Thoroughly enjoyed this, Diana! And done on a Platypus! I don’t understand what happened with Michael’s rack, however and I’d like to. I have a front rack on one of my bikes and I want to be sure it never falls off the bike rack when in transport! How did Michael’s front rack make the bike unstable? How is the bike fastened to the rack?
I was on the edge of my seat reading this and I can’t wait for the Smoke and Fire Trip. Leah On Saturday, October 26, 2024 at 7:47:00 PM UTC-4 Diana H wrote: > I did the Lost Sierra Loop > <https://bikepacking.com/routes/lost-sierra-loop/> back-to-back with the > Smoke > and Fire 400 <https://bikepacking.com/routes/idaho-smoke-n-fire-400/>. > The Smoke and Fire 400 will be a separate Trip Report. > > Our bikes: > > Diana’s: 2022 Platypus, 51 cm, Rene Herse 27.5”x2.2’ tires. Choco > Handlebars, friction shifters, 38x24 crank and 9 speed cassette > > Michael’s: Stock Salsa Cut Throat > > > > May 25 > > Miles: Approx 50 miles > > I left SF at 5:15am and met Michael at the trailhead at 9:15 am. Michael > is uncharacteristically late. When he arrives, I find out that his bike > *fell* *off his bike rack*. This is one of my worst fears and I > neurotically check my bike over and over and worry about every bump I hit > in the car. I always thought (hoped?) I was just overly anxious… Luckily > for Michael, that little strap over the back tire kept his bike from > falling completely off the rack. Turns out the front portion of his rack > was too far forward on his front tire (he had bottle cages that prevented > him from putting the front rack closer to his front fork) and the front > portion of his rack slid off his front tire and his bicycle toppled over > onto the back end of his rack. Everybody says they transport their bikes > with front racks just fine, but this is the single reason I don’t ride with > a front rack! Anyway, Michael immediately pulls over and shoved his bike in > the car and he meets me at the trailhead. We’re riding by 10am after some > tune-ups to our rigs. > > The beginning of the ride isn’t the best. It’s on a fire road where ATVs > are cruising by and it’s a little dusty. However, after the first few miles > we start getting some better views. The beginning of the ride is always a > little hard. We don’t have our trail legs under us yet, but we are so > excited to be riding. We just take it slow and grind up. > > We both get flats on our tubeless tires and I think to myself that I’m > swearing off tubeless. However, Michael advises me that I gotta keep riding > to get the sealant to seal whatever caused the hole and he’s right. After a > few ride, stop to pump, ride, stop to pump iterations, my tire holds air. > > We make it into Taylorsville and we buy 4-beers and fill up water here. > We’re both shocked the beer is only $2/can. I carry the beers in my Ortlieb > Panniers and we grind up on China Grade Road. I’m riding on my easiest gear > but I’m hardly going faster than walking pace. During this stretch I will > get *demolished* by some insect and not realize it. I’ll end the day with > 15+ insect bites and hate life for a little while. I also fall while > clipped in and snap my Cateye computer wire. This is sad because I love > getting my mileage at the end of each day. > > [image: PXL_20240525_235828130.jpg] > > After getting up China Grade Road the only thing separating us from sleep > is finding a place to camp. Most trips Michael and I don’t know where we > will camp and just wing it. We both suffer from paranoia that when we stop > for a campsite there will be a pristine campsite *just around the bend*. > So 2 miles later we pull a little ways off of the road hoping for a view, > getting none, but deciding we don’t want to ride at night. We crack open > our beers, eat our dinners, and are asleep by 9:35pm. > > > > May 26 > > Miles: Approx 50 > > I am woken up by *tons *of gunshots and the sound of a chainsaw. I have > never been happier to be camping a little ways off the trail. This noise > goes on for an hour? I’m in a deep deep sleep and can’t quite pull myself > out of my slumber. I almost think it’s a dream until I hear the loudest > CRACK. I have no idea what’s happening out there. Michael and I whisper to > each other in our tents. Mostly. “oh my god *what is happening??*” I > really don’t know what would have happened if they had spotted us, would we > have run?? We fall back into uneasy sleep. > > Michael and I are riding by 6:30am. 1 minute into our ride we see what all > the noise was. Whoever was out in the middle of the night cut down a big > tree. It’s really sad and I’m sure it was illegal. > > > We immediately have a very steep grade to deal with so we just hop off the > bikes and push up. We want to get to the top of Mount Hough but its snowy > up there and really muddy. We ditch the bikes by the side of the road and > walk up the muddy road. At the top we can see Mt. Lassen and we’re really > glad we made the trek up. > > > We walk down, hop on our bikes and are about to have beautiful ascent. > This is literally the best single track I have ever ridden. I cannot > recommend this enough. I plan to go back again in the future. > > Michael gets a flat tire during th edecent and despite his best efforts, > he is unable to get his tubeless tires to hold air. He puts a tube in and > we continue down. We lose probably an hour. When we cross Highway 70 we > decide to take that back to the car instead of riding more gravel. We don’t > want to get back to his apartment super late with an early day tomorrow. > We’re back to his car by 5:30pm. > > > > Some things that I changed from our Death Valley > <https://groups.google.com/g/rbw-owners-bunch/c/abOYxHywP-Q/m/KfcjIZNuAAAJ> > and Ordaho > <https://groups.google.com/g/rbw-owners-bunch/c/hxsdsHuUT9Y/m/5N4tAVBLAgAJ> > misadventures: > > > - I built my own wheels <https://youtu.be/y1aEe5AAAxs> that could run > tubeless tires. The video is of me installing my spokes. I’ll spend over 2 > days building the wheels and going to my local bicycle co-op to use their > wheel truing stand. These tires were a labor of love. Sadly, as I finished > my second wheel I was doored on my way home while riding my bicycle, and > my > rim got totaled. So, I actually built 3 wheels for this trip. I did not > get > the information of the man that doored me. However, with my new skill I > plan to build some bitching tires for my [future] Homer. Speaking of > which, > I’m in the market for a 51 cm Homer if anybody out there has one! I > - I used 27.5 x 2.2 tires (instead of my 43mm tires) > - I bought the Tosco Bars from Rivendell but I ended up switching back > to Choco bars because the Tosco bars put my arms at a higher angle and > when > I’m climbing hard hills I had a tendency to pull my front tire off of the > ground. I learned this test riding some gravel north of San Francisco. So > not a change, but just following up for folks that follow my adventures. > - Clipless peddles. I actually am surprised that I liked these as much > as I did, falling over in them and all. The pedals I use are dual sided, > one side with clips and the other without. > > > > For folks interested in switching up your lunches or dinners, I recommend > you all try out Huel. I’ve been eating their Hot and Savory meals for years > when backpacking or bikepacking and love their stuff. It’s vegetarian and > way cheaper than backpackers pantry. If interested you can use my code > <https://huel.mention-me.com/m/ol/tz7ed-7f27d5f354> and save some money > on it (and I’ll save money on my next purchase too!) > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/6dfb874a-8ad8-45b0-b3ce-d7c67805c204n%40googlegroups.com.