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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Posts
    328
    I've been a bad girl! I haven't gone on a mtb ride since my Fleming Meadows ride in April. The encounter with the equestrian kind of turned me off to mountain biking for a while and I concentrated on road cycling instead, with plenty of climbing, of course.

    I thought my recent San Francisco steep climbs on my folding bike would prepare me for steep mtb climbs, but as always the mtb stuff is more difficult than any road climb. The good thing is, for some odd reason I climb better at high altitude. I have no idea why but it's always been that way ever since I got serious about cycling in the early 90s.

    As a result, I didn't suffer as much on climbs as I usually do on mtb rides. Even though I love to suffer, it's good that I didn't suffer too bad on climbs on this ride. I needed plenty of energy to navigate my hardtail Trek Wahoo through the incredibly technical singletrack on this famous trail.

    This is in the Tahoe-Donner area of the Sierras, near Truckee, CA. I had a bit of trouble finding the trailhead at first. I climbed on pavement on Donner Pass Road from I-80 to the summit. While descending that road I finally found the dirt road turn-off to the snow laboratory. It was a long dirt road climb to the actual trailhead.

    This may be the hardest mtb ride I've ever done. I think I set a personal record for dabs, stall-outs, and hike-a-bikes, both up and down! . Most hike-a-bike sections were very short, except for the stairs. There's no way in hell I was about to attempt those on a hardtail!

    I rode more conservatively than I normally would, but this was my first ride on this trail. Also, I'd rather ride out of there on my bike, not in a helicopter. The owner of the store I bought snacks at after my ride told me that there have been people helicoptered out of there after they attempted stuff that was beyond their ability and got injured.

    Hole-In-The-Ground by freighttraininguphill at Garmin Connect - Details

    In spite of my non-daring ride, I did manage to find enough footage for a video.

    As with all my videos, this one is 100% natural sound. This means the sounds of effort are clearly audible on climbs and technical sections, so be forewarned!

    Hole-In-The-Ground MTB ride - YouTube

    I rode the trail in a counterclockwise direction. Here's the start of the singletrack.


    Hole-In-The-Ground trailhead (counterclockwise) by freighttraininguphill, on Flickr

    Views from near the top of Andesite Peak. Normally I try not to stop on climbs, but this view was just too good to pass up!


    view from Andesite Peak by freighttraininguphill, on Flickr

    view from Andesite Peak 2 by freighttraininguphill, on Flickr

    End of the singletrack, right before the dirt road.


    Hole-In-The Ground trailhead (clockwise) by freighttraininguphill, on Flickr

    The following weekend I checked out another trail. This one was much mellower though. It's the Sly Park trail that goes around Jenkinson Lake, near Mormon Emigrant Trail (Iron Mountain Road).

    After pushing my bike up a short unrideable section, I got stung on the back of the leg by a yellowjacket when I sat back down. It must have landed on my shorts or saddle while I was off the bike.

    Twice when I yielded to hikers, they noticed the cameras and commented.

    This loop doesn't have a lot of climbing, so I added some by exploring other legal trails after I was finished.

    Here's video of the Sly Park loop. It's the quieter helmet cam footage this time. The chest-mounted GoPro recorded the entire ride with no sound, so that footage was useless. I formatted the memory card and the camera has worked fine ever since.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlmtc4sZ62E

    Here's a nice steep fire road I found that leads to one of the dams at Mormon Emigrant Trail.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gTwOsqVzRI8

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    MI
    Posts
    2,543
    We camped at a park South West of us and had ample opportunity to mountain bike Saturday and Sunday. These trails are well maintained and have some fun technical sections There is one section of big whoop-de-doos that I had forgotten about--selective memory I guess. They are very 'rideable' but I'm not used to them and my heart managed to lodge itself in my throat during that section!

    I did most of my mountain biking with the kids. The trails at this park have lots of loops so you can easily add sections or take short cuts. There's a nice 1-mile section rated "difficult" that is relatively flat other than the whoop-de-doos that has some log piles and other small technical features. The kids LOVE riding this section--they call it the roller-coasters. We'd ride it over and over and over again. The funny thing is how great these kids are at the technical stuff but they just don't have the strength and endurance to ride other sections that are "easier" but have more climbing.

    I was also able to introduce my 8 year old niece to trail riding. She told me that this was her Second Favorite trip of all time and that mountain biking is her new FAVORITE sport! Mission accomplished!

    Oh, and we all stayed up very late to watch the meteor shower Saturday night. We saw quite a few small ones and one that was absolutely brilliant!
    2005 Giant TCR2
    2012 Trek Superfly Elite AL
    2nd Sport, Pando Fall Challenge 2011 and 3rd Expert Peak2Peak 2011
    2001 Trek 8000 SLR
    Iceman 2010-6th Place AG State Games, 2010-1st Sport, Cry Baby Classic 2010-7th Expert, Blackhawk XTerra Tri 2007-3rd AG

    Occasionally Updated Blog

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    Sounds like fun Limewave!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Denver, CO
    Posts
    575
    Dang, Limewave. Wish I was there. Sounds like fun.

    I'm really intrigued by yours and Catrin's stories of camping and mtb'ing. I love the idea of camping but I'm not so sure that I love the actual camping part.
    LORI
    Pivot Mach 4 / WTB
    Updated Vintage Terry Symmetry / Bontrager InForm RL WSD

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    Quote Originally Posted by Artista View Post
    Dang, Limewave. Wish I was there. Sounds like fun.

    I'm really intrigued by yours and Catrin's stories of camping and mtb'ing. I love the idea of camping but I'm not so sure that I love the actual camping part.
    I seriously that that at my age I would hate it. However, last year I really wanted to attend a couple of events and I couldn't afford a hotel room...but could score free camping. Some good friends loaned me camping equipment so I could try it out, and thankfully the owners of the tent were also camping that weekend so they pitched it and took it down.

    I hate sleeping on the ground, but I have a cot which changes the equation, the camping part is nice and relaxing, I am very glad I started doing it!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Denver, CO
    Posts
    575
    It's not the sleeping on the ground part that bothers me. It's the peeing in my shoes part, being eaten by a bear in my sleep part, and not having any camping gear part that bothers me.

    I assume that most "civilized" camp grounds have outhouses these days so that takes care of the peeing in the shoes thing. We camped a lot when we were kids and never even saw a bear so the risk of being eaten is probably pretty small. I don't know anyone to borrow camping gear from so we'd have to spend a fair amount of money on gear just to take one camping trip to see if we like camping as adults.

    Still, it sounds glorious to get up in the morning, cook breakfast on a camp stove, head out to the trail, come back to camp for lunch, ride again, return to camp for dinner, admire the stars, sleep in the pines, and then rinse and repeat. Maybe we'll try it next summer. Then again, we may just spend a few weekends in a hotel in Fruita instead. We're planning a Fruita mtb trip this fall. I'm soooo excited.
    LORI
    Pivot Mach 4 / WTB
    Updated Vintage Terry Symmetry / Bontrager InForm RL WSD

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    Indianapolis IN
    Posts
    325
    Did around 10 miles Saturday with my son. Discovered other interesting routes at the trail. It was Fun!..

    Love Never Fails
    2012 Giant Revel 1 -MTB
    2013 Giant Defy 5 - RB(Commute/Easy Rides) "Trooper"
    2012 Diamondback Response XE MTB (my son's)

    13' FUJI SUPREME 1.3C (Selle Italia Diva/Easton EC70 SL) "My Girl"

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    western Colorado
    Posts
    442
    I don't get out on my mtb very much, but I did go today with a local hike-n-bike group. We went out to the 18 Road Trails in Fruita, CO. I hadn't been out there in a year or so. I wanted to do the slow easy trails. I'm not a very good mtn biker. I rode with a couple other people and did Vegetarian and Down Uppity. I got a flat (goatheads). Then we rode up the rest of 18 Rd and came down the Kessel Run, that was pretty fun! Now I'm pretty tired, even though I didn't feel like I rode a lot.
    Specialized Ruby
    Gunnar Sport
    Salsa Vaya Ti
    Novara Randonee x2
    Motobecane Fantom CXX (Surly Crosscheck)
    Jamis Dragon

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Bulgaria
    Posts
    270
    Quite muddy autumn ride:
    .
    Info on Sportstracker.
    I was with my husband's bike. It's heavier than mine and with DH tires so it was hard for me to get to the trails: about 15 miles in one direction on the road.
    I also fell because of traction on the mud and now I have bruises on the nose and under the eye. I can mask it with makeup. I broke a little piece of my helmet.

 

 

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