#46
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Not so sure about Mt Hamilton. The views aren't that great during the climb (esp. compared to Mt Tam), just a long slog. More of a challenge from the backside. |
#47
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The grade of the road up the front of Mount Hamilton was intended for mules pulling wagons to supply the construction of the observatory at the top. Now, the backside is another story.
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You always have a plan on the bus... |
#48
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Yes. I remember Hamilton's "backside" well.
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Turns out they took a different route up ... |
#49
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It sounds like you went up Sierra road. The TOC has used that road a couple times. Brutal.
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You always have a plan on the bus... Last edited by Hindmost; 12-15-2018 at 03:07 PM. Reason: You guys are right it's Quimby. I had climb dyslexia. |
#50
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It was Quimby Road, the shortcut that trims off the initial section of the Hamilton climb from Alum Rock. Quimby is worse than Sierra and you must climb it on a summer day to appreciate the upper section in the baking sun.
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#51
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Yes. It was Quimby. I remember it had an unusual name. Bleech. Horrible.
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#52
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Ha! A friend just did an Everesting, 17 times Quimby. I would be afraid of that descent when I am so tired.
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#53
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I suggest some of the northeast climbs are memorable. Mt. Washington, for me at least, is/was an experience I will never forget. It lives up to all the hype it gets from various lists. I think it is 12% for 7.4 miles. The views are breath taking. And I think there is a haunting sense of isolation at the top with the changing cloud cover and winds, depending on the weather, of course. You can climb it, however, only on race day and the practice day, which is open only to the racers.
I will also put in a plug for Mt. Ascutney in Vermont which can be climbed anytime in season. I think it is 3.4 miles at 12%. There is no view until you get to the top, but once there it is quite spectacular. I appreciate the climb as the road is narrower and you are under a canopy of trees. There is very little traffic - so it is you and the climb. I found Mt. Mitchell (from the Marion side) to be disappointing. It may be I was too physically drained to appreciate it, but more traffic, much wider road, and a grind it out (seemingly forever for someone as slow as I am!) climb. |
#54
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underrated: all of the climbs out of Barcelonnette: Col de la Bonette, Coll d'Allos, Col de la Coyelle, Col de Vars ....
A great place to base for a week of great riding and climbing. |
#55
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Wow. Kudos to your buddy. That's a disgusting climb. Nothing redeeming about it. It's been several years, but I recall it has some pretty technical switchbacks and the road isn't in great condition. I'd be very cautious descending when I'm wide awake...
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#56
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I've found that a lot of the best climbs I have done are the unnamed climbs in proximity to famous ones.
I spent a summer in Bormio and the best climb was this little side road that climbed out of the valley for 20 miles and dead ended at a waterfall. At the time the Strava segment had fewer than 15 rides. Some of the best climbs I did in Mallorca were unnamed as well. |
#57
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ALL of the best
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Tibet, KKH in Pakistan, Yemen backrods etc etc etc The climb to Everest base camp is my fave The pass is 19k Basecamp is 17 |
#58
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Kokee on the Western Hawaii island of Kauai ... Steep climb with views of the Grand Canyon of the Pacific. Unremitting tropical sun. I did it in 1995 or 96. Cramped 2/3 of the way up and couldn't get my leg over my seat to get off the bike. Eventually remounted and limped to the finish. Hard to carry enough water and there is no place to stop to get any.
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#59
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I wonder what Bikeflights charges to ship to Lhasa?
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“A bicycle is not a sofa” -- Dario Pegoretti |
#60
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Iowa Hill Road
Of all the big climbs in Nor Cal I'd put Iowa Hill Road as my fav - I would call it under-rated. It is harder than just about any climb I've done in this area, but also incredibly beautiful, and very remote (no cars, no services). A black bear in the road is not uncommon. Start in Auburn and make a loop back via Foresthill. Or do an out and back on Iowa Hill road for a crazy 1.75 mile plunge. If you add and out and back to Robinson Flat once you hit the Forest hill road junction you'll end up with about 10K' of climbing and 100 miles. Don't try it with a standard crank unless you have some solid standing power.
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