Monthly Archives: January 2024

Gravel Permanents

Starting February 1, 2024, gravel credit and timing will apply to permanents with unpaved portions! Relaxed timing should open up new terrain and gnarlier routes should become accessible to a wider variety of riders.

Gravel Timing

An extra minute is allowed to complete a route for every kilometer of gravel. The extra time allowance is computed by adding up all the gravel segments in a route, then dropping any fractional kilometer. (Ride with GPS displays the summary unpaved distance.) For example, at the minimum average speed of 15 kph, a 200 km route has a basic time allowance of 4 min/km, or 800 minutes. If the route has gravel segments of 20.6 km and 2.2 km, the sum is 22.8 km. Thus the extra time is 22 minutes. The total time limit is 822 minutes or 13 hours 42 minutes. This is the same rule that has been used for RUSA gravel brevets and populaires.

RUSA’s RwGPS routes contain the overall time limit in the final cue. Presently the time limit is based on 4 min/km. After Feb 1 the volunteers will begin updating gravel routes with the extra time allowance. It will take some time to work through all the routes. If you are unsure whether a time limit has been updated, you can check it yourself with the method described above.

RUSA’s results logger, where you enter your elapsed time, has been updated with gravel distances. It will know the correct time limit regardless of whether the time limit in the RwGPS route has been updated.

Gravel Credit

Gravel permanent kilometers will be tracked in your results and apply toward gravel awards.

Checking for Gravel

To check whether a route is a gravel route, use the Permanents Search function at rusa.org > Permanents > Search. The results will list unpaved distance. For example, searching WA routes of 100-199 km gives:

Baked Goods and Cle Elum-Hyak-Cle Elum contain unpaved distance, so you would get gravel credit and timing for riding them.

A route is a gravel route only if the RUSA database says so!

RwGPS might say a route has unpaved distance yet RUSA does not show any unpaved distance. Reasons could be:

  • The route was overlooked and needs to be updated as a gravel route.
  • The route is known to be entirely paved. RwGPS’ surface-type data is flawed and has not been corrected.

Gravel Errors

Surface-type information comes from the crowd-sourced Open Street Map project. Surface-type data is missing or incorrect for some roads, leading to errors in unpaved distance. If you notice errors when riding, such as unmapped unpaved segments, or incorrect unpaved distance, you can report errors with the form at rusa.org > Permanents > Permanent Route Update Request. (If you’re really dedicated, you can also correct OpenStreetMap yourself. Then routes created in the future will have the right surface type.)

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2024 Waterville Gravel Populaire

Text and photos by shiggy Person

I (shiggy) have been riding on the Plateau for more than 12 years, traversing the area on the grid work of farm roads, many of which were established in the 1880s. I picked some of my favorites, and the best surfaces, for this first Waterville Gravel Populaire route.

The 134km route is 70% unpaved. Surfaces range from wide smooth gravel to fine dirt. Few chunky rock sections. May be some loose sandy stretches. Paved sections are dispersed fairly evenly providing regular breaks. Minimal traffic on the gravel and little on the paved roads. Of course, farm equipment ALWAYS has the right of way. 

Starting from Pioneer Park take a 134km ride through the greening wheat fields and shrub steppe of the Waterville Plateau, on some of the same roads ridden by the Waterville Bicycle Club 128 years ago.

We will pass through the small communities of Douglas and Alstown, both at the top of the Douglas Creek Canyon. Turning back north and east through sage and wheat on ever rolling hills. 

At Withrow we reach the edge of the last ice sheet advancement and roll into the Withrow Moraine. Fewer fields. More rock formations, erratics, eskers, and older basalt flows. 

Resupply comes in Mansfield at 74km, with a small grocery, cafe, bar and a pleasant city park, the only shade on the route outside of Waterville. 

Here we turn west. More moraine, and back into the wheat fields. 

The Fletcher pioneer cemetery, one of many on the plateau, is at 110km. Worth a stop. 

The neverending open sky carries us on west and south. Views of the Cascades in the distance over the rolling hills. 

We mostly stay on gravel clear to the Waterville city limits, 1km from the finish back in Pioneer Park.

Recommend minimum 38mm tires. Slicks are fine. I usually ride 42-48mm semi slicks.

There is only one resupply point in Mansfield at 74km. Water, small grocery, cafe, bar, city park. Be sure you are carrying enough food and water to get there, and then get back. 

It may be very hot, and there is ZERO shade on route.

Restrooms in Pioneer Park in Waterville. Grocery nearby. Knemeyers Eatery & Spirits is friendly and does a good pizza. 

RV camping available at the NCW Fairgrounds. 

Parking: near the tennis courts in the park or at the high school on S Chelan Ave. 

Waterville Plateau history: https://www.historylink.org/file/9357

Withrow Moraine geology video: https://youtu.be/uhz-7EsYRik?si=Odxua0hBEULSphbI

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