Tuesday, June 25, 2024

CHC'24 Day 1 - Photos from Walden

 First day of the High Country offered heat climbing Poudre Canyon and an unaccustomed headwind, finishing off with a cooling shower just coming into Walden.

Conor O'Brian

Colin Allen


Just the tip of the food-and-drink iceberg!

Finishing with a cooling shower.

Colin Allen heads towards Saratoga for his sleep break.

Dave Brillhart

Amy Andrews and Stephen Wasmund - the only tandem.



Mike Turek and friends

Paul Liu


Tal Katzir (lower left), and clockwise Mike Turek, David Weigel, 
Kevin Klaes and others enjoying Italian Nite

Tranquil end of day in Walden

-jle

Saturday, June 15, 2024

Rashid's Colorado High Country pre-ride report

Rashid Khan and Jenn Moore pre-rode the 1000k option of the Colorado High Country on June 11-13.

Day 1

0:00  Louisville Departure
2:15  Platteville
4:35  Carter Lake
6:10  Horsetooth
14:00  Cameron Pass
15:52 Walden Arrival

Sandy’s was out of burritos. And it wasn’t long after that tragedy, while climbing Horsetooth, that the carrier that holds cogs 6 & 7 on my rear cassette failed, taking out those gears and another adjacent. While there was a bike shop 2 miles off the route, my house was only 5, so I hammered home, swapped a new cassette and returned to the route where I left it. I caught the gang at Ted’s, costing myself 40 minutes, but gaining 10 bonus miles.

All that, and Ted’s only had bean and cheese burritos remaining. Bummer. 

We took our time climbing Poudre towards Cameron Pass, trying to keep the heat from getting to us, but it did anyway. Hotel reception, who held our drop bags, would close at 10pm, so the decision was made to send Jenn and I as a forward team to check-in, collect bags, and source food from Corkel’s across the street, which also closed at 10pm. Fortunately things went smoothly, with Vernon and Dustin rolling in just 20 minutes or so behind us. Pizza was baked and sleep was had

Carter Lake


A break in the shade in Powder Canyon


Jenn & Vernon at Cameron Pass



Sunset descending into Walden


Day 2

24:09 Walden Departure
28:43 Saratoga, WY
35:15 Laramie, WY
41:26 Walden Arrival

Departing promptly at 5am, er 5:09am, we waved to the Trans Am racers riding into Walden, their race having started in Oregon 10 days prior.

After a hearty pasta salad we grabbed packaged sandwiches to go and rolled out of Saratoga with a stiff side wind that turned to a welcome tailwind as we headed into Snowy Range. Unfortunately a bodily mechanical would rob us of one of the team, but the wind would continue to carry we remaining three all the way to Laramie.

Of course the route makes a sharp, nearly 180deg turn in “Laradise”, as Jenn would affectionately call it, and we’d work hard taking short pulls all the way to the foot of the climb back into Colorado. With the Woods Landing store closed, we filled bottles from a, perhaps ill advised, tap and pressed on. We pulled into Walden late, well after all had closed, agreeing to catch a bit of extra shut eye tonight.

Rolling out of Walden at dawn


Jenn returning to her homeland


Snowy Range is snowy


Donning reflective gear at sunset

Headed back in Walden


Day 3

48:47 Walden Departure
53:08 Steamboat Springs
55:39 Yampa
59:23 Kremmling
66:11 Walden Arrival

67:03 Walden Departure
68:04 Gould
69:07 Walden

Getting out a bit after we planned we slow pedaled the gentle grade out of Walden headed southwest for Rabbit Ears pass. We paused at the gate to Jenn’s cousins ranch before tackling the fast descent into Steamboat. The well stocked store (with TWO microwaves!) provided the fuel we’d need to get to Yampa, over Gore Pass, and on to Kremmling. 

Having researched ahead, we knew Sulphur Springs wasn’t a food stop we could depend on. Filling ourselves on generous portions of microwave mac & cheese in Kremmling, we took what we could carry and hoped to at least source water and ice cream in Sulphur Springs. We passed yet more Trans AM racers as we left town, including one in a PBP vest.

The Sulphur Springs Mini Merc had decided to close at 2pm. We were on our own for the next 60mi over Willow Creek Pass. We began the climb in the golden hour, the canyon washed with warm evening light, a slight breeze keeping the temperature down. As a light rain began, the breeze stiffened. It seemed the inevitable summer thunderstorm had arrived. But as quickly as it started, it passed, leaving the road damp and a fresh scent in the air. We crested the pass at sunset, donned reflective gear and enjoyed the fast descent on a quiet road all the way back to Walden, uneventfull save for a startled family of foxes yipping in the dark.

Parting ways with Vernon, who would ride back to Louisville to complete his 1200k in the morning, Jenn and I had a snack, knocked out the last 40k of the 1000k and finished up our final Randonneur 10000 award qualification.

Near Rabbit Ears

Descending Gore Pass

Bottom of the climb to Willow Creek Pass



Top of Willow Creek Pass


Carl Gillies & Raphael Bernardo, Trans AM racers arriving in Walden the next morning. 


- Rashid Khan

Thursday, May 9, 2024

Flèche 2024: Team Ferrous Rouleurs Day Off

- Rashid Khan (captain)
- Jenn Moore
- Maddie Fulmer
- Tim Sunset

Friday, February 16, 2024

Remembering John Hughes

It is with personal sadness that I report that John Hughes - friend to so many in the rando and ultra communities and to RMCC - passed away unexpectedly on February 4.  His widow Carol will be publishing details of a Boulder memorial scheduled for next month, plus his obituary.

John was my friend, and a wonderful riding partner to me and to others in the RMCC after moving to Boulder County in the 90's from the Bay Area. He also volunteered on Last Chance and other rides of ours.  A bit more about John ...

after a brevet, relaxing with friends
while sitting in my RAV4
hughes_j.jpg

Palmares - John was a Paris-Brest-Paris ancien, riding and finishing PBP'79, '87, '91, '95, and '99. I rode a delightful stretch with him at PBP'99 with his "gruppetto" of friendly randos, stopping strategically at bakeries and cafes on the way back from Brest. John set a course record at Boston-Montreal-Boston in 1992 (52:53). His final 1200k was the Rocky Mountain 1200 (in British Columbia) in 2004. John raced solo RAAM (the Race Across AMerica) twice, and won the prestigious Furnace Creek 508, a grueling 508-mile trek across the California desert.

UMCA - From their early days, John was involved with the Ultra-Marathon Cycling Association (now World Ultra Cycling Association - WUCA), and was the executive director of the UMCA from the 90's through the first decade of the millennium.  A full-time job.  Aside from RAAM and RAAM-qualifying races, John promoted the UMCA Year-Rounder Challenge, which he lured me into managing in the 1990's. You can see the spillover of UMCA year-rounders to this day, some of them becoming RUSA K-Hounds.

Tours - John put on a series of western tours, the Red Rocks tours in Utah, and the Pacific Crest tours in California, along and up and over the Sierra Nevada mountains. Challenging, incredibly scenic, but doable. John invited me to help scout out his Red Rocks tour, an experience which I thoroughly enjoyed.

distance-cycling.jpg

Coaching and Education - John was a longtime cycling coach, dispensing advice to clients based on his personal lessons learned in ultra-cycling coupled with scientific expertise. John tried especially to help older cyclists deal with how age impacts performance levels and training. John had a weekly column in Road Bike Rider dispensing free but valuable advice, which he wrote until his passing. And John in collaboration with Dan Kehlenbach wrote the authoritative book you see above, on Distance Cycling. My copy is sitting nearby.

We will miss this wonderful spirit and companion.

-jle