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Pittsburgh, according to the previous set of pictures.
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The good thing about an all road bike is that it lets you take the longer way home on the spur of the moment. This road was actually a poor choice for my 650Bx38 shod Bingham, as it had a fresh layer of sand put down on a very crowned road and I kept sliding down and digging in. I averaged 7 mph on this road. The single track was way faster.
It's the annual fishing derby here on MV and the fisherhumans are everywhere.
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
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A few from the recent weeks
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Finally getting back on my MTB after spending the past 3 years riding road and gravel!
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Nice, Hole in the Ground is my old favorite! I've also fallen off of mountain biking. |
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Groovilicious sloppy gravel! This is an awesome, *awesome*, **AWESOME** little route. Back roads, mountain views, plenty of punchy climbs, turtle rescuing, riverside rambling, a little MTB-lite stuff, creek crossings, state park (no cars!), cows, deer, donkeys, chickens, loose dogs, Gooney Manor Loop, and one particularly sketchy area passing a certain foxy farm where a particularly unsavory but incredibly well-coiffed man is rumored to live.
I've been going lower and lower with the tire pressure lately, and the lower I go, the better it gets. There's plenty of good road riding in the world, so almost no one *needs* a gravel bike...but man, if having a gravel bike means being able to experience rides like these, it's a luxury worth having! [IMG]Untitled by Michael Lock, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]Untitled by Michael Lock, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]Untitled by Michael Lock, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]Untitled by Michael Lock, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]Untitled by Michael Lock, on Flickr[/IMG] |
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None other! Now is the time, my friends.
(I am so grateful to be in a place and at a point in my life that I can take a few hours off work, roll down my driveway, ride the Alpine Loop, and return to my day--so much experience and sensory input packed into such a small bit of time.) |
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Wouldn't want to get your hands caught in this! Squeezed in a ride on wet roads between rainy days.
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Gosh, I know I live in a beautiful place (well, most of the time. I sometimes live in a very congested area of NJ) but the pictures you guys post from the less/undeveloped areas of California, Montana, Idaho, Colorado, and other such areas that seem to have huge swathes of unpopulated wilderness around every corner, those pictures leave me in a state of salivating awestruck envy. I rode and hiked in Alaska once and got a taste of it. Sublime!
VA is amazing for its road surface quality and varied terrain (mountains! hills! rollers! farms!) but the views always contain rural development, never unblemished wilds. That rural development is often full of really enjoyable details that make the ride a constantly developing montage of detail, but gosh, yeah...those pictures of the Alpine Loop a few posts up...awesome! Tangentially, one of the best routes around these parts starts in Harrisonburg, VA and is also called the Alpine Loop (Fondo). Top notch ride of 100+ miles and 11,000+ feet, but it's so awesomely fun that the day goes by quick! |
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(This particular "Alpine Loop" is here in Utah--come on out for a visit and we'll ride it together! We were in VA for years (I have family in Flint Hill), and I miss the dense foliage, the beautiful countryside (I don't miss the traffic). Still grateful every day, though, to be able to escape into the mountains from my doorstep.) |
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These are from yesterday's ride around the valley testing out a new P&S digital camera. Took out Bob Fourney's old bike yesterday as it tends to get lost in the shuffle with the other bikes. Not sure why as it's so nice to ride each time I get on it.
The bike, built by Wayne Evans of Denver for Bob Fourney to ride in a mid 90's Paris-Brest Paris. Columbus EL-OS that I upgraded with Dura-Ace 9 speed and those wheels. Scrub oaks are in full color but the Aspens having shot off yet. Close up of the old Cabin as you enter Huntsville Nice color by Pineview Reservoir Zooming in the canyon from Cememtery Point. The main road to town actually snakes through that canyon. The water was so calm that morning. The barn on Two Rivers Ranch Display at the Pumpkin Patch. Middle Inlet area is now closed to cars so I can bike up there and have it all to myself. YES!!!! Final shot of the bike. One of these days's I'll put some proper compact handlebars on this to fix that weird setup. Easy to do with that open face quill stem. |
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And this would be . . .
. . . where, pray tell?
BBD [QUOTE=jamesdak;3427187]These are from yesterday's ride around the valley testing out a new P&S digital camera. Took out Bob Fourney's old bike yesterday as it tends to get lost in the shuffle with the other bikes. Not sure why as it's so nice to ride each time I get on it. The bike, built by Wayne Evans of Denver for Bob Fourney to ride in a mid 90's Paris-Brest Paris. Columbus EL-OS that I upgraded with Dura-Ace 9 speed and those wheels. Scrub oaks are in full color but the Aspens having shot off yet. Close up of the old Cabin as you enter Huntsville Nice color by Pineview Reservoir Zooming in the canyon from Cememtery Point. The main road to town actually snakes through that canyon. The water was so calm that morning. The barn on Two Rivers Ranch Display at the Pumpkin Patch. Middle Inlet area is now closed to cars so I can bike up there and have it all to myself. YES!!!! Final shot of the bike. One of these days's I'll put some proper compact handlebars on this to fix that weird setup. Easy to do with that open face quill stem.
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--- __0 __0 __0 ----_-\<,_ -\<, _(_)(_)/_(_)/ (_) A thing of beauty is a joy forever--Keats |
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