back in the saddle again

I’ve been back for over two weeks now. It still feels a bit surreal, although I am grudgingly stepping back into my former self. School has begun and my thoughts turn to final projects, Master’s reports, and life after I graduate in December. I long for the summer when my worries were few, the scenery was breathtaking, and free time was spent frolicking about the countryside with friends, both on and off the bike. Luckily, I still see the T4kers quite frequently…we’ve had a lot of celebrating to do, especially Tess, Lorig, and Brett, they’ve done so much to help the transition. My friends and colleagues in Austin have also been wonderful and have made it easy to remember why I love this place. And my short stint in Chicago with my family was just what the doctor ordered.

I’ve been taking time to organize photos, before the chronology gets foggy. I’ve been sifting through my pictures as well as Tess’s, Brett’s, Merriweather’s, and Bredt’s, since they’re all living on my laptop. I’ve pulled ones that I’m especially fond of to print. Aside from a few I’ve already posted, here is the last installment of my T4k pics. A couple are mine, the rest belong to the aforementioned parties.

Actually, this photo was taken by a newspaper in a town outside of Oklahoma City. Tess wrote a note in her journal about how she thought she might be featured in an article and a woman at the newspaper sent her an email with this photo attached. This was a rest stop, and we had been through a lot by this point in the day. There were about seven or eight of us that found ourselves lost on the way out of town, I think we went about 10 miles out of the way. We still had mobile phone coverage and so Lorig and Andy used a computer to chart a route for us back in the right direction as we asked locals at the McDonald’s where we were. It just so happens when we reached this rest stop, in the rain, Limbo Rock came on the speakers of the van and we had an impromptu limbo party. The newspaper caught Tess rocking the limbo.

Bike riders do limbo at a rest stop

Carly, me, and Lorig braving the winds of Wyoming.

Three bike riders in a paceline

Photo of a felled tree

Team Friday at the lunch stop in Big Sky, Montana. Montana was easily the most beautiful state I rode through. Everyone has their favorite, but it was truly impossible to take a poor picture.

Libby, Tess, and Lorig at a rest stop in Montana

Bike riders going up a hill in Montana

Bike riders in a paceline in Montana

Reflection of the van and trailer in the rear view mirror

Stream in Canada

Close up of the asphalt in Montana

Brett Anderson and Libby Peterek in Montana

Clouds in Montana

Lorig and I.

Lorig Hawkins and Libby Peterek riding bikes

Closeup of a sign with the words "Giddyup! Hyah!"

Tess was back on the bike by the time we rode through Banff. You can barely see Meg behind her. I got a flat on a sweet descent and the girls waited.

Libby Peterek fixing a flat and Tess sitting cross legged on a descent in Canada

Tess and I, tiny against the mountains.

Libby and Tess riding next to mountains in Canada

Photo of a tree from the base looking toward the sky

Our rest stops were strategically placed near places of interest, like this stone skipping spot. Everyone had a go, here are Carly, me, Adriano, Lorig, Andy, and Brett.

Carly, Libby, Adriano, Lorig, Andy, and Brett skipping stones in Canada

Close up of water rushing in a river against rocks

You can barely see Lorig and I on the bridge. We were all trying to watch men spearing fish in the roaring waters below.

Photo of two cyclists on a distant bridge in the wilderness

Me, Tess, and Carly.

Libby, Tess, and Carly riding

Libby, Tess, and Carly riding

From the canoe in the middle of Meziadin Lake.

Angled shot from the middle of Meziadin Lake in the Yukon Territory

This is one of my favorites, Lorig and Tess, our first morning in Alaska.

Lorig and Tess as the rest of the team mills about before the day's ride

It was a wild ride. Andy wrote “Don’t be sorry it’s over, be glad it happened.” I have learned so much this summer about myself and others. I remember the weeks before leaving Austin and how worried I was to be spending perhaping the most challenging summer of my life with total strangers, those strangers became friends, and then those friends became family. I expected much from this summer, but I could never have prepared myself for the kindness of strangers, their willingness to give to us, and to share their personal experiences with cancer. I’m sure the future holds many more bike tours for me. For now, I’m content to return to my life with a fresh outlook and a brand new bike posse.