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-   -   RR: Colorado Trail (Part 5) (http://www.cyclebanter.com/showthread.php?t=189323)

Corvus Corvax July 1st 08 12:19 PM

RR: Colorado Trail (Part 5)
 
Days 6 and 7: Continental Divide

I pitch my tent on Kenosha Pass. I have gotten pretty well acclimated
to 7,000 feet, but at 10,000 I am winded by the smallest activity. My
legs are totally shot, aching and wobbly. I take a rest day. I left my
car parked on the pass the week before, so I have fresh supplies and
clean clothes. I drive down into Fairplay and load the cooler up with
ice and BEvERages, and have a hamburger for lunch at a roadside bar.
It's sublime. Dinner is macaroni and cheese -- no more of that freeze-
dried backpacker **** for me. I'm living large. I celebrate with a
huge campfire and lots of cold beer.

The next day is the last leg of the trip, up to the Continental Divide
at Georgia Pass. I have decided not to do the descent into Frisco, but
instead do the pass as an out-and-back. I leave the trailer behind. On
paper, the stats for the trail to Georgia Pass are pretty
intimidating: 25 miles round-trip and 4,000 feet of climbing, all at
altitudes where pilots are required to use supplemental oxygen. (Or,
in JD-speak, "a hoot".) But I am hugely fit now. Without the trailer,
the bike is light as a feather, and I climb through the Aspens and
descend across the grassy valley in the early morning sun without a
care in the world. I take the climb carefully, stopping regularly to
eat. I know how quickly things can go from wonderful to dire above
10,000 feet, and I am taking no chances. But everything is smooth and
wonderful. The climb is challenging, pretty technical in places, and
as I ascend above 11,000 feet, the snow begins to thicken and finally
congeals into a mass, blocking the trail about two miles below the
pass.

This is the end of the road. 134 miles point-to-point from Denver. I
turn around and let it rip on the descent back to Kenosha, sailing
through the aspens on the smooth, twisty singletrack like Luke
Skywalker. I return to camp, and prepare for the drive home.

Sweet.

Bill Sornson[_2_] July 1st 08 06:56 PM

RR: Colorado Trail (Part 5)
 
On Jul 1, 4:19*am, Corvus Corvax wrote:
Days 6 and 7: Continental Divide

I pitch my tent on Kenosha Pass. I have gotten pretty well acclimated
to 7,000 feet, but at 10,000 I am winded by the smallest activity. My
legs are totally shot, aching and wobbly. I take a rest day. I left my
car parked on the pass the week before, so I have fresh supplies and
clean clothes. I drive down into Fairplay and load the cooler up with
ice and BEvERages, and have a hamburger for lunch at a roadside bar.
It's sublime. Dinner is macaroni and cheese -- no more of that freeze-
dried backpacker **** for me. I'm living large. I celebrate with a
huge campfire and lots of cold beer.

The next day is the last leg of the trip, up to the Continental Divide
at Georgia Pass. I have decided not to do the descent into Frisco, but
instead do the pass as an out-and-back. I leave the trailer behind. On
paper, the stats for the trail to Georgia Pass are pretty
intimidating: 25 miles round-trip and 4,000 feet of climbing, all at
altitudes where pilots are required to use supplemental oxygen. (Or,
in JD-speak, "a hoot".) But I am hugely fit now. Without the trailer,
the bike is light as a feather, and I climb through the Aspens and
descend across the grassy valley in the early morning sun without a
care in the world. I take the climb carefully, stopping regularly to
eat. I know how quickly things can go from wonderful to dire above
10,000 feet, and I am taking no chances. But everything is smooth and
wonderful. The climb is challenging, pretty technical in places, and
as I ascend above 11,000 feet, the snow begins to thicken and finally
congeals into a mass, blocking the trail about two miles below the
pass.

This is the end of the road. 134 miles point-to-point from Denver. I
turn around and let it rip on the descent back to Kenosha, sailing
through the aspens on the smooth, twisty singletrack like Luke
Skywalker. I return to camp, and prepare for the drive home.

Sweet.


Sweet indeed. (Anyone who missed the links, Part 4 has the pics.
Really added a lot to an already splendid narrative.)

Thanks again, CC. Great stuff.

[email protected] July 2nd 08 05:15 AM

RR: Colorado Trail (Part 5)
 
On Jul 1, 4:19*am, Corvus Corvax wrote:
Days 6 and 7: Continental Divide


Corvus

That's quite an adventure. I really enjoy your writing. thanks for
posting , it reminds me of the good old days on
AM-B.

Pauli

dardruba[_2_] July 14th 08 09:28 AM

RR: Colorado Trail (Part 5)
 
wrote:
On Jul 1, 4:19 am, Corvus Corvax wrote:
Days 6 and 7: Continental Divide


Corvus

That's quite an adventure. I really enjoy your writing. thanks for
posting , it reminds me of the good old days on
AM-B.
Pauli


Wonderbar. And you're spot on there Pauli, I only dropped in on the offchance and found this.
I once called CC a wordsmith, now I'm not sure what the word means but he can sure tell a
great tale.


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