Tuesday, May 26, 2009

The Peruvian Posts: Local Culture

Peru is an interesting place. It is advancing at a break neck pace, with building and expansion visible everywhere. Interestingly, most of the buildings seem to be made with the ability to expand at a moments notice. The first floor is built, and the re bar is left exposed from the walls, so that they can be extended when another floor is needed. In the meantime they provide great lines for drying clothes. Lima is a bustling city of about 8 million and the traffic is quite insane. Aggressive is the key word. Merging is crazy with cars coming from every direction, and vehicles passing on the outside and forcing their way to the front. I can guarantee that a normal Vancouver driver would last about 5 minutes in Lima before his car would be demolished. As we headed farther and farther out into the country side, we began to see more and more of the way life used to be. In particular, when we were in the high alpine on our way back to Cusco we saw many of the indigenous people in there local clothing. Of particular interest was the head gear worn by the women which told the story of the woman’s life. Cusco itself is bustling with many foreign trekkers; this despite the fact that the world is in an economic downturn. In my estimation Peru needs a place on your personal bucket list.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

High School Mountain Bike Provincials: Valemount, BC

Race day dawns clear and cold. Our pre ride of the course yesterday revealed a gem of a course nestled under the snowy peaks. Skiing or biking, your choice! Valemount Senior Secondary is hosting the event and they have built a course especially for the event. Starting on the edge of town it climbs for 300 m with a variation of single and double track, before peaking with a neat little V trap between two trees. Then the downhill begins back into town with some really technical sandy sidehills and some steep descents into big bermed corners. The kids gave after one loop gave it a 8.9. Not bad for a first try. After our pre ride we made a quick trip to Mt. Robson and rode our bikes out to Kinney Lake. Standing beside that mountain makes you feel quite inconsequential. Stay tuned for race day results.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

The Peruvian Posts: Riding around Lima

I am starting to think that this trip might be more tiring than a seven day stage race. Those 0500 hr wake up calls wear on you pretty quickly. Our first major ride here starts out with a 4 hr shuttle to what has to be considered an epic adventure. Where else in the world of mountain biking can you start at an elevation of 3500 m., ride 50 km., and end up on the beach of the Pacific Ocean? The shuttle up on the bus was pretty scary with narrow dirt roads, endless switchbacks and some serious exposure over the edge. We finally started to ride only to hear by radio that the driver had managed to get stuck after he dropped us off. A quick return to the bus and some very muddy pushing got him unstuck and on his way to the pick up zone. This days ride had it all; rocky technical singletrack, flowy smooth paths through grass fields, steep exposed trails with wicked whoop de dos, and then this really neat kilometer wide flood plain with natural features to jump, drop off, and generally have fun. We finished at the beach as the sun set, but it was still warm enough for several of us to jump in and get wet. Our second major ride in Lima had another early start. Wake up was at 0530hr, so we could be on the bus at 0600hr for a long shuttle to a small village. We then had a horse assisted ride to an elevation of 3300m for the start of our ride in the stone forest. Once out of Lima and heading into the Andes we were treated to the scariest drive I have ever experienced. We followed a river up its valley, and then eventually switched back and started up the valley wall. Looking out the rear of the bus showed that the rear wheels were inches away from the edge of the road and from there, it was often several thousand feet to the bottom, and the river. The valley walls were surprisingly lush and after traversing up one side of the valley we switched over to the other side as we crossed a natural dam and then could look back and see our route. Many of us were showing a brave face but I have to say that all the windows were open and at least one of us had a hand out the window hanging on to the roof rack to assist in quick evacuation if necessary. Literally from the time we left Lima until we arrived at our destination, we were on one lane potholed dirt roads and meeting traffic presented interesting challenges. A lot of the approaching traffic were local busses packed with people and somebody had to back up. Pretty scary! Once we reached our bus destination we kitted up and shortly later our horses arrived for the last part of our shuttle. The horse that I picked turned out to be pretty skittish. In fact they eventually had to hobble him so that I could get on, Hmmm, perhaps this is not a good sign. As we headed out, I was the only one needing a handler connected to the horse by a rope. Was she leading the horse up the trail, noooo, she was holding the horse back. Hmmm, now I am really getting worried. Off we go heading up the trail. So what about our bikes? Well, the fit Canadians get carried up by horse, and the bikes get pushed by the local kids. Amazingly, several of them beat us to the top. As you can imagine anytime you involve a mode of transportation that has a functioning brain, the set up is ripe for some interesting stories. By the time we were half way up; my fat ass, the steepness of the trail, and the altitude had beat a little of the spunk out of Bucko. My handler then bailed and let me lose. Immediately, Bucko decided that he wanted to be off the front of the pack. About the same time, one of the horses ahead carrying Chris Winter moved a tad too close to one of the handlers. The handler whacked him on the ass and the race was on. Chris’s horse took off at a gallop, and promptly so did a bunch of the rest of them. Bucko thought this was too good to be true. Having been on a horse for a grand total of about 20 hrs in my life, I think that at first we were cantering as the trail was still pretty steep and very rocky. As soon as it flattened out just a bit, we were into a full gallop. My stirrups were way to short for me (Peruvians are not very tall) and it was all I could do to stay on the horse. I started planning exit strategies, but thankfully the steepness of the trail and its condition brought Bucko back to earth. Chris was not quite so lucky! As he passed the guys ahead of us he was teetering a little to the left. He blew by them, and the horse decided which way he wanted to go. Off he went down a different trail to a building we could see and eventually the horse stopped and Chris walked the horse the rest of the way to the top. Shortly thereafter we reached a really neat natural amphitheatre, and we readied for our ride. It was a short ride out of the amphitheatre to the Stone Forest. It’s kind of interesting rising at this altitude. You start off and feel pretty normal. In about 20 seconds you burn what local oxygen you have at the tissue level and then “bang” you are out of gas. The panting starts and you drop into your granny and spin the rest of the way up. Once up on the plateau we were treated to one of those vistas that just blow your mind. You could immediately see why this area was sacred to the Incan empire as a religious site. We slowly made our way over to some ruins taking lot of pictures, and then the downhill began. If yesterdays downhill scored a 7 on the difficulty scale a good portion of todays was about a 9.5 and the average was a good 8.5. Portions were relatively easy to ride and one probably could have nailed them at about 30 kph. The ringer was that the trail in places was about 2 to 3 ft wide and off the edge was a good thousand feet of vertical before you might hit the ground. Not the sort of place to wash out your front tire. The “fast” sections were interspersed with steep jagged rock gardens that rarely seemed to have the only “good” lines less than 6 inches from the precipitous edge. Add in the fact that you could be ripping along and come around a blind corner and meet locals with a burro train and you quickly get the picture. We actually had one close call as Bob Faulkner nicked a rock with his front wheel and then did a sort of summersault corkscrew as he went off the trail. Being a smart guy and understanding the 1st rule of mountain biking (live to ride another day) he grabbed for the first available piece of vegetation to slow his fall and let the bike go. Thankfully it was on one of the less “muy empinado (very steep)” pieces of trail, but it still took a good twenty minutes to find his bike farther down the slope. By the time I reached the bottom, I was pretty tired and although I hate to admit it I bailed on the last technical section and took the 10 minute road ride back to the bus. A few beverages for recovery and we were on our way back to home base in Lima. Tomorrow we are off the airport (again at 0600 hrs) for our flight to Cusco and our high altitude experience,

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Introduction to Peru

Up at 0800 hrs and out to build our bikes after a quick breaky. Man, the coffee sucks down here, no “real” coffee, only instant. Thankfully a few of our coffee addicts did their research and brought down their own beans and a couple of small bodoms. Definitely a must bring for this trip if it is in your future. After the usual “Hey anyone have an extra brake bolt, I forgot mine?” the bikes were built and we headed out for a quick lunch at a local restaurant. While eating some of the local delicacies we were treated to a mass protest right outside the window as several thousand women expressed their displeasure with the cancellation of a local “milk for kids” program. The streets quickly deteriorated into gridlock and it seemed that we might miss the afternoon ride at a local trail called “Pachacamac”. We quickly learned that our driver could get us through anything. The drive out to the trail head was probably as scary as any of the riding afterwards. It started in what seemed like a barren moonscape. We were actually riding down the floodplain of a small creek that occasionally gets a flash flood and spreads debris across a large area. The riding was a great introduction to Peru and way for us to get our legs. Because of our late start it was dark when we finished, and we still had to negotiate Lima traffic back to the hotel. Early start, late finish; could be a long trip.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Riding Peru with the Boys


Last October I was lucky enough to get an invite to ride in Peru with a pretty exclusive group of hard core riders I have met though my travels on the endurance circuit.
Big Mountain Bike Adventures, http://www.ridebig.com/ a company headed by Chris Winter, was our Vancouver contact and chief organizer. He partners with Peruvian local mountain biker Eduardo “Wayo” Stein to guide our travels in Peru.
At the time, I was pretty stoked about the trip but as departure day drew near, I started to get pretty worried about “keeping up” with this group. The trip is designed to give us a taste of what to expect in Peru with 3 days of riding in and around Lima. Following a transfer to Cusco, we have four further days of riding in the Andes at elevations approaching 15000 ft. How does one keep up with youngish, almost pro riders when that kind of elevation hits home? Suck it up princess, right! The trip would also get us up to Macchu Picchu to see one of the wonders of the world.
The trip is planned as an “all mountain” adventure and so out came my Santa Cruz Nomad http://www.santacruzbicycles.com/ equipped with free ride rims and 2.3 tires. From the trip planner it seems like there will be a fair amount of shuttling to elevation, and then some wicked ups and downs to our finish points. Keep checking back for updates and some wicked pictures.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Maratona Dles Dolomites

For anyone who has ever dreamed of racing bikes in Europe but for whatever reason never made it happen, do yourself a favour, get yourself a plane ticket to Italy and sign up for a Gran Fondo!

Gran Fondo means long distance or great endurance in Italian and my experience was nothing short of amazing. Over the years I have spent lots of time training and travelling in Europe but all of my racing has been contained to the North American continent. After a couple of trips to the Italian dolomites I heard about a race that covered the same roads used in countless Giro D’Italia’s. It was something that immediately appealed to me after years of reading about the epic mountain battles of the Giro in Velonews.

Read the whole story>>>

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Go Green


Go Green
Originally uploaded by Steed Cycles
Cheakamus Challenge 2008 turned out to be a wet and muddy affair. The green team did well with 3 racers in the top 50. Jason Shorter was 5th overall, Tim Graversen was 29th, and John Ramsden was 49th. Over the short course Calindy Ramsden turned in a blistering time to take 6th. After what seemd like an eternity of riding dry trails, the wet conditions and slippery roots snuck up on a large number of riders. The cool temperatures had many riders battling mild hypothermia. Hats off to the race organizers for booking Dusty's at Creekside so we could all warm up as we waited for awards. The mountain bike season is winding down, time to get out the cross bikes!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Day 7 Contemplation at the start

TransRockies 2008 Review
August 17, 2008
Afterthoughts

50 years old today. Ouch! 5 TransRockies completed. Ouch! Ouch! Where to go from here?

I would like to take my hat off to the TR organization this year for stepping up and improving the overall product from a disappointing 2007. The course was significantly harder, perhaps the hardest yet. The food was stellar unlike last year’s European gruel. The camaraderie was again excellent and is what I think separates this race from all the others that I have competed in. The fact that this race occurs on several of its days a significant distance from civilization forces all the riders to get to know each other. The underlying Canadian spirit meshed with a common bond of suffering helps also in setting an atmosphere that I have not seen repeated elsewhere.

I have been asked many times which race is the best, or which race is the hardest. It is extremely hard to pick any one of these race as they all have their pluses and minuses. From my point of view, I guess that I have to say that this race has a special place in my heart as it was the first that I did and I have kept coming back. Next year, I guess, remains to be seen.

Day 7 Finish- One hot day

TransRockies 2008 Day 7
August 16, 2008
Crowsnest Pass to Fernie
78.8 km/2101 climbing


Last day, 80 km., finish significantly lower in elevation than the start. Easy day right? Ha, ha, once again not so. Off the start we were immediately into a climb up the local Blairmore ski hill. Although, I reached the top before Trevor, I was soon put on my heels as the man found some hidden reserve of energy and proceeded to put a severe beating into me for the next 90 minutes. I crashed twice and all I could think of was “eat, drink, eat, drink, eat, drink, oh please let me get my strength and mojo back”. Finally I started to feel better about 2 hours in and we both put the hammer down. On the last climb we smoked past several Masters teams and on the long descent into Fernie several more.

The last 7 km were some sweet technical single track and we were flying. We came up on a few teams so fast that I think that they wondered what had hit them as we blew by. What an exceptional way to finish a race on a high!

As usual Fernie put on a great show for the finish with what seemed like the whole town out cheering on the racers as they cruised down the main drag. A great beer tent within crawling distance of the finish allowed even the most trashed racers to get a beverage.

Our teams support vehicles woes continued on when they found a cracked radiator as they headed out of Blairmore for the finish in Fernie. No Dodge dealership in Blairmore equaled no possible solution until at earliest 3 days hence. What to do? Blairmore is an awesome town! The repair shop headed the crew down the road to the GM dealership which took mercy on the assembled clan and gave them (yes, gave them with no more that a name and phone number) the shops pickup truck as long as they had it back by Monday at 8am. At the finish in Fernie, we were greeted by a beater brown GM pickup but no one was complaining.

The final party turned out to be a great evening. On the way to the party, Trevor and I were sitting in the pickups box as there was not enough room in the cab. Sure enough, despite the short distance that we had to travel, we got spotted by the local RCMP and some discussion, eventually got a ride in the back of the cruiser to the party. By chance, my 50th birthday occurred at midnight and this made for even more reason to celebrate. Tomorrow we get some well deserved rest, and I can attest that I can hardly wait.

Day 6 Shattered


Day 6 Shattered
Originally uploaded by Steed Cycles
TransRockies 2008 Day 6
August 15, 2008
Elkford to Crowsnest Pass
102.4 km/2998 climbing

Well there is now no question about it, this year’s version of the TR is definitely one of the toughest ever. This day revolved around the first climb right off the start. The climb covers 250m in about 4 km as you climb toward the Fording Mine. It is all paved and I had hoped that Trevor and I could hang with the front group because at the top you immediately dive into about 5 km of technical single track. This is then followed by about 20 km of slightly downhill road work into the first aid station. Getting into the single track ahead of the majority of riders allows you to gap out on the majority of the field, and this then allows you to ride conservatively during the middle of the day, saving energy for the last few big climbs.

The cards did not fall our way and when we hit the single track we were behind a number of riders unable to manage the single track riding. The leaders were gone, and we were forced to push the pace over the next 20 to 30 km in an attempt to limit our losses. We soldiered on, viewing some fantastic scenery as we crested Racehorse Pass and flew down the other side surfing over several scree falls that push their way over the trail.

The last aid station led to the beginning of several steep walls that unfortunately were essentially unrideable after 6 days in the saddle and in the 35C heat. This was one of the few times during this week that I questioned the course design. Usually suffering up climbs like this will result in some sweet downhill riding on the other side, but on this occasion what we received was very dangerous quad track that was covered with cross ruts and water eroded ditches. We even found deep mud; personally I was not very impressed with eating cow dung in 35C heat. At the best of times I would call it ridiculous; at this time of the day and week it was particularly annoying. Our thoughts were mostly with the vast majority of riders behind us who would be negotiating this in far worse shape than we were in. We really thought that this part of the day was a recipe for disaster.

The finish required a short run against traffic on Hwy. 3 into a really annoying head wind before we turned under a bridge and headed for home. As usual our support crew was waiting with recovery drinks in hand, but I really think that this time we really scared them with how shattered we were at the finish. We both had the “thousand mile stare” going on. Trevor’s dad was particularly concerned that I was about to keel over. As usual, it only takes about 15 minutes of recovery and everyone looks entirely different.

Trevor’s dad has a reputation for exceptional BarBQ skills on prime Albert beef. He brought along his own BarBQ and our treat later was to reveled in one awesome dinner at the cabin. The results show that there is now less than 5 minutes separating 6th from 11th in our division after 6 days. We are currently in 9th. If we want to finish top ten, I do not think that there can be any sight seeing tomorrow.

Last day is tomorrow. Fernie here we come.