Hurtin’ 4 Vert – 2

Ah yes, Day 2.  Time for the real Hurtin’ to begin.  Now, right off I gotta set the record straight.  If you check out Hurtin’ for Vert 2012 – Part 2 of 4 over at PinkBike, you’ll see that Tyler is moaning about "2.5 hour climbs", and "what felt like a few hours, straight up."

Not precisely accurate.  Yes, it’s a bugger of a climb to start off with.  2.5 km, maybe 300m (tha’s about a mile and a half, and 1000′ or so).  Takes a good 45 minutes to an hour.  Then there’s a nice section of alpine singletrack, and then another 20 minutes of mixed pedalling and hiking.  It’s nowhere near as gnarly as Tyler remembers.  Probably the fact that we took a shitload of pictures on this section and wasted a good couple of hours in doing so is skewing his remembrance of the situation. 

Now…back to our story.  When we last left our intrepid band, they were drunkely falling into beds all over the property.  Bikes, vans, and smelly dudes everywhere.

Little White involves a huge apporach, so we took our time over a big breakfast and hit the road around 10.  A couple of hours later, and we have firmly arrived in the BC backcountry. Here’s Richie showing us his Kamloops roots.

Yes, that first climb sucks.  Best to just get it over with.  One motion…like a band-aid.

It doesn’t take long.  Good thing we had some mild weather.   In retrospect, this was to be one of the coolest 4 days of the summer.  After this, there was virtually no moisture anywhere in Southern BC until October.

Not much pain involved with this part of the ride…

Here’s a good reason why it took so long to get to the top.  Nice image (you can see Okanagan Lake in hte background), but they’re going the WRONG WAY!  Lots of playtime on the exposed rock up here.

OK, if Richie is impressed, I know I’m on the right track.  Brother has high standards.

Mr. Simmons ponders his line.

Hi Dave!  Note: he has no idea he’s on the edge of a thousand foot precipice here.

A BIG shout out to Reg for bringing 240 ‘Sners to the party.  Cheers, bra.

Alright, we’be done the climb and a sponatneous monkey dance for a random helicopter flyby (I can’t explain it any better than this, you kind of had to be there).  It’s time to head down to the lake, over 6000′ below us.  First, we have to find a trailhead…

Richie’s like, "I don’t need no stinking trail," and promptly schooled the field.  Wish I had more time to set up for this one.  It’s a good 10′ to flat, and he rode it out wheels down.  Not a huge move, but definitely impressive.

After some flailing finding the route down, we got onto the old Telegraph Trail and began the longest part of the ride.  Tis is an awesome high speed shred through spruce and fir forest.  It’s a good half hour or so non-stop ripping, and with this crew you know that’s a long way.

Then you hit the the rock garden.  Most people think of rock gardens as short sections, maybe 10 or 20 seconds of battering.  Nuh-uh.  This one is over 20 minutes, solid.  It’s freakin’ awesome.  Your best bet is to just smash it out as hard as you possibly can. Once your arms go numb, it’s easy…

After you are just about ready to drop your arms off like a crab with an injured claw, it’s over.  You get a bit of a rest and some touristy views on the KVR.

Now we’re into the regular Kelowna trails of Myra-Bellevue Park (aka Crawford).  The sun was getting a bit low at this point, though.  I think we may have wasted a bit too much time at the top, so we may have to cut part of the ride short.  That’s one of the best parts of this zone.  With a couple hundred km of trail in this network, you can adjust the route easily.

We weren’t so rushed that we couldn’t do a little trundling… (**note to folks who weren’t there.  We DID check every cliff for climbers, even though any place we rolled a rock wouldn’t be someplace that people would bother climbing.  Many of us are climbers as well as bikers).

Take that, Sock Monkey!  As we went deep into the Golden Hour, the fatigue started to make even slightly ridiculous situations hysterical.  A good laugh was had by all at Teddy Bear Junction.

Almost out of daylight.  We’re gonna have to cut out the last 5 km of singletrack and hit the road.  Not a problem, I think we’re satisfied with the day.

The end of the ride.  We rode right into the Eldorado, where we had the red carpet rolled out courtesy of our good friend "Dangerous" Vince.  Vinny used to build all sorts of sick and legendary trails in Kelowna, but has since moved on to riding moto.  He rolls a 250 on log rides though.  The owner of the El, also a mountain biker, sprung for the first round.

Good times on the deck at the El, as always.  Then it was back to the homestead for some maintenance.  You can tell who wasn’t running a Rocky Mountain or a Specialized. Because they (Mark…) needed to do a bit of work.  I run a union shop, so we made sure we had enough supervisors for the task. 

Here’s todays map and graphs.

Alright, better bunk down and get some rest  Tomorrow is looking SERIOUS.  Tight schedule for Saturday, we gotta roll hard and roll fast.

October Randoms

Old Cover Guys never die. They do look older after a while, but they just keep on hammering.

I did a ton of riding this month with the Rabbit, who I worked with for several years back in the old country. It was XC stuff mainly, and we rode at old school pace (no stopping…ever). I’m pretty sure there was one point where I didn’t put a foot down for over 2 hours. Lots of killer rides all month, but no eye candy for you. Just this little fella:

Can’t believe that was the first snake I saw all year. Everyone was raving about how many and how large the snakes were this summer, and I see this puny little one in the last week of herpetological friendly weather. He is quite pretty in those yellow leaves though.

Coolie is getting out for more rides now. She got a 35-40 km day in at the end. And slept it off in one day. She killed it until the last couple km of the last lap, when she started to limp just a little bit. Pretty amazing…and a bit scary. Next summer could be a chore keeping her exercised.

Another little scenic window into my neighbourhood. I got into a bunch more trails in the Naramata zone. Figuring out tons more routes to play on for next year. Would you believe it? I rode that zone over 20 times this year alone, and just in the last couple of weeks did over 5 hours on stuff I haven’t seen before.

PS – Happy 73rd Birthday, Dad.

More Banana Bread – Day 3

Or…Happy Birthday Al!  These guys really like the Gillard trails, so that’s where we went.  There’s some new trails up there too.

This one’s called Meeko (whoever that used to be…).

Thanks to Tucker for providing some new singletrack for us.

The way Ken’s been putting in lines, you can run the same trail over and over, but keep mixing it up with all the alternate lines.  Here’s a shot from Ghost Rider.

The birthday boy dropping in to Boss Hog.

A few more faces showed up for the last day, some we’ve had before…

…and some were new.  I’m gapping on names though (sorry, it’s been a brutally long month and I’m a sieve right now).  All I can tell you is that this Aussie is loose, as in nut.

Most stylish on the step up, for sure.  That last shot I was just assuming he was hitting the small line. Glad I caught it.

George, as usual nailing it.

Mark railing it.

Moaty, on his 40th.

Oh, and George has a new girlfriend, who is long on style herself.

He’s jumping for joy, he is.

The Blue Hat goes to…

Yeah, waste three runs on a brake line and that’s what you get.  What a bummer.  We also made him ride a pink bike.

What….more laps?  Yeah, Cat’s Ass to Fist’s First at full tilt.  We only stopped to session this log to gap.

We did our victory dance on the Crawford DH.

George showing us how he made his fortune as a Sears underwear model.

Spot the bikers.  Yes, there’s 2 of them in there someplace.

A very happy 40th to Moaty.  Wish I could have hung around for more Floaties (delish, they involve tequila AND beer), but that’s the price you pay.