What a bicycle ride! 
Seems to be a real country bike kinda bike ride.
-JimD
On Feb 13, 2012, at 8:30 AM, Earl Grey wrote:

> Today Paul (on his Rivendell Sam) and I (on my still new Rawland
> rSogn) decided to explore a road at the far point of our usual 50km
> mixed surface "SW" loop here in Chiang Mai, Thailand. We met up at
> 8:15 at the local market, had some hot fresh soymilk and tiny Thai-
> Chinese donuts (pa thong koh) from a street vendor, and headed south.
> Where the long dirt section dumps you back on tarmac past the halfway
> point, we have always gone left/downhill/back to town. Today we
> decided to go right, which on our GPS map meandered along a stream for
> perhaps 5km, and then seemed to dead-end. Sounded pretty, anyway.
> 
> We had stopped at our usual watering-place, a Hmong village along the
> longest dirt section, where we were unable to buy liter bottles of
> water. Instead, not for the first time, our bottles were refilled from
> a big 20 liter jug, and payment was steadfastly refused, which gave me
> no choice but to buy a kilo of local mandarin oranges (for the even
> here ridiculous price of 30 cents) and stuff the bag in my handlebar
> bag. We would be glad to have them later.
> 
> The new to us road took us over a ridge, and then dropped us along a
> narrow paved section into the next valley. The road was being widened,
> and the operator of an excavator blocking the entire road as it was
> chipping away at the cliff somehow saw us coming over his shoulder,
> suspended work and let us sneak by with a nod. No flagmen, here.
> Dropping down into the valley we found a merry creek and a lush valley
> floor, a welcome sight here at the height of the dry season. We began
> climbing up the valley past a couple of little villages and well-
> tended fields, and a few remaining forest giants above us on the lower
> slopes. The paved road ended at a little wat (Buddhist temple), where
> we took a brief rest and admired the plaster buddha statue under
> construction.
> 
> Photos start here: 
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/gernothuber/6870180197/in/photostream
> 
> We continued along a dirt road into the remote upper reaches of the
> valley. After a couple of short steep climbs the valley flattened out
> again, and an occasional seepage of water from the slope to the left
> cooled the air and turned a section of road into rutted near-mud. This
> may not be a good ride in the wet season. As the road narrowed to a
> motorcycle trail, the creek started meandering like crazy from one
> side of the valley to the other, which meant that the trail, which ran
> more or less straight, crossed and re-crossed the stream every couple
> hundred meters on its way through orchards and tiny pastures. We
> counted 15 crossings before we had to turn around and recross them
> all. After making it through the first 3 or 4 unscathed (on 42mm
> Marathon Extremes and 42mm Grand Bois, respectively) we got cocky and
> really started to enjoy each crossing, Paul without fenders getting
> quite wet in the process, a welcome cool-down in the 90+ F / 30+
> Centigrade heat. Some of the banks were quite steep and clay-y, which
> posed a bit of a challenge on the Hetres, especially since the water
> was deep enough that it was hard to maintain momentum all the way
> through the creek. So we didn't make it all the way up the far bank
> every time, but we did make it back onto dry ground every time. We
> started getting out our phone cameras to attempt some photography, but
> without too much success. We shall return with a real camera (and a
> dry bag, just in case).
> 
> Having tarried, we needed to haul @ss back to town, as I had a yoga
> class to teach at 1 pm. Pushing hard climbing back over the ridge we
> got smiles and thumbs-up from the concrete-pouring crew. Somewhere
> along the way, running on empty, we made an emergency stop for a Coke,
> and had our water bottles forcibly refilled by the grandmotherly
> proprietor with water and ice. By the time we got back to the flat
> road home I was pretty bushed since I hadn't been riding much aside
> from my super short commute for the last couple of months, so Paul
> pulled us all the way back home in a mad 15km sprint. I got home,
> jumped in the shower, got on the scooter because my sit bones were
> hurting to the point where even sitting on the scooter was painful and
> riding a bike not to be contemplated. I got to the studio in time and
> taught my class basically without sitting down (I couldn't). A couple
> hours later the pain fortunately receded. I never had this happen
> quite this bad, and that even though I had swapped my most comfy B-17
> from my own commuter/kid-hauler Sam Hillborne to my rSogn the night
> before. The sitbones  (and attached hamstring tendons) felt mostly
> fine until the sprint, but during those last 30 minutes got
> progressively worse, slowing me down even more than the jello in my
> legs. Next time we'll take more time and add a few more stream
> crossings, hopefully following the creek all the way to the head of
> the valley.
> 
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