Rock & Road Trail route today |
A roadie brevet is just that ... polish up your carbon, air the tires get on your bike and ride roads.. a hill is a hill with the only variance being the grade. The difficulty being how many miles & how many hills (also thrown in would be some traffic conditions). Not so on trail riding. Every week the trail conditions change, the goat-heads blossom and the rocks get bigger. Just 4 riders for this one.
Keith Olsen took his Salsa Spearfish out of mothballs and finally got some help setting it up for dirt riding. His results proved that today.
Non-rando Bob Sheldon from Fallbrook was a newbie to randonneur stuff and was well mounted on Yeti carbon full suspension ride. Bob is a OFR road rider and likes the climbing stuff.
Rando Mike Bailey rode a few brevets years ago and was back with his brand new Giant cross carbon bike. Mike did good today with just navigating the rock gardens and finding some traction on the climbs.
I was on the thrice ridden 27.5+ wider tire C'dale and still playing with the settings, tire pressure and where to put bags to carry things.
After a few words, we were off just after 0700 on a crisp, clear morning on the Inland Rail Trail heading for Escondido. Our first "detour" came as construction equipment blocked the East Escondido Bike Path at Broadway Street. We rode around looking for another entrance and finally found one over on Fig Street. Bob and Mike were blasting off the front with the early adrenaline surge. Fun riding the Old San Pasqual Valley Road & Milkey Way. Finally some dirt as we stopped at the Ysabel Creek Trailhead. A dozen trail runners were just leaving as we approached. Mostly women training group heading the same direction as we were. We stripped off a layer, I let some air out of my tires and after the INFO question, we were off for some fun!
Ran into the trail runners again just on the steep part of Raptor Ridge climb. I waited a bit for them to clear and went around as they thankfully stopped off trail at the top. Bob was just behind be as I kept hearing his squeaking rear disc brakes. We made a stop as I pointed out to Bob the hillside trail way over there where the Ham-Hock Trail would be going up in March. Quick time on the sandy flat stuff over to Mule Hill Chevron. Mike caught up by then, having a little traction problems going up the first climb. Keith cruised in a bit later. Water refill, receipt and we were off in about 15 minutes.
Lake Hodges "rock gardens" quickly separated the group. A whole lot of hikers out along Hodges today, so it was "Good Morning" and "Thank You" galore. Got together at the parking lot and took the roadside trail over to the regroup in Del Dios town (I think it's a town...sort of?) Mike's top-tube baggie blew up and Keith helped him pick up the goodies scattered over the trail.
Santa Fe Trail: 33 switchbacks make for interesting climbing! |
More great single-trak on Lusardi Loop Trail. Nice little bridge crossing and the steep rocky side-hill was mellowed out over last weeks recon ride. We all made it safely thru there and a regroup before the cardiac workout ahead. At least there were no tumbleweeds blocking the double-trak this time. Looks like a truck smashed up some and threw the rest over the side. We finally all made it over to Black Mtn. Park and a brief repose at the water fountain. Smooth sailing ahead down hard-surfaced Black Mtn. Road to the Shell Station Control.
Nice lady there knew all about cyclists stopping and needing receipts. I grabbed a over-priced bottle of Citrus Vitamin Water and added powder to my bottles. Temps were warming up to low 60's by now and I was considering shedding the long sleeve layer. Not just yet, as we had a fast downhill ahead to more dirt. Around 15-minutes later, we were off, chasing a roadie downhill to Los Penasquitos Canyon Preserve. Entering the Preserve, this place was packed with Saturday hikers!
Lusardi Loop Trail: Pristine single trak |
first 2 miles. We still made constant riding over to the waterfall. After which, the foot traffic fell off dramatically and we were able to hit those rocky uphills with some speed. Wide tires are perfect here with the softer stuff mixed in with rocky sections make for a easy straight line. Mike was picking his way thru with accuracy and Keith's pre-ride planning was paying off. At Wagon Wheel Crossing I ask a hiker about the Abode Trail section mud bath and she said it was dried out some. That's the way we went and only had to dismount one time just before the Adobe Ruin. Shoes slightly muddy, we were soon onto Sorrento Valley Blvd. heading for the hidden Roselle Street dirt climb.
Easy way up to UTC or not, this climb gets steeper as you go and makes for another good cardio workout. Non-rando Bob and I cleaned our cleats out at the top and soon our small gruppo was back together again for the blast down Genesee Ave. to the last section of dirt.
Rose Canyon Hiking Trail-N is like a rutted access road. Lots of "Preservation Construction" signs and a few rocky uphills brought us to a shortened detour onto La Jolla Colony Dr. sidewalk. Another plus for the pre-ride last week. Regroup there as I briefed Bob on the little "switchy thing" on the top of his right suspension fork. Keith led out down Rose Canyon Bike Path and onto the now soft riding Rose Creek BP (with suspension MTB's, of course). Mike on CX bike was now back on comfortable riding mode. Necessary stop at the first Mission Bay bathroom, where it was time to refill bottles.
Do to moderate BP traffic and lots of kiddies out on bikes, we decided to make a "safety move" and left the Mission Bay Bike Path for a stint onto Mission Bay Drive over to Fiesta Island. Back onto BP, we were soon winding around by Sea World Drive and a packed parking lot. A few turns later, crossing the channel, it was Ocean Beach 7-Eleven for our short final stop. Looking at the clock, we had less than one-hour to finish up downtown. Bob was lying on the sidewalk, stretching out his lower back.
Scenic Sunset Cliffs: Ride by just before the cardiac Hill St. climb. |
Keith rode back home to Point Loma (we almost passed his house on the route), Bob, Mike & I finally got tickets & jumped the 3:18 Coaster to Oceanside with time to spare. Bob opted to dig into my drug cache for 2000mg of Tylenol to ease the back pain. Soon joined at Sorrento Valley Station by a big body-builder guy on a Specialized 29'er who sat next to Bob! Things got real quiet after that. Oceanside stop we jumped the 4:33 crowded Sprinter Train to San Marcos. Some anorexic girl passed out on the train so the ride was anything but boring for me! A short BP ride and it was back to the Albertson's start just as the sun was setting and time for rear blinkies. Good ride guys!
Sun, light clouds
Hi: 63 Lo: 38
Wind: Light, variable
84 miles
-randorides
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