Seven (of 21) stages in, women on Tour de France ride face realities of challenge

Strong winds on Stage 2 led to a tumble.
(Photos © Michael Robertson/Velodramatic)

The Reve Tour is getting real. The six amateur women riders tackling the entire, 21 stage Tour de France route have completed seven days of riding. That’s about 905 miles and over 40,000 feet of climbing. And they’re only one-third of the way to Paris.

The team’s correspondent, freelance journalist Heidi Swift, has been sending dispatches each day via Twitter and Peloton Magazine. Here’s what she wrote after Stage 4:

“At night when we finish I want to cry. In the morning I want to jump out the window. By 6am I am ready to fucking go for it again. It’s a constant process of destruction and resurrection. A daily face-kick to non-believers, including the one that lives inside of me.”

A post this morning after Stage 7 was more optimistic: “Hip hip hooray!” she wrote on Twitter, “The #revetour ladies and I celebrated our one week anniversary by crushing stage 7. Including the death climb at the end.”

Just how brutal was that “death climb”? How about averaging a 10% grade for four miles, with several sections at 15% and topping out at 20%. “You got to recover at 9%,” Swift wrote.

Swift is one two women on the team that hails from Portland (initially there were three Portlanders on the team, but Susan Peithman did not end up making the trip to France). Jennifer Cree is the other.

I emailed with Jennifer’s husband Russell Cree this morning. He said the team is “doing great” and that they’re eagerly looking forward to the first rest day on Monday. “They are very tired but things are going smoothly and so far everyone is doing very well,” he said, “Each week brings a new challenge.”

The first big challenge was a very windy stage two, which caused the group’s only crash thus far (it caused only minor road rash). What awaits the women after Monday’s rest day are the Tour’s legendary and massive climbs; and the long and fast descents on the other side of them. Russell says the team has packed lights and they, “Expect some very long days on the bike.” So far, they’ve put in about 7-9 hours in the saddle each day.

Beyond the obvious physical challenges of the route and the glory that the women enjoy back home as they attempt this feat, there are other dynamics at play. Not one to gloss over reality, Swift shares some of the tribulations in her most recent dispatch:

“The thing about this is that it is so incredibly physically challenging that every bit of effort saved or expended is critical. Over 21 stages the sum total of those things will affect whether or not we can finish. We have to learn to make the choices that are best for the team as a whole. What is the best way to get to Paris?

We came here together, six near-strangers and started the most stressful and taxing endeavor that any of us has ever undertaken. We’re tired, we’re rushed, we’re eating unfamiliar foods and we’re riding until we can’t see straight. Yeah, there’s gonna be some shit.

But you know what?

In the meantime, we’re crushing it.”

Getting to Paris, together, as a team (which is how I think each of them measures success), is far from assured. “But they’ve shown they are strong and they are in this to finish it,” says Russell, and “They are going for it.”

— Follow the Reve Team’s daily rides via Strava and Peloton Magazine.

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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Jolly Dodger
11 years ago

GO LADIES!

Sunny
Sunny
11 years ago

They’re riding bikes. They’re in France. I’d say they’re on a dream vacation. (French drivers respect cyclists.)

Thomas Le Ngo
11 years ago
Reply to  Sunny

Definitely my dream vacation. Not sure about those drivers, though, after seeing the press car swerve into TDF cyclists, sending a few into barbed wire.

dan
dan
11 years ago

I’ve often thought it would be a good idea to market bike shorts with Kevlar reinforcement over the outsides of your legs (the road rash zones). We can’t armor up like motorcycle riders, but we could probably wear more protection than we do.

NW Biker
NW Biker
11 years ago

I couldn’t even finish one leg of the TDF, so I’m seriously jealous of what they’re trying.

Amazing.

Pete Sandrock
Pete Sandrock
11 years ago

Heidi’s posts are extraordinary. I admire her guts and wish the team tailwinds all the way to the Champs de Elysee.

Steve Bice
Steve Bice
11 years ago

Outstanding Riding by all the Reve team TDF women so far ! My Tip of advice to the team is this: Only try to avs.14 mph & on the hard Climbing days its ok to be on the Bike 10 + hours. You are all Hero’s ! Take all the time you need to get to Paris. To Finish is to WIN !

noah
noah
11 years ago

I request more coverage of this very, very serious issue of upper thigh rashes. Thank you.

seaweed
seaweed
11 years ago

A.M.A.Z.I.N.GGGGGGGGG

Uncle Muscles
Uncle Muscles
11 years ago

Can we please stop pretending that our cycling vacations are epic battles against the trials of the road? You’re riding bikes. Stop taking yourself so seriously.

Suburban
Suburban
11 years ago
Reply to  Uncle Muscles

Hype is often required for sponsorship, marketing and some personal reasons, and this is fine. It’s perfectly fine. Etape riding is a long tradition of le tour. Extroverts make easy targets, so please pity those who are compelled to render the ecstatic-athletic into mere words.

Kristen
Kristen
11 years ago

These women are more inspiring than the professional men riding the same stages– because these women are all average janes– incredibly fit average janes– amateurs, riding to the best of their ability on some of the most difficult cycling stages in the world. If they can crush those climbs, surely, with enough training, I can crush my local hills here!!

Glen
Glen
11 years ago
Reply to  Kristen

Kristen,

While I agree with your comment on inspiration, I hardly think you meant to call them “average” Janes. I’m average, and I certaintly couldn’t make that ride. I’d say they are exceptional Janes

Ben Guernsey
Ben Guernsey
11 years ago

Hell yeah! Reve tour is gonna do it, and glad to have two Portland women part of it.

Pete
Pete
11 years ago

Thank goodness they have a rest day before the brutality of Stages 16 & 17. 16 climbs the cols d’Aubisque, Tourmalet, Aspin, & Peyresourde. 17 takes them over Col d’Mente, Port de Bales, and Peyresourde a second time. I’ve ridden all of them, some of them several times, but I can’t imagine doing more than 2 a day. Go, Reve, go.