Archive for the ‘Mountain Biking’ Category

I’ve been very homesick lately. But the ideas rolling around my head haven’t been for any particular people or food….but for the delicious mountain bike trails in North Georgia, Eastern Tennessee, and Western North Carolina

It’s been over a year and half since I’ve been on my mountain bike. I finally got sick of feeling as healthy as Keith Richards looks (ironically, he’s probably in pretty good shape). But the problem is that using my car to drive up into the mountains strands Lisa and Madeline. But this weekend was different. They went on a Girl Scout camping trip where they spent the night next to a dilapidated section of the Great Wall. This freed me up to do whatever I desired.

So this morning I dusted off my bike, packed some gear and headed to the same trail system at Fragrant Hills that I rode the first (and last) time here. Getting there took about 30 minutes and I was successful remembering the location of the obscure trailhead.

The trail is rocky and technical as it climbs up precipitously close to areas of sheer drop offs. It’s so rocky that I would be better off with “all-mountain” bike (longer travel, bigger tires, and disk brakes) instead of my lightweight XC racer.

Being off the bike for a year has it’s consequences. Leg strength, endurance, technical skills and general confidence suffered. On the climb up, I used an abnormal amount of discretion when it came to tricky sections and walked some of them. After all, my goal was to get my heart pumping and get the trail “feel” back…not chase adrenaline-pumping thrills.

Watching the clock, I decided to start my decent after about an hour of painful climbing. This is a great trail for descending but I still rode conservatively. I reached a left-inside switchback and while doing the left turn, I hung my front wheel on a big rock and started to fall towards the downside of the hill…not the direction you want to fall. I clipped out one foot and was nearly successful stopping myself but the ground crumbled and I kept going over the ledge. As I was rotating over the steep ledge towards a pit of sharp boulders my “Risk Bucket” blog entry came to mind because it looked like I was in for a potential trip to the hospital.

As an action-sports participant, you learn to be cautiously optimistic in the first few minutes after a wreck. You may think you are just sore only to find something broken later. Visibly, I was pretty messy. My elbow had a bleeding raspberry along with cuts on my shin, knees and hip. The area above my sacrum (lower spine) took a major scraping blow and that reminded me how dangerous even a low-speed tip-over could be.

After my 30-second “system-check”, I untangled myself from between my bike and the boulders pulled myself back up onto the trail. Still not ruling out serious injury, I started checking my bike and my thinking about an exit strategy. The bike looked fine except for the seat which broke cleanly off. I jury-riggged it back onto the post, then held it in place by pinching it between my thighs and slowly descended about 2 miles back to the car.

On the way out of the village, I bought a couple drinks from a local merchant and soon started to feel certain that I didn’t have any serious injury. As more hours passed, I’m certain that my arm isn’t fractured and more optimistic that my back is just banged up rather than “really” injured.

Despite the soreness in my legs competing with the pains from the fall, I felt the energetic fatigue that I haven’t felt since moving to China. My homesickness is cured and a third year here isn’t so scary after all.

This week, Beijing Olympic Committee launched the online ticket website for the 2008 Olympics and I impulsively signed up for tickets. It’s interesting.

http://www.tickets.beijing2008.cn

You don’t actually buy the tickets when you check-out of the store. You are creating a list of desired events. The purchase date occurs in June. Based on demand for various events, you are either issued the tickets outright or put into a lottery if the event has a greater demand than supply.

Pricing and ability to reserve more than one ticket is based on the perceived demand. The following is a list of prices for the Opening Ceremony:

¥5000.00 - A
¥3000.00 - B
¥1500.00 - C
¥800.00 - D
¥200.00 - E

The ‘A’ level tickets cost about $650 USD. and they only allow one reservation. If I don’t get the ‘A’, then I’m in the drawing for the ‘B’ etc. I’m actually hoping that I don’t have to pay for ‘A’…it’s a bit steep. The other scary prospect is that this is just one ticket..what about the rest of the family?

I have to go through and do the same for them as well and cross my fingers that they get tickets too. I imagine that there will be a lot of creative trading happening in July.

Along with the opening ceremonies, I reserved tickets to the mens and women’s mountain bike events and the mens track & field final events. If I get all my 1st choices, I’ll be looking at almost $900 USD.

Your identity is verified with your passport. I can envision ticket brokers using their friends and family’s passports overwhelming the system. They do say that 70% have been reserved for China residents. Apparently we’re in that pool…yea.

I’m so buzzing right now. I just finished riding some sweet, technical, steep singletrack within a 30 minute drive from my house. I hooked up with a teacher, Andy from school and a couple of his riding buddies, Nick and Rob. It was a beautiful day…slightly hazy unlike the perfect, cool, blue sky day we had yesterday, but that’s very rare here…it’s usually polluted smoggy muck.

View All Photos Here

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The trail climbs from a middle-class, suburban part of Beijing called Fragrant Hills which is on the northwest side of town, nestled at the foot of the mountains. The long climb starts from the valley floor and crawls up technical, craggy rock outcroppings, with a brief mix of paved trail followed by an additional climb topping out at close 2000′…over a very short span of about 5 miles…that’s very steep.

The total ride-time was about 2.5 hours including a number of breaks.
About 30 minutes into the climb, I quietly panicked because I took one last sip from my Camelback it was bone dry. Luckily, when we reached the top, there was a small snack stand with a guy selling coke, beer, and water. Excellent! I had a Coke and refilled my Camelback with a half liter of water and we departed down the back side of the mountain. This part was more grassy and sandy with lots of erosion. It proved to be pretty tricky but fun. We reached a small reservoir and dam where locals were fishing. We rode up dirt road back to the ridge and dropped back into some extremely technical singletrack with large, twisted rock drops followed by a tunnel of low-hanging tree branches. We soon re-connected with the main trail and after a quick climb and descent, we were home.

While the trail wasn’t designed for cycling, it was really quite amazing because it had elements of every trail I’ve ever been on in terms of tread, steepness, and ecosystem. The only thing it lacked was a creek crossing which is not a desirable thought here in China considering the water quality.

The Great Wall Bicycle Festival is coming in a couple weeks. It will feature world champion MTB racers Sue Haywood and Gunn Rita Dahle along with members of team Discovery. Saturday will be for the roadies and Sunday is for the mountain bikers. They will be hosting fun races and an “elite” race. But at 12k, I don’t really think it would be too terribly difficult. I’m sure I’ll get spanked by some hotshot riders but it will be 100% speed…endurance isn’t a factor for a 8 mile race.

Anyway, I better start riding a little. Finding the time is very difficult because family time is critical here.