Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Alpine Dam

Mt. Tam Watershed

It's December and skies are strangely clear. We all agree that it's not good, but we're all loving the extended riding season.

Clear Sky December
What happened to foggy Nor Cal?
That being said, on Christmas a friend of a friend invited me along for the Alpine Dam route, where we met clear skies and comfortable temps.

Pines
Dead grass climbs fall into lush tree lined valleys
Aki, Nuala, Jason, Jesse, and I started across the bridge, nearly devoid of cycle traffic on a Sunday morning (bizarre). Once over the bridge we wiggled our way over through Fairfax and into the first climb over the ridge to drop down toward the dam. Aki and Jason tore it up, flying up to the top of every hill. Aki doing it all in track pants and a backpack while jetlagged, just showing that you don't need $200 bibs to be the first one up the hill.

Alpine Dam
Dam good view.
Cross Check Dam
This seems to be the cliche Instagram flick of this route, so I had to.
Nature is Boring
Nature is boring.
The ride was a relaxing 60 mile roll to the scenic dam and back over to Ridgecrest Blvd, otherwise known as the Seven Sisters, which overlooks the ocean on the backside of Tam. We dipped back down 1 ending up in a tourist packed Sausalito where Jason took off to press a 120 mile day.


Oceanviews Jason
The few times Jason was not climbing hella far in front of me.
Nuala Crests a Sister
Nuala, who put this shindig together, crests one of the Seven Sisters.
Seven Sister Views
Seven Sisters ocean views.
Jesse hung on for some caffeine with us at Velo Rouge. After his quad latte he'd push on to a 110 mile day (and follow that up with another 110 mile day). Nuala, Aki, and I were happy enough with our scenic detour through the Headlands and called it a night after our own caffeination. This was my first time riding with all of these people, always enjoyable to ride with new people, which seems to keep happening here.

Roadside Attractions

Thursday, December 26, 2013

DFL Holiday Bandit Cross

DSC_3846
Photo by TenderGreens on Flickr

Last weekend was the annual DFL bandit cross holiday race. I decided against taking photos in favor of racing. I showed up just in time for the race to start, giving me no time to prep, meaning I almost puked lapping around. The course was intense, but loads of fun. I was proud to only fall once. Booyah. I don't know if anyone was really counting, but I felt like I was near the back of the pack. Damn, these cats are fast.

DSC_4042
That's me, grooving. Photo also by tendergreens.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Partners in Dirt

New Dirt 

Marin is the contested birthplace of mountain biking (Crested Butte begs to differ). It's also a roadie heaven. With the contoured landscapes across the Golden Gate it is where most of the San Franciscan cyclists, road or dirt, go to escape. Which means that our own little slice of heaven here in the East Bay is usually free and open for the taking. 

Tall Bike, Cargo Bike
Some eclectic bike choices, a Surly Big Dummy and a custom tall mountain bike. (The Big Dummy a week old and needed a few adjustments and unfortunately Tobe ran his deraulleur into his spokes).
Jillian's Off
Giant views are nestled in the hills hood.
It wasn't long from my house to the dirt when we started climbing. It was some rough rolling terrain but some beautiful stuff. Jillian knows the woods better than I do and pointed out some great added trails. Maleko pulled out his tall bike for the fun and Tobe took out his fresh new Big Dummy (which seemed at home on the steep climbs).

On the Bend
Cross Check in it's native dirt lands.
Maleko Mounts
Always entertaining to watch Maleko get on this thing.
Afternoon Rollers
The final rollers.
We didn't quite hit the mileage we were hoping for, but the crushing ups burnt our legs good. It's great to be able to just leave the door and hit dirt so quickly here.

Road Finals

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

East Bay Mice

www.worntreads.com

Last Friday was the East Bay Mice Friday the 13th Alleycat. I thought it was only track bikes, so I showed up far too drunk. It was also my first night with my new camera, in the dark, with fast bikes. So as every good photographer does, I'm making excuses. Anyway here are the few salvageable photos.

www.worntreads.com
Checkpoint 1: Drink Beer
www.worntreads.com
Skid competition
www.worntreads.com
Skidding Kyle; after he donated his tubes to another racer.
P.S. Once we got going, I did start racing and in typical fashion I got lost. In even more typical fashion, I fell. I got wasted and had a shit load of fun, so even if I didn't win the Broakland frame up for grabs, I still won.

www.worntreads.com

Monday, December 16, 2013

New Blog

For a variety of reasons I'm now calling Patrick's Velolog quits and instead starting a new at WornTreads.com.

So head on over there to check it out and remember to change your bookmark!


(This site will be active for a few more weeks til it redirects!)

Diablo Overnighter

Morning Roadside

It's winter. The days are short, making time to ride short. Of late, I've been finding myself wandering more and more after the sun has hit the horizon. When Manny invited me along for some Diablo bikecamping (which I have yet to do) I couldn't resist. We met at Walnut Creek and left long after the last shred of sunlight had gone.

Junction
The junction was so quiet.
Diablo Night Views
Nightviews

The gate was closed at the front, which meant that Manny, Tony, Chris, Ely, and I had the road all to ourselves. We spun with our lights on for a bit, but we quickly realized that the moon was strong enough to hold the center line, so we shut off our lamps and rode by moonlight. At one point I pulled ahead of the group to feel that eerie sense of isolation that came on this dark mountainside. An incredible feeling.

Camp was a tad cold. Setting up my tent for the first time led to a rather sad pitch, but it did hold. I gnawed on a burrito and then tucked into my bag hoping for a good night's sleep. Unfortunately, the chilly December air kept me awake longer than I would have liked. Before I knew it, it was morning and we were pulling ourselves back onto our bikes, aiming for the summit for some incredible views with our coffee.

Hanging at the Bend
Bikepacked or Rando's doesn't matter, as long as you came to ride.
Manny Shoots
Manny has some of the most incredible photos. Check out his photos on his Flickr.
Chris climbs
Chris completed this tough journey on his Specialized Hardrock from high school.
High
Manny's bike at the summit.
Lighthouse
Can't think of a better place to have morning coffee.
Prospector's Gap
Prospector's Gap.
Going Down
Chris descends.

After breakfast and coffee we descended back to pack up camp. Once we filled everything back into the bag it came from it was time to hit some dirt, as any ride with Manny inevitably leads to. This was when things got real fun and real whacky.


Chris' Unbelievable Descent
This "road" was a straight drop down. I walked it. Manny and Chris rode it. They thankfully walked home with all their limbs in intact.
Massive Views
Those dots are cyclists.
Ruthwork Hearts
This amazing detail is part of Ely's handiwork. Check out the rest of his work at Ruth Works.

Last week was one of the biggest mileage weeks I've had in a while and to end on such a fantastic trip with such majestic views will be hard to forget. Thanks to Manny, Ely, Chris, and Tony for the great ride!

Poking Through

Riv Hatchet/Bike/Book Shop

Rivendell Rodeo

Before our camping trip to Diablo, I met up with Manny at the new Rivendell store that just popped open in Walnut Creek (opened due to the great interest the pop up shop had). Along with bikes there is a small but well chosen book selection, a huge MUSA wool collection, and probably the best hatchet selection in any store I've ever seen (I mean who really specializes in hatchets anyway?).

  Hatchet

The store is at 1601 N. Main St. in Walnut Creek and is definitely an eclectic shop that is worth checking out if you are on your way to Diablo or Shell Ridge.

  Suggestion Box

Welcome Aboard

ART: Top of the Rock
 
Well, here it is. After my first experiment with a blog, I decided it would be time to start a new one, one where I have things a little more organized and put together. So this is it. The beginning of it all. I'll be blogging mostly about bikes. So yes, this is another god damn bike blog. Feel free to peruse, look at the pics, read the words, write mean comments, or just totally ignore it. I'm interested in almost every form of cycling from alleycats to randonneuring to bikepacking to downhill freeride. Anything fascinating on two wheels is what I'll be following. Anything that interests me really. At times this blog will turn into a travelogue as I hope to take more extended bike tours in the future, but for now it's ride reports and reports of things that are rad and interesting. So enjoy.

  Miscellaneous Shots 1/15 - 1/30

Some other places you can follow what I'm doing.
Facebook (get social)
Tumblr (for things I find cool)
Flickr (for more of the photos and such)

Friday, October 18, 2013

Becoming a Racing Jerk (Endless Summer of Slaughter edition)


It's happening. I never thought it would, but it's happening. When I first started riding people asked me about racing and I thought it silly. Racing was always something I thought that took itself too seriously, besides paying to ride a bike is kind of silly. Then I got turned onto underground racing and I'm hooked.

It started with a mondo alleycat, the Endless Summer of Slaughter last weekend in Oakland. 5 checkpoints, one of them way up in the hills, and the rest spread apart a large swath of the East Bay. This was my first alleycat so I had no idea what to expect. From the start point we were sent to some park I've never heard of so I followed the crowd, who followed by getting lost. My Garmin saved the day getting me back on course to the first "checkpoint" (really it was where the manifests were, so this could arguably be checkpoint 6). I looked at the manifest. I knew where all of them were except one. That one was on Harbor Way, so I figured it must be by the water, I'm sure I'd figure it out, so off I went to nab the other checkpoints.

The first checkpoint was up Castle Drive, a steep steep road that was a workhorse to get up (I felt bad for anyone on track bikes at that point). Once I hit the first checkpoint I split up from the people I was following, figuring I knew where I was going. I mashed to the first checkpoint after surviving the terrifying Thornhill descent. I danced to some Mariah Carey then was off the next point in Marin. Again I blazed through and was feeling great on my legs. Despite knocking down the checkpoint hosts bike I drank some plastic vodka and got back on it toward Albany Hill.

The downhill grade had me flying out to Albany Hill. I got some cat make up then started bombing back down when I blew a flat. I changed it very quickly (I guess all those flats last summer on tour taught me something) and got back going. Now it was a flat sprint to the Bay Bridge. This would be where my energy started to wane, especially getting up onto the bridge in the face of a gnarly headwind. I checked in and then it was off to Harbor Way. I tried my GPS. No luck. I tried everything I could on that thing. I tracked up and down the Bay, nothing. I was lost. I had to stop in West Oakland to get my bearings. That stopping was what killed me. My stomach started cramping, my legs didn't feel like moving. I had plenty of time, but really had no clue where the final checkpoint was and called it quits.

A DNF after such a hardy ride absolutely sucked. I should have been smarter and figured out all the checkpoints first, but I got antsy at the first checkpoint trying to figure it out. Oh well, maybe next time. I'm just impatient and don't want to wait a year for the next Summer of Slaughter.

One Final Look Over the Valley
(Also, I've stopped taking pictures of late, maybe I'll get back into that soon)

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Wait, Where Was I?

Sky Camp Trailhead

I've been laxing on this place, thanks to what my roommate mistakenly calls Indian Summer. The time of year when shorts and a t-shirt at night isn't unheard of in Oakland. As the East Coast buckles down for the winter, we're hitting our stretch and taking it in stride. Instead of sitting inside editing photos and writing words, I've been out in the saddle nabbing miles.

'Merica
U! S! A!

The last adventure I went on was a bike camping trip up to Point Reyes for a friend's birthday. It was a good repeat of people from the Memorial Day ride, a fantastic crew to ride with, where the booze and people are just as important as the tent and bike. Since my last outings I have made moves to another tent, but the bad news is that I never finished building a tent pole for it, so I had no tent when I finally made a commitment to the ride. So be it. In the pursuit of getting lighter and more B.A. I decided to go tentless and sleep out under the stars.

Tracy Leading the Pack
Tracy has probably navigated half the rides I've ever been on in Marin.

With such a small rack of goods I met with some buds in the Inner Richmond. Being a bike camping trip beers were cracked at 11 AM, as they should be. I was trying to be a civil human being and cut back (that quickly changed in the week after or so). Once we rallied our group of about a dozen off we went.

The ride avoided the same old climbs we've done through Marin a hundred times (I love not having to navigate and just following and complaining about routes, err, not complaining, nevermind). There were fewer aggro Marin dorks, instead there was an ocean of pink, it was the Avon walk, the biggest feel good, do nothing event of the year.

W. Marin Map
If you haven't heard, West Marin rules.

Along the way we picked up a many stragglers to join our merry crew. After Fairfax it was smooth sailing over some climbs before the final Limatour to dirt climb. I beasted this one. I wanted it. So I had it. The final stretch on dirt was the best part. Then we finished up at Sky Camp; a secluded camp up on the ridge overlooking the trees that dropped to the ocean. The clouds rolled in right around sunset dashing our hopes of a good sunset. Then it was a waiting game, because we stupidly decided to rely on someone else to bring our food (and some people's tents and such, good thing I didn't have one). People were getting upset as stomachs growled and heads got sober. We munched on whatever we had, chocolate, Clif Bars, nuts, whatever. It was dark when four of us decided to bomb down to the parking lot to fill up on people's stuff, hoping our rendezvous was there. This descent was fucking awesome. I nearly got impaled by a deer on the way down, but managed to keep rubber down the whole way. We ran into the car crew on the way down at least knowing that we'd have something to bring back up. I was the first one at the bottom by a long shot. I shut off my lights and looked at the dim spots in the sky. It still never ceases to amaze me that a 50 mile bike ride away from the city and I'm in the middle of nowhere.

Pre-sagwagon Plenty 'o Whiskey
So much booze, so little food.

The rest of the crew met up and we began ravaging the car realizing that the camp equipment made it, but the food did not. Somehow there was a fumble in communication, all we had was a bunch of beans and seitan, mixed in with the little bit people carried in by bike we agreed we'd make it work. Cody led the way up the hill, I was chasing his red light the whole time, but he took off and I couldn't even try to compete; one tough rider.

The Bikes at Camp
Woody carried half the things he owns, maybe just to say he could?

From there it was a big communal meal, some frisbee, oh and booze, did I mention booze? I hardly drank, but everyone else did there fair share. People stayed up long past my grandpa clock. I laid out my bag and watched the stars in the warm night. As it is sleeping outside, you never are completely asleep, there is some animal instinct that pulls you in and out of sleep, I pulled in and out a couple of times, waking up to the sound of the tide coming in, the sound of foghorns in the morning, the sight of a crescent moon hiding behind the pines, and then of course, Woody scaring the shit out of me as he passed me at 3AM. Sleeping outside is probably going to become the new norm now.

Home for the Night
It wasn't nearly as wet as this photo makes it look like.
Sky Camp at Dawn
Sky Camp.

The Photographer
Cody shooting the others.

On the ride out we hit Pt. Reyes for some food and coffee treats. Of course getting there by noon, because people who said they were in a hurry were probably lying. Yet, my legs were in a hurry as I killed section after section, what is it that makes some days better than others? What makes my legs spin and spin and spin? I blame the fixie for fixing my cadence. After a quick stop in Fairfax some of us split off toward the ferry, but a few of us cheapskates rode back (oh and we like riding bikes and have little to do in life, we did something right that day I guess).

Loaded Up
Surly babe.
Pt. Reyes Hangs
There were lots of cyclists in Pt. Reyes, but few bikers.

It was somewhere in Marin that I got the phone call from my roommate Estathea, "Oh, hey, house, broken into, shit stolen, shit sucks," I'm heavily paraphrasing, she doesn't talk like a dirtbag like me. I was pretty sure my laptop was gone, I was anxious to get home and see what else, but mostly I was just pissed. Thankfully there was an open bottle of whiskey and beer in front of me right after it happened. Oh and a gnarly climb to the bridge too, that probably helped even more (although disappointingly some bastard friends still beat my Strava on that segment, how!? it felt so good!).

So here I am on a fossil of a laptop with a hipster OS trying to figure out how to use these fandangled computers again. I think I did it right?

Silhouette