I'll back up to Thursday to explain (today is Sunday).

I went to a concert downtown Toronto and got home after midnight (I'm 
usually in bed before 10:30!).  I didn't really sleep in, worked all day; 
on a Friday before a long weekend, usually not many meetings, I was in 
meetings until 4:30.  Sigh.  I cooked dinner for the family as I always do 
on Friday.  Weather was the best so far this spring (25C+ and sunny, no 
wind) so I went for a ride on the trails, taking my Fargo.  I thought it 
would be great: shorts, shirt, short-finger gloves (no additional layers, 
for once).  I have to ride when the conditions are so good, right?  I was 
wrong.

First 20 minutes was okay and then I started to run out of gas.  An hour 
later when my ride was done I was spent, not just tired, but really sore 
upper body, laboured breathing.  Symptoms I had years ago when I just had 
my old road bike with it's aggressive cockpit.  On the 10 rides since I put 
the VO Granola bars on the Fargo my upper body has been pain-free.  I'm 
also pain-free on the Roadini. I was surprised I was so sore...and then I 
went into that state I sometimes do.

Initially I was like, yeah, these bars are out.  I'm going back to drop 
bars.  I spent that night researching for different bars than the ones I 
had before I put on the Granola bars (not to mention thoughts of different 
levers, cables/housing).  Sidebar - one reason I went with swept-back bars 
was to be more upright when riding on trails, so I wouldn't have to tilt my 
chin up to see as easily down the trail on the many descents, or around 
corners (that chin up position is my biggest problem as I have an unnatural 
bend in my cervical spine).  And the bars have been amazing in that regard: 
I'm so much more comfortable on technical turns, descents and climbing; 
when I first rode with these bars I was sold, as I was more easily able to 
handle the terrain, thus I would smile more, and actually go faster.  Not 
to mention the braking is better with these mtb levers (same callipers).

Redemption ride: I took the Fargo out this morning.  It was around 12C, 
windy, but I'm sheltered from the wind on the trails so it doesn't bother 
me.  I felt good from the start and never tired.  At around the hour mark I 
was on my way back and starting playing Bob Marley's Redemption Song in my 
head, and I thought, this is my redemption ride (maybe not as important as 
what incited Marley's lyrics, but a small redemption worth celebrating 
nonetheless).  This ride gets a 10 out of 10 (vs. "0" on Friday).

Lessons learned:
- When I'm already tired, don't expect much out of a ride, turn back if I'm 
tired and go for a walk
- I'm a morning person and like riding about an hour after waking up (have 
some tea and do some mobility / light stretching); I don't have work stress 
on my mind, nor am I tired from daily chores or walking around.  Expect 
nothing from a ride after work, or better yet, don't ride at all (unless it 
has been days since previous ride, or something else that makes me really 
want to ride)
- I like the cold.  The heat drains me.  I take electrolytes, stay very 
hydrated; it doesn't matter, I just prefer the cold.  When it's really hot 
(25C is not that hot lol), plan accordingly.

So, have you had any "redemption rides" lately, and if so, what led to that 
magical ride and what have you learned?

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