Thursday, October 23, 2008

OuToF OrDeR


The non smoking battle continues - but I'm calling it a win now. It's been nearly 6 months. I no longer crave it, and only miss it once in a while, sort of like an ex-girlfriend. I win, I won. I'll mark my quit date by years from here out. :peace:


IT'S LIKE THAT...
IMG_3052



Out of Order...

As in.. not in a linear order. 

I have a few journals to get out, but they're coming out backwards.  There's a trip report regarding the Moab/Fruita trip, but I'm still finishing it off, hopefully, I'll get that out this week.  LOTS of photos in that one.



"see ya later... going downhilling with no back brakes!"....  Really.


But I wanted to get some stuff out while its fresh and relevant to the deviations I've posted recently...  So here goes...

I had lots of grand ideas about how things would go once I moved out west.  Oh yeah..  best intentions and all that.  I can't say I regret the decisions I've made, though I admit I've f**d up more than a couple times, and am very lucky I have a few very, very tight friends that give a rats ass.  Anyhow, this aint about bad things, just sayin'...  Anyhow.. funny how one decision to stay in ABQ changed so many things down the line.  I don't know what I was thinkin', lol... well, yes I do, and I'd make the same decision again were it placed in front of me now.

Hell, where was I going with all this...  When I moved out here.. out this way, I had this sort of expectation great riding all the time, challenging trails, sick lines... blah blah.  I can't say exactly what I thought it woul be like, I suppose it was sort of arbitrary, based on magazine photos and mtb videos. 

In ABQ, I struggled to find such things.  There were (are cool trails there), but the really insane (read "fun") stuff was hidden, and I was no longer in the inner circle of movers and shakers of the riding scene (was I ever?)  (YES, I was :D )....  But I made do, and found my way around, and had a decent riding experience.



Finding my soul in ABQ...  (gawd I miss those forks...)


Then, I moved to Durango.  Known Previously as Mountain Bike Mecca.  I say previously because places like Whistler and the North Shore are en vouge now, and on the surface Durango seems like a haven for spandex clad single track maniacs.  Not that there's anything wrong with that, but I've never been that kind of rider.  The first summer, I rode all the local fare, and even some of the spread out trails, but never really made it out anyhwere really "cool" like Fruita, or up in to the high country.  I was like a mountain bike shut in, lol...



I need to update this one...


This summer though.. has been off the hook.  This Ohio homeboy has been living his bicycle dream with the trails and riding and bikes and...  Yeah, it would have been cool to just jump right out here and be immediately immersed in the thick of it...  But now, its all that much sweeter.  I've been tipped off to keen lines, explored and found them on my own, and forged through and even created few (more in the works). 

This last weekend was golden for sure.  I was previously kind of bummed that Durango seemed to have lost some of its lustre in the mtb world - but really, that was my own minsconcption (and wow, funny how many of those I keep finding out about)...  Whatever it seems like on the surface - hell man, whatever.  That's great. 

The last few lines we've found, we had to really sort of search out.  Nothing obvious.  No signs, no cairns', no maps, no nuthin' save for a fresh wet knobby imprint in a dished out puddle in knee high grass on the mountain top.  hmmm.. follow it.  keep going..  "okay, I"m going back ot get a bike"....  that kind of stuff.  People that need to know - they KNOW, or somehow they find out...  or, they don't.  There is no trail guidebook for this stuff - and thank goodness, because some people would be spending a lot of money getting airlifted out of these places after their whole world fell apart.  hmmm.. this intro is getting really long and going nowhere, so, here - lets go...

Last weekend, Ben and myself set out to find a trail we had heard rumors of for a while now… Little did we know that we’d have to travel all the way to Texas to find it.

Well, not really to the state of Texas, but “a little slice of Texas” to be sure.

See, its hunting season here.  Wabbit Season.  Duck Season.  It's Fiddler Crab Season, shoot me now. 

In an area not too far from home, we found the trail we were looking for. But man, those hunters mean business. Because, from the looks of things, they sure didn’t mean hunting.  I have not seen so many people dealing so personally with fluorescent colors since a Derek May/Rave back in Detroit.  

These dudes/dudettes were buzzin all over the place in everything from dirt bikes, to four wheelers, to super heavy duty dually’s, and hell, we even saw a group just waiting in their SUV near a switchback in the road… Just sitting there... waiting...  like a deer was actually going to walk right out of the woods and present himself as a prime target or something, maybe just climb in their with them (sights we'd like to see).  Good thing they all had orange on though. jeezus.

Perhaps the best part was - as we were rounding our way up this mountain, we came across several vacant camps (”hunters” were busy - out buzzing around on their noisy vehicles spooking all the local fauna)… huge canvass tent-towns, complete with chimneys and all - it was like a set from the show M*A*S*H, except replace all the little Willys’ Jeeps with Ten-Ton-Hulking Canyoneros.  Anyhow, the camp was empty except for a few deer that were just passin’ through, inspecting coolers and anything else that was open.

Really, it was like the scene from JAWS, where all the yahoos are zipping around in their boats trying to blow the shark out of the water with dynamite or shotguns, fueled by nothing but testosterone and alcohol...   only this was on land. Just crazy. Hardly saw a Colorado license plate all day.  Were it not so surreal, it would have been downright scary.  Also, no shortage of "NObama" bumper stickers too. 

Texas???  why would they come here.  Nobody from Oklahoma, Kansas, AZ, CA, UT, OH, MI....  funny. 

   Shhhh...  Be veeewwwy quiet...


  Ben, looking for the line... and hoping not get buzzed by anymore Elmer's...

Anyhow, we ended up finding our trail, and ran in to some cats riding their bikes down it. These guys were the real deal… sponsored pro or semi-pro downhill riders that knew the trail well, and knew their bikes even better. We ended up shooting quite few images that day.

It's funny.. you see images in magazine, or watch a person take a line on a video... and they look pretty impressive.  Of course they do, they become heroes and role models to thousands or millions of teenagers every year.  But, as I learned at Red Bull four years ago... until you see some of this stuff in person, you just have no clue how "impressive" it really is.

Just the steep parts of the trail - were fairly intimidating.  Not impossible, and I was actually figuring out my way of hitting them in my head.  Sure, I can do these.  Well.  I was set up just before a short berm before the trail ducked in to a small area of trees.  The run in was open air, twisty, steep and WET.  Again, in my head, I had picked my way down the line - lol, I had it all figured out, and sort of expected these guys to attack it in a similar way.


Well, as the first guy came down, my jaw just dropped in to the mud.  At first, I was not sure if he was just out of control, and I should run for cover in the trees, or, good god - was he actually in control?  He was actually pedaling full force DOWN this "trail"??  Holy.  Well, yes, that was indeed correct.  I stayed in place, but didn't even try to take the photo as blew by me - I was too busy trying to study the line.  Only, there was no study to it.  Not to take anything away - as it does take some significant skill to navigate such a line at speed... but really, it was more about just having the cajones/minerals/balls/whatever to take that at speed like that.

We were in soft, loamy, wet forest dirt.  When they came by, the ground shook like a cardiac arrest being routed through an 808/sub in somebody's fast n' furious Honda Civic trunk.  These cats were hitting and hucking all comers man...  They went BIG too, and really blew away some other misconceptions I had about what MY bike was capable of...  One guy broke his rear brake 50 yards in to the first run of the day too... He kept riding.  He ate it few times, but just damn.  

..

JAWS comes to mind again.  We're going to need bigger bikes....

I was all hip on my Giant Reign - over 6.5 inches of travel in the back...  the Tora fork would do for now, but I could upgrade later.  I used to sort of blow off the idea of ever riding anything like a Spec. Demo, or a Giant Glory, or whatever else is a big free ride thing these days.  Not anymore.  Funny... this of all things, is almsot enough to make me get a second job.  lol...  eating ramen half the week, nope - no incentive there... 

And damn, I'm like 40 and shit.  what am I thinking?  Well, I either take advantage now - or hang it all up, because really, in ten years, I'll probably be lucky to be able to ride a bike ;)

Okay.. straying from the topic.

..

We ended up talking with these guys - I think they all race, are all students up at the college.  They were out shooting video to send to their sponsors I think.  We found out we had friends in common, and all that rider talk ensued...  We hop-scotched down the trail with them, and they even gave us a shuttle back up the top when we were done.  Cool.

.

Yeah, anyhow.. Durango.  Funny place.  I see people up here from out of state all the time, riding the Gulch of all places.  I can't imagine coming up from like..  Ohio, riding the Gulch, and taking that back home as my Durango experience.  But - I guess it's all about perspectives, right?


Ben had dislocated his shoulder last week during a fast ride down Kessel Run in Fruita, so I was the only one of riding stuff this day.. or "trying" to ride stuff I should say.

Shot on the left is me rolling in a nice rooty steep.  The sad thing is that the other cats just launched from the top.  the one on the right is me contemplating too long.  ended up not dropping it, but I will next time.  Its about a 5 foot drop with a nice downhill on the back side.. probably a 7 foot drop by the time you land.  I need to get used to that going over blind edges stuff, cause now, I can't believe I didn't ride it.  both Shots by Ben.

.


After I get their names, I’ll post them, and maybe label some images.. but anyhow, thanks to Andrew and the crew for letting us shoot.


McCain will in town tomorrow.  I hear tell that Colorado is a huge state in the election.  Evidenced probalby pretty well by all the McCain/Palin ads I saw between here and Fruita last week.  It was crazy, quite honestly.  If I were still getting up with graf, I'd be jealous, those suckers are crushing it out here...  That's all I'll say about politics right now, taking a break from all that hoo-ha.

I'm sure there's other stuff I'm forgetting, but I think I'll have it in the next journal...

Hope all is well, and thanks for lookin' :peace:

AND THAT'S THE WAY IT IS...

DSCI0132a
Perhaps the most photographed thing on the Portal Trail. Well, I guess with good reason. Once you start riding it, you're way too busy to look back and shoot, plus there's not a lot of off trail vantage points to shoot from either. That's been ignoring the suggestion, as we all did.... I dont' want to hear it either...

Saturday, October 04, 2008

Get Outta Town

Friday night/early Sat Morning right now... 




Not sure if the two crows show up here or not...  Fall Colors in Durango.

Did some riding Friday, and a lot of just looking.  Fall colors are in full swing up high right now, the intensity of the golden aspens is nearly unreal, and just the mix of colors in eyewatering.  Lovely stuff if you've never seen it.  Lovely still if you have.  The other looking we did today was at the trial itself.  Oh - forgot to mention, we took a friend on his first official mountain bike ride today too.


 
Justin nails a nice ribbon of aspen-lined singletrack on his first day out.

Anyhow, we ended up on some trails on a mountain out here, and shuttled to the top.  Sorta cheating, but...  I'll be riding for the next 5 days straight, so I aint worried about my trail cred ;)  One might question the wisdom of shuttling some fairly difficult trails for their first ride, however - he's an accomplished skier/snowboarder, rides a motorcycle.. so he has some idea of momentum/inertia/weght transfer/and speed to distance sort of stuff...  and well, I dare you to show me any "beginner trails" in Durango anyhow.  If you can learn to ride the stuff here, you can ride just about anywhere.  Well, I'm digressing - pardon me...  He ended up doing extremely well - surprised both me and Ben with his navigation and all, excersized the appropriate caution on sections that were over his head, and did his best to keep up on climbs.  Plus, he managed to ride the whole day without slamming.  Congrats man :thumbsup:.  I think he's hooked - sweet, another one in to the fold...  Now we just have to get him a bike.



Working for it...




Single.  Track.

Another thing we looked at a lot today was the trail.  And rather than just getting my ass handed to me like last week, I was a little more prudent today, and just viewed some pretty sick lines from the side as I walked/climbed around them.  It sort of sucks having this stuff in my face like this, reminding me that I'm only a shadow of the rider I once was.  But at the same time it is also a sort of impetus to push myself a little more, and realize that I can indeed become a better rider if I want.  I don't think I'll be doing 15 foot drops any time soon, but there's some things out here - right now they just boggle my mind and I would pay to watch some people ride them (and photograph them too).  But, I think that by next summer we'll be able to ride most of this stuff.  A pressure suit, pads and maybe a full face helmet would help tremendously.... 



Well, this is a lot... "worse" than it looks.  Wait 'till you see the other side....





Though it does look steep in the photo, it's still difficult to express the atmosphere of this image.
Unbelievably steep, narrow, loose, and sustained.  That is, sure, you ride down this, drop off a
foot or so at the bottom, but then the trail does not let up.  If you're not on your game here,
pain will ensue.
  Not sure if photos of me riding this will ever surface ;)



We also ended up getting rained on for good while, and the temps dropped probably down in to the 30's for a while there.  Or, maybe because I was riding in the bed of pick up as we shuttled back up the mountain in the rain - it just felt colder, lol.  Anyhow, it was blast...  And its always cool to be on someones "first ride" too. 

I ended up missing the Biden/Palin debate, but have heard a bunch of mumbo jumbo about it.  blah blah...  The only thin that bothers me is that the more she's in the public eye like that, the more credibiltiy she sort of gains.  As long as she can manage not jamming her own foot in her mouth too badly, she'll become more accepted by the voting sheep - er, I mean public.  Any minor foot in mouth stuff will just get spun off in the media.  The scary thing is, even if McBane doesn't win, she is not going anywhere.  Don't expect the Republicans prize anti-Hillary missile to just disappear.  Like Arnold - she'll be back in four years to try again.  And whether she's got the goods or not - two terms of this bush guy have totally proven that the pres is indeed just a figurehead/puppet with someone else pulling the strings... ugh.  anyhow...

Red Bull Rampage is in effect now, out in Virgin Utah or close to that.  If you get a chance, check out :devneetrith: - he'll be on the spot capturing all the action.  I think I'm riding a place called Boggy-Draw tomorrow, and on Sunday we embark on a six day riding mission, including Moab, 5 Miles of Hell, and the Grand Junction/Fruita region.  This will be... sweet. 

Hope you all have a great week, thanks for looking! :peace:



The pay-off to the rain; a keen rainbow.  Justin
and been takin' it home...

Thursday, October 02, 2008

October 1 2008

*Edit*
Forgot to mention the Monkey business...



Info here: Shuttermonkeys.org

Promo product here: Shuttermonkeys gear


View from Kendall Mountain a couple weeks ago.  Probably more
snow up there now.

If you've been to my blog over the last several months at all, you'll have noticed what a mess its been.  This week, the mess was capped off by my server destroying my sql database, which is the backbone of my wordpress blog platform.  Nuts to them.  I don't have the energy to put  in to fixing it - and since the site is way over due for some TLC, I figure I'll just start anew.  Hence the presence of good ol' Blogger as my blog.  Still not sure what way the site is going to evolve, but I'm leaning towards slick, minimal hipsterism.  We'll see, I'll probably have it done by the christmas holiday if I'm lucky.  There's just so many images I've created in the last few months...

Oh, yeah, so.. the galleries here will also go under the knife too, since they too relied on those sql things. 

Backup?  what's backup?


So, I figure I'll learn how to tweak and freak the hell out of blogger and just do with it, since its hooked up with and owned by the (currently) largest search engine in existence...  Once would think thats a good a thing... but then again, wasn't I just aksing about backing up?

Okay. thanks for looking - about to blast off to Moab, Fruita, and lines beyone.  Have a great weekend.