DEE-livered!

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Wheel full 70px You’ve  probably noticed that my posting here has been a little light the last couple of days. I was very up on Monday over the results of my weigh-in that day, but the failure to arrive of the meds I needed in order to be able to take off from Halifax really had begun to pull me back down.  I had begun to feel like August was completely slipping away,  and… enough of that.

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Wheel full 70px In short, just before lunchtime some welcome newes finally showed up on the USPS tracking site.

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Wheel full 70px An hour later, and the last obstacle to me and heading south was in my hand.

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Wheel full 70px I could ask “Whose priority?” but that would be snarky and completely out of keeping with my celebratory mood.  I’ll post some info about tomorrow’s ride later on and then head for bed early, as I’m planning a 7:00 a.m. start.

Wheel full 70px I’m ready!

Whee Boy Howdy!

Wheel full 70px If the Delta departure counter area at Tampa International Airport is any indication…

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I was at the end of this line over an hour ago

…you might want to delay your travel plans or choose another carrier.  My experience once at the counter to rebook and check my panniers was that Delta’s computer system is still not all the way back up.  Many Delta flights out of this airport this morning were showing as cancelled.  I have now been rescheduled for the fourth time and leave here late this afternoon.  Not complaining, mind you.  Lots of people were inconvenienced far worse than I was.

Which way did it go…?

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Wheel full 70px Well, that’s not a Trek bike in that box in any event.

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Wheel full 70px So, oh momma, can this really be the end?

Wheel full 70px Is it really all over?  Am I headed back to Alaska?  After all that prep, am I done after only riding 60 miles/105 km?

Wheel full 70px Or am I headed for the next level?  Just keep in mind what Treebeard said (in the movie at least):

I always like going South; somehow it feels like going downhill.

Wheel full 70px So, wherever you go, there you are.  And we’ll see where we are in just a few days.

David Edgren

Problem solved!

Wheel full 70px I don’t see my sister Sue (and the rest of her family- great folks all) enough- about once every ten years on average after we went our separate ways on reaching adulthood.  She is the only other person in my life besides my mom (R.I.P. – hi mom!  Miss ‘ya!) who has been conferred the privilege of calling me “Dave” without incurring an annoyed look.

Wheel full 70px So Sue put her mind to helping me deal with the Florida heat…

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Wheel full 70px If you have a favorite brother or sister, call them up right now and tell them how special that they are to you.  I know mine is.

It’s Deja Vu All Over Again

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Wheel full 70px So, damn it.  Here we go again.

Wheel full 70px If you’ve been following along with this blog, you’ll know that I was admitted to the hospital the weekend before I left for Florida.  That admission was kind of a mess.   My blood pressure had fallen really low and that led to the discovery that my BP meds were probably at a dosage that was no longer needed, in that exercise and tightly controlled diet were doing the job pretty much on their own.

Wheel full 70px The problem with low blood pressure, at least for me at this point, is that it leads pretty quickly to my kidneys starting to shut down due to dehydration.  That process was reversed during the three days I was in the hospital through IV hydration, and we thought we had addressed the problem by cutting in half the dosage of one of my BP meds.

Wheel full 70px But not so fast.

Wheel full 70px Wednesday of this week was a really great day for me, ride-wise.  I met both of my goals- ten miles an hour and forty miles total for the day.  My legs were strong at the end of the day.  Even though it was very hot- near 100 degrees- I felt good throughout the ride.  I’ve described elsewhere the glitch as far as not having a place to stay when I arrived in Lake Butler, but that wasn’t really a big deal.

Wheel full 70px So on Thursday everything seemed to be going OK.  I did notice that I seemed to be moving along somewhat slowly as I packed up for the day’s ride, but  I chalked that up to my first night camping instead of sleeping in a bed.

Wheel full 70px As soon as I got on the bike, though, it was apparent that something was up.  I felt weak and wobbly from the first push on the pedals.  My immediate inclination was to stop and get something to eat, as I had not been hungry before I went to bed the previous evening.

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Wheel full 70px There was a handy pizza stand right next to where I had camped, so I had the nice Pizza Maiden make me one, which I then sat outside and ate.

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Wheel full 70px One pizza later I got back on the bike.  After riding about a mile, I called a halt.  I didn’t feel steady on the bike (even with all that pizza weighing me down) and I was worried about being at risk on the busy road on which I was traveling.  I stopped, leaned my bike up against a sign, and sat down on one of those above-ground utility cabinets.  Nice folks brought me out some cool water from a nearby apartment building.  When I couldn’t pull it together after sitting for a while the local rescue squad was called and I was off to the North Florida Regional Medical Center in Gainesville.

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Wheel full 70px And, as I said back at the beginning, it’s deja vu all over again.  My blood pressure is low.  I’m dehydrated (despite drinking enough Gatorade on Wednesday to float a battleship).  My kidneys are crying “uncle!”  I’m back tethered to an IV pole.

Wheel full 70px The recommendations this time around go even further than last time.  Stop both the Azor (which had already been reduced by half) and the Bystolic altogether.  Wait at least two weeks before resuming my trip.  Oh, and find somewhere other than Florida to resume it in.  Antarctica, I guess.

Wheel full 70px So I’m really pretty down at this point.  I have already hugely modified the trip from what I had originally planned.  I now need to ask my wife and her mom to do without me for another two weeks.  Relocating the start of the trip to somewhere meaningfully more temperate will cost at least $500 and probably more in airfare and bike teardown/shipment/reassembly.  And I have only packed one pair of non-bicycling underwear.

Wheel full 70px Well, OK.  The last one may verge into whining.  But I guess it’s either that, or cause my kidneys to fail, or just fly home.  At what point does audacity turn to folly?  I guess I’m about to find out.

 

In which law enforcement gives me a hand

Wheel full 70px So here’s the story on last night.

Wheel full 70px As the campground I was headed to turned out to be closed down, I was without accommodations when I arrived at the little town I had set as my goal for day two of this ride. There were no other accommodations available without another 25 miles of riding. I wound up at about 7:00 p.m. in a convenience store where pretty much everyone wanted to be helpful (but nobody appeared to want a tent in their own front yard or else didn’t live in town). Finally about nine in the evening after several hours of nothing panning out I called the sheriff’s department, which sent over an officer who looked me and the packed bike over, said “you’re legit,” and accompanied me to a city park where he indicated that I could put my tent anywhere I would like. So, in the dark, I took my tent out for the very first time and fumbled my way through setting it up.

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Wheel full 70px Not bad, eh?

Wheel full 70px So today I am going to take it very easy, planning to do 33 miles to Newberry, Florida.  There is a small mom ‘n pop motel there in the center of town.

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Wheel full 70px It’s very hot.  We’ll see how this goes.

 

A long, long time ago…

…someone told me that just because you can fit everything in your panniers doesn’t mean you should put everything in your panniers.

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Wheel full 70px Still sounds like good advice to me.  Wish I was following it.

Wheel full 70pxFine tuning the load is still in progress.  Fortunately it’s a bit cooler here today.  I’ll let you know when I get started.

Today is the day…

Wheel full 70px Folks have been asking for the story of what has been going on this past couple of weeks with my health and ability to do the ride, as I’ve indicated that the whole thing almost didn’t happen.  Here’s the whole story and some news about the route.  I wrote it overnight on the flight to Orlando just a few days ago.

-oOo-

So how did we get here, with me on a plane to Florida arriving just two short days before my beach2beach trip is supposed to start? I’ve not addressed the situation in a post to this point because, even as late as midweek, the outcome was seriously in doubt.

Things all started the second day of my cardio stress test- the day I was put on the treadmill. All was well until my heart rate reached 135, then it all went, as Sir Terry Pratchett so eloquently put it, pear-shaped.

My oxygen saturation level, which is normally a marginally OK 94% and which had stayed in the 90s up to that point, dropped all at once to 85%. My muscles, which were not getting any properly oxygenated blood, basically rebelled and more or less stopped working. My brain did the same, and I became disoriented. My doc, the amazing and gifted Natalie Beyeler, stopped the test at that point and, after giving me a shot of something through the IV port, helped me off the treadmill and on to a gurney, where I slowly returned to an acceptable heart rhythm and O-sat level. The day concluded with a return to the machine that measured gamma ray emission to determine heart function. I would learn later on that my heart works pretty good for being an almost 64 year old guy who has abused and neglected his body in countless ways over the years. Dr. Beyeler ordered me at the conclusion of the stress test to undergo three separate pulmonary function tests, which were scheduled for Wednesday of last week.

I was a little sore that evening when I went to the Alaska Club to ride the stationary bike for an hour, so I took a couple of newly purchased Ibuprofen before going. “Vitamin I” works wonders for muscle aches and I finished the session without incident.

The next day, a Friday, I was sore again, so I took another dose of Ibuprofen before riding. Tthat was probably the straw that broke the camel’s back, to turn a phrase. I was very shaky over the weekend and missed daily exercising for the first time in almost a month. I felt dizzy and lightheaded. On Tuesday of last week I stood back up quickly after bending over at the waist and found I could not control my legs, which were jerking. My wife drove me to the emergency room, where it was determined that I was dehydrated and that my creatinine and other kidney levels were elevated. I was hydrated through an IV and felt much better. When I appeared to be fully stabilized I was sent home.

The next day I felt well enough to do the pulmonary function tests and resume working out. A day later I accompanied my wife to an appointment with her doctor and was just sitting and listening in when, at the appointment’s conclusion, my wife asked a nurse who was in the room if she would take my blood pressure. Heather, who knows me better than anyone else on the planet, thought I looked peaked and pale. The BP reading, after several attempts to obtain it, was 60/40. That was not good. I was taken by wheelchair to the urgent care offices downstairs from Heather’s doc and from there was transported by an EMS ambulance back to our local hospital’s emergency room.

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At the ER it was quickly determined that I was severely dehydrated and that various bad kidney levels were through the roof. I was in the initial stages of renal failure. As a result, I was admitted to the hospital to be rehydrated, undergo various tests and be monitored. I spent Thursday and Friday night a week ago there, having IV bag after IV bag of fluid run through me. I felt like cra… well, you know. I was also pretty depressed, as I thought b2b at that point was toast.

The Hospitalist, Dr. Lutz, by Saturday had figured things out. He told me that, because of my diet efforts resulting in significant weight loss coupled with the daily moderately strenuous levels of exercise, my Azor medication should have been cut back, as it was pushing blood pressure down harder than I needed it to. The excess Azor levels also conflicted with the Ibuprofen in a way that had a direct impact on my kidneys. I contributed to that problem by drinking lots of plain water but no electrolyte. This all came together to create a “perfect storm” situation that sent me to the hospital in what the docs described in medical terms as “bad shape.”

The Azor and a couple of other meds were withheld during my hospital stay in order to flush them from my system and allow my kidneys a clear shot at recovery. By Saturday afternoon that had happened and I was discharged by Dr. Lutz with stern instructions to stay away from Ibuptofen altogether and a prescription for Azor at half the former strength. He also discontinued Niaspan and Torsemide.  My Vitamin D has also been cut back as I’m getting plenty (heh!  It’s inescapable) of sun.

On Monday of this week I was back in Dr. Beyeler’s office to check out the results of the pulmonary function tests plus a fasting complete blood panel taken that morning along with Dr. Lutz’s six page discharge summary. The only thing on my mind, of course, was “could I still do an epic bike trip?” To heck with all the medical stuff. I just wanted to ride a very long, long way.

I came, though, with a plan “B.” There is no transcontinental route without an elevation somewhere of eight or nine thousand feet in the west. The b2b route I had planned had a 9,600 foot plus elevation at Togwotee Pass in Wyoming, plus Teton Pass just west of Jackson, which is a bit more than 1,000 feet lower in elevation but which has an approach that is akin to bicycling about 3,000 feet up a vertical wall… Well, I’m exaggerating a bit but, again, you know what I mean. I looked had at the southern route , which skirts the border with Mexico from El Paso, Texas west to San Diego, California. Nope. Serious elevation gains and steep grades that way as well. Plus the Southwestern deserts from Texas on in late summer.  Uggh.  Given the results of my stress test, I was seriously concerned about my ability, even after several thousand miles of cycling, to ride across the United States from east to west on any route.  But what about south to north?

Key West is most of two weeks from Jacksonville on a bike at a slow, steady pace. Florida and the coastal plain and barrier islands for the the north are pretty much as flat as the proverbial parking lot. So let’s cross the U.S. from south to north along the coast and see what hills we run into. No hill higher than 400 feet? Check. More or less flat for a long, long way from the start? Check. Of epic length? Check.

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Thus the beach 2 beach two route was born. I threw in some extra miles in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, mainly because I could, but also because the coastline in the Maritime Provinces is drop dead gorgeous, and particularly in the fall. Also, as it turns out, Halifax, Nova Scotia is far less expensive to return to Alaska from than anywhere in Maine. Around the same length as the b2b trans-con route? About 4,000 miles, check. And the “beach 2 beach” meme? Well, you can’t ride along the Atlantic Coast for 60 days or so and not see a beach most every day. So while it’s not Atlantic Beach to Pacific Beach…

I’m a sucker for symmetry

…I think beach 2 beach still works just fine. So check and double check- the Atlantic Coast b2b route is born. And, come to think of it, I’m still riding across the United States. Just not in the east-west direction most people associate with that kind of trip.

Bonus check. Heather felt sorry for me because I had to change my plans and told me if this ride went as planned I could ride the original east to west b2b route next year. Whoa!

This post has gotten very long so I’ll wrap up quickly. With Dr. Beyeler on the phone, her equally fantastic ANP Debbie Chabot, Heather, Heather’s mother Frankie and I worked out a daily ride plan involving regular BP, BPM and O-sat monitoring and reporting, specific hydration and nutrition goals, along with adoption of the Atlantic Coast route. A further requirement was that all this needed to be blessed by a cardiologist. If she or he said no, b2b was over for the duration.

On Wednesday of this week I saw Dr. Thomas at the Alaska Heart Institute in the hospital’s professional building. When Dr. Thomas walked in the room my heart sank. He looked like a triathlete. I imagined what was going through his mind- here is this old, fat guy sitting in my office who’s lost a few pounds and now he thinks he’s Lance Armstrong.

Didn’t happen. Dr. Thomas, who had quite obviously read the rapidly accumulating sheaf of paperwork generated by my issues over the past few weeks listened to me describe in detail my daily plan and the Atlantic Coast route. He confirmed that the Azor had been reduced and that other changes had been made, then said, in effect, go have a good time.

And so here I am an hour out of Orlando at 4:00 in the morning. I have all my gear less what was sent straight to the ZenCog bike shop in a duffel bag that fits in the overhead plus a camera bag and a b2b flag (with a tiny frog pennant under it) made by my loving (and slightly frog-happy) wife. Other than being assaulted earlier in the flight by a drunk in the row behind me…ahh, but that’s a story for another day. Life is good. I’ll pick up my bike this afternoon.

I’m ready to ride.

-oOo-

Wheel full 70px Yes I am!  I’ll give you a link to RidewithGPS later today so that you can look at the new route in minute detail.  I’d love feedback from my Atlantic Coastal friends.  I’m off to ZenCog now to see if a last part has come in.

Wheel full 70px Thanks so much for stopping by.

David Edgren