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July 1st Hurricane Ridge

Posted: Tue Jun 16, 2009 2:57 pm
by Dave Spiers
Canada Day is almost here and some of us had mentioned that we would do Hurricane Ridge. Who's up for a hill climb now that Windsor Park is cancelled?. I drove up a few weeks ago and it's not steep, just long (ish).
Early Coho 6:10 and back on the 5:15?

Posted: Tue Jun 16, 2009 3:25 pm
by Roland
I'm pretty sure Katie and I are doing it. I think we should do it on the tandem, Katie disagrees.

And since everybody loves graphs:
Image

You can see that most of the climb is less than 8%, with only a couple spikes above 10%. It's long, but it's not that hard.

It's going to be a lot of fun, so you should come no matter what you think of hills. It's not a race and we'll wait at the top.

Posted: Tue Jun 16, 2009 3:47 pm
by Alan
It's a pretty cool ride. I did it on Canada day a few years back and it took about 2.5 hours to get up and 45 minutes to get down. It'll take longer if you're riding a unicycle or a tandem. Glad to see Windsor Park is canceled so Pete is left without a weasley excuse to get out of it.... Be sure to bring something warmish to put on at the top as it's cool and there's still a lot of snow up there. Plus since this is the U S A you'll need a passport

Posted: Tue Jun 16, 2009 4:10 pm
by Plawless
AARGHHHH!

Posted: Wed Jun 17, 2009 9:59 pm
by RyanC
This is a great day of cycling and there is almost always a good group heading over. Remember to have or get your passport or Enhanced DL in advance for the border guards. If you are planning to do this ride for the first time, bring a rear flasher, as there are two tunnels to pass through on the way up. I know the word 'epic' is destined for the forbidden words list of 2009 but this ride definitely qualifies. The 6:10 am ferry is the one to aim for. I hope to be there July 1st. See http://cohoferry.com/main/ for details.
R

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2009 12:56 pm
by Brian S
If we are indeed talking about going on the Wednesday July 1 (as opposed to the week end), I am in! Let's talk Friday!

Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2009 12:25 am
by Ramsey
Count me in too, guys! Have done the Ridge 3 or 4 times. For the downhill, for sure. But mostly for French Toast at the Haven Cafe - best I've ever had! But I guess liver and onions would taste good after an hour and a half of climbing..
'Case you didn't catch it one topic down, the gear is here!

Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2009 8:59 am
by mlawless
I think I am in for Canada Day as well - I am chanting in my head as prep for the climb "I am a Whippet, I am a Whippet"

I should be off the bike for a solid two weeks at that point - so I should be really well rested!

See you Canada Day - I will be the guy sobbing quietly in the Coho lineup in the morning.

Michael

Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2009 2:06 pm
by Lister Farrar
mlawless wrote:I think I am in for Canada Day as well - I am chanting in my head as prep for the climb "I am a Whippet, I am a Whippet"
Michael
Hmm. I sense "Whip it, whip it good" will actually describe the day better.

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2009 9:44 pm
by Dave Spiers
Was hoping to ask about this at Tuesday ride but won't be able to make it..
Does anyone know how what time we have to be at the Coho?

see you there.

Posted: Tue Jun 30, 2009 8:11 am
by Dolly
For those who didn't get a big enough helping of "pain pie" on the weekend, this info is for you!! The Coho leaves at 6:10 am. I called today and they recommended getting there 30-45 min prior, to get tickets and go through customs. The fare is $18.75 one way (with bikes). The return ferries are at 12:45 (for those who can't do the "extra loop") 5:15pm, and 9:30 pm for those really hurting. There is also a $5 park entrance fee. See you all there!

Posted: Thu Jul 02, 2009 10:14 am
by Lister Farrar
Well, that was fun. In a painful sort of way.

Bouquets to all who rode, for the company, and especially Chris M who towed me almost all the way to the top, where he dropped me like the 10 pounds off his new bike.

Brickbats to whoever sold that absurdly light bike to Chris M and has unleashed a monster. Rumour has it he had to fill his pockets with rocks to get back down the mountain.

Roland we need the graphs and times! Nice to see you blow by.

On a more serious note for others considering it; it's a different kind of climbing than anything we do. Very steady, sub or at threshold, kinda teasing you to go too hard and blow yourself up (see 500 m to go above) but rewarding patience amnd efficiency.

On gears, for me 39 x 23 was too big for the first quarter, but ok after that. 39 x 25 would have been better.

The Ridge

Posted: Thu Jul 02, 2009 10:40 am
by Brian S
Agree with Lister--what a great day, and the extended version to Sequim was also fun in an obscure sort of way. After a beer/burger in Port Angeles, the head back tongue out power snooze virus hit a couple of us on the way back across the straight. Pictures pending.

Posted: Thu Jul 02, 2009 10:59 am
by Roland
It took me 1:55 ferry to top. 47 minutes from the ferry to where we paid. And then another 68 minutes to the top. I didn't take part in the "race", they were taking forever to get going, so I left a few minutes behind the Tripleshot group with Dave Shishkoff. When Max Plaxton passed me, I jumped on his wheel for about 15 seconds, I quickly realized that was a terrible idea and dropped off.

I was pretty happy with my time, over 15 minutes faster than when I did it two years ago.

Elevation & Grade: (Ignore the big spike) Average 5%
Image

Heart rate: I didn't put on the monitor until the first stop
Image

Speed: I kept it fairly constant, averaged 16.8 km/h
Image

My battery died so I don't have data for the 80 km loop that followed. Some wise guy decided to finish up the ride with a 50+ km/h sprint along the highway. Today, my legs are done, but I have a mountain bike race tonight. :(

Posted: Thu Jul 02, 2009 12:46 pm
by Plawless
wow I had a dig down Cook St. yesterday. The elevation change was maybe even as much as -5m. And you guys are impressed with what YOU did??? Wow!

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 12:56 am
by Ramsey
Seems like I missed a good day in the saddle!

Had my passport packed and.. must've taken the wrong ferry 'cause I ended up in Vancouver..

So, partly motivated by guilt for missing out on the inaugural TSCC Hurricane Ridge trip, but mainly wanting to pay homage to the King of Pop in my own way - haha, I rode the "Triple Crown" solo in N Van today..

With apologies for the lack of graphical data, here are a few stats:

Mt Seymour 1020 m / Cypress Bowl 910 m / Grouse Mt 275 m

Climbed Seymour and Cypress from sea level, Grouse from Highway 1

4 1/2 hours / 121 km / 27 km/h average

2410 m elevation gain / max gradient 12% (Grouse is a short climb, but kicks up to 10-12%) / 74.5 km/h coming off Seymour

28 degrees C / 5 water bottles, one Coke, one espresso / 4 lbs lost!

May be doing it again this summer.. Make a day of it and ride it as a club?

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2009 10:45 am
by Brian S
that's a great ride, Ramsay. Was that a ferry to ferry loop? I hope not anyway. Would love to take you up on the suggestion of another road trip for TS.