Yes, it was around the lake...very challenging but I am proud of myself for doing it! According to Strava, I ranked 2nd overall amongst women (who use the app) on my climb on Spooner. I do love my Dolce, but this titanium bike sure is fast!
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As you should be! :) Finishing a climb is always something to be proud of.
I don't fancy myself a super climber or anything, but that Spooner climb was ridiculously easy for some reason. I read that it was supposed to be something like a 6 or 7 mile climb, but it was over so quickly that at first I thought I was on the wrong road when I reached the summit.
Other climbs are hard like they're supposed to be, like the Tahoe side of Kingsbury Grade, where I measured a max grade of 12% last year. Another fun one is the last steep section of Ski Run Blvd. I measured 21% on that, and I'm going to attempt to climb it on the Dahon. I hope I don't break the handlepost climbing out of the saddle LOL!
Great job, Mojogrrl! A seven mile climb doesn't sound all that easy to me--and probably to many of us! From past threads about this ride, I'm gathered that successfully climbing Spooner is a big accomplishment. It's not just the climb itself, but where it falls along the ride, and my understanding is that it's near the end.
I'll admit that when I climbed it it was the first climb on my ride, not the last:
http://connect.garmin.com/activity/50666558
It just didn't feel as hard as the other climbs I've done. There are many climbs that feel very hard even when they're done first like Spooner was.
Here's video from the ride I'm talking about that a friend took of me climbing Spooner and the Tahoe side of Kingsbury Grade. Don't worry, there's no heavy breathing as it was recorded "third person", not the typical first-person effort like most of my videos.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GaR70lTtIl0
Again, I'm not trying to be a braggart like many of the roadies on other forums. I'm just being honest about what my experience was like.