A Ride In The Life

I used to do a photography project I called "A Day In The Life," where I would take photos all throughout a single day of what I did and where I went. Photos of everyday things like buildings, street scenes, people, and the like. I haven't done one in quite a long time, mostly because my days now include my children, and I don't want to plaster them all over the internet.

I ride with a GPS cyclocomputer that I've configured to record a lap every kilometer, which includes an alerting beep and a brief status screen that shows me how long I took to ride that kilometer. I started doing this when I lived in San Diego because there was a section of rolling road in Rancho Santa Fe that I would challenge myself to maintain 30 kph (or greater) on. Instead of doing mental arithmetic while hypoxic, the cyclocomputer did the math for me.

I decided to combine these two things into a "Ride In The Life," where I would take a photo of the road ahead of me every kilometer when my GPS beeped. Well, not every kilometer precisely, only when I felt safe to pull out my phone and take a picture. I didn't take any photos while descending at high speed, and if cars were passing me closely, I delayed the photo until I felt safe. The ride was one week ago and it was into the mountains west of Boulder; here is the GPS trace. I'm not sure how interesting this is, but since I went through the effort to take dozens of photos, I'm seeing it through to post them here. I hope you find them interesting!