Friday, March 6, 2015

Readying

For bikepacking season.  Which, if you account for the early Spring weather, and even a minor amount of annual evolutionary gear shakedown and fussery, starts exactly . . .

Now.



Monday, March 2, 2015

Foto Fun at the Falls

From yesterday.


















Sunday, March 1, 2015

Riding Mt Spokane With [Friends]

Due to the lack of snow on Mt Spokane, grooming of the nordic trail system has ceased for the year and the park ranger has opened the trails up to fatbikes.  I got together with a couple of buddies and headed up yesterday morning.  Unfortunately, the buddies shall heretofore not be spoken of, for reasons that shall heretofore not be revealed.  All photographic evidence of their participation has been destroyed.

You still need a Sno-Park Permit to use the trails, and since Patty and I never bought season passes because we never skied this year, I bought a one-day pass, which costs $22.  Which seems like kind of a lot, but in the big picture the cool thing here is that the park ranger is making this opportunity available to bikes, and what kind of oils the whole machine up there is Sno-Park revenue, and if bikes are part of the revenue stream and this enables even some limited access, I am all for it.

Parking was kind of problem, but we, I mean I, eventually found a spot.

 Mystery pal #1 was never here.

 And mystery pal #2 was never here.

 Am I just a lonely, solitary, delusional blogger who has further devolved into conjuring imaginary friends, or did I actually share a ride with substantive beings?  And how weird is this whole secrecy deal, anyway?  All good questions.  Which shall remain unanswered.

 There was a lot of ice on the trails nearest to the parking lot, but once we I got out a ways the trails were really nice.  Mystery pals #1 and #2 both went down on the ice once (allegedly), and I was one iota of going down myself on one occasion.  There was some wind, but there was also some sun, and all in all it was a great ride.  Aside from a handful (as in less than 10) of dedicated skiers, we I had the place to ourselves myself.

 In other news, the Blackborow is such a rad bike.  Man, I dig it.  The more time I spend on it in, and the more surfaces I get it out on, the better it gets.

 The new camera bag is working out pretty well, too.  The one thing doesn't offer me is the ability to reach down with one hand and grab the fancy A600 and shoot while I'm rolling.  I miss my little Canon S95 for this, so I taped it aboard for this trip.  And it gave me what I wanted.  So I may look for a more elegant attachment solution, or I may just freshen up the tape once in a while.  Most likely the latter.


Aside from the nordic trails, there are other winter riding opportunities at Mt Spokane, and considering that the drive is just under an hour for me, I need to get up there more next winter.  I think I'll just plan on buying a season pass at the beginning of next season.  It's too cool of a place not to support and take advantage of once in a while.


Saturday, February 28, 2015

Quilomene Recon Ride

It all started with a text message on a dark and stormy night, exactly one week ago.  (Okay, the dark and stormy part is an embellishment, but do you want me to tell a story, or deliver the stock market report??  Okay, that's what I thought, then.  So shut your pie hole.)

So on this dark and stormy night, the text message read exactly as follows.  And I quote.  Verbatim.  Reproduced here just as written.

"Steve and I riding Vantage sunday. Prob ride to whisky dick bay.  Anyone welcome. No time set yet."

Holy, Living, Hell.  Talk about your heart pounding immediately out of your chest.

I'd already sort of committed to a ride with Chip on Saturday, and I couldn't afford the time to ride on both days, so I had to be kind of a heel and back out of the Sat ride, but in my defense, once the Q is in your blood, you are kind of helpless to its allure.  And the fact that there was this grand opportunity to ride it in February (are you freaking kidding me???), well, you just don't say no.  Sorry for being such a heel, Chip.

The message came from Ward, my Yakima-area buddy who has the connector tendencies and charisma to pull people together to do rad riding shit.  The message didn't go out to just me, and a flurry ensued, and five dudes ultimately scrambled to put all their other life shit aside and rally down to humble Vantage, Washington, on the morning of Sunday, Feb 22, '15.  At around 10.


Shawn, of NW fatbike fame on FB, had been out to the Q before, and so had I, but never at the same time.  Once you've been in the Q with a dude, you have a bond.  It sounds corny, but it is just flat out true.  It was cool that we were going to have this chance to suffer together.


In true Q fashion, the climb started innocently enough . . .


Mother sucker . . .


Uncle . . .


Too little oxygen, too many layers . . .


The wind never, and I mean never, does not blow in the Q.  It's why they build wind farms there.  But the wind was not blowing.  And the sun was shining.  On Feb 22.  In the Q.  Are you shitting me.


This is how it looks at the top of the world . . .


Soon thereafter, the well-earned descent began, and we could once again assume our roles as men, instead of weeping, climbing, ladies.

Steve here, killing it . . .


Randy, miserable and killing it . . .


Shawn, seriously killing it . . .


Steve, Randy and Shawn, simultaneously killing it . . .


Meanwhile, Ward was killing his brakes.  As bigga place as the Q is, he filled it with the acrid smell of burning brake pads.  If you can believe that.

But while you're sympathizing with his plight, might I temper your sense of sympathy with the knowledge that he was beating the rest of us into submission on every climb, due to his insane level of early season fitness.  Skinny bastard.  Damn mountain goat.  Or in other words, don't feel TOO sorry for him.

The other thing of note, is that he recently drilled out his 100mm rims.  Dang!  That's a thing of beauty.  These are the fatback hundies before anyone even knew what hundies were.  And now they are something incredibly unique.  I think he said it took him something like a week and a half of nights after work to do the drilling and de-burring . . .



There is no way any amount of photography can come anywhere close to capturing what I love about the Q, but if I had to choose one pic from the day to try and do that, this might be it . . .


We were co-existing with this outfit for a while, but one whif of Ward's scorched pads and they were "OUTTA HERE", like, ummm, "what's that smell, man??: . . .


Luckily, on this day when none of us were in any kind of riding shape, we were able to preserve our scarce energy reserves by sticking to the beaten path . . .


For just one moment, or maybe three, I considered lying down on this luxurious elk-created mattress and going to sleep and quietly dying . . .


The rad crew.  And let me just pause here for a minute to observe something.  The Q is not for everyone.  Probably there are quite a few people who would try it once and not go back.  And then there are those few who would.  The crazies.  Who would just cancel everything and throw down on short notice because of the promise of a grand adventure that can be packed into one amazing day.  I feel so incredibly privileged to have somehow gotten hooked up with these dudes and landed in the same circle of passion and appreciation for this area . . .


Ward.  The man.  The legend . . .


So.  Ummm.

There was a, uhh, slight ulterior motive for this outing.  That being the placing of a beer stash for a possible upcoming overnighter.  Anything worth doing, is worth doing right, of course.


Not all beers were meant to be stashed, though. But I'm sure I don't need to tell you that . . .


Whiskey Dick Bay.  Yep, the same place where I almost lost my life in a windstorm in '13.  It's too painful to talk about, but a true story, trust me . . .


So these next two pics are just about what it feels like at the end a badass day, when you've totally worked your ass off to the point where you don't know if you have anything left in the tank and then you finally get to the point where you know it's all downhill to your truck and you've made it!




There's been a lot of map activity this winter/spring, whereby Ward got a hold of the Green Trails map folks about a map of this area that used to exist but now didn't, and then they found some old stock in their basement, or something, and Ward snagged a few of them and sent them to a few of his lucky friends, me being one, and then I accidentally scanned one a blew it up on a large scale plotter at work and sent him a few hard copies, and then he took one of those and made it into a canvas print which he gifted me with.  So cool.

And that's Meg on the left, which is Steve's better half, or vice versa, I am not sure.  They are both so cool.


My work week pretty much sucks the life out of me these days and I'm not exactly sure where I summoned the energy to throw down and spend a long, taxing Sunday on this Q adventure, only to show up as a rag doll at work on Monday morning, but wherever it came from, I am so grateful that I was there, in the Q.