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melissam
08-01-2008, 05:56 PM
I'm a roadie who also has a mountain bike. My usual route on the mountain bike is a nice 12 mile loop on the levees, where the biggest technical challenge is avoiding a few goose turds.

During the summer, the Velo Girls women's bicyle club puts on a Thursday evening mountain bike ride at the Arastradero Preserve in Palo Alto. Arastradero Preserve is known as a relatively easy place to ride a mountain bike -- the Kiddie Pool of single-track, if you will. Last night the stars aligned so I could cut out of work a little early, so I decided to load up my mountain bike and head off to Palo Alto and meet up with the Velo Girls.

First highlight of the trip: I got to meet velogirl herself! Lorri Lee Lown, the founder of Velo Girls, is as friendly and knowledgeable in person as she is here on the online forums.

At that point, four other women had shown up for the ride. Lorri wanted to wait for one other rider, so she sent us off on a nice gentle warm up loop.

My first thought: oh my, Toto, we're not on pavement anymore!! :eek: It's amazing how much you take solid ground for granted. Within a few hundred feet on the warm up loop, I encountered ruts, powdery dirt, a few stray rocks, some horse manure, etc. Now, I was in fairly familiar territory with the horse manure -- the goose turds had given me ample preparation. But the powder -- wow, what a momentum stopper! And when you slow down, it's harder to stay upright, so you turn your front wheel to keep your balance, which the wheel doesn't want to do in the powder, and well, it gets interesting.

But no, I didn't biff it!! :D

We got to the top of the hill, and the leader advised us that there was a series of whoo-de-doo's and that the terrain was rutted. Best approach was to keep the weight back, relax the arms and knees, and stay on the left part of the trail (less ruts.) OK!

Down I went -- I thought I was gonna biff it at any second. The adrenaline had kicked in, and I was laughing maniacally. Now this was some kind of fun!!

Somehow I got thru the whoop-de-doo's with nary a biff. We got back to the parking lot, and Lorri and the other rider were rarin' to go.

Lorri, riding her cross bike, led us thru a patchwork of single-track trails. I lost track of where we were, and just gamely followed along. We had frequent regroups, which was fortunate, because I was sucking wind like I hadn't done in ages during my road bike rides.

We negotiated a series of sharp switchbacks while climbing uphill. Notice that I didn't say riding uphill. Some of us rode uphill. Some of us couldn't get their front wheels to turn the correct way while riding uphill, so they walked their bike up the switchback part. And you know what? It was all good -- just get the bike up there, any way you can!

Toward the end of the ride, I had started on a trail and saw a lady coming toward me while walking her dog. At that moment, my front wheel hit some nice powder, and I almost biffed it. I unclipped, waited for her to pass, then tried to get back on my bike. No go -- I had a major case of spaghetti leg and couldn't clip in. Took me about 5 attempts to clip in and get rolling. Ms. Endurance Roadie was wiped out after about 9 miles of singletrack!!

All good things must come to an end -- the sun was coming down, so we headed back for the parking lot. After loading our bikes, we headed up the road to the Alpine Inn for some food, beverages, and comradery.

Will I be back? You betcha!

velogirl, if you're reading this, it was a pleasure to meet you and hang out with your crew!

- Melissa

maillotpois
08-01-2008, 06:14 PM
Wow - sounds like a great time! Way to step out of your comfort zone. :D

velogirl
08-01-2008, 06:16 PM
Melissa is far too modest! She did great last night -- she's got good skills, good fitness, and a better sense of humor. And, she's got one of the nicest scars I've ever seen!

She was sneaky, and didn't introduce herself as MelissaM from TE. About halfway into the ride I put two and two (or M and M) together and guessed it.

I posted some photos here:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=45908&id=617196282

sheri
08-05-2008, 08:34 PM
Thanks for the post, Melissa. It's great to hear you had such a positive experience as a newbie on the Arastadero ride. The Velo Girls are great to ride with even though I don't join the rides very often.

I'm also a roadie looking to get dirty. After six months of shopping and learning and coming home bloody and scraped and bruised from my time out on demo bikes (my bike handling skills suck!), I finally bought a mountain bike. I'm chomping at the bit to get out there but it's still on order. Hopefully I'll be able to get a few weeknight rides in before the time changes.

I'm hoping to find the time one of these days to join one of the MTB skills clinics put on by Velo Girls, also!

Sheri

Miranda
08-06-2008, 03:55 AM
I'm a roadie who also has a mountain bike.

Ms. Endurance Roadie was wiped out after about 9 miles of singletrack!!




Well, I heard this one loud and humbly proud:o. I went out on my first true mtb trail recently thinking "well, it's less than 10mi, that should take me no time". NOT:eek:...

I'm the same (roadie girl that also found dirt). One of my die hard bike guy buds (who was a mtb first, roadie second) says, "road is about the lungs, the trail is about strength".

Of course road takes strength in other ways, but the trail is a whole diff ball game for sure. And, a different kind of fun.

Glad you had fun on your ride:).

rocknrollgirl
08-06-2008, 05:11 AM
It does my heart good to hear you girls say this. I am soooo tired of my roadie friends saying things like...."the sport race is only 17 miles, you are joking right? "

You really cannot understand until the knobbies hit the dirt.


Welcome to the dark side...I go both ways, and I like it...but the dirt is so much darn fun.

velogirl
08-06-2008, 09:06 AM
this is so funny. roadie first, here. when we first started doing mtn bike rides with the club, the ride leader would post her reports: 7 miles, 6 miles, 10 miles. I kept thinking "why not just skip the ride and go straight to the burgers & beer?" what I didn't realize was the significant pace differential between road and mountain.

I remember my first mountain bike race: 15 miles -- I thought I would die! it was the longest mtn bike ride I'd ever done.

gnat23
08-06-2008, 10:23 AM
Awesome post! I'm hoping up to pick up my first mountain bike this weekend and will be looking for any and all ways to practice! Hope to hook up with you guys before it gets too dark in the evenings!

-- gnat! (on the test ride, trying to teach me how to ride up onto a curb, I freaked out: "You can't DO that!")