Nineteen Miles up to Mt. Wilson Observatory

“OWWWWW. JEEEEZUS F*CK WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING?!”

Turns out the enraged howl of agonized obscenity from across the courtyard at the Goodnite Inn Calabasas wasn’t from some domestic dispute. It was from one of my guys. Misplaced joshing caused Tweedledum to slap Tweedledee on the hip – hard – not knowing he had bad road rash from a recent fall off his bike. On the drive to Pasadena today, the guys agreed:

“Our friendship is based on the fact that we aren’t actually friends.”

Scores would be settled over the 30km ride, climbing 1600m to the famous observatory. I never saw the grudge match, as they rode away from me quickly. IMG_00000185Instead, I gobbled down a Power Bar and a Starbucks Espresso Double Shot and settled in for my longest, highest climb ever. For the next 90 or so minutes, with no watch, no Garmin, no real distance markers and no one around it was just me, sheer, bleached cliffs, tarmac, and my breathing. Basically just ride until, at some point, you get to the top and get to stop.

My buddies waited for me for the last 8km segment, and I returned the courtesy by attacking immediately. It makes a big difference knowing how much more you have to endure. Up top, the Observatory was closed but the hazy view of the surrounding mountains complemented my blurred vision.

The others barrelled back down. I “mini-kegged”. Here’s what a half-hour of continuous descent at maybe 50-60km/h feels like:

Sounds like: wind howling in your ears

Looks like: blue sky, rock face, tarmac tangents, squirrel playing chicken

Feels like: cold, salty snot running down your nose and into your mouth that you dare not wipe off. Handlebars vibrating.photo 1


In the Santa Monica Mountains

I’ll get straight to the first ride reports. Clever travelogues sometime later this week.

I’m in the city of Calabasas, CA with two friends, and expecting a third whenever his stand-by flight releases him from sleeping at YYZ. They’re all fitter than me and it’s shown in the two days of riding since we arrived late on Friday night.

True to our expectations, it’s warm – over 20C – and sunny – perfect for cycling in the arid, yellow canyons of the Santa Monica Mountains. Yesterday we went out for a short 1h45, followed by today’s taxing 3 hours. All in, 2,500m of climbing in 120km. The ups were hard but relatively civilized yesterday, but today was rather ferocious for a guy who hasn’t climbed for real since leaving British Columbia 2.5 years ago. Topanga Canyon was the shortest, a mere warmup in the shade. Fernwood, also in the shade, was a series of endless twists. But the final climb in the noonday sun, Las Flores, north from the Pacific Coast Highway, caused a ludicrous amount of slow pedaling, squirming all over the bike, moving maybe 1m per second. I’m certain the roadside cacti were laughing at me (those pricks!). I was out of water by then, and knew there would be no more until we got back to the hotel.

But the descent of Tuna Canyon to the ocean took the most concentration. When you’re dropping down 15 per cent grades, picking up speed quickly, negotiating blind hairpin turns, it’s no time to admire blue skies and jagged rock faces unfortunately. My hands started to cramp from braking, but I’ve broken a wrist on a bike trip before and would rather not repeat that.

We’re up very early for tomorrow’s adventure – bedtime now.

At the crest of Piuma yesterday. The smile is fake. What's real, apparently, is the number of muscles I apparently need to unclip from a pedal.

At the crest of Piuma yesterday. The smile is fake. What’s real, apparently, is the number of muscles I apparently need to unclip from a pedal