December 2011 Archives

Peak 1

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Plans to take on Sniktau -> Cupid -> Grizzly were defeated before they started - my ride fell through, sadly. Thems the breaks when you go carless and rely on the kindness of other people to get you to pokier parts of town. Like I wrote before, it seems the rule, rather than the exception that winter ascent plans are foiled, as the chance of complications are multiplied due to the weather, etc. 

When the season turns a little more spring-like, I'll ride a bike up to Loveland Pass and take on all of them (and more, and more!) mark my words! Another mystery to look forward to experiencing.

One of the highlights of staying in Summit County though is their absolutely brilliant public transportation system. Free buses and shuttles to almost every nook and cranny of the entire county. A complete necessity for people who work in town (which I have done, for a few summer seasons, long, long ago) and a fantastic way to lessen the strain of the road system with all the out-of-town visitors (like me, in the here-and-now) come piling in when the season is in full-swing. 

The next day, I arose bright and early to take on Peak 1, 


Peak 1

Took the bus from Breckenridge -> Frisco at 6:45am, got coffee and was on the trailhead by 8:00am. It's like my Denver -> Boulder -> Boulder Mountain Park routine, severley magnified. 

Peak 1 is just shy of 13,000 feet, far eclipsing the ~8,000 feet peaks I saunter in and around Boulder.  Far above tree line and with the obvious alpine weather patterns, the higher parts of the peak at this time of year provide a few challenging mountaineering aspects and perfect for practicing my newly purchased ice axe and generally getting into potentially serious trouble alone.

The hike, while steep, was usual fair, until the weather station, situated near one of the false summits a little below treeline, 

Where the fun starts

The snow on the ridge at this point was quite a bit more than I had anticipated - the wind was blowing quite incredibly (in the picture above, you can see the snow being blown from off the peak) and snow from the west side of the mountain was being blown over to the top and east side. Some post-holing hell, until hitting the ridge. 

The ridge itself and its current condition led itself well to my ability, being just a little over my comfort level without getting crazy on me. For me, that means adrenaline is pouring through my veins, but not enough where I'm incapacitated and frozen with a sudden rush of fear and dread, wondering if I just had gotten up, what I may not so comfortably get down. Some people have different thresholds, I'm sure. 

The wind guts provided much of the perceived fear, as the sound itself is enough to make one nervous. Complicate that with the fact that it's pelting me with sharp granules of snow and pushing me over a 12,000+ edge of a f'n cliff, it's enough to give one pause and wonder why it is I'm doing this alone - or at all. Therapy, I suppose - the old adage that one does not feel as if one is living, unless one is experiencing almost dying. Different paths to enlightenment, I guess.  

Other than the damn wind, conditions were favorable. Although the snow being slightly - well, overwhelmingly dry and sugar-like, it also lacked any real patches of ice and I felt safe enough bumbling up the mountain with careful footing, some microspikes and the ice axe, with a fuzzy sense on how exactly to weld such a Device that's pointy on three of it's four endpoints and allows one to get farther into difficult places, rather than save one from reaching them in the first place.

Thankfully, working the tool seemed fairly intuitive with my only nervousness utilizing it being that my left hand was woefully less adequate at the task as my right. I had no leash - didn't think I needed one, but the idea of dropping the Thing at the wrong time felt a little touchy. Guess I'll make one, for next time. 

Practicing some self-arrest moves lower on the mountain felt thankfully also second-nature. The wind-swept ridgeline didn't seem to lend itself to tumbling down, though. Rather, it looks like a fall would be arrested via boulder field, rather than ice pick, with broken bones being its payment. 

Getting to the final false summit gave a good view of the final, "pitch". Earlier when looking at the summit from the weather station, it seemed as if there was a gentle snow slope that would give access to the west ridge from the north ridge and from there, the top. Upon closer inspection, that "gentle" slope looked like a fairly risky, avalanche-prone snow slide, who's endpoint was an even steeper, rock-filled gully all the way down to I-70, on the west side. What to do. 

Instead, I just traversed to the east ridge, which had a few scrambles in altogether more protected "gullies", where the snow wasn't so loaded. Looking straight up at the crux that allowed access to the summit, 

"Crux" "Pitch"

It was steep enough that I questioned what the hell I thought I was doing, on the down climb, but it lacked an absurd amount of exposure - and I'm writing this, so all in good fun. 

Much of mountaineering, I'm learning, is to know what not to do. The mountain has weaknesses and it's patience to find those weaknesses and perhaps ask silently to the mountain if it's a day for safe passage. It's fun though, to find oneself changing strategies of ascension from one of walking to one of climbing. One does not have to be fully aware while walking, one may need such concentration while climbing. 

And it's rather sweet to be alone, at the top, on a blue bird day.
    

Summit

I managed to develop a disastrous stomach problem on the way down - probably all the coffee (and not enough of anything else), which made getting down a little uncomfortable. In my fashion, I also got a little lost and bushwhacked from the weather station off my original course, hoping to find less snow and more rock for a faster passage. Found myself much to the west of the ridge and had to both move down and across the northern face to the eastern, to get a bit more on course, without getting cliffed out, via cliffs I wasn't sure were or were not there. Amazing how steep terrain can get that trees can still grow upon.

And I also overcompensated greatly, only realizing this, when I found that the coverage of trees I was moving fairly safely through had thinned out considerably and downward travel by me was causing mini slides. You know: avalanches. 

"Hmm...", I thought. "I'm going to get in trouble, here...". Gingerly, I about-faced, into more denser timber and figured that I just walked straight into the J Chute, an enormous scar of an avalanche path that had famously taken out the entire township of Masonville early in the 20th century. 

But, hey, "J for Justin", right? A good sign. I at least got a bearing on where I was, so I simply barreled down the side of the chute, where I knew the hiker's trail would be found traversing across its base.

Getting back into Frisco, I picked up some food and a bus back to Breckenridge, got to home base and took a righteous nap. Chamonix and it's attractions such as the téléphérique to the Aiguille du Midi it ain't, but its quite amazing to me to be able to saunter out of the door, catch a bus to the trailhead of something like Peak 1 and get back before dark on one of the shortest days of the year. All hail Summit County's public transportation!

The next day, took a little snowshoe hike to Bakers Tank and back from the Boreas Pass winter TH, using the road the GDMBR uses for part of the circuit. A friend came up to bring me back to Denver, but before we did some shopping in Frisco and Dillon to get some clothes for the new position in Boulder. 

Boulder and this new job were on my mind my entire holiday stay in Summit County. It was going to be a large transition for working a freelance and contracting scenario to almost, almost a 9-to-5-er, which I haven't done in a very, very long time. It would perhaps mean moving to Boulder and trying to fit in intense and long training periods for things I haven't yet announced I'm going to do (perhaps even to myself) with this job I found important to work well at, instead of having complete control over my schedule. I was excited at the prospect of getting up very early, running up to Green Mountain before work and maybe cylcing intervals up Flagstaff Road - a deviously steep uphill climb afterwards, while then pursuing my more artistic endeavors at night without having to think about work until the next morning. It was going to take discipline and I was ready. 

While going from one shop to the next, the workplace called and let me know the job they needed me aboard for, fell through and with that, I wasn't really needed. Damn. Felt defeated going home and a lot of problems I thought were in the process of being solved were now at step #1 again. Damn damn. 


At least there's more time to summit loftier peaks in solitude, thinking perhaps more of a mode of meditation, being just a little bit on this side of common sense in my path. Great mountains, allow this to be done in safety and sanity. 

Bear Peak Saddle

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Currently, hanging out in Breckenridge, enjoying a quiet Christmas, getting my leftover mimosa on - getting up early tomorrow to hike a few mountains. Perhaps something like this: 

grizzly.jpg

Sniktau -> Cupid -> Grizzly (with a very small chance of Torreys, but time is a factor). The trailhead starts at ~12,000 feet, which feels altogether cheating! Having cycled up and over Loveland Pass a ton of times and hiking East on Grays/Torreys/Flattop/Argentine, I'm curious to see what's between all this. 


Thursday, I had a great job interview in Boulder, so wish me luck as I start Thursday on a trial basis! Fancy web work. This man is one of many talents. It's been a job search that's gone on for months to find a fun, sustainable job that I can learn new skills while working at and which can help fuel my desires for further adventures and fun (aka: project become not pretty much broke). 

I'm currently in Denver and the job is in Boulder, so I need to make a decision on whether I want to take the bus every day, or commute by bike 60+ miles/day (which for at least the latter, I'd be game!), or move back to Boulder after a leave of 10 years, live in a more expensive town, but be closer to work and well, all the fun trails and mountains, literally right outside my door. 

The bus ride to Boulder from Denver was a peculiar one, as it had snowed a ton the night before. I rode to the bus station with many comments my way about my usage of my bicycle to do so. Everything from, "Yeeeeeeah" from other cyclists to, "You're crazy." and a sly grin from others. Getting to the bus station at 8:00am, thinking the place would be mobbed with people not wanting to drive their commute turned out to be incorrect! Almost no one there and I shared the bus with only a few other people. Guess most people were telecommuting. Tons of wrecked cars on HW 36, I really couldn't believe it. 

AFTER the job interview, I cycled up the snowy Table Mesa to NCAR and again started stripping down and layering up for a little hike. Late in the day, but my goal was South Boulder Peak. Ton of snow had fallen - at least a foot in Boulder and I was excited to frolic in it. Thought I'd be practically alone, but actually met up with someone at the trailhead. They hadn't ever hiked the area and really weren't sure how to get to where it was they wanted to go (Bear Peak). 

I'm not one to exercise major caution, but I thought it strange that they'd try this hike, while the trail itself is under a ton of snow, with no one to start a trench to the top. Daylight was also a factor - it's practically the shortest day of the year. I was questioning their inexperience - even on this city trail, so I offered to show 'em the way and they accepted. Yeah! 

So, together, we set out to find the route up Bear Peak, with a little route finding done to make sure we were on course. Much of the route, once you leave Mesa Trail is near some of the sandstone slabs and mini avalanches will fall onto the trail, completely obliterating the route. Fun stuff. 

While we were hiking about and yapping and learning about each other and acting as if we've known each other for far longer than we do, as friendly people are wont to do, my new hiking partner, stops and starts crying in the middle of the trail.

I asked what the matter and she replied, "It just hit me what it is that I'm doing."

I asked her... what it was she was doing, 

"I have my Brother's ashes in my pack. He committed suicide a few years ago - after my Mother passed. I'm going to spread them at the top."

I consoled her a little bit and made sure she was OK (she was) and we continued to go for the summit. She was pretty tired, having been in the mountains a few times this week and kept wondering if the pace was OK. I would tell her that it was fine - that I'm a little firecracker going up and down Hills, but there's nothing crazy about me - and that I was more wanting to help her get to the top. So we tried. 

The going was slow as there was so much snow, but we reached the saddle between the final push of Bear Peak and Nebal Horn, having promised ourselves a break and some munching of foodstuff. I checked the time: 3:00pm

"That's pretty late, huh? Maybe we should turn back?"

I smiled and reminded her that although I know the risks of things that seem benign - like this little hike just out of town and I'd probably go-for-the-top-what-the-hell, that we were sort of moving slowly and we'd only be moving slower, as the trail got steeper. I rehashed the theory that Bad Things Happen with a series of tiny events that accumulate and multiply and we're sort of on that trajectory: late start, unfamiliar with the route, deep snow, obscured trail, fatigued body, etc, etc, etc. 

"But really, if you want to go for the top, we can - it'll just be dark when we get back"

We decided though, to end the hike at the saddle. She also decided that this would be a fine time to say goodbye to her Brother, so she did so. I gave her some space and stood around and well, shivered. Once she was done, she seemed quiet a bit more at peace. 

We barreled down at fantastic speed and got to the NCAR nature loop in almost no time. I excused myself to have a up and personal time with a tree and when I got back to the trail, well, she was gone. I sort of wondered if I had just hallucinated the whole thing - my mind playing out a role perhaps I should have done myself, but no - she popped out of her own little privacy and I got ready with some snowballs to greet her. 

bear_peak_snow.jpg

Quite the surprise that I could help out someone with such a heavy load in their pack. All in all, a beautiful and exceptionally snowy day, just outside of Boulder, just a few miles from my new job. 






Bear Mountain via Nebal Horn via... Places

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"So where did you come up from?", the lone other person on Bear Peak inquired.

I thought for a minute, but I had no real good answer. "Hmm. Over... uh, there". I pointed basically North of us, which points to a rocky outcrop called Nebal Horn. "When you go back down, you'll see my footsteps emerge from the opposite side of the saddle."

"Thanks, but I'm descending the other way".

"Ah, OK then", a little deflated with not being able to show, well, anyone how I managed to get up what's usually a pretty easy hike, even from almost downtown Boulder. The problem was, I didn't really know how I got up, precisely. 

Last week, I was somewhat surprised I could half fast-hike, half run up Green Mountain in what seemed to be awfully... eh, alright time for a reluctant runner. This day's hike had a goal wasn't speed, it was just... anything other than the standard route, as I get bored of things, quite easily. So instead, I pulled a beta about a route from Harmon Cave to Nebal Horn and then to Bear Peak. Checking out a cave I've never seen sounded fun, with perhaps good photo opps.

In pure Simoni style, I never really did find the damn cave, so my exact route shall be unknown, but was a wonderful tour of scrambles of the sandstone slabs below Bear Peak. Often getting cliffed out, only to find a new way up, down, around and sometimes through fallen boulders, while searching for Nebal Horn. Quite fun. My mountaineering boots were a little overkill on some of the moves and I sort of wished for some footwear with a lot more mobility, but whatareyagonna do? 

Once reaching Nebal Horn proper, I finally got a good look of what I needed needed to be done, mostly get down from the damn thing. With the recent snow and freeze/thawing cycles, this proved to be quite a bit more exciting than it really could have been, which was nice. My left shoulder got a good test to see how reliable it's becoming, while doing some downclimbing. Only one move proved indescribably painful, but today, nothing seems noteworthy or concerning to me, so that's good. A nice soreness all in my upper body. 

Upon reaching the top, I realized I once climbed up to this same spot... maybe 12 years earlier, again having lost the trail to go up Bear Peak. I remember there was a juvenile raptor, sharing the view with me. I remember being happy simply to be there, with the view. 


The plans I eluded to in my last writing were cancelled - both a hiking/camping trip by bike to some mountains and a trip up Longs Peak, but that seems to be more the rule, rather than the exception for winter plans in the mountains. Like, right now: it's again snowing - this time for maybe a foot, which is stopping my plans to get to Summit County tomorrow. For the time being. These small half-day trips though, are pretty fun and a good way to gauge fitness, gain confidence and generally keep myself sane while the streets leave me bruised and battered from falling on my bike on the most pedestrian of rides.

 
Backlit Bear Peak
Bear Peak, backlit from the failing sun, on one of the shortest days of the year. 

Nebal Horn in Shadows
Nebal Horn, seen from the Saddle between Bear Peak and Nebal Horn 

The Winter of Our Bear Peak
Season-appropriate reading, Longs Peak being blocked by my big head. 

Green Mountain!

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My most awesome and patient LBS was helping me with an out-of-true wheel the other week. We sort of went overboard on the thing and the mechanic decided to overhaul the whole damn thing. Once we tuned up the White Industries Dos ENO freewheel, replaced the bearings and replaced the track nuts, talked about adventures had and to be had, we both remembered that the wheel also needed that truing. So, on the truing stand it goes. Phillipe makes short work of the wheel, until, he stops -

"Ah, well that's the problem. Your wheel is cracked. Don't ride this thing too far from home, OK? And get it replaced."


Another Salsa Delgado hoop cracked. The first one was built for touring and suspiciously was showing cracks after being only a few months old. We questioned on whether there was some manufacturing problems. This one though? This one was clearly used well and abused. Toured from Paris to Amsterdam on the Paris Roubaix track, used for cyclocross training - hell, the last thing I did was take it up and down and up and down South Table Mountain, until the third pinch flat forced me to stop and very nimbly get home with one tube patched up with a wish and a prayer and a few patches on top of themselves to hole air in the tube where the snake bites were. I certainly miss tubeless tires.

But I destroy bike parts. The touring delgado hoop was replaced but a Velocity Dyad hoop - expensive - and heavy, bit of kit. Yeah - it's bent. And I bent it.

Getting this news of a cracked rim (and waiting for its replacement), I've been a little conservative on my rides. Winter also is not so much fun to ride bikes and it's nice to get a break on things - I can certainly say I've ridden enough this year. I've been doing a fair bit of hiking in the mountains and that's been a great change of pace. Walking up mountains is another romantic endeavour I seem to preoccupy myself with. Having no car, my hikes usually begin with a bike ride to a small, front range mountain, or if I'm lucky, someone will pick me up and we'll carpool to a proper mountain. It's been fun.

Monday or so, I rode out to Golden to the Mt. Galbraith "neighborhood" trailhead with runnin' shoes and "ran" to the top and back. Of course, I got lost on the ascent and the descent, so adventure was had by all. I'm really not the strongest "runner", but when I think of going up one more time on the Lookout Mt. Road or HW 40, I sort of cringe. Going down on a cracked rim also doesn't sound too good of an idea - even for me. I like training of riding to a trailhead, running up and down something and cycling home. I believe the tri-people call that, 'Bricking".

Wednesday, I upped it a little but and took the bus to Boulder, to "run" up Green Mountain. I surprised myself at my time getting up - as I scrambled the small summit block, synchronicity shined upon me, by playing, "Voodoo Child" in my portable music player - the lyrics that go,

Standing next to a mountain! Chop it down with the edge of my haaaaaaand,

Which means I made it up before finishing a record. Got down in a time around 1hr 50 minutes. Which means my bus ride to from Denver to Boulder and back was longer than gaining the peak and running down.


Well, hello there

Certainly no Anton Krupicka, who runs this route semi-daily, but certainly getting close to an offseason,, injured and conservative hike kinda Anton time! Something to work on. ...Maybe not.

Luck was with me, as I swung by the Boulder Sports Recyclery before going home - picked up a 34t chainring in the correct BCD for the cranks on my Surly Crosscheck. May pop that on to give me a way casual low gear ratio of 1.6:1 and see what sort of mountains I can ride up -

and with what type of gear I can bring. Bet I could bring a bit more hiking - maybe climbing gear with me than just a pair of beat-up trainers. Maybe even some camping gear. Maybe even some winter camping gear...

Sure is a good view of Longs Peak from the top of Green Mountain...

Longs Peak from Green Mountain

So where the Hell have you've been, dude?

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It's been about 5? months since the 2011 running of the Tour Divide and I've been quite quiet here this site. Kind of want to apologize, as my intention wasn't to show you how I trained, do the race and then: disappear.  5 months is a long time to recap, so I will barely try but a few major points:

The Tour Divide takes a lot of energy to do and that energy takes a long time to recapture. Mental. Physical. Financial. Lots of energy.

Work disappeared like wild game in Alaska come the onset of winter and I become pretty much broke and my priorities sort of became, "become not pretty much broke". I work for myself doing various things and those who also work for themselves know that it can be either feast or famine, and that's sort of the tradeoff you have for the flexibility in your work schedule.

Injury! The shoulder injury I sustained outside of Silver City took a long time to heal. ...Is taking a long time to heal. And I will extrapolate on this:

The initial pain seconds after impact was probably the worst focused pain I've ever experienced in my life. I was waling out on the track to no one in particular, tears streaming down my face, unable to even lift my arm anymore, worried that I did some Major Damage to Something. Bleeding everyone. Just a mess.  Once a little settled down (and at an ER), doing something as simple as resting the arm on a table would hurt. Or not resting the arm on a table.

It hurt taking the bus back to Denver, from Las Cruces. It hurt changing clothes - I couldn't even raise my arm over my head. Or close to over my head. It was funny, in a sad, sad way.

It hurt carrying my bike from the basement where it's stored, it hurt to open the back door and it hurt just to ride the thing. It especially hurt going over cracks in the road, or up/down a curb. Or going over sand. Or any sort of bump. Differences in elevation. Sweet Mother, it hurt to brake. It hurt to go fast and it hurt to go slower. Basically, riding a bike made it hurt more and that made me think that I was probably best not to ride the damn thing and you know what happens when you don't let yourself do things you love to do: you get depressed.

I joined a cyclocross team for the fall, to help keep some of the insane conditioning my poor body was chiseled into becoming. Man, I'll tell you what really hurts: trying to race a cyclocross race with a sprained shoulder. So, that was a wash of a season for me. Will power alone and thinking that, "Hey, it may hurt, but not that much", doesn't really help it from hurting.

It hurt to sleep, if I slept the wrong way - meaning, on my shoulder - and uh-huh, my other shoulder has a little nerve damage from that time I got stuck in a flash flood. For 3 days in New Zealand. (a story for another time) So it hurt to sleep any which way, but on my back.

But ever so slowly, it hurt less and less. As of last week, 5 months, FIVE! MONTHS! I was able to go to the gym and do some bench presses. It hurt... just a little bit, when I racked up a total of 85lbs. That's like, a little over half my body weight. I had to stop because, yup, it hurt. And man, it hurt so much, I did finally go to the sports doctor, as I was worried. They didn't seem worried, but slightly compassionate. "Yeah, it takes a long time to heal" and they kicked me out of the office. Nicely, but they said it was a classical case. 100% recovery they said and yeah, you get to keep the bump. Don't worry about it. Unless, it keeps hurting.

So it's on the mend. Still. And it doesn't hurt so much where I don't want to ride a bike. Which is good, since I would think of bad, dark thoughts if I had to live a life without bicycles. And it doesn't hurt so much, and I can now ride bicycles off  pavement and it doesn't hurt so much, that I can fall again and scrape myself up (and I do have quite a talent for that!) and not be worried that I'll just re-injure the damn thing and start all over with hurting and trying not to hurt.

So that's good and that allows one to relearn an important rule about life: Problems worked on will be solved as soon as they can, if not as fast as you'd like.


So. Future endeavors? Tour Divide again?

My lips are zipped.

I'm still on a large project called, "become not pretty much broke", which is a also pretty important to me and the Tour Divide is an expensive race to race. I know you'll say, "But Justin! You can do x, y and z and then it's not so expensive!", but you're missing the point - it's more expensive to race the race than to just ride a bike around, as fast as you'd like, anywhere you'd like, on your whim and desire and have a lot of fun doing so. Believe you me, I've done both and I know.

But, the Tour Divide is still the most incredibly outrageously amazing bike ride I've ever been on. If anything, I understand the allure to do it again and again. And I'm hooked. Maybe just on the idea of Best Known Times and Unsupport/Self-Supported adventure/challenges that have some sort of time that's calculated with surprises and unknowns - an imperfect course. I also know I have a desire to excel physically, even though my greatest assets are perseverance and it seems an uncommonly high tolerance for pain, danger and solitude. I'm not particularly strong or, fast or, powerful, but  keeping it together when things are rough, I can do.


So, without any future goal in mind yet, I'll take a shot of documenting some of my more interesting physical foibles. Sorry for taking so much time out.


Really, it was really painful.

Contact:

I certainly could not go on the adventures I do, without the help and support I've been given along the way:




What is the Tour Divide?

The Tour Divide is a 2750 mile, single stage, self-supported bicycle race. Starting in Banff, Alberta Canada, one will cross the Great Divide 39 times and climb a total of 200,000 feet of elevation before finishing at the Antelope Wells, New Mexico border crossing.

Find out more at http://tourdivide.org

Categories

Inspiration.