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- <p>The temperature today breached the 90s. I wasn't really bothered. In fact, I hardly noticed. This was
- an oft-repeated question: isn't it too hot to be riding your bike?? Really, I never actually noticed. Even
- sweating it uphill I have a bit of a breeze. More air circulation than I could ask for. And working hard and
- sweating... the heat was never an issue. I NEVER noticed but people would CONTINUE to comment on and ask
- about this.</p>
- <p>I was writing my thoughts in my journal (the source of all these memories and experiences) at the local
- dive and I was approached by the exceptionally outgoing citizens of Bowman, ND. One person asked me how the
- golfing was. ??? What golfing??? He had seen my (bike) glove tan and thought it was a (golf) glove tan. He
- thought I had "Golfer Hand". I showed him that it wasn't golfer hand because I, in fact, had it on both hands,
- not just my left. An old dude in a veterans cap approached me and asked what I was writing. I told him I was
- recording my thoughts and experiences. He thought for a minute and asked if <em>this</em> was going to be
- recorded, meaning our conversation. I thought for a minute, and said "I suppose so. If it's a notable event,
- I'll write it down." By asking, his question became a self-fulfilling one. Sure enough, I wrote down our
- experience.</p>
- <p>That night, I truly experienced the power of a great Midwest storm. It was the most colossal war in the
- skies I had ever seen. We were at the intersection of two great storms converging and a friendly trucker
- introduced me to the Midwest hobby of "Storm Watchin'"... just as foreign to me as their fondness for "Road
- Trippin'" and "Rabbit Shootin'". But Storm Watchin' is truly a spectacle, better than television. The strength
- and magnitude of these storms as they roll over the great flat expanse of the Midwest, picking up steam and
- shaking the Earth with their strength... truly a humbling hobby. I'd like try it again.</p>
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