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RR: Rim Trail, Looking Back
My legs hurt. I think it was the Elbert climb on Wednesday. My quads and my calves are cooked. Yesterday, I could barely walk, and today isn't much better. Oddly, I can still ride fine. Maybe a nice easy little run will work the kinks out. I head up to Snowmass. I take the car. I'm in no mood for the climb up Owl Creek Road today. I just want a smooth, fun ride. The Rim Trail starts with a switchback climb on smooth singletrack up from Snowmass Village. The first time I met JD was riding this trail four years ago. He thinks this is a nice singlespeed trail. I'm in my granny. But the climb is not too hard, the switchbacks are not too tight, and I cruise steadily up the climb, feeling the knots in my quads loosen with the effort. I think about riding in the Rockies the past few weeks. Tolstoy's first sentence in Anna Karenina is "All happy families are alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." I think this is certainly true of riding. All happy rides are the same. I spin up the smooth switchbacks, switching in and out of the middle ring. My wife and I met Craig Brossman when we first showed in Durango. Alas, Craig has some job or something silly like that to attend to, and he wasn't available to ride during our time there. He did, however, very generously offer to give us a shuttle up to the top of Hermosa Creek. Turns out we met a couple of riders where we were camped and set up a shuttle with them, so we didn't need to put Craig out of his way (but we appreciate the hospitality anyway, man!) We rode three days in Durango. The first day was a warmup ride, eleven miles or so on the Colorado Trail from just outside Durango. The second was the classic 19-mile downhill on Hermosa, a ride I first did nine years ago on a rigid seven-speed, the bike which is now my singlespeed. They were both beautiful rides, and J. was grinning from ear-to-ear. The switchbacks top out in a grove of aspens, with a marvelous view of the high peaks in the wilderness beyond the ski area. I stop and take a leak. The morning tired is lifting. I feel good. The riding in Durango was good. But **** happens. J. came down with a cold, nothing too bad, but enough to prevent her from riding. Being the sensitive and supportive guy I am, I left her alone in camp and went for a ride. This ride was supposed to be the warmup for doing Monarch Crest with MattB. Monarch Crest never happened, and I found myself driving up for the warmup ride the high country alone. Damn. The Rim Trail weaves through the Aspens along the top of the ridge above Snowmass. The well-worn Paragon has seen some hard riding, but is still performing well. I wag my hips through the twisty singletrack, smiling. Molas Pass. The Colorado Trail from Molas Pass starts at just shy of eleven thousand feet and the singletrack climbs gradually from there, almost all of it in the tundra above treeline. What to say about the Molas Pass ride? Imagine you are spending the evening with the most beautiful girl in the world, whoever that might be for you. For me, maybe Scarlett Johansson. You dine on the balcony, escargot to start, and then steak frites and asparagus with a perfect Hollandaise sauce. The aged tenderloin is perfect. You share a bottle of Moet, maybe two. She laughs at all your jokes. After the meal, over espresso, she moves behind your chair, strokes your neck. She tells you she has a special surprise for you. She steps inside, and you lean back and close your eyes and think that maybe you have never been so happy as you are right this moment. Then she gives you a savage beating with a lead pipe. I got a late start on Molas, which is a rare thing for me. I am a fanatic about doing above-treeline stuff in the early morning, before the thunderstorms build. The weather in the high country is totally unpredictable, yet utterly monotonous. Once the clouds build, there's no way to tell what is going to happen or when, but if you're out early, it's blue sky all the way. But I felt good. No, I felt great. I was climbing in the middle ring, smooth, out of the saddle over short steep sections. The view was spectacular, high peaks on all sides. The wildflowers were so thick that the trail was nearly impossible to follow through the chest-high thickets of purple and yellow and red. The trail followed a long traverse through the high valley, climbing gently and crossing small streams along the way. I was euphoric in the thin air. I passed some joggers coming down the trail, three very buff women, and then climbed through a group of hikers. "At least you have the decency to be breathing hard," said one of the hikers. "Love those Durango chicks," I replied, and he smiled and patted me on the shoulder as I labored past. I rode in about seven and a half miles, far past the hikers. I was all by myself. I felt like I could ride all day. It was amazing, intoxicating. Then, like a bolt from the blue, I bonked. My head spun and my vision went fuzzy and I could suddenly barely keep the bike up. I had forgotten the cardinal rule: eat before you're hungry, drink before you're thirsty. I had eaten nothing the whole ride. I had a pack full of power bars and Gu and fantastic Nambe Pueblo beef jerky we had bought from a nice young man with a 9mm on the roadside in New Mexico. I was flush with food. I think it was part altitude and part calories and part three days of hard riding, but whatever it was, I stumbled off the bike and began eating. My balance was gone, my energy was gone, and I could tell my judgement was completely shot. I downed a couple of packs of Gu, an Odwalla Bar, and a couple of handsful of jerky. But you know how it is when you bonk, you're just never the same, even with calories. It was time to turn around. I picked up the bike and pushed it forward along the trail, but somehow I managed to slam my knee hard into one of the pedals. My head went light again in a rush of pain and fear and nausea, and I nearly fell over and started bawling. I was in trouble. But I got it together and started to push my bike along the trail. Just then, a couple of German guys ride by, packing full panniers. Good God. I mounted the bike and wobbled back the way I came. The ride out was a death march. But I took it slow and easy, ate more, and made my way gradually down. I walked the bike a whole lot. I begin the descent on the Rim Trail. The singletrack is impossibly buff, and I rail it, grinning. CC Some pictures from Molas: http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00020.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00024.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00027.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00034.jpg |
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#2
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On 6 Aug 2005 21:13:02 -0700, "Corvus Corvax"
wrote: My legs hurt. I think it was the Elbert climb on Wednesday. My quads and my calves are cooked. Yesterday, I could barely walk, and today isn't much better. Oddly, I can still ride fine. Maybe a nice easy little run will work the kinks out. I head up to Snowmass. I take the car. I'm in no mood for the climb up Owl Creek Road today. I just want a smooth, fun ride. The Rim Trail starts with a switchback climb on smooth singletrack up from Snowmass Village. The first time I met JD was riding this trail four years ago. He thinks this is a nice singlespeed trail. I'm in my granny. But the climb is not too hard, the switchbacks are not too tight, and I cruise steadily up the climb, feeling the knots in my quads loosen with the effort. I think about riding in the Rockies the past few weeks. Tolstoy's first sentence in Anna Karenina is "All happy families are alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." I think this is certainly true of riding. All happy rides are the same. I spin up the smooth switchbacks, switching in and out of the middle ring. My wife and I met Craig Brossman when we first showed in Durango. Alas, Craig has some job or something silly like that to attend to, and he wasn't available to ride during our time there. He did, however, very generously offer to give us a shuttle up to the top of Hermosa Creek. Turns out we met a couple of riders where we were camped and set up a shuttle with them, so we didn't need to put Craig out of his way (but we appreciate the hospitality anyway, man!) We rode three days in Durango. The first day was a warmup ride, eleven miles or so on the Colorado Trail from just outside Durango. The second was the classic 19-mile downhill on Hermosa, a ride I first did nine years ago on a rigid seven-speed, the bike which is now my singlespeed. They were both beautiful rides, and J. was grinning from ear-to-ear. The switchbacks top out in a grove of aspens, with a marvelous view of the high peaks in the wilderness beyond the ski area. I stop and take a leak. The morning tired is lifting. I feel good. The riding in Durango was good. But **** happens. J. came down with a cold, nothing too bad, but enough to prevent her from riding. Being the sensitive and supportive guy I am, I left her alone in camp and went for a ride. This ride was supposed to be the warmup for doing Monarch Crest with MattB. Monarch Crest never happened, and I found myself driving up for the warmup ride the high country alone. Damn. The Rim Trail weaves through the Aspens along the top of the ridge above Snowmass. The well-worn Paragon has seen some hard riding, but is still performing well. I wag my hips through the twisty singletrack, smiling. Molas Pass. The Colorado Trail from Molas Pass starts at just shy of eleven thousand feet and the singletrack climbs gradually from there, almost all of it in the tundra above treeline. What to say about the Molas Pass ride? Imagine you are spending the evening with the most beautiful girl in the world, whoever that might be for you. For me, maybe Scarlett Johansson. You dine on the balcony, escargot to start, and then steak frites and asparagus with a perfect Hollandaise sauce. The aged tenderloin is perfect. You share a bottle of Moet, maybe two. She laughs at all your jokes. After the meal, over espresso, she moves behind your chair, strokes your neck. She tells you she has a special surprise for you. She steps inside, and you lean back and close your eyes and think that maybe you have never been so happy as you are right this moment. Then she gives you a savage beating with a lead pipe. I got a late start on Molas, which is a rare thing for me. I am a fanatic about doing above-treeline stuff in the early morning, before the thunderstorms build. The weather in the high country is totally unpredictable, yet utterly monotonous. Once the clouds build, there's no way to tell what is going to happen or when, but if you're out early, it's blue sky all the way. But I felt good. No, I felt great. I was climbing in the middle ring, smooth, out of the saddle over short steep sections. The view was spectacular, high peaks on all sides. The wildflowers were so thick that the trail was nearly impossible to follow through the chest-high thickets of purple and yellow and red. The trail followed a long traverse through the high valley, climbing gently and crossing small streams along the way. I was euphoric in the thin air. I passed some joggers coming down the trail, three very buff women, and then climbed through a group of hikers. "At least you have the decency to be breathing hard," said one of the hikers. "Love those Durango chicks," I replied, and he smiled and patted me on the shoulder as I labored past. I rode in about seven and a half miles, far past the hikers. I was all by myself. I felt like I could ride all day. It was amazing, intoxicating. Then, like a bolt from the blue, I bonked. My head spun and my vision went fuzzy and I could suddenly barely keep the bike up. I had forgotten the cardinal rule: eat before you're hungry, drink before you're thirsty. I had eaten nothing the whole ride. I had a pack full of power bars and Gu and fantastic Nambe Pueblo beef jerky we had bought from a nice young man with a 9mm on the roadside in New Mexico. I was flush with food. I think it was part altitude and part calories and part three days of hard riding, but whatever it was, I stumbled off the bike and began eating. My balance was gone, my energy was gone, and I could tell my judgement was completely shot. I downed a couple of packs of Gu, an Odwalla Bar, and a couple of handsful of jerky. But you know how it is when you bonk, you're just never the same, even with calories. It was time to turn around. I picked up the bike and pushed it forward along the trail, but somehow I managed to slam my knee hard into one of the pedals. My head went light again in a rush of pain and fear and nausea, and I nearly fell over and started bawling. I was in trouble. But I got it together and started to push my bike along the trail. Just then, a couple of German guys ride by, packing full panniers. Good God. I mounted the bike and wobbled back the way I came. The ride out was a death march. But I took it slow and easy, ate more, and made my way gradually down. I walked the bike a whole lot. I begin the descent on the Rim Trail. The singletrack is impossibly buff, and I rail it, grinning. CC Some pictures from Molas: http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00020.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00024.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00027.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00034.jpg DSC00034.jpg is schweeet! Nice RR Peace, Bill The First law, Inertia: Unless acted upon by an outside force, a body at rest tends to stay at rest, and a body in motion tends to stay in motion. Sir Isaac Newton |
#3
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Corvus Corvax wrote:
Then she gives you a savage beating with a lead pipe. I love reading your posts. (I'm getting an "rloadblock.jpg" for all those links above.) gabrielle |
#4
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Corvus Corvax wrote:
Some pictures from Molas: http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00020.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00024.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00027.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00034.jpg Sweet RR and pix. I'll be back up there right after Ideehooooooo. Gary |
#5
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Corvus Corvax wrote:
Then, like a bolt from the blue, I bonked. My head spun and my vision went fuzzy and I could suddenly barely keep the bike up. I had forgotten the cardinal rule: eat before you're hungry, drink before you're thirsty. I had eaten nothing the whole ride. Okay, now THAT's bonking. I bonked on my ride last weekend (it was a road ride), but I merely felt this wave of fatigue hit me. I've been unable to ride as much as I want, and I too had not eaten during (or before) the ride. I had to ride back down on fumes/fat. I think it's actually good to bonk mildly like I did - your body merely runs on fat, which is very good for most of us. But I've also hit walls like you did, and that can't be good for you. -- -- Lynn Wallace http://www.xmission.com/~lawall Conservative dictionary: Judicial Activist: n. A judge who tends to rule against your wishes. |
#6
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Corvus Corvax wrote:
snippedthe bike a whole lot. I begin the descent on the Rim Trail. The singletrack is impossibly buff, and I rail it, grinning. CC Some pictures from Molas: http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00020.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00024.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00027.jpg http://www.angelfire.com/ab6/corvusc...s/DSC00034.jpg Great country, I've backpacked down there, and Mr. Adventure did 6 weeks of geology field camp in that area. Thanks for the tale. penny |
#7
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gabrielle wrote: (I'm getting an "rloadblock.jpg" for all those links above.) Are you reading with Google? Angelfire seems to block links referred by Google. Try cutting and pasting the URL in your browser. CC |
#8
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Raptor wrote: I think it's actually good to bonk mildly like I did - your body merely runs on fat, which is very good for most of us. But I've also hit walls like you did, and that can't be good for you. Altitude can do funny things. A "mild" bonk at 12,000 feet can turn into a major problem very rapidly. I prefer not to bonk at all... CC |
#9
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Corvus Corvax wrote:
Are you reading with Google? guilty as charged, yerhonner. Angelfire seems to block links referred by Google. Try cutting and pasting the URL in your browser. Duh, thanks! Those are gorgeous shots. gabrielle |
#10
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Corvus Corvax Wrote: Raptor wrote: I think it's actually good to bonk mildly like I did - your body merely runs on fat, which is very good for most of us. But I've also hit walls like you did, and that can't be good for you. Altitude can do funny things. A "mild" bonk at 12,000 feet can turn into a major problem very rapidly. I prefer not to bonk at all... CC That was an awesome RR... Pics are amazing!!! I bonked on our Saturday ride... but if it makes you feel any better... It was flat... 90deg F and about 85% humidity... If I had my choice of places to suffer I think I would pick out that way! -- Jimbo(san) |
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