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Hawaii Maui's Haleakala
Anyone have any info on this climb of 36 miles up to 10,000 elevation? There
seems to be tour rides going down but not up. I guess its for the very fit cyclists. I wanted to get info on this before I try this one. So far I learned that its a two lane highway with no bike lanes. Also some people going down lose control and have died going off the road. If I go, I would like to go up and then get a ride down. Are there any decent rental shops with good light road bikes to do the climb? I assume they will have a 12-25 rear cassette or better. Any other pointers would be helpful. |
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Jee Doy wrote:
Anyone have any info on this climb of 36 miles up to 10,000 elevation? These write-ups are pretty decent: http://briandesousa.com/bicycling/rides/haleakala.htm http://home.pacbell.net/d_swiger/HaleakalaRide.htm http://www.actc.org/stories/hlk00_da.htm -- terry morse Palo Alto, CA http://bike.terrymorse.com/ |
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Terry Morse wrote:
Jee Doy wrote: Anyone have any info on this climb of 36 miles up to 10,000 elevation? These write-ups are pretty decent: http://briandesousa.com/bicycling/rides/haleakala.htm http://home.pacbell.net/d_swiger/HaleakalaRide.htm http://www.actc.org/stories/hlk00_da.htm -- terry morse Palo Alto, CA http://bike.terrymorse.com/ I found another writeup from a Feb 2004 ascent: http://pages.prodigy.net/hamachi/Haleakala.html and another article from Bicycling Magazine's web site from 2002: http://www.bicycling.com/article/0,3...ategory_id=362 |
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#5
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Jee Doy wrote:
Anyone have any info on this climb of 36 miles up to 10,000 elevation? There seems to be tour rides going down but not up. I guess its for the very fit cyclists. I wanted to get info on this before I try this one. So far I learned that its a two lane highway with no bike lanes. Also some people going down lose control and have died going off the road. If I go, I would like to go up and then get a ride down. But, ... but! .... but .... but! ...... I'd have to kill anyone that prevented me from being able to ride the descent after a climb like that. Isn't that the reason for going up? (..... just kinda messin' with ya') -- ***************************** Chuck Anderson • Boulder, CO http://www.CycleTourist.com Integrity is obvious. The lack of it is common. ***************************** |
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Chuck Anderson wrote:
If I go, I would like to go up and then get a ride down. But, ... but! .... but .... but! ...... I'd have to kill anyone that prevented me from being able to ride the descent after a climb like that. Isn't that the reason for going up? Descending can be fun, but 30+ mile descent gets pretty tedious. -- terry morse Palo Alto, CA http://bike.terrymorse.com/ |
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"Chuck Anderson" wrote in message
news:MTL2d.66779$D%.53190@attbi_s51... Jee Doy wrote: Anyone have any info on this climb of 36 miles up to 10,000 elevation? There seems to be tour rides going down but not up. I guess its for the very fit cyclists. I wanted to get info on this before I try this one. So far I learned that its a two lane highway with no bike lanes. Also some people going down lose control and have died going off the road. If I go, I would like to go up and then get a ride down. But, ... but! .... but .... but! ...... I'd have to kill anyone that prevented me from being able to ride the descent after a climb like that. Isn't that the reason for going up? Ditto, Chuck...no way I'm riding up 10,000 feet and not enjoying that downhill!! It would be pretty cool to see if you could break 1 hour for the descent. It's an average 5.3% grade (278 feet of climbing per mile), so I'm guessing 1 hour for the descent would be do-able. GG (..... just kinda messin' with ya') -- ***************************** Chuck Anderson • Boulder, CO http://www.CycleTourist.com Integrity is obvious. The lack of it is common. ***************************** |
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Terry Morse wrote:
Chuck Anderson wrote: If I go, I would like to go up and then get a ride down. But, ... but! .... but .... but! ...... I'd have to kill anyone that prevented me from being able to ride the descent after a climb like that. Isn't that the reason for going up? Descending can be fun, but 30+ mile descent gets pretty tedious. But easy. This is on my list of things to do, definitely. The closest to it that I've ever done is Salt Lake to Park City (and back). Parley's Canyon only feels like it's 38 miles long, but there's nearly 10K feet of climbing in that ride, and it's always hot and dry. What's Maui like later in the day? The earlier in the day you start, the suckier in my book. -- -- Lynn Wallace http://www.xmission.com/~lawall "We should not march into Baghdad. ... Assigning young soldiers to a fruitless hunt for a securely entrenched dictator and condemning them to fight in what would be an unwinnable urban guerilla war, it could only plunge that part of the world into ever greater instability." George Bush Sr. in his 1998 book "A World Transformed" |
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On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 19:51:30 -0700, Terry Morse wrote:
Chuck Anderson wrote: If I go, I would like to go up and then get a ride down. But, ... but! .... but .... but! ...... I'd have to kill anyone that prevented me from being able to ride the descent after a climb like that. Isn't that the reason for going up? Descending can be fun, but 30+ mile descent gets pretty tedious. Deployable drogue chute? http://home.att.net/~m--sandlin/pad.htm -B |
#10
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Raptor wrote:
The closest to it that I've ever done is Salt Lake to Park City (and back). Parley's Canyon only feels like it's 38 miles long, but there's nearly 10K feet of climbing in that ride, and it's always hot and dry. You rode up I-80 to Park City? That doesn't seem to be a pleasant route. I'll be there in a couple of weeks, but riding on I-80 wasn't on my list. Do you have any recommendations for hilly routes that don't incluude the interstate? One of my favorite long climbs is the final one of the Everest Challenge. It starts down in the Owens Valley in Big Pine, at 4,000 feet. It climbs about 21 miles into the Bristlecone Pine Forest to 10,000 feet. 2.5 hours up, 52 minutes down. http://bike.terrymorse.com/esierra04.../IMG_0597.html -- terry morse Palo Alto, CA http://bike.terrymorse.com/ |
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