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SIR Newsletter/Blog Editor RUSA 5988

PCH Randonneurs Five Rivers 300k

A trip and ride report by Andy Speier with a few comments from Jeff Loomis

Andy (L) and Jeff (R) enjoy some sunshine.

The opportunity to ride 300 km in weather above 40 degrees sounded good. After riding several sub-40 degree rides in January, I was in need of some re-warming. The flat 5 Rivers 300 out of Corona sounded like it would do the trick. I sent out an email to my local guys and Jeff responded back. Yes, he would love to get a 300 in early in the season but did not want to sacrifice a day off from work. Ok. Less than ideal, but, with a flight out of Seattle at 5:00 P.M., we could do it and be in bed by before midnight. With an 0600 start we could get 5 hours of sleep. More than an overnight control. Perfect.

As with all plans, they started to crumble a bit on the day of the departure. Alaska Airlines alerted us to a delay of 45 minutes. As the day progressed, it became 90 minutes. No harm done. We arrived and waited for our rental car. Jeff had spoken to me at length about the advantage of using Avis and being a “Preferred Member,” so I have reserved a car and enrolled in their program. There is only one Avis guy on duty. A family of 8 is working through the details of their reservation with 4 children running around. The insurance liability conversation seems to go on forever. Jeff is lecturing me on the virtues of the Preferred member status and that I have not attained that designation. [Jeff:  Unfortunately this is an accurate accounting.]  At one point a second clerk appears and he inquires whether any of us are Preferred Members. I say I am. He asks if my name is Chappman. It is not, so he calls the next person in line. When it is my turn, he asks to see my ID, hands me a car key and calls the next person. Apparently, I am in the club. They are just a bit less organized at John Wayne Airport.

Our transportation is an SUV that swallows up our bikes and bags with room to spare. Off to Corona. A 27-29 minute drive on 55 and 91. There is some mention of a toll road, but it is now 11:30 at night. Traffic is flowing quite well. Off we go. After about 10 minutes the traffic slows and then STOPS. Jeff consults his mobile app. There seems to be a long red line. How long? Very long. I will spare you the details: our 29 minute drive becomes 2 hours. Wow. We arrive at the hotel at 1:30. The bad news is there is only one bed. The good news is that it is a king and there is plenty of room.

Now the fun stuff: build up the bikes. My bike is done in an hour. Jeff finishes soon after. [Jeff:  We made the decision to go fender-free because it is California and it speeds the assembly/disassembly process.]  I am in bed by 2:45. Jeff by 3:00. Up at 0500. 2 hours in bed. Yes, this is a 300 with an overnight control.

Morning upon us, we check in with Terry, the ride organizer, at 0530. There are around 14 participants. Nearly all from the LA and San Diego area. Michelle has flown in from Minnesota. The CA folks are bundled up. Jeff and I not so much. It is 54 degrees at the start. Within the hour we will be stripped down to short sleeve wool jerseys, shorts and fingerless gloves. At one point sunglasses are critical to being able to see. [Jeff:  We received many comments during the day about our lack of clothing.]

The route is 80 percent on paved bike trails. Though there has been recent rain and local flooding,  there is little sign of this on the trails. [Jeff:  A few puddles early in the day make us briefly regret the lack of fenders.  Andy rides straight through some of these, having forgotten his bike is naked.] The trails mostly follow rivers, waterways and freeways. This would not be described as a beautiful cycling adventure on rural quiet roads. Often there is the sound of highway traffic. When not along a highway, the trails run alongside rivers and waterways. Most are empty or trickling and filled with debris along the sides. There is much garbage in the trees.  [Jeff:  many of the trails are bordering older neighborhoods that now appear to be low-income areas.  Interestingly, there are large clusters of shacks and paddocks housing horses right here in the city.]

I did this ride last year and saw several homeless tent sites. This year there are tent cities along the trail. Most of these we pass by during daylight hours. There are large cities under the overpasses and at night this will resemble a scene from a Mad Max movie. The good news is that there appear to be several bike repair / replacement shops within the cities. Enter at your own peril.

Andy on top of the Santa Fe Dam

[Jeff:  Heading into Long Beach we chat with a new randonneur from the area.  He is interested in our bikes and has clearly been reading Bicycle Quarterly.  A new recruit!  Andy has much to share…  A bit later Andy is stopped to answer nature’s call and a guy riding the other way on the trail sees our bikes and asks if we are on the Five Rivers ride!  It turns out he has ridden in in a previous year.  He offered to take our photo (at top of post.)]

Across the River from Compton LA River and bike path

[Jeff:  Near this point we also pass a small convoy of mini-bikes and maybe one full-on motorcycle riding the other way on the bike path!]

We hit the Pacific Coast Highway and cycle through towns of Sunset, Seal Beach and Huntington Beach. There is an option to ride the bike trail along the coast and that is a blast. A bit slower than the highway, but it is the beach. The ocean. Waves. Did I mention we were cycling in shorts? Though it becomes windy, it is not a blow in your face knock you down wind, and we are quite happy. It has got to be one of the flattest 300 routes you will find. Terry has done an awesome job of linking up the various trails.

Between the route sheet and Jeff’s ride with GPS app, we get around quite well. We, of course, blow a couple of turns in the dark and add a few bonus miles here and there. “No flats or mechanicals,” I’m thinking as we are 6 km from the finish, topping the hill on a bike trail with a small group of randos. I hear something fall off my bike, but write it off to a stick, as everything on my bike is packed up well. The bike is still functioning and we are beginning to descend. (Note to self: stop and check the bike.) Jeff notices that my chain has too much slack and that something is wrong. I continue to pedal thinking I am not in gear. Then it dawns on me. I stop and investigate and, sure enough, I have lost the lower rear derailleur jockey wheel. Hmmm. Not good. Jeff is upset. We are so close to the end.

I tell Jeff I’m going to go back to look for it. Jeff is skeptical. “You’ll never find it in the dark,” he tells me. [Jeff:  Andy reminds me I am a “naysayer.”  Guilty.]  We turn around and start to ascend the hill we just descended. My bike does not want to go up hill so I run up the hill. I pull out a spare light and begin searching. Found the jockey wheel. Ok. So far so good. How about the bolt? Found it. Jeff is shocked. So am I. Jeff looks for the bushing and side plates, but I’m good with what we found and re-assemble it. A bit of friction, but it actually works. I can use all the gears and I can stand up and pedal going uphill. The bonus is, on the way bac,k I find my spare gear cable and the hotel room key, which I  lost when getting my light out.

We are a couple of km from the finish when we come upon road construction. Road closed. The Police Officer gives us directions and, after climbing a fairly long multi-block hill, we check Google Maps directions: we are now 4 km from the finish. Nothing ever comes easy. At this point it is downhill and flat with more downhill. We arrive at the Best Western Hotel, but don’t know what room Terry is in. The hotel clerk is not allowed to tell me, so I ask him to call. Done. Room 116. Pizza and snacks are waiting. It is nearly 10:00 pm. Not as impressive as our finish just after 7:00 last year, but it was a comfortable 300 in good weather and company.

Back in our room, we take our bikes apart and, just after midnight, we are back in bed. Bikes packed with an afternoon flight, we are all set. Real sleep tonight.

We receive an alert from Alaska airlines of a flight delay. We arrive at the airport and it is delayed yet again. Again, a 90 minute delay. Such is life. If all goes well, we’ll land safely and be home by 6:00 tonight…

Whew!

 

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Permanents: Known Road Closures

Road construction and natural disasters often close roads our permanents use. The permanents team tries to post information about these closures on the Detours page. Formerly we posted lists of affected routes… but that has proven to be too much work to maintain.

Going forward, we will post a general description of the closure, dates of the closure if known, and links to official web pages about the closure, if available.

We will suggest detours. However, if there are no viable detours, routes will be deactivated until the roads are reopened.

Link:  http://permanents.seattlerando.org/p/known-current-detours.html

The detours page is also linked on the Perminator “Find a Permanent” page, and in the approval email the Perminator sends when you register for a permanent.

The permanents team makes no guarantee that the list of closures is complete. Riders are always responsible for checking for closures before starting a ride. To help with this, the detours page has links to several county road conditions websites. Also, Google Maps in Traffic View will show closures Google knows about. You will need to zoom in several steps to make closures on secondary roads visible.

If you have other resources for checking closures, please share them in the comments below.

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The SIR Ride with GPS Club Account

by Bill Gobie

You may have noticed that SIR’s Ride with GPS routes are in the Seattle International Randonneurs club account. The club account gives SIR members some great benefits.

Even if you only have a free basic RwGPS account, SIR members can access RwGPS’ premium-level features for SIR brevets and permanents. These features are:

  • If you use the RwGPS mobile app on your phone you get:
    • Voice navigation – your phone speaks each cue.
    • Offline maps – you can download the route and required maps to your phone, then navigate in areas without cell coverage. You can navigate with your phone in airplane mode to save power and data usage.
  • If you use a gps that uses TCX files, you get advanced turn notifications, which has your gps alert you prior to arriving at a turn. The distance before turns is customizable.
  • If you use a Garmin Edge GPS, you can use the Write to Garmin function to load a route onto your Garmin.
  • You can use the PDF Maps and Cuesheets features to produce printed directions. Since randonneur events must provide a cuesheet, these features are not very important for SIR members.

How to join the club account

  1. First you need to have a personal Ride with GPS account. Go to: https://ridewithgps.com/ and sign up. You only need to sign up for a free account.
  2. Go to the SIR RwGPS club main page: https://ridewithgps.com/clubs/29-seattle-international-randonneurs. Click on “Apply to join” and fill out the form. The account administrator will check that you are an SIR member and approve your membership.
  3. Once you are approved, your personal RwGPS home page will list SIR under Clubs in the left sidebar.

How to use your club membership

  1. Log in to your personal RwGPS account.
  2. Click on the SIR club link in the left sidebar on your personal RwGPS account home page. You will be taken to the SIR Club page.
  3. Scroll down to the Route Library. You can sort the routes by clicking on the column headings. You can use the Filters to efficiently find a route. You can filter by:
    • Route name or permanent number
    • Tag. We try to tag all the routes as permanents or brevets, by distance, and year for brevets. There are other tags, too, which you will see on the popup menu.
    • Location. Location is the city or county where a route starts, as determined by RwGPS.
  4. You can go to a route by clicking on a link, for example, in an SIR brevet description page. To get the premium features make sure you are signed into the club account first.
  5. You should watch Ride with GPS’ video to see how to use the premium features, such as downloading a route to your phone. https://ridewithgps.com/help/club-benefits/

 

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WTS 5: Auburn-Lake Tapps-Orting-Carbonado-Buckley Ride Saturday 2/4

The 5th ride in our 8 ride Winter Training Series is another of our favorites and has remained unchanged. This is a wonderful route that takes in Lake Tapps, Orting, Carbonado, Buckley and lots of great back roads in between. This is one of the most rural rides of the series.  No good coffee shops along this route, but there is a Java’s Angels espresso stand in Buckley at mile 48. Please help out the Ride Leaders by pre-registering at: https://www.cascade.org/node/39535

Click here for an introduction to the Winter Training Series, including a bit of history, how the rides are conducted and rider expectations.

When: Saturday, February 4, 2017

Time: Sign-in begins at 8:30am. To save time please pre-register at: https://www.cascade.org/node/39535
Ride announcements at 8:50am
The peloton rolls at 9:00am sharp.

Distance: 66 miles / Approx. 2750′ gain

Where: Auburn Fred Meyers – 801 Auburn Way N; Auburn, WA 98002

Directions to Start: Take 167 South from Renton. Take the 15th St NW exit and head east about 0.4 mile. Turn right on A Street at stop light. Go 0.2 mile to 10th St NE.  Look for parking lot around the corner on your right. Park in NW corner of the lot at corner of A St and 10th St away from the entrance to Fred Meyers.

See you rain or shine!

RideWithGPS(Track)

 

Click here for more about the 2017 Winter Training Series.

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WTS #4 Snohomish-Happy-Valley-Arlington Ride Saturday 1/28

Randos –

It’s always tough to depend on weather forecasts in the Pacific Northwest but at this point it looks pretty promising for WTS #4 with a predicted high in the upper 40’s maybe even 50.  Remember that WTS rides are only cancelled or altered under the threat of ice or snow so the ride is on! 🙂

It really helps us out if you would pre-register at: https://www.cascade.org/node/39534.   This ride is a clockwise loop starting in Snohomish through the outskirts of Everett and Marysville to Happy Valley.  We return via Arlington where you can take a short break at Stilly Coffee Shop.  Then it’s back via Burn and Schwarzmiller Roads before hoping on the Centennial Trail for the last few miles.

Print your own cue sheet if you need one from RWGPS.

We hope to see a lot of you on Saturday,

Ralph & Noel

__:)       __:)
_ \<,_   _\<,_
(*)/ (*) (*)/(*)

2017 Winter Training Series

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Oly Country 300K: Saturday Nov. 5 at 6:30 a.m.

by John Pearch

There’s still time to register for this late addition to the SIR 2016 brevet calendar and get in another 300K:

http://brevets.seattlerando.org/register_for_event/381

Anyone planning to ride the 300K this weekend should know that we will have printed copies of the cue sheet on hand at the start. The cue sheet is also online for those of you who like to make edits and adjust formatting.

Here is a link to the RWGPS file/map: https://ridewithgps.com/routes/16388027

Registration opens at 6:00 am and the ride starts at 6:30 AM at the Fish Tale Brew Pub Parking Lot.

Fish Tale Brew Pub
515 Jefferson St SE
Olympia, WA 98501

Parking is free on weekends on the streets in Olympia.  However, do not try and park in the Fish Tale parking lot or any others marked.

If you need to use the restroom, there is a McDonalds on Plum and 8th, just a few blocks from the start.

Preride Notes:

Josh and I prerode this past Sunday with dry weather the first 100k, then the final 200k (12 hours) of constant rain.  The forecast looks like rain this Saturday so byobuddyflaps:) Take note of all the CAUTION on the cue sheets as railroads crossings will be slick and highway crossings visibility might be limited.

There are 7 Info Controls to explore backroads of rural Thurston and PierceCounties, in the first 126k. We will depart the Fish Tale brew pub taking Olympia’s NE neighborhood to the the Chehalis Western Trail (CWT).  Then taking the CWT south to the Yelm Tenino Trail (YTT).  We will follow the YTT passing through Yelm to the far reaches of the YTT, then cross over the Nisqually River into Pierce County with back roads of the Lacamas Valley and hillier Harts Lake area, then back into Thurston County backroads of Bald Hills, Lake Lawrence, Vail Cutoff and the Deschutes River. If you did the 200k last March, just keep an eye on the course change, as the course will take Runyon Rd (easy to miss off of Vail Cutoff) to access the back way into the town of Rainer!

After the Rainier Control, you will then get back on the YTT temporarily to access Johnson Creek Road and eventually the Skookumchuck Valley (info control at the fish hatchery)! Then follow the Skookumchuck Valley back to Tenino.  From Tenino you will go north on backroads to Scott Lake Chevron Station control.  Then the route goes south to Littlerock and Mima-Gate Rd and access the back way into Anderson Rd/ End of Trail Station control.  We decided to ride the 0.3 km section of gravel to avoid the U.S. Hwy 12. From End of Trail control, the route temporarily goes west on U.S 12 (crossing the narrow Black River Bridge) then on Elma Gate and flat S. Bank Road to Elma control. Elma is an Open Control, even though we encourage to find the stores on the far east side of town.  From Elma you will climb gently up Cloquallum Road for 26k.  After Cloquallum Road jct with Highland Rd, Cloquallum Rd has a few spurts of up to 16%.  Cloqualluam Road steeply descends into Isabella Lake and then rolls into the Arcadia neighborhood of Shelton.

From Shelton the route follows Hwy 3 (with a narrown bridge) to US 101, which has a small 2k section of Old Olympic Hwy to temporarily get off 101. There are a few rollers along 101 until the route takes takes Steamboat and Madrona Beach to Mud Bay. Alas, the infamous Mud Bay final climb and descent into downtown Olympia!  We’ll have some Fish Tale Beer regardless if you don’t make it before the Fish Tail Brewpub closes.

See you Saturday!

Cheers!

John

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Crater Lake 1000K – September 23

The Crater Lake 1000K is an incredible, unforgettable ride that will take you down almost the full length of the Oregon coast before a 100 mile climb up to the lake. It’s challenging, but no journey to such a sacred places should be without challenge. Crater Lake is a magical, wondrous place. Getting there by bike puts you in the right frame of mind to really appreciate it. I, your humble blog editor, rode it in 2013 and, as a result of ill advised sleep choices, reached the lake at dawn. It was worth it. -Theo Roffe

Crater Lake at dawn. Photo by Theo Roffe

Crater Lake at dawn. Photo by Theo Roffe

Ride organizer Vinny Muoneke says:

The route will be basically as in previous years. Night start in Bremerton and follow old Belfair highway to Belfair then run along the Hood Canal to Shelton and Matlock heading out to the coast Via Raymond. Then to Nasselle and cross the Astoria Bridge at the mouth of the mighty Columbia river and witness the beauty of the Oregon coast. Sleep for some in Pacific City and staying with the pacific ocean mostly till its sand dunes start to swell on your way south.

At Reedsport you turn inland hopefully through an Elk reserve to encounter the wonderfully deceptive camp creek road, anticipate a gravel descent to sleep for some in Roseburg Day 3 features the “100 mile climb”, up to the rim Village of Crater Lake at close to 8000ft ASL and a rip off of a descent to Fort Klammmath which is above 4000ft ASL There may be some gravel on the way to the finish in Klammath Falls.

Watch soon for a preliminary route the final route must come after the pre-ride.

I will take your drop bags to Pacific City. Roseburg both overnight controls and Klammath Falls Riders who plan well ahead are ok to make their own hotel arrangements already. Your return may be by Train in a special box provided by Amtrak at the station, Plane, or Bike. In fact Eric Larsen plotted a lovely course South to The Bay area. https://rusa.org/cgi-bin/permview_GF.pl?permid=2066

The airport in Klammath Falls is pretty small, If you return as most by train be ready remove and turn your handlebars and remove your pedals.

That's Rando! Vinny and Mark at Crater Lake. Photo stolen from Joe Platzner.

That’s Rando! Vinny and Mark at Crater Lake. Photo stolen from Joe Platzner.

Organizers: Vincent Muoneke

Date: Ride will start at 21:30 on Friday 09/23/2016
Riders coming from Seattle on the Ferry must join a 19:55 boat or earlier departure.

Start Location: Bremerton WA Ferry Terminal

End Location: Olympic Inn at Klammath Falls OR

Directions: We will gather for pre ride briefing at the terminal next to Starbucks

Ride Fee: $150 (for non-members it is $160, which includes SIR membership).

Map: https://ridewithgps.com/routes/16404562

Registration and essential information are on the SIR website: http://seattlerando.org/sir_content/fall1000.htm

Discussion, photos, planning, and encouragement are in a Facebook group, so log on, request access, and check it out:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/236611246735366/

 

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SIR Classic Design White Voler Jersey Order

Due to popular demand we are bringing back the old-style SIR white jerseys for one order cycle. This is the white jersey with blue and white lettering shown above.
Pricing is based on 15 items as a minimum number. If 25 or more are ordered the price will drop and those who have already purchased will receive a refund equal to the difference.
We are including matching white shorts but again will need 15 items to be ordered within the shorts category or the shorts order will have to be canceled. See image at top.
Blue coffee bean style caps will also be available on this order since they have been popular and we anticipate SIR members wanting to buy more.
The ordering link can be found below the read more link. The ordering deadline is October 3. Items will ship on or near November 23.
If you have any questions about these garments, please contact Voler (contact info listed below the read more link).
Please note: Voler long-sleeve jerseys are sized about 1/2 size larger than the short sleeve jerseys EXCEPT that the new long-sleeve FS Pro jerseys are sized the same as short sleeve jerseys. This is important because there are no returns or exchanges for sizing errors made by us.
— Doug Migden

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SIR Summer 600K Information and Pre-ride Report

Sunrise over Lake Washington. Photo by Steve Frey.

Sunrise over Lake Washington. Photo by Steve Frey.

Mark’s Preride Report

This is the best of rides. This is the worst of rides. Apologies to Dickens, but after pre-riding the summer 600k I can tell you that I believed each of those statements wholeheartedly at different points this past weekend. It’s really a hard ride and it’s sometimes hard in ways that most brevets are not. At the same time, it is extremely scenic, beautiful, and grand.

Getting out of Seattle to the south looks complicated on the cue sheet but uses the standard route that’s familiar to locals. The Green River trail gives the first taste of gravel and leads to the familiar control at Black Diamond Bakery. The Green River Gorge is not far away, and is the first of many incredibly scenic viewpoints.

The dues of not-so-interesting roads with substantial traffic are paid on the way to Enumclaw. After that, it’s mostly the Ramrod route. Orville Road is the best section of the route to Eatonville. We were getting hot as we climbed the last mile into town and stocked up at the control.

We were careful on the narrow and busy Alder Cutoff Road, then felt more comfortable on the wider shoulder of Highway 7 and 706. Because of long lines at the entrance to Mount Rainier National Park, the route turns right at Kernahan road/NF 52 and follows Skate Creek Road to use the “back entrance” to Longmire 9.5 miles later. There’s a gate at the Park boundary, but it’s fine to just walk around it and continue to Longmire. Fill up your water bottles at Longmire. If it’s even close to hot you might want an extra bottle to hold water for squirting on yourself. The climb is not super steep, but the sun is intense and the grade is unrelenting. We were all amazed at how thrashed we felt when we reached Paradise. We ate heartily because the availability of food is uncertain from Paradise until the overnight control in Naches, almost 90 miles away.

The descent on Stevens Canyon road goes by quickly. We figured we had more than paid for the miles of descending that went by easily. If you expect the climb up Backbone Ridge, it goes pretty quickly. If you expect to coast all the way to Highway 123, it’s much longer.

The last few sweeping switchbacks before Grove of the Patriarchs are some of the best road in the Northwest. The last water for 40 miles is at the Grove of the Patriarchs trailhead, so we made sure to top off our bottles there.

photo by Steve Frey

Sunset on the descent from Chinook Pass. Photo by Steve Frey

After our experience climbing to Paradise, we were worried about the long, steeper climb to Cayuse and Chinook Passes. The sun, luckily was low enough that the road was almost entirely shaded. It made a huge difference. For me, the best part of this climb is looking back down the valley and seeing how far I have climbed. The smells of the forest and views of Mount Rainier go well with a steady climbing effort. Mercifully, the grade drops substantially on the last mile of the climb to Chinook Pass.

After crossing under the huge log NPS boundary marker you have passed the true crux of the first day. The road descends steeply for many miles, and then rolls along the river, losing elevation and making it easy to maintain good speed. The Cliffdell general store/grocery closes too early (9 pm) for many randonneurs to stock up there. Food might be available later at a few lodge restaurants and roadhouses along the road from Cliffdell to Naches. The road continues its descent as the forest gives way to open sagebrush. We rolled easily on this section, helped by a slight but consistent tailwind. We talked about how difficult it would be to ride in the opposite direction.

There will be solid food at the overnight control in Naches.

We left Naches at 4:00am and immediately started climbing into the sparsely-populated hills. A few sections had me reaching to shift and finding I was already in my smallest gear. It sure was beautiful though. Big rounded hills, some farm buildings, a few roosters crowing, and a gradually brightening sky. Maybe it was the novelty of riding it for the first time, but the 10 miles of North Wenas Road were my favorite of the ride.

Then the pavement ends. The sign says, “Rough road 9.5 miles” and the sign speaks truth. It’s rocky and often washboard –there is no smooth line to be found. The best you can do is grind along avoiding the biggest holes and rocks. It’s hard on hands and hard on butts. There is a particularly steep section or two where there would be no shame (and almost no time lost) in walking. Really pretty country though. Finally the crest becomes obvious and the descending starts. The road seemed slightly smoother on the descent, but it was still rough enough that I managed to pinch flat a 42mm tire. Along the way we saw several deer, and a herd of more than 20 elk, so keep an eye out until you reach Ellensburg.

Mark fixing a pinch flat near Ellensburg Pass. Photo by Steve Frey.

Mark fixing a pinch flat near Ellensburg Pass. Photo by Steve Frey.

We felt that our breakfast in Ellensburg was well deserved. After a refreshing break we set off for Cle Elum, riding another road for the first time, Highway 10. The road climbs right to the base of a wind turbine farm, so this is a good time to remind yourself that effort doesn’t always equal speed. Beautiful road though, rolling above the river.

Cle Elum isn’t even 30 miles from Ellensburg, but we stopped again for food and water. The Iron Horse Trail isn’t hard to find if you know that the brown signs that never use the word “Trail” actually lead to the trail.

Unfortunately, the Iron Horse from Cle Elum to Easton is a dusty, wind-swept, grind. Something about the East Side seems to make the trails and roads rougher. The trail is too rough to draft effectively, and whatever trees there were didn’t shelter us from the wind. Again, the surface takes a toll on hands and butts. It also requires your attention and punishes you when attention drifts. We were very glad to reach Easton where the trees get bigger and all aspects of the trail improve. There is about 600 feet of climbing between Cle Elum and Hyak, and it’s basically imperceptible. At Hyak we got water and put on our cold-weather gear to ride through the tunnel. We were glad we did as the inside of the tunnel is strikingly cold and damp.

Once through the tunnel you get more than 26 miles of much smoother, mostly shaded, west-side gravel trail. We know it was more than 26 miles because some folks looking for unofficial personal-best times had just run a marathon down the trail ahead of us. We didn’t see any of them until the finish, but we saw their mile-markers.

The control QFC in North Bend has a deli and Starbucks. We used both. Then it was a short pavement ride to the trailhead for the Snoqualmie Valley Trail. Be careful on the steep, loose footpath. It’s only a short bit, but by this point we weren’t at our best.

About 4.5 miles past Carnation, the Snoqualmie Valley Trail has some construction. There was a big, self-contradicting sign that seemed to say there would be some short closures when work was being done. Press on, as we did.

The climb out of the valley on Woodinville Duvall road isn’t a highlight of this ride, but there’s enough shoulder outside the fog line to be usable and you have to get out of the valley one way or another. By this point we were counting kilometers. After reaching the Burke Gilman Trail, we rode side by side and debated the merits of an immediate shower or an immediate cold beer.

Here’s my mental tally as we rode the last miles: we felt heat-stress, cramps, sleepiness, muscle fatigue, hunger, thirst, hand pain, butt pain, neck pain, nausea, and general discomfort. On the other hand, we saw volcanoes, glaciers, rivers, rain forests, dry pine forests, shrub-steppe, and sub-alpine environments. We saw an orange moon rise over the ridge. We rode in the silent pre-dawn darkness and saw the pink light on the hills. We had a big 600k experience.


UPDATE and Questions Answered:

SIR site is back online, find ride description, parking information, and registration here: http://seattlerando.org/sir_content/sum600.htm

Q: Is that steep bump in the ride profile just past 300miles the pass summit?

A: The two biggest bumps you see in the profile are Paradise at about mile 125 and Chinook pass at about 160 miles. Yes, they’re about as challenging as they look in the profile. Chinook pass is the steeper of the two, though we found it easier because it came later in the day when the sun was behind the hills and it had cooled a little. The climb to Paradise is very exposed which adds to the challenge if it’s a hot day. [Editor’s note — The spike at 487 km is actually a tunnel, see first comment below.]

QHow was traffic from longmire to paradise?

AWe did the climb to Paradise at peak traffic time. There were a lot of cars on the road, but we found that inside the park everyone is moving pretty slowly and they were generally very respectful of cyclists. Traffic there really wasn’t a problem at all. [Editor’s note — The ride is scheduled for Labor Day Weekend, 9/3-4, so traffic may be somewhat increased.]


The RwGPS route has been updated with a few minor route revisions and is posted here: https://ridewithgps.com/routes/14276651

The Cue Sheet has also been updated and is available here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1kmEDHMQ5va6O4Fd7IV_loW81XWVgUQQr957M5YN3U8U

– Steve Frey

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Doug Migden’s Transcontinental Race

Doug Migden on his bike with flags of Turkey and Greece behind him, showing that he has just crossed the border into Turkey.

At the border of Greece and Turkey with less than 300km to go…

Doug’s goals were simple: ride all the way to Istanbul, and finish the race. Doug was clueless about what he was really getting himself into; but why not give it a go?

Doug Migden started randonneuring in 2010 and the distance bug bit him hard. 1200km PBP 2011, 1600km Miglia Italia 2012, 2200km Giro Ciclistico delle Repubbliche Marinare 2014, 15, 16…

What’s next when you’re riding that kind of distance? For Doug, the Transcontinental Race (TCR) from Belgium to Turkey presented an attractive answer and an irresistible challenge.

You can read about Doug’s 2015 TCR in a piece by David Longdon on The Seattle PI Blog, which also includes Doug’s detailed ride report and photos. Check it out here: http://blog.seattlepi.com/velocity/2016/07/10/doug-migdens-2015-transcontinental-race/

Doug will be riding the TCR again this year, starting on July 29th.

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