Showing posts with label Death Ride. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death Ride. Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2009

Death Ride Training - Part I


Mostly 8% grade for 8 miles with ~ 2,800 ft of climb

My old riding partner, Bruce, is on vacation, and while watching the Tour de' France we got inspired by the Mt Ventoux climb and decided to have a go at Monitor Pass, the first, longest, and hardest (E side climb) of the 5 climbs of the Death Ride. I should also say, in fairness to riders like Bruce who did the Death Ride back in the day when it usually lived up to its name, the current Death Ride is pretty tame. It used be close to 200 miles and 21,000 ft of climbing. I wouldn't even consider such a ride, but at 129 miles and 15,000 ft of climbing, it is just one hella bad ride I might be tempted to try.

Originally planned for Friday, we rescheduled for Sunday due to persistent rain and wanting to watch Lance Armstrong give it one last shot on the fearsome Mt Ventoux. We got started about 1:00, and it was already 96 degrees in the shade. It was also extremely dry. My guess would be at or below 10% humidity. Our plan was to do the W slope of Monitor and then tackle Ebbetts Pass from the parking lot where hwy 88 "T"s into hwy 89. We should have done Ebbetts Pass as it has a northern and eastern exposure, the road is narrow, lined with trees, and water at a park half-way up. Live and learn!



My water was frozen solid in the ice chest at the start, so I slammed half a 7-Up and hoped for the best. Starting a bit dehydrated wasn't so great. I also forgot to start my Garmin recording, so I was 2 miles and 25 minutes into the climb before the traces start. My Gatorade, spiked with Power Electrolytes proved to be too strong in the hot conditions, so after stopping once to hydrate, fix my dragging front brake, and turn on the Garmin, I stopped again a few miles later to bum water off a nice elderly couple driving a new Prius. I could have easily drained both 12 oz bottles, but I left them half a bottle in case it was their last. The diluted Gatorade went down much easier.

Bruce had left as soon as he was set up, so I had to do the climb alone - we need a little heart to heart on that issue. Not cool! I have to say, except for being very aware how bored I was, the climb didn't seem at all strenuous. I am going to try experimenting with playing some music and see if that helps with the boredom. I was very happy my HR was holding steady at 147 while climbing at 4~5 mph. That's just squeeking under Zone 5, but manageable, and not bad for the 3rd ride in 6 weeks after Hamilton. I rode and trained from November '08, so needed a sustained break.

Monitor Pass is a special place for me. My Ex and I crossed over Monitor on our very first bike tour, and camped overnight by the small lake just before the summit. The east side's switchbacks are big, open, turns that you can carry a lot of speed through. I remember having a blast flying down to hwy 395 with 55 lbs in full panniers, loving the low center of gravity and amazing speed. What an idiot I was!!! The views are stunningly expansive. The valley to the south extends over the horizon.



We didn't go over the top, but did take some photos at the summit marker. With all the rain the trees and grasses were green and creeks flowing. After hydrating until our bottles were dry, we headed back down the mountain. I was having a blast flying down the mountain at over 50 mph in a full aerobar tuck when I ran over a rock with my back wheel.

Within a couple of seconds it was flat and felt like it was sliding on greased glass. It put a serious scare into me as a fall at those speeds can be fatal. I was very, very lucky and got it shut down within a few hundred yards. I'm installing puncture strips on the tires, because this is just not acceptable.

We drove up to Ebbetts Pass to scout it out, and took some pics there too. Bruce faked it in his riding clothes, but I don't like to foul my Karma like that, so changed into clean, cool, loose clothes and took some decidedly unglamorous shots.



After endless hours trying to adjust every imaginable thing, I have given up trying to use a 24T granny on my bike, because it drops the chain often enough that all the paint and then some is now torn off my bottom bracket. The seat tube swells below the water bottle brackets, so I can't use a Deda Dog Tooth, and there isn't enough material on the 24T to safely drill it so I can use screws to pin the chainwheel. I have a 28T that should work fine, but I am going to try a 26T first. Gear charts don't lie.


45 rpm produces lots of muscle fatigue, but not much power

As you can see from the trace, even on the relatively mild slope of Monitor, my cadence was too low to make good power with a 30T. If I had a larger frame I could get by standing, but with my frame I just don't have enough cockpit room to climb out of the saddle, and when I tried it my HR alarm went off within a few seconds. 125% of the power. 200% of the work. All that core and upper body burns lots of fuel and oxygen that starves the legs and burns the lungs.

PS: Kik, Lance Armstrong's Ex, had this special chain restraint custom made to keep the chain from falling past her granny. I don't have carbon "braze-on" dérailleur mounts though, so not sure it will work for me, but I'm looking into it.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Death Ride Regrets


West Walker River Valley on approach to Sonora Pass from 395 Side

I was studying the course for the Tour of the California Alps - Death Ride a couple of nights ago and started to regret that I stopped training for a few weeks after my Mt Hamilton ride. The course is not as difficult as I had imagined, and also not quite as high or steep. In addition, I have done all three of its passes before - touring with 45 lbs in my panniers - although I was in my 20s at the time.

The Death Ride is a very difficult course, comprising 129 miles with 15,000ft of climbing and 5 passes at over 8,300ft, but does not take in Sonora Pass, as I had imagined it would. Sonora Pass, at 9,624 ft is signed as 26% grade, so it requires much lower gearing, or much younger legs. It does take in Monitor (twice), Kit Carson, and Ebbetts Pass (twice), just to the north of the posted map. (you can see Ebbetts Pass in the far upper left on this map)

I have some slides somewhere of the valley looking back over hwy 395 at Wheeler Pk and Mt Patterson to the east from our campsite at the edge of a cliff. Judy (Ex-wife) and I stayed there overnight, exhausted from a hard day's climbing, after getting a large water donation from a friendly Winnebago. We learned the hard way that night that when you get within 1,500 ft or so of the top of a mountain range, there is no water. Live and learn. We got up very early the next morning and went over Sonora Pass, because by about 9:00 the air starts to heat up and it gets very thin very fast.


View Larger Map

I am looking for a slide scanner so I can share those, but THAT was a climb. At 5' nothing, and 125lbs, she chugged up it behind me on a 28 lb bike, with 10 lbs in the panniers, turning 24f - 28r gearing. Even the US Marines were impressed, saluting us as they held onto their truck, crawling up the mountain. At any rate, sans Sonora Pass, the Death Ride is a much easier course to manage. The pic posted above was taken much earlier in the year, but AFAICT, from the same spot. Our view was of a breathtaking yellow, orange, and amber Alpine-glow, with the setting sun brilliantly burning the west side of the range.

I will have to study the course more, and try a few rides at altitude, as my 24 minutes in Zone 5 Saturday have left me very fatigued. My training for threshold power is going to have to be very carefully scripted if I am to succeed, but I think I can manage that successfully, so hope my altitude work will bear fruit. The event is this Saturday, and I wish I had prepared to ride it. For those that are, best of luck!


The gorgeous and green Monitor Pass