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Category: weather

Ridable Trails!

While River Bends made for decent riding earlier in the week today’s beautiful weather and rumors of good conditions at Stony Creek convinced Nick and I to head out to ride some trails. Danielle joined us, then split off at the beginning to go find her own route on the two track.

We ended up riding all of the single track, and all of it was in prime condition. It was slightly tacky to try, and there were only a few very small muddy spots, none of which caused difficulty. Nick had no problem repeatedly dropping me which caused me to push myself a bit harder than I was ready for, but that’s probably a good thing overall. It helped make for an excellent ride.

Now, to try and finish off River Bends before the sun sets… Also, here is a photo of my Titus and Danielle’s Motobecane 29er on the back of my car.

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Still Muddy…

As expected local trails are still spring-time muddy and unsustainable to ride. I managed to access a short spur of single track that I knew would be safely passable and used it to connect paved areas today, but that only wetted my appetite. While I live in a decent area for being able to take off and ride relatively safe routes, I’m getting a bit tired of the same-old paved areas. I can’t wait for everything to thaw and begin drying out and becoming ridable again. Unfortunately I guess that thawing will involve more water, like here which was dry and passable last weekend.

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Wormsign!

While taking the trash out tonight I saw worms crawling along the pavement. This is a good sign, as it means the ground is mostly thawed and thus off-road riding will be possible soon.

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Pontiac Has Terrible Roads

Pontiac is the first town in which I’ve worked where I also have to pay a city income tax. It is also the worst city I’ve had to deal with road-wise. Two days after a moderate winter snowfall there is still an inch of ice on all roads making even the most gradual uphill difficult to drive. Pulling away from a stoplight is almost always a matter of frustration involving 10-15 seconds of figuring out how to acquire traction.

Maybe I should just buy myself some snow tires. It’d make driving (all around) much nicer during winter.

(Another road photo, and a view from near my new desk on Monday.)

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XC Skiing from Home

Having my own cross country skis and with this weekend’s sudden snow fall frozen into hard pack I decided to see how well skiing the field next to my condo would go. Two laps (roughly a mile) later and I can say that I’m now able to have an enjoyable (albeit short and flat) ski from my house. There was even sufficient moonlight to make skiing perfectly fine without a headlight.

The snow is so firmly packed that it could be cut with a saw which allowed me to easily glide along on top of it, only occasionally sinking through recently-drifted powder. It was also deep enough that only once did I run into brush sticking through the snow and have to deviate course. Hopefully this means that the trails at Stony Creek will be open and groomed for skiing this weekend.

(Oh, and the footprints next to the ski tracks? Those are from Roxie heading out to go to the bathroom and then my fetching her deposit from the snow.)

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24.4°F and Emerald Ash Borer

Had my camera battery not died in the 24.4°F weather (confirmed by my bike computer while leaving the trail) I would have a better photo than this.

This place is exactly where Nick, Erik, and I spent the bulk of our time on Sunday clearing the trail, and there’s now another fallen tree there. Thankfully this one can be ridden under. It appears that this area had a number of ash trees all of which fell victim to Emerald Ash Borer, and this autumn is the time they are all falling. As they are still very solid internally, I hope that we’ll be able to chop them up in the spring and use them to build a few log piles.

Tonight’s ride was quite wonderful. While it was cold outside I was appropriately (and perhaps over) dressed, and this was only a problem when I stopped to use nature as my toilet. Due to recent rains before the cold the trail was packed hard and as grippy as brushed concrete (or slickrock?) which made riding quite fun. Road traffic was surprisingly light, and I had no problems with cars either on the (residential) roads or at intersections.

I’m really looking forward to being able to ride these trails in the winter. I’ll just have to go get that tree sorted out before it actually falls and keep an eye out for others in this area. I suspect that this trail will be outstanding with studded tires once the snow falls and ice is making everything slick. I can’t wait.

(Total ride time today 1:40:37, 18.71 miles, 11.16 MPH average, 21.76 MPH max. Rode up from home, 1x full single track, two-track as return trail, 1x regular loop, 1x backward regular loop, then back home with a loop around the neighborhood.)

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Snow! (Late Autumn 2010 Version)

Well, there it is; the first that I’ve seen near home this season. En route to Traverse City for Iceman we drove through a quite-strong snow squall between Kalkaska and Acme, but this is the first bit here. It won’t be long before it’ll be time for winter biking season and cross-country skiing! Yay!

(Hmm, I should get those 29er Nokians broken in soon. I keep putting it off. Maybe Saturday…)

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Late Autumn Riding

Today’s ride was probably the hardest I’ve done this year. At 51.71 miles (in 3:35:34) it was about a mile shorter than Massive Fallout and my route made it mostly flat and paved, but the conditions were not particularly hospitable, and there was no real opportunity to stop and get food. I started out by heading up to River Bends, then over to Clinton River Park before ducking out through Dodge Park to ride the paved path out to Metro Beach. After consuming the only two gels and finding that my favorite trail mix wasn’t being particularly satisfying I was concerned about running out of glycogen so I headed up Schoenherr towards home. I normally would have brought more food, but I erroniously thought I had three gels in my bag when I really only had one.

Schoenherr is terrible riding between Metro Parkway and 18 Mile as there’s no paved path, no track worn in the grass, and the road is shoulderless and 50MPH, but I still took that route (via the grass) in the interest of time. From there I took the usual route of 19 Mile to Hayes, up to 21 Mile, over to Milonas, then back home via 22 Mile. The next time I ride through the Hall Rd. area along Hayes I need to find a better route, because I had more than my share of car issues. I think that simply cutting through the parking lot of Meijer and the plaza containing Sherwood Brewing Company would save me a bunch of hassle. Unfortunately there isn’t any other option for getting through the shopping centers along this area. The next feasable crossing is Schoenherr (which is worse) or heading over three miles west to the tunnel to downtown Utica.

With overcast skies and roughly 34°F air it was cool out, but the ~14MPH wind out of the southeast made the ride down the Metro Parkway path brutal. Still, the tights, shoe covers, windproof gloves, Under Armor shirt, and windbreaker that I was wearing did a fairly good job of keeping me warm. My fingers were a bit cold at times and I probably should have opted for Moose Mitts and summer-weight gloves, but things worked out just fine.

The photo above shows a newly-downed tree on the trails at River Bends. At ~40′ long the tree will need to be sawed out, so I’m hoping to give it a go this weekend. If I’m not able to remove it by hand I’ll just have to ask the park to cut it out with a chainsaw. Previously I’d mentioned not wanting to be near a small tree that was falling, but this one would have been much worse to be around. While not quite visible in the photo, a piece roughly 8″ across is also lodged in the dirt trail surface so deeply that I can’t see the end of it.

Here’s three more photos from today:

· Titus Racer X 29er sitting against the gazebo at the end of the path at Metro Beach during a long, cold ride.
· Lights were brought on the long, cold ride just in case I got stuck outside after dark.
· Standing at the end of the Metro Beach path near the gazebo a bit more than half-way through a long, cold autumn ride.

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…and then there was a tree!

While out at River Bends with Bob tonight we did a casual-pace lap, then set out for a second. Apparently due to the winds that were whipping around the area the second lap was blocked by a freshly fallen tree. I had my Sven-Saw in the car so we were able to go get it and take care of the tree. While too heavy to move in one piece, cutting it at the edge of the trail, tossing aside the lighter top, and dragging back the heavy base made quick work of this otherwise impassible obstacle. This 6″ log was sitting about 8″ off the ground, located just before the top of a short, steep bench cut uphill that turns and passes between two trees.

Here is another view of the fallen tree just after finding it. The broken piece laying on it had broken off of the main trunk as it was falling. I’m glad I wasn’t near by when this occurred.

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Pea Soup

A night ride in tonight’s pea soup fog was an interesting and challenging time to try out my new bike headlight. With two 700 lumen elements, one wide and one spot, and default settings of high power for one, the other, or both, the light was almost a bit too bright. I would like to have the headlight run a bit dimmer for the foggy conditions, but I’m quite confidant that the light will do what I want of it.

While the fog was often dense enough to obscure single track 30′ away and the humidity caused ones glasses to fog up at every stop, it was really pleasant to be out in it. I’ve been wanting to do a ride in fog for years and it did not disappoint. The entire ride was like swimming in a cool, damp blanket and every stop (once everyone in the group had turned off their lights) found us in a quieter than normal darkness without the normally visible distant lights. It was almost like riding in a snow storm but darker due to the lack of bright snow and without the cold. It was wonderful.

(The photo above shows the new headlight in spotlight-only mode with only one 700 lumen element running shining at a tree near my condo on a long exposure.)

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