22 May 2011

A Mile of Climbing

With this as our last training ride before next week's Utah Cliffs we decided on an endurance ride into the snow covered mountains working more on strength than a century on the relative flat would provide. Since the LT's first century, he has been out-riding me, so I let him decide though Bogus is still obviously snow covered. Ever since our first adventure of a couple years ago which took us over Aldape Summit, I'd wanted to ride to Aldape Summit and catch a ridge road that would take us to Bogus. He suggested that same ride but in reverse, so we wouldn't have to descend the paved Bogus Basin road. "In reverse" makes finding the route more difficult; there's a spider web of unmarked roads leading off the top of Bogus which I didn't think I could navigate, but pilots have excellent map reading skills, and the LT had carefully printed the maps, so I agreed.

As we neared the top, we had a brief discussion about turning right, but the map reader decided the details were wrong, so we continued on. In about a mile we turned around- back to that dirt road which had been plowed but didn't quite match the map. For the rest of the ascent we'd be on mostly dry dirt despite about 2 feet of snow everywhere else. The LT had a flat, and as he changed it, I ate lunch as he warned we had some 800 feet more to climb. I did feel that lunch in my tummy in the next 800 ft climb. We hoped to find our turn off back to Aldape Summit before reaching the top at Doe Point, but that's where our turn out was - snow covered and unplowed. With 2 to 3 feet of snow covering our planned route and unsure how far we'd have to push down through the snow, we reversed course. We'd climbed about 4000 feet. That would be adequate, and our planned route was all downhill from here.


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The LT Descends from Deer Point on the plowed road


The LT still didn't want to descent on the pavement, so those pilot eyes of his caught an unmarked jeep road that descended in our general direction. "You can see the trail there at the bottom of the canyon, it has to lead back to Boise" the LT assured me as we discussed following this obvious shortcut back to Boise. Sure enough, it was a great trail that wound steeply down through the forest with a few short sand traps, some wash outs to make it more interesting, and with no problem rocks- my favorite kind of trail. We were at the canyon's bottom ready to descend trails back to Boise when we started climbing, climbing, and more climbing that required granny 2 or 3 and that occasionally forced a shift to granny 1. Uhm, despite the pilot's map reading skills we'd now climbed over 5,000 feet! "Well, maybe we'll get in our first climb of over a mile" the LT observed. "I guess that's a meaningful goal" I replied, but my legs were still beginning to burn as the LT hoped to get me to climb another 280 feet. At least I'd brought plenty of food. It was time for a snickers.



The LT in front of the Boise Valley just before we'd climbed back to Bogus Basin Road


There was another fork in the road just where the above photo was taken. "Maybe that's the route that takes us back to Boise", the LT observed. He may be right, and I suspect we'll return to that trail later this year to explore, but I had a 6:00 dinner appointment and someone may have been getting too tired for exploration. The descent on Bogus Basin Rd has a couple of climbs at the bottom that brought us to 5351 feet of climbing in about 42 miles of riding. We'll save that exploration for Chief Winn, SGT Bullard and SGT Schumacher, who need to work on their hill climbing abilities.




The LT's altimeter shows 5,351 feet of climbing for the day

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