I should add that Agate Bay Road heads straight into the hills for a couple miles, then joins up to Jensen Road, which curves around and intersects with Y Road again, just before the top of the climb. So I got to ride the downhill twice, but only did the climb once.
I should also have said "neither the bear NOR I was much disturbed."
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Bears in the Woods
Wednesday I rode Northshore Drive to the Y Road hill climb, then on Mt. Baker Hwy. to the Nooksack River, and back the same way. At the bottom of Y Road I stopped to rest, just across from where Agate Bay Road angles up the hill. After sixteen or so years in Whatcom County, I'd never been on that road, and noting that my odometer was at 3199.6 miles, I decided to go exploring and watch my odo turn over. At first the road goes over a few small, steepish rolling hills through woods with a few houses. Near the top of a hill I looked off in to the trees and huckleberries on my right and saw either a very large black Newfoundland dog, or a small black bear. Assisted by the downhill, I coasted by fast enough that neither the bear or I was much disturbed. When I glanced at my odo again, it said 3200 exactly.
I was riding about 4-6pm, so there were deer out feeding, too. I saw several grazing in cleared fields or front yards at the top of the hill climb.
Y Road, by the way, is about a Category 2 or 3 hill climb, in Tour de France terms. I've learned to appreciate low gears, but did not have to drop down to the smallest chainring.
I was riding about 4-6pm, so there were deer out feeding, too. I saw several grazing in cleared fields or front yards at the top of the hill climb.
Y Road, by the way, is about a Category 2 or 3 hill climb, in Tour de France terms. I've learned to appreciate low gears, but did not have to drop down to the smallest chainring.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Coming Down from the Hills
The November rains are trying to get an early start. Usually by afternoon the sky is only partly cloudy, the temperature moderate but uncomfortably damp and humid. I'm still running errands by bike, and going for flattish 20-30 mile rides for fun. I've ridden more than 3100 miles since mid-February; I expect to ride 4000 miles this year.
I hate to admit it, but after returning from vacation I found my hilly eight mile commute was beginning to wear on me. I rode that route five days a week for more than a year and half, and the year before I rode another route with an easier daily hill-climb. I started doing hilly rides back in a warm spell in January, to test myself before the Chilly Hilly. And then some hard hill-climbing on my vacation in July. By mid-August I was getting twinges in both knees and straining my back on the hills on my commute. I guess it's a good time for a rest.
Now that I'm not commuting any more, maybe in the next couple of weeks I'll revisit my old routes to work and review my hill-climbing lessons from the past two or three years.
I hate to admit it, but after returning from vacation I found my hilly eight mile commute was beginning to wear on me. I rode that route five days a week for more than a year and half, and the year before I rode another route with an easier daily hill-climb. I started doing hilly rides back in a warm spell in January, to test myself before the Chilly Hilly. And then some hard hill-climbing on my vacation in July. By mid-August I was getting twinges in both knees and straining my back on the hills on my commute. I guess it's a good time for a rest.
Now that I'm not commuting any more, maybe in the next couple of weeks I'll revisit my old routes to work and review my hill-climbing lessons from the past two or three years.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Club Univega
This is a newly-created blog dedicated to bicycle commuting and recreational cycling in and around Bellingham, Washington.
My Summer Vacation
NOTE: this is a repost of one of my first posts from September 2010. At the time I was still learning the finer points of placing and sizing photos and wrapping text. Since then something seems to have gone wrong, and the post and some photos went missing, except in draft form. So there they are again, because I miss the sun.
Klamath River |
Emigrant Lake, near Ashland |
Some high points of the ride |
Last public restroom for 65 miles |
The historical marker there tells about one group who were delayed when an ox became mired in the mud, then had to abandon a wagon after it broke a wheel. To make the climb up to Hayden Pass they had to double-team the wagons, using two ox teams to pull one wagon up, then returning to pull the one left behind.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Alas, I won't have much to say about commuting for a while, as I was laid off from my job on September 1. But this is a glorious season for recreational cycling in Bellingham and I plan to take full advantage before the November rains set in.
Here are some photos from a recent ride to Blaine, just south of the Canadian border:
Here are some photos from a recent ride to Blaine, just south of the Canadian border:
My trusty K2 on the public fishing dock across from Semiahmoo Spit.
Quick-Step was here - steam-powered
Some scenes from the 2010 Chilly Hilly, a 33-mile ride
around Bainbridge Island, last February:
The bike deck on the ferry |
Lining up to disembark - people were very orderly and docile, probably because of hypothermia. |
Rest-stop at the half-way point |
The line-up for the return trip on the last ferry to Seattle. |
ClubUnivega
This is a newly-created blog dedicated to bicycle commuting and recreational cycling in and around Bellingham, Washington.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)