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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report on: July 12, 2011, 05:13:23 PM
DenisVTT


Location: Beautiful downtown Darnestown, MD
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« on: July 12, 2011, 05:13:23 PM »

Starting from the south, the difficulties were early: you’re in the heat of the desert the very first day (one guy suffered a heat stroke after just 70 miles and had to be treated at the hospital,) by the second day you're at 8,000ft, 9,000 by the 3rd, and on the 5th day you’re over 11,000 ft. That means it’s very hot during the day, near freezing at night (there’s plenty of snow), and unless you're used to altitude, you gasp for air! It’s also where some of the most remote stretches of the race are found. Crossing the Gila Wilderness on the 2nd and 3rd day is a stretch of 176 miles between Pinos Altos and Pie Town with no services: no food, no water, no nothing, just a Ranger work station after 130 miles of this with a Coke machine that doesn’t work. The field of northbound starters got decimated that first week. As I don’t suffer from the heat too badly, I got through it alright but the nights sleeping in the cold were tough. Ripped a hole in my rear tire on the second day in one rare singletrack section, fixed it with a boot. Also broke my rear rack on the 4th day (bought a replacement in Grants).


At the start line.


In the heat, on the road to Silver City

Shortly after Cuba on the morning of the 5th day, my rear shifter failed. With the help of a touring Great Divide biker, I was able to put the chain in the 20t in the rear, and continue on a 3X1. But the highest passes were still to come: Cerro Del Grant, Burned Mountain, Brazos Ridge, La Manga, all of them at 10,000 ft+, and the biggest of them all, Indiana Pass at almost 12,000ft. The next bike shop was in Salida, close to 500 miles away. After 3 days of sucking air on my 3X1, I was exhausted. I arrived on Day 7 in Platoro, CO around 4pm after just 50 miles that day and decided to stay there and assess the situation rather than continue the 6-hr climb to Indiana Pass. I got passed by 2 guys that day that I thought had been way behind me (Roland and Ross). It was a low day, but staying put turned out to be the right decision as I used the available time to secure a shifter from an off-route bike shop close to the next town.


Near Platoro, CO


My cabin in Platoro, CO

After a good night rest in a very nice cabin, I climbed the very steep and very beautiful Indiana Pass (this time the chain got stuck in the 16T!) and happily got through the 25-mile descent towards Del Norte where Gary, the local bike mechanic, fixed me up with the new shifter from that off-route bike shop and a new rear tire and new chain that I had asked my LBS to send there earlier. It was another 3-hour stop (including a nice lunch!) but I got out of Del Norte in good spirits and ready for the rest of the race.


Indiana Pass


Indiana Pass

The difficulties certainly had not ended. Carnero Pass and Cochetopa Pass are at 9,000ft+, Marshall Pass is at almost 11,000, and Boreas Pass is at 11,500. I caught Ross back in Salida on the 9th day. On the 10th day, after meeting southbound leaders Kurt and Jeffe near the top of Boreas, I caught a brewing cold storm on the way down and arrived real cold in Breckenridge. My goal was to get to Silverthorne about 20 miles further but the cold rain had me shivering and I had to stop about 8 miles short in a Frisco motel, where I took a one-hour long shower to warm myself up.


Boreas Pass

Got up at 5:30am the next day, and took a look outside. There was a cold rain falling and I certainly wasn’t going to leave enthusiastically. By the time I went to get breakfast, it was now snowing, an inch of snow was already on the ground, and the TV was predicting 3 to 6 inches falling in the region throughout most of the day. By that time, I also heard from Roland who was by then just 10 miles ahead of me in Silverthorne that he was going to take the day off. The thought certainly crossed my mind too. I decided to ride to Silverthorne and met with Roland. The 2 of us went shopping for winter clothes. I bought $150 worth of various liners. It was then already way past noon but I decided to ride. There was snow on the way to Ute Pass (9,500 ft), cold rain on the other side, and very decent weather by the time I made it to Kremmling, CO. Only did 63 miles that day but I had passed Roland for good. I was now in 3rd place. Unfortunately, Craig, the guy in second, was about 200 miles ahead of me at that time.


Snow in Frisco


The snow leaving Silverthorne

Reached Steamboat Spring the next day where I stopped relatively early (7:30p). The next morning was a bit emotional going by the road where TD rider Dave Blumenthal lost his life last year (collided with a pick up truck on his way down the pass), and then went to one of the biggest difficulties of the route, a 6-mile (3 climbing, 3 descending), 3-hour pusher in 2-foot deep soft snow. The reward on the other side is Brush Mountain, a very friendly lodge kept by the very friendly Kristen. She fed me the biggest sandwich I have ever seen. I also met Bob Anderson from Plum Grove Cycling on his southbound way. I also got caught by Greg, a stealth (no Spot) NoBo rider. It was a surprise, but he said he was going to spend the night at the lodge and I was going to go on so I was able to stay ahead of him for the remainder of the race (I think…!) Got into Wyoming that day feeling pretty strong. Camped in some lonesome road in Medicine Bow National Forest south of Rawlins with the antelopes.


The 6 miles of snow


The 6 miles of snow

Day 14 was my biggest ever. After riding the 35 miles or so to Rawlins (met many SoBo riders on the way there) where I got lunch (actually, breakfast!), I filled my 100oz camelbak (always had to fill it short to fit it properly so it was more like 80oz), 3 20-oz bottles, some trail mix and a pack of gummy bears, I set out to cross the 140-mile high desert in the Great Divide Basin. In 140 miles I saw 2 cars, 4 southbound riders, not a single house, not a single tree,  and hundreds of antelopes. My goal was to make it to Atlantic City (pop. 39) by 11pm but the last 10 miles were an 800-ft climb. Hardest 800 feet I have ever climbed. I arrived there almost out of food and water and completely exhausted around 1:30am where I was greeted by 4 drunk guys in a bar. They offered me food, ice tea and a cabin (I paid for all that so it was legal). 172 miles total for the day (my longest ever), 15 hours wheels rolling, 17.5 hours total ride time, and a fantastic end to a grueling day.


Antelope


4 drunk guys in a bar

The next day (Day 15) was tough. Started late (around 8:30am), got dime-sized hail from 2 thunderstorms before it was even 11am, suffered through 40 miles of steep rollers with more thunderstorms all along, and finally had to go through a 40-mile flat stretch with a fierce wind in my face. Stopped very tired in Pinedale, WY after only 90 miles.

Day 16 was a detour to avoid the snow in northern Wyoming. Beautiful route going through Jackson Hole with a view of the Tetons most of the day. Jackson Pass was very steep (2,500 ft in about 5 miles). Managed my second longest day ever at 156 miles in 13 hours wheels rolling. Slept in a motel in Ashton about 5 miles off course.


Jackson Hole

The next morning brought me what I thought was by far the worst section of the route: a 40-mile stretch of straight, sandy, heavily washboarded stretch of rail trail that really should have no place on this beautiful route. Pure torture and I suspect riding it is actually on the list of the Geneva Conventions’ prohibited practices. It’s not even very pretty but even if it was you wouldn’t know it as taking your eyes off your front wheel means you are sure to catch the deep sands and lose your balance. I hated it!

I crossed into Montana shortly after that. Made it to Lima late that day (arrived around 11:00pm) after 131 miles. Also had to start dealing with the mosquitoes. Changed my main TD goal from “not being eaten by a grizzly” to “not being eaten by mosquitoes!”  Also did well the next day, managing 136 miles into Wise River, MT, and reducing the gap with Craig to about a day of riding.

Day 19 wasn’t going to be that great. First had to deal with the news that my 2 main bank cards had been defrauded and that I was no longer going to be able to use them. Then broke 2 nipples in rapid succession just before attacking the monstrous Fleecer Ridge (38% grade, on heavily rutted trail, you basically push the bike one step at a time and people with B.O.B.s have to push the trailer up the slope separate from the bike.) Descended cautiously as I was worried about tacoing the wheel. Then another very steep climb to yet another Continental Divide crossing, and finally the town of Butte, MT, where I was warmly welcomed by bike shop owner Rob Leipheimer (Levi’s brother). He fixed my bike pretty quickly, but as I was trying to load the upcoming, now authorized for NoBo riders, snow detours, my GPS started to malfunction. Lost a good couple hours trying to fix the problem, also had to deal with the credit card fraud and by the time I was ready to go, it was 6:30pm, thunderstorms were coming in, I had not yet bought food or had dinner and I just decided to call it a day and stay in town until the next morning. Lost a good 40 or 50 miles on Craig that day.


With Rob Leipheimer at the Outdoorsman bike shop in Butte, MT

Did much better the next day (Day 20), rolling late into Lincoln, MT after 130 miles and 9,200 ft of climbing. Even had the pleasure to be welcomed into Helena, MT by a fan who knew about me via a cycling forum. Had to go through a nasty thunderstorm and a very muddy descent and several steep climbs. Day 21 ended with a tough finish in muddy, hilly conditions late at night and I arrived tired, wet and dirty in Swan Lake’s local B&B (5 miles off route) around midnight after 147 miles and a 14 hours wheels rolling day. Broke my rear rack again and this time just discarded some items and converted the aerobars into an improvised front rack. I had also reduced the gap with Craig to about 60 miles.

Got going early on Day 22, only to be caught by the B&B owner who brought me breakfast on the side of the road! Easily rolled into Whitefish around mid-day, then started the big climb of the day, which ended with another 2.5-hour, 5-mile hike in deep snow. It was dark by the time I finished the descent on the other side and I went for another 35 miles with wet feet. Got a maintenance worker to open a motel room for me in Eureka at 1 in the morning. I was just 10 miles from the Canadian border, and barely a little more than 20 miles behind Craig.


5 miles of this


My wheel

I set out to catch Craig that day (Day 23), but it wasn’t going to be easy. I rode at race pace all day and I only caught him right before Elkford after close to 120 miles of pursuit. When he finished the descent and caught up to me in the convenience store in Elkford, it was only 8pm and I was pondering adding another 20 miles or so for the day but I decided that it would be better to keep him in my sights so on the last day I would know exactly whether he was ahead or behind, and could race accordingly. The last thing I wanted was for him to pass me in the middle of the night and I wouldn’t even know he had. We went to dinner together and both of us spent the night at the Elkford’s campground.


Caught Craig and camped next to him

Both of us got up very early (around 4:30am) the next day, got breakfast at the same convenience store at about the same time, but I departed there slightly before him and so I knew he was behind. Either he was going to have to catch me, or I was going to finish second. It was a very tough day again with some rain, steep climbs (Elk Pass,) rough roads and even some difficult singletrack but the finish line was in sight. I saw 2 grizzlies and one huge bear, and the mountains all around were majestic. I rode all day like Craig was right on my ass, even looked over my shoulder many times (he wasn’t even close and actually didn't finish that day, as he apparently experienced some mechanical problems, but I had no way of knowing). I made it to the finish line around 5:40pm, and was greeted there with a PBR (anything tastes good after 2,750 miles) by Jason of Soul Cycles, who confirmed that I was second. I was elated. And ready for a break! My (non-official) time: 23:09:40! My overall finish (SoBos and NoBos combined) was 24th, out of 90 starters.


The finish line in Banff, AB


Average mileage per day: 114.08
Total time wheels turning: 257 hours+ or 11:00 hours a day
Total time riding, including breaks: 347 hours+ or 14:85 a day

Most mileage: 172 miles
9 days over 130 miles
8 days under 100 miles
Shortest day: 48 miles

Photos: https://picasaweb.google.com/dchazelle

GPS tracks: http://ridewithgps.com/users/27288
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- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #1 on: July 12, 2011, 05:16:43 PM
DenisVTT


Location: Beautiful downtown Darnestown, MD
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« Reply #1 on: July 12, 2011, 05:16:43 PM »

More race report....

The toughest parts: definitely the south, but it’s not like the rest is easy.

The toughest day: Day 7 in Platoro, CO. I was exhausted from 3 days of riding 3X1 over the highest passes of the course. The thought of stopping there did cross my mind but I never made any concrete plans to stop. Instead, I arranged for a new shifter to be there at the next town, and from there on, while I had tough days, I never again considered abandoning.

Easiest day: no such thing as an easy day on the TD, but maybe Day 18, Lima, MT to Wise River, MT, 136 miles and 6,300 ft of climbing.

The human stories (among many more):

- Arriving exhausted at close to 2 in the morning in Atlantic City, WY (pop. 39) after having ridden since 6am (15-hr+ wheels rolling) and crossing the high desert of Wyoming on 1 gallon (4 liters) of water, a couple packs of trail mix food and a few gummy bears. I had been told that there was a tepee next to a bar and that the bar owners didn't mind anybody sleeping in the tepee. But that’s still sleeping on the ground at close to 8,000 ft of altitude. The last 10 miles or so were a slow, 800-ft climb, probably the hardest 800 ft I ever climbed. I finally arrived, exhausted. I find the tepee. There's a light inside the bar next to it. I go check it out, and there are 4 guys in the bar, 2 behind the counter and 2 in the front, all completely drunk, celebrating something (I think it was the fact that it was Thursday…). They welcomed me, fixed me sandwiches, gave me ice tea, offered me to crash in a cabin they were usually renting in the back but hadn’t because it was without running water, and let me shower in one of the guys’ father’s house. An unbelievably warm and friendly end to an unbelievably difficult day of riding!


The tepee, where I didn't sleep
   
- The lady that stopped to offer me a ride in the middle of a nasty, lightning-filled thunderstorm on a climb towards Helena, Montana:

Me: I’m sorry, mam, I'm on a race and I can’t accept or I would be disqualified.
Lady: oh, you're on a race! I'm sorry, I didn't mean to slow you down.
Me: that’s alright, mam, I still have 600 miles to go, you know…

- Don from the Velonews forum who welcomed me into Helena and presented me to his coworker at the library while I was covered with mud.

- Swan Lake, MT: Made it to this very small town around midnight. Passed an open bar on the way to finding a place to stay. Finally locate a Bed and Breakfast but of course it’s closed. There’s a sign in the porch though that tells people to just help themselves to a room, and pay the next morning. I did just that, put my bike inside and quickly head out to the open bar. One girl is still tending the bar, and a middle aged couple is about to leave when I arrive. I ask the girl if she still serves food. She says she doesn’t, but would be happy to prepare me a pizza. She did, and a nice one! The couple during that time starts chatting me up and before I know it it’s 2 in the morning when I get to my room and take my shower. Got up around 5:30 and the sign in the porch says that breakfast is at 8am. Wrote a note on a piece of paper, apologizing profusely for having to leave before breakfast, and leaving my credit card number there for them to charge me.  Started the long climb of the morning, then about 2 hours later I hear a car behind me. The driver comes to my level, opens the window and the following dialogue ensues:

Driver: Are you Denis?
Me, a bit startled: yes
Driver: I’m the B&B owner
Me: [uh, oh!]
Driver: I brought you breakfast!

And thus I had a wonderful breakfast on the side of the road. Turns out the guy knew about the race, looked me up on TrackLeaders, his wife fixed me breakfast and he drove all the way to catch me and bring it to me. Quite a nice surprise that day!  


Breakfast on the side of the road

Physical/medical issues: Never had any serious medical issues but got bad sun burn in the first few days that got both my arms and my neck bleeding for weeks (you can still see the scars). Never seriously got dehydrated, except maybe the first day as I had some cramps around mile 85. Sleep deprivation probably was my biggest issue, as I was sleeping an average of around 4 to 5 hours a night, and often less. Almost everyday I had to stop on the side of the road to take a power nap, as I was getting drowsy on the bike, often during downhills. On the positive side, there is no question that I got stronger as the days went by. While by the end I was mentally ready for the race to finish, physically I could easily have gone on for days, maybe weeks. Riding more than 10 hours wheels rolling at the beginning was tough. By the end, I didn’t even feel tired by the time 10 hours went by.

Weight loss: I'm not sure exactly because I didn't weigh before returning home, and I already had several substantial meals (including at The Bison in Banff, one of the best restaurants in the world). But when I got home, I was 192 pounds, down from around 207 when I started. That's a 15-pound loss.

Dealing with butt pain: I rarely experience butt pain even on long rides but I do on multi day rides and this wasn’t going to be an exception. I adopted 3 strategies:

- Lowering the saddle. It makes you less efficient, but it reduces the pressure on the butt (transferring it to your feet, I suppose)
- Double shammy: I had taken 2 sets of bike shorts because I was worried about the rain, but except for thunderstorms we had fairly little rain overall so after the first week or so, I decided to wear both. It does help.
- Anbesol, or Oralgel: it doesn’t work just on your mouth sores….

Butt pain is hardest in the morning, when your butt is cold. Didn't really feel anything by the afternoons and evenings.

The route is absolutely beautiful
: the most beautiful places in my opinion are from northern New Mexico (north of Cuba, NM) to Central Colorado (around Breck), but the entire thing is just overall gorgeous (and very, very remote!). Even the detours in the north, while probably not as nice as the original parts, are still beautiful. If you can’t do the race one day, I highly recommend doing it touring. Yes, it’s hard, but very much worth it.

My bike:

I had a Niner MCR (hardtail steel 29er) that worked perfectly for the ride.

Mechanical issues:

- Rear shifter failed (it was a SRAM x9)
- Rear tire (a Nano) was shredded in the singletrack on the 2nd day. Switched to tubes and had 3 flats after that until I switched back to tubeless in Del Norte, several hundred miles later. No issue after that.
- Broke 2 nipples in rapid succession 50 miles south of Butte, MT
- Broke 2 rear racks
- GPS mount broke
- GPS (62CSX) sort of failed, then came back to life. Not sure what the problem was.
- Aerobars by the end were loose on the handlebar


My rear tire

The bike and all my gear (including Camelbak with some food and water) weighed around 63 pounds when I weighed them at Rob Leipheimer's shop. That was probably way too much.

Disappointments: the 40-mile Idaho rail trail and the Y in Banff (what a rip-off!)

Wildlife: I saw a bear, 2 grizzlies (stood on the trail about 50 feet in front of me,) a wolf, several moose, rattlesnakes, hundreds of elks, deer and antelopes and 3 skunks. Riding along a pack of elks is quite a thrill!


Moose


Bear

One of the best thing on a race like this is the ability to eat absolutely anything you want, in any quantity (provided of course there's a restaurant, somewhere...)  Fried ice cream for dessert? Sure, I'll have that. A Snickers bar right before bed? Yeah, why not!

The 3 most feared words on the map: “Long descent ahead” (the map cues go north to south…)

Will I do it again next year? Unlikely. Never say never but I always viewed that as a once in a lifetime adventure. Not because it was too hard but because of the huge commitment in time (between the travel and the race itself, unless you're Paul Attala you need almost a month), money (it's the most expensive free race I have ever entered) and training. I'm unlikely to be able to commit like this again some other year. But even if I did have the opportunity to once again commit that kind of time, money and training, I would likely do something else with it. The Tour d'Afrique (Cairo to Cape Town, 4 months, 12,000 kms) maybe...

Was it a good idea to go northbound: the big advantage that most of us northbounders expected was to have less snow in the north by the time we got there but that got irrelevant when southbounders were given significant detours around the snow portions 2 days before the start (which we later also got authorized to take as the snow was still there when we got there). I don’t regret it though, mostly for one reason: while we had thunderstorms on several days, we never had a really bad day of rain, let alone several days of it, which is what I was fearing the most. It’s just not very fun to ride day after day under the rain. My understanding is that the southbounders had to deal with rain pretty much the entire first week.

One thing I must mention is that my race was against northbounders almost exclusively. My focus was trying to catch the guy in front of me while not being caught by the guys behind, not trying to do better than people who were about 2,000 miles away from me going the other direction and whose overall position I actually knew nothing about. It even took me 2 days to find out what my overall finishing position was. What I am saying here is that my final time was largely dictated by the northbound race conditions I was in. had I gone southbound, I may have been able to catch up people that ultimately finished ahead of me and do better time wise, but then again people who finished behind me may also have been able to catch me.

One big thrill: the hundreds of people following my race. More than 1,300 messages were left from all over the world during those 3 weeks on my Facebook page, on my bike club’s (Mid-Atlantic Off-Road Enthusiasts) forum and on the Velonews forum. I thank all of you profusely for your support, along with my friend Tom for organizing the very nice celebratory ride and party when I returned.

It may be the hardest bike race in the world, but it was also the most thrilling!
« Last Edit: July 13, 2011, 09:10:43 PM by DenisVTT » Logged

- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #2 on: July 12, 2011, 05:32:36 PM
THE LONG RANGER

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« Reply #2 on: July 12, 2011, 05:32:36 PM »

Chapeau, Denis!

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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #3 on: July 12, 2011, 06:21:33 PM
rocky rode


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« Reply #3 on: July 12, 2011, 06:21:33 PM »

Great write-up Denis! Congratulations on a great ride!

It was also an honor to get to meet you.  I assume the new tire, shifter and chain worked out fine?

Gary in Del Norte.
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #4 on: July 12, 2011, 06:41:51 PM
DenisVTT


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« Reply #4 on: July 12, 2011, 06:41:51 PM »

Great write-up Denis! Congratulations on a great ride!

It was also an honor to get to meet you.  I assume the new tire, shifter and chain worked out fine?

Gary in Del Norte.

Thanks Gary. You saved my ride!

Yes, the tire and shifter worked perfectly all the way to Banff. Rob Leipheimer's mechanic changed my chain in Butte but I think it was just prevention.

Thanks again to you and Patti for the very competent help and wonderful welcome in Del Norte.
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- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #5 on: July 12, 2011, 07:00:43 PM
Roland Sturm


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« Reply #5 on: July 12, 2011, 07:00:43 PM »

Nice write-up and pictures!

Great move doing the Basin in one go, that was your decisive break and there was no way to catch you again afterwards (although Greg started to put in really long days towards the end).

Plus, we got to hear stories of the crazy French guy near death for the rest of our ride (starting from Atlantic City on, the guy in the black shirt in your picture had already sobered up by the time I got there). Timing was also impeccable because you made it into a little bit of a sheltered area when the particular hard wind came (it stopped Greg and me completely for that day shortly after South Pass, it caught Ross still in the Basin).

New Mexico was the toughest, by a big margin, and I physically needed Colorado to recover a bit (in particular sit bone bruises and chafing, partly from having to carry a backpack for all the extra water in New Mexico). By the third week (and a week without a backpack), I was very comfortable again and could have gone on as well. 

« Last Edit: July 12, 2011, 07:07:23 PM by Roland Sturm » Logged

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #6 on: July 12, 2011, 07:08:44 PM
DenisVTT


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« Reply #6 on: July 12, 2011, 07:08:44 PM »

Nice write-up and pictures!

Great move doing the Basin in one go, that was your decisive break and there was no way to catch you again (although Greg started to put in really long days towards the end).

Plus, we got to hear stories of the crazy French guy near death for the rest of our ride (starting from Atlantic City on, the guy in the black shirt in your picture had already sobered up by the time I got there). Timing was also impeccable because you made it into a little bit of a sheltered area when the particular hard wind came (it stopped Greg and me completely for that day shortly after South Pass, it caught Ross still in the Basin).




Cool to hear from you Roland. I was watching your and Ross' blue dots every time I got a chance, and it took everything I got to keep some separation. You guys were strong!

When did Greg the stealth rider finish? I was worried about him catching me or even passing me without warning.
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- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #7 on: July 12, 2011, 07:12:41 PM
DenisVTT


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« Reply #7 on: July 12, 2011, 07:12:41 PM »

I physically needed Colorado to recover a bit


That's got to sound very odd to most people who look at a map of Colorado....  icon_biggrin
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- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #8 on: July 12, 2011, 07:17:18 PM
Roland Sturm


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« Reply #8 on: July 12, 2011, 07:17:18 PM »

Greg McKennis and Craig Dolwin finished together the day after you, then Ross Delaplane. I came in about 24 hours after Ross, partly  because I returned to the original GDMBR route from northern Montana on (fewer cars, more miles and slower pace, but worth it) and partly because of a food poising episode that I attribute to a sandwich in Helena.

Broken GPS holder, slashed Nano sidewall (mine was the front), broken racks (in my case 2 Salsa cages), seems like some issues are very common.

That's got to sound very odd to most people who look at a map of Colorado....  icon_biggrin
Yes, but we now know how much easier Colorado is compared to NM!
« Last Edit: July 12, 2011, 07:23:59 PM by Roland Sturm » Logged

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #9 on: July 13, 2011, 09:07:08 PM
DenisVTT


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« Reply #9 on: July 13, 2011, 09:07:08 PM »

Greg McKennis and Craig Dolwin finished together the day after you, then Ross Delaplane. I came in about 24 hours after Ross, partly  because I returned to the original GDMBR route from northern Montana on (fewer cars, more miles and slower pace, but worth it) and partly because of a food poising episode that I attribute to a sandwich in Helena.


So did you and Greg spent the night at Brush Mountain Lodge? Did you ride with Greg at all?

Also do you know whatever happened to Craig on the day that he left Elkford? It seems like he had to return to Fernie.
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #10 on: July 14, 2011, 04:57:24 AM
6thElement


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« Reply #10 on: July 14, 2011, 04:57:24 AM »

Agree with you on the Kicking Horse Lodge in Swan Lake Denis, I stayed there during my race attempt this year too, it's fantastic!
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #11 on: July 14, 2011, 09:47:54 AM
DenisVTT


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« Reply #11 on: July 14, 2011, 09:47:54 AM »

Agree with you on the Kicking Horse Lodge in Swan Lake Denis, I stayed there during my race attempt this year too, it's fantastic!

I think it's The Laughing Horse, but yeah, very friendly place. Only wished I had more time to spend there.
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- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #12 on: July 14, 2011, 09:59:16 AM
6thElement


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« Reply #12 on: July 14, 2011, 09:59:16 AM »

Oops, Laughing Horse is correct. I'd written it correctly in my blog race recap!
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #13 on: July 17, 2011, 03:07:11 AM
groundedkiwi


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« Reply #13 on: July 17, 2011, 03:07:11 AM »

Hey Denis,
I just looked over all your photos, what a great record!  What type of camera did you use to take those stills and video shots with?  How did you go for batteries or charging and did you do it all on one card?
Also curious on what type of tent that is and what you thought of it?
Many thanks,
Groundedkiwi
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #14 on: July 17, 2011, 04:21:36 AM
DenisVTT


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« Reply #14 on: July 17, 2011, 04:21:36 AM »

Hey Denis,
I just looked over all your photos, what a great record!  What type of camera did you use to take those stills and video shots with?  How did you go for batteries or charging and did you do it all on one card?
Also curious on what type of tent that is and what you thought of it?
Many thanks,
Groundedkiwi


Hi groundedkiwi:

I have a Panasonic DMC-ZS5. I crashed it several times, including on the second day when I was riding with Pete Faeth, wanted to take a picture of him while I was riding and I crashed in the ditch. Couple of other times it just got ejected from my cockpit bag. The result is that I often had trouble with the focus system. I would have to shut it down and turn it back on, but it still worked overall. Also, towards the end it got some water inside the lens. You can actually see a foggy spot in the late pics.

I had a charger (fairly light) and I charged it a couple of times in motels, but overall this is a long lasting battery. I also had 2 8GB cards. At the rate my camera was ejecting from the bike, at some point around mid-way I switched cards even though the first one wasn't full, as I figured at least those pics would be safe.

My pics in 2 albums:

Day 1 to Day 13: https://picasaweb.google.com/dchazelle/TourDivide2011Day1ToDay13
Day 14 to finish: https://picasaweb.google.com/dchazelle/TourDivide2011Day14ToFinish

For the tent, I had a Big Agnes Fly Creek UL2 ultra light. Still 1.2 kg, too much for this ride. It was comfortable although I was still pretty cold in it at 10,000ft+. I should have gone bivy!

PS: Are you Chris the New Zealander that started with me in AW?


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- Denis aka Ze Diesel

  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #15 on: July 17, 2011, 09:32:36 PM
groundedkiwi


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« Reply #15 on: July 17, 2011, 09:32:36 PM »

Hey Denis, thanks for the info!  Again, awesome pictures!  Yes, the tent looked very comfortable!  Do you think a bivy would have been warmer?

And no I am not Chris, but also a New Zealander, now Ex-Pat, living here in the US.   And seriously considering an attempt at this epic event, possibly next year.  But as you know, a lot of getting-ready to do before then, and time will go fast!  I've been wanting to do this for years, and even bought the maps a few years ago, but was initially planning a touring type tour. However the race is very tempting and to be part of the experience with this backpacking community would be ideal.  (As I have no one to ride it with anyhow!)

Thanks again for the great write up and the photo albums!
Grounded......
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #16 on: July 18, 2011, 12:18:21 AM
caddy


Location: Swindon, UK
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« Reply #16 on: July 18, 2011, 12:18:21 AM »


Also do you know whatever happened to Craig on the day that he left Elkford? It seems like he had to return to Fernie.
Hi Dennis,
My Bottom Bracket finally seized up 5 miles out of Elkford. I pushed my bike back to Elkford and then got two hitches to Fernie to get a new BB, lost 6-7hrs. When I finally restarted I hit some killer mud after a thunderstorm and my de-railler/hanger got mangled for the 3rd time this trip.
Congratulations on a well deserved 2nd place.
Craig
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #17 on: July 18, 2011, 03:42:12 AM
DenisVTT


Location: Beautiful downtown Darnestown, MD
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« Reply #17 on: July 18, 2011, 03:42:12 AM »

Hey Denis, thanks for the info!  Again, awesome pictures!  Yes, the tent looked very comfortable!  Do you think a bivy would have been warmer?

Not sure. I went with the tent because in all the TD pics I looked at from the last few years, it always seem to be raining. Turns out, starting from the south, I had many thunderstorms but pretty much no steady rain. I was cold at 10,000 ft, mostly I think because I had a 40-degree sleeping bag. If I were to do it again, I would go warm bivy and warm sleeping bag.

And no I am not Chris,

Any idea what happened to Chris?

but also a New Zealander now Ex-Pat, living here in the US.   And seriously considering an attempt at this epic event, possibly next year.  But as you know, a lot of getting-ready to do before then, and time will go fast!  I've been wanting to do this for years, and even bought the maps a few years ago, but was initially planning a touring type tour. However the race is very tempting and to be part of the experience with this backpacking community would be ideal.  (As I have no one to ride it with anyhow!)

Thanks again for the great write up and the photo albums!
Grounded......

Hope you do it, and I look forward to following your blue dot, and seeing your pictures afterwards.
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #18 on: July 18, 2011, 03:46:55 AM
DenisVTT


Location: Beautiful downtown Darnestown, MD
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« Reply #18 on: July 18, 2011, 03:46:55 AM »

Hi Dennis,
My Bottom Bracket finally seized up 5 miles out of Elkford. I pushed my bike back to Elkford and then got two hitches to Fernie to get a new BB, lost 6-7hrs. When I finally restarted I hit some killer mud after a thunderstorm and my de-railler/hanger got mangled for the 3rd time this trip.
Congratulations on a well deserved 2nd place.
Craig

Craig:

Good to hear from you, man!

Sorry to hear about your problems with the BB. I sort of figured that's what happened but I wasn't sure. When did you make it to Banff? Did you get passed by others?

Also, did you stay in Banff a few days? I stayed a couple days and kept asking Jason from Soul Cycles about your whereabouts but I'm not sure your Spot was updating properly.

Anyway, it was cool to see you in Elkford and have dinner with you.
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  Topic Name: My TD '11 race report Reply #19 on: July 18, 2011, 02:41:14 PM
vancouvergnome


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« Reply #19 on: July 18, 2011, 02:41:14 PM »

Great photos! Congrats on your accomplishment.

Regards,

Gnome
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