Monday, 14 September 2009

Tioga Pass and Road Biking in Mammoth

Well it’s been a wee while since I last had a post on here. I have just been chilling. Hitting the beach a few times and relaxing after a busy first half of the year focused around racing on two wheels.

Last weekend I headed up to Mammoth, this time with Derek which meant that we had road bikes in tow, not the usual mountain bikes. Anyway we left early and by the time 1pm rolled by we were zooming down the 395 from June Lake towards Tioga Pass. This is the pass you must cross to get to the Eastern Entrance of Yosemite National Park. The climb started on the valley floor at about 7000ft and headed up too just under 10000ft. 9945ft to be exact. We were guttered. Anyway it hurt. The altitude was felt as was the steepness. It was however the most beautiful place I have ever ridden a road bike. Incredible passing by huge avalanche slopes and lovely lakes with huge valleys and peaks all around. The pictures though pretty good do not show the scope of this country side. It was epic.

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Even more epic was the downhill. What took us 1.5hrs to chug up was dealt to in about 15-20 mins of downhill. Man Derek was just ahead of me, we were tucked. He shook his head and I looked at the speedo. Yep. 60.3mph. Dam. Insane. 100 clicks in metric terms. It was awesome though we got out of the tuck position both from excitement and from self preservation and never went faster. We were catching up to traffic real fast. Anyway it was exhilarating. I still cannot believe how stable those bikes are. So light but at speed that carbon is just so stiff.

The rest of this ride was tough. Derek started to drag the anchor, but man he did so well coming out of some surgery not a month before. My legs were wrecked too especially due to the head winds and rolling hills past Grant, Silver and June lakes. The Jacuzzi helped out immeasurably that evening however.

That night we were met by Dave, Kendra and Kerri who had come to spend the weekend up in Mammoth also. They did some great hiking. The two nights we had there were spent playing Apples to Apples. This is the best board game out. Add a bit of booze and it means you have the grumpy neighbor knocking on our door at 10pm saying that she was angry from the night before by all the noise of people having fun the night before. Man. We should have offered her earplugs. She did live in a condo next to another one that is rented out to holidaymakers coming to Mammoth to have FUN.

Another ride Derek and I did was also awesome. It consisted of a round trip down to the Devils Postpile. Awesome extruded hexagonal lava outcrops are the main attraction here. I visited this site the year before. Riding down there was awesome though. Mammoth really is a sweet spot. From Hiking, rock climbing, cross country mountain biking and downhill and also sweet road riding. And that’s just in summer.

Before we hit the long drive home through the desert we visited Mono Lake. What a weird place. 10% salt in that lake. So it’s real salty due to evaporation being the only way the lake loses its water. Also there are real weird limestone formations call Tufa. They grow under the water and when the level of the lake drops they are visible sticking up like little spires round the shoreline. The pics will give you a better idea of what I am talking about.

Yesterday I just did a 100 mile road ride with Derek aswell as Lee and Eric. Their first big big ride. At lunch in Big Bear after 2500m of climbing Eric told us it was his birthday. Pretty sweet doing your first century on your birthday if you ask me.

Anyway this is my last post before I head back to NZ to get a new working VISA and catch-up with all the peps. This time I will take a bike back home so I can remember what riding in mud, on roots and not in 35 degrees is like. The riding is so different to here which is good. Variety is the spice of life after all. After that there is a variety of shenanigans planned so keep posted to see how it goes. I have lots to look forward too and can’t wait.

So till my next post from the road take care,

Kurt

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