300k and Artist’s Point

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Homer

This seemed like the perfect first 300k: similar venue to my first 200k in Whatcom County in Northwest WA state, perfect 70 degree weather, a challenging 5000′ climb to Artist’s Point between Mt. Baker and Mt. Shuksan, and mostly flat after the first 100k.  Sounds doable, and even fun.  I hadn’t done a longer ride (more than the 13-mile commute home) since a 40-miler on the 1st of June.  I rode a total of 80 miles the week before in 4 days of commuting, so I was half-way there, but I was still feeling a bit under-prepared.  It didn’t help my mental state when the ride host, Dan Turner, said that this was a “harder 300k”.  Hmmm.  Still, I had a goal of doing a 300k this year, and this looked to be the best shot.

I took some randoly advice and drove up to Bellingham the night before and camped out in his yard.  Didn’t sleep much, though – kept drifting in and out of sleep in anticipation.

At 6:00am, I got up and had some coffee, donuts, and eggs that Dan and his wife prepared for the riders.  I loaded up on Mojo bars and jerky, and filled my bottles, and we promptly set out at 7am.  The first 20-30 miles went fast, and I rode with the main lump of riders at a pace of about 20mph.  It was fast, but I felt good, and it was nice and easy holding in the peloton.

Into the Eastern Sunrise

This was a pretty serious bunch of Randonneurs.  Of the ~20 riders that started, many of them were veterans of years of 1200k’s.  There were 2 or 3 of us that were also first time 300k’ers, with one gal, Mandy, who had just joined RUSA and SIR the night before, and was doing her first rando event.

As we neared the mountains and got into the first bit of the foothills, the riders started spreading out, and from that point to the top, I never rode with more than one person for short stretches.

Into the Hills

The bike was riding well, and everything felt spot on.  Things I was slightly concerned about going into this ride included:

  • Seat Comfort – I had put on the Selle Anatomica the week before the ride as it was great on my last 200k
  • Shoes/pedals – I had not put more than 20 miles on my new Sidi Spiders
  • Tires – would the well used Cypres go the distance?
  • Brakes – how well would the Paul Racers stop on the long descent down from Artist’s Point?
  • Food/Water intake – could I deal with a 17-hour day in the saddle?

I had checked some of the times that SIR riders with similar 200k times had done on earlier 300k’s to give myself an idea on how I should expect to do.  They seemed to vary from 17-19 hours, so I of course figured I would shoot for 17.  This would bring me into home base around midnight.  I was also motivated by the promise of burgers and beer, and midnight seemed a bit late, but not too late for dinner 🙂  I really thought that getting up the big climb quickly would keep me in the time, and this proved mostly true.

Climbing into Beauty

 

Final Few Switchbacks

After some 30 miles of climbing that turned knarly for the last 10 miles, I made it to the top, and some seriously great views.  The clouds were starting to part, and the peaks were showing through.  Mt. Baker is infamously invisible in clouds, and in normal fashion, I only saw glimpses of it on the way up and at the top.  Shuksan was a bit more cooperative.

At the Top

I had a quick bite and refilled the bottles, and felt like I should really high-tail it outta there ASAP.  I still had a 200k (~130 miles) left.  So far so good.  Now came the fun part!  I love descending, and some racer boyz had ripped past me on the way up.  As I left the parking area, they started their descent in front of me, so I latched onto one of them and enjoyed the ride down.  All I can say is that at some point we passed 2 cars!

At the bottom, I had my first real trial of the ride.  As I shifted into the big chainring, my chain stuck to the teeth and came around to pop the outer plate off my front derailleur.  I had been riding quickly with a couple fellows, and stopped to see if I could fix it.  I quickly surmised that I was now riding a 1×9, so I shifted it into the big-ring, made sure the plate was bent in enough to stay out of the crank/shoe path, and proceeded into the berry fields around Sumas near the Canadian border.

Berries for 40 Miles

I hooked back up with a group of 4 other randos and we rode the next 20 miles together in a tight peloton making great speed.  This was the most fun part of the ride for me as we chatted and the miles flew by.  One of the fellows had “questionable” shorts, perhaps a bit past their prime wear – a little too many miles on these guys – imagine the problem the yoga pants company had recently and you’ll catch the drift, so as long as I wasn’t directly behind him, things were great 🙂  The control stops were really nice, as well.  We were picking up 75-cent kid’s cones, and enjoying the short rests.

Ice Cream!

After the Lynden control, I had my second setback.  My knees were starting to get a bit sore, and I found that I could no longer stand up to climb without major pain in my left knee.  It felt like it was swelling a bit, so I eased off the back of the pack, and rode a bit.  I stopped on the side of the road to stretch out a bit, but this didn’t do much.  I started thinking about the logistics of calling my wife and waiting the 3 hours for her to come up and pick me up near the border.  Hmmmm – if I can just make it to Peace Arch park and get some Advil – yeah that’s what I’ll do.  I had already gone just over 200k, and had about 50 miles left.  I walked up a few of the steeper hills, and eventually found myself rolling into Blaine, WA.  I stopped at a gas station and bought a few packs of ibuprofen and quickly took a pair.  After weaving my way through the border town and reaching the coast, my legs started feeling better.  I also realized I could make good headway by pulling up with my left pedal stroke, and doing the normal push with my right.

“Pain-da”

This part of the country was interesting enough to keep my spirits up, with great stretches of closed roadway and wide open fields, and distant views of the mountains I had been in at the start of the day.  After getting past the coastal stretch of the ride, and starting to head back towards Bellingham, I was sure I could finish – perhaps even within my time goal.  At one point, I found one of the gents from the earlier group waiting on the side of the road with a binding bottom bracket.  He was out, and I felt really bad as he had put in over 250k at that point.  He assured me he had a ride coming, and a short while later, I came up on another guy who was having some leg cramping.  We ended up riding together on and off for the rest of the way back.  At the penultimate control, I had to pick up more Advil, but having only 15 miles left, I was starting to ride on the endorphins.

Rollin’ Towards 300k

I rolled into the final control, and the end of the ride right at 11pm.  All the folks I had ridden with earlier had arrived shortly before, so we all ate and chatted about the great day.  I took a quick shower and climbed in my tent for some needed rest.

Verdict:  I can finish a 300k bike ride, and still feel good enough to enjoy a hot dog and beer.  I can climb 5000+ feet and not keel over!  The Selle Anatomica and Sidi shoes passed with flying colors:  The only sore parts of me were my knees.  No flats or braking issues.  I never bonked, so I managed my food/water intake just fine.  Hmmm – this pushing the limits stuff is getting addictive.  It certainly helps when the ride has tons of natural beauty, and the weather is fair!

 

A sad day

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I frequently reference and participate in an online email list group called the RBW Owners Bunch.  Yesterday was a sad day on the list as one of the folks in our little community was killed by a hit and run driver on his commute.  His name was Seth Vidal, and although I never met him in person, I had enjoyed his well thought out online opinions and responses with the group.  There have been others on the list over the past few years that shared losses, but this was the first time an active member died in a way that was personal to the biking community.  For me, it was a bit of a double loss in that I found out about his contribution to the open source community:  He authored the “yum” linux tool that I have used at work on a regular basis for years.

Seth was a good soul in the world.  One of the posts he had started in 2012 was as follows:

I’ve been specing out a potential bicycle build and I’m trying to see
what parts I can get from places which have pretty reasonable working
conditions and rights of workers – especially something resembling a
living wage, etc.

In a later response, he added:

My major concern is that I’m getting products from places where they
do not undervalue the importance of their workforce.

Seth cared about our well-being.  What a great guy!

There were over a hundred responses on multiple threads when the news broke, and there was universal mourning.  One of the saddest experiences I had was looking at his online Flickr photo sets.  I went through his “favorites” and found most of the active members (including a couple of my photos) represented.  It really struck me how much an online community can touch so many diverse folks across state and even national lines.  When people come together via a shared love of a hobby/pastime, it can be quite powerful.  I feel like a friend has passed away.

Seth. We will miss you, my friend…

 

Camping With Bikes

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Seattle vs. Portland Riv Rumblers

Last month, I met up with some fellow north-westerners for a couple mountain rides between Seattle and Portland.  The goal was a nice weekend with a potential shot at going over Babyshoe Pass early in the season.  If nothing else, we would see some snow and avoid the bugs that start swarming a bit later in the summer.  The 2-hour drive south reminded me why I live here.  Lots of wilderness very close to home.  I was driving to a rendezvous between 3 active volcanoes in the Cascades mountain range.  We would be closest to Mt. Adams with possible views from the ride, but Rainier and St. Helens were nearby, as well.  As I got close to Randle, WA, I lost all cell service – this was a signal that vacation time was ON!

North Fork Campground - Randle, WA

North Fork Campground – Randle, WA

We had reserved a group site at the North Fork Campground 12 miles out of Randle.  I arrived around the same time as Charlie (from Eatonville), and we started setting up in the reserved spot, but when the rest of the group showed up (Andy, Chris, and Aaron from Portland), we explored a few other sites, and chose one that was right next to the river.

Campin’ by the River

Not too many people were camping the weekend after Memorial Day.  With 4 tents and 1 hammock, we were spread out nicely.  Our camp could normally accommodate 20 tents!

Chris and Aaron’s Tents

The setting was beautiful Northwest – lush, green, and budding with spring.  Ferns, moss, and huge evergreens all around us.  It had rained quite a bit before the trip, but we were into a short spell of dry weather.

Full Camp?

After we set up camp, we set off on the first ride.  We chose FS 22 heading east, and it was a good immediate climb on gravel.

Day 1 Ride

We rode up leisurely as we all got to know each other.  A fair amount of time was spent off the bike taking in the scenery, and just geeking out on our setups. All but one bike was by Rivendell.  There were 2 A. Homer Hilsens ridden by Andy and Chris, a Hillborne ridden by Aaron, and Charlie’s lone Surly Long Haul Trucker.

Bikes of Day 1

I took the Hunqapillar on this ride.  Since it was an unofficial “Rivendell ride”, I had both my A. Homer Hilsen, and the Hunqa packed.  I wanted to see how they both fared on the rougher mountain gravel roads.  I had changed out the Nomad tires for my 50mm Duremes with their more aggressive tread and larger volume.  We didn’t get into much nasty trail, but the couple areas of “rough stuff” we hit made me appreciate the mammoth bike’s capacity as a real mountain bike.  It rode nicely over everything I threw at it, and it brought back memories of my early ’90s rigid Stumpjumper Pro.  The Albatross bars and front V-Brakes proved to be great on the rough trail.

First Day’s Apex

We took a side trail up an overgrown trail to a nice meadow with a great view back down the valley we had just climbed.  We rested for a bit, and had a snack before making the quick descent down to camp.  On the way down, we took another side trail down to the river.  This one was an older, overgrown jeep track and made for some fun riding over roots and blow-down.

Trail Riding on Day 1

Singletrackin’

After the nice descent back to camp, the Portland crew set about making a superb dinner of pasta and white sauce with morels and a great salad, while I walked around soaking up the camping atmosphere and helping Andy get a fire started.  His chopping knife was a trip!  We used that and a hatchet to make up the kindling.  Some of the wood was a bit wet, so it was a smokey end to the day.

Woodsman

Portland Crew Dinner

After a late night around the fire, and a great sleep by the roaring river, I felt refreshed as ever.  I set about making breakfast and coffee for the campers, and got most of my stuff packed up for a quick getaway after our day-2 ride.

Chilaquiles, anyone?

Another healthy meal

Charlie had to get home, so we bid him well, and took our group photos.  Ready for the next adventure, we set off on FS 23 with a destination of getting close to Babyshoe Pass and some scenic views of Mt. Adams.  Today, it was the Hilsen’s turn at gravel.  This bike was set up with standard rando gear – trod with Gran Bois Cypres tires, and carrying 2 cameras, rain coat and food in a Boxy Rando bag.  We hit the mountains on 3 AHHs and a Sam Hilborne.

Joy Riding!

Today’s ride was a bit more ambitious.  If all went according to plan, we would double the distance and elevation of the prior day with around 40 miles and 5000 ft of climbing.

Wing formation

With a bit more shade, the day was perfection for a long ride.  Amazing views around every corner helped to keep everyone jazzed.  Destination snow or Babyshoe.  Most likely snow, but who could tell?

Destination? Who cares…

After a while the road turned to gravel, and we started climbing in earnest.  We finally hit snow within a mile of our destination at around 4300′ elevation.

End of the dry road

Andy noticed that there should be a fork within a quarter mile, and after a short committee decision where we invoked the “Manny Principle”*, we forged ahead to the adventure that awaited us all!  It ended up looking something like this:

Pushin’ on…

And this:

More pushin’…

Until we found a meadow, the fork, and paved road again.

Meadow

Fork

It was a short respite as we turned around heading NW on the north slope that didn’t seem to want to start declining too soon.  We ended up pushing/straddling our new snow bikes for a mile or so before we ended up back in the mostly snow-free but still very wet next phase of our ride.  During the snow phase, it was great fun to see how far you could bike in the tire tracks that had been lain some unknown time prior to our arrival.  Most of the time, you could sit on the saddle and paddle along with your feet on the raised snow, but if you pedaled, your feet sunk into the banks.  I had a successful ride through one of the snow fields, and my confidence was raised enough to try to ride the next one (larger and deeper unbeknown to me), so I got some speed up for the attempt.  As I started across it, things went sideways – my front tire started out riding up on the old tire tracks, but quickly sunk in.  Once that started, it was only a few seconds before it swallowed the wheel enough to catapult me over the bars in a spectacular (to the watching jays) endo, spilling me and my entire bag’s worth of food and camera gear into the snow.  Nothing hurt in a snow landing, and the bike checked out.  After a hasty re-packing and snow dusting, I was back on my way.

Snow cowboys!

After Andy’s toes had thoroughly gone numb in his sandals, the road finally turned back to gravel, but it was not much of a road at that.  This was definitely less-traveled with snow melt ruts, random sharp fist-sized stones, and lots of overgrowth to keep you busy.

Descending

Recalling the joys of descending on a mountain bike, I quickly rode far past my current bike tire’s capacity hitting speeds around 30mph, and suddenly felt my rear tire go limp.  Yes – a pinch flat will kill a descent faster than a broken regulator.

Testing the kit in the wild

After the break, we got back to the art of the fast mountain ride, and had a great time with over 5 miles of glorious downhill under-biking.  I had no idea a rando bike with skinny 31mm tires could handle terrain I usually ride on a front suspension MTB.  Still, the Hunqapillar may have been a better choice for day 2.  I had pushed, and perhaps found the limits of the AHH.  With no real harm done, at that.

It’s like skiing in the summer!

Back on the pavement, I appreciated the final minutes of the ride with new friends.  When we got back to camp, we all congratulated each other on an excellent adventure, and vowed to come back in years to come.  I am hoping that this was the first of many trips to the volcanoes.  With the beauty of the rides, and the amazing lack of population and drivers, it’s a treasure close to home.

Snow tires!

The path on Day 2

The path on Day 2

* Manny Principle – according to Smitty:

“Mere uncertainty and tardy-ness are not sufficient reasons to abandon an adventure. Unless danger is imminent, the adventure must move forward.”

More Diamonds on an Albatross

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I did another diamond (harlequin) tape wrap on my Hunqapillar with Albatross bars.  I’m liking the gray and maroon cotton Newbaums tape as a match for the bike.  I will eventually put clear shellac and darken the gray tape a bit, but for now, I’m enjoying the raw cotton feel.  Here are some pics from the process:

Half-done

Cat’s view

With Dog

6 per side

 

Grip with Cork Underneath

Forward Grip Curves

 

 

 

 

Soften the Rivet

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Rivet Pearl

Disclaimer – you will possibly ruin your saddle if you try this, and there is no way that any manufacturer will recommend this.  However, if you are planning on selling/trading/or tossing a new leather saddle that isn’t working for you, this may be worth trying…

Further information from the manufacturer (Rivet): Using this procedure will certainly invalidate the 365-day warranty. It falls square into the “altering” the saddle category, so only do this as a very last resort! See this page for proper care of this saddle.

Have a saddle that didn’t quite break in fast enough, or ever?  Disclaimer 2: this process will probably half the life of a saddle.  But…if half the life of the saddle brings you discomfort, who cares.  Especially on a leather saddle which probably has a lifespan of several decades.  If I get 10 years from a comfortable saddle, that is far better than 20 years with only the 2nd half being bearable, right?

Here’s what you do (the following process is a summary of Lon Haldeman’s famous Brooks Break-in method):

  1. Soak the saddle in warm (100 degree ish) water for 5-10 minutes
  2. Dry it off quickly
  3. While the saddle is still warm, slather it with mink oil (or proofide, or Obenaufs)
  4. Put it on your bike and go for a ride – about 5-10 minutes – preferably with old shorts
  5. Put more mink oil on it
  6. Walk away…

The next day, if the saddle is still stiff, repeat the above procedure.  If it is more pliable, go for a longer ride and see how it feels.

Soaked

The back story on this particular saddle isn’t that interesting.  I have about 500 miles of commuting on it, and while the shape is superb, the spot where my sitz bonz sat was hard as a rock, and didn’t seem to be getting any better.  I could ride it with padded shorts for short distances, but no padz, no wayz!

I was ready to throw in the towel on this saddle, but decided that I had spent the money, and wasn’t quite ready to give up.  Now this saddle is not a pure leather variety like a classic Brooks B17 or Pro, but has a waterproof coating layer on top, so I wasn’t so sure I wouldn’t be wrecking it.  Ahhh, risk – gotta love the adrenaline.  I’ve never done the Lon Haldeman treatment on a Brooks, but I did butcher one not long ago, and that turned out OK…

Some slight wrinkling

After the treatment, I observed a bit of a change to the top layer.  It seemed to show the underlying layers a bit more, and even exposed the frame around the side rivets.  There was no major issue around edge separation, so the saddle is still intact and solid.  The shape also remained consistent.  The leather around the right sitz area was definitely harder than the rest of the saddle, and I massaged it (with a rubber mallet, even) more than the rest of the saddle to get it to relax.  It seems to have done the trick.  Lotz of mink oil helps…

Honey, your frame is showing

I noticed on the following day’s ride that I could actually feel the steel frame through the saddle on the right side.  I scanned the saddle from above and it appeared to be ever so slightly askew – like the frame was slightly oriented to the right side.  I did what any sensible man would do and turned the saddle slightly to the right to move the trouble spot back out of the sitz area.  Voila!!!  Perfection!

The next day – 20+ miles with no padded shorts and the saddle disappeared underneath me.  Now thatz what I’m talkin’ bout!

A new saddle!