Saturday, October 10, 2009

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Bugaboos!

The last time I (Wes) saw the Bugs was about 15 years ago, when we stopped by for ONE DAY on our way home to Montana. If you are a climber, that is akin to having two bites of the world's best gourmet feast before it is ripped away and replaced by a stale corn dog. Needless to say, I was excited to come back for a longer jaunt, and to teach Steffy the mystical ways of the marvelous instrument we call the piolet.
After we finished our bike tour in the Canadian Rockies (below), we hitched back up to Jasper, grabbed the car, and headed to the Bugaboos for about a week. What a wonderful place to be. We slept in Ray and Meg's mega tent. I think that we had about three times the room as in Stef's little guy. By the end of this last trip we had slept about two months of this summer in a tent. What fun! We climbed a few great classic climbs with longer then normal approaches and descents due to the warm weather, which made one of the main passes very dangerous.



Steffy in the mornin'... How cool!


Approaching the Pigeon Spire. Stef got to jump some cravasses, and learn why we cross snow bridges so early in the morning!



The Howsers, from the summit of Pigeon. What a FUN route!

Pigeon and the Howsers, from the base of Snowpatch. Note the climbers on the icefield following us. Is that great or what!



Maybe that piolet will make a good cam-hook?

"Yeah! I'm back!"

"I hope the porcupines don't eat our brake lines."

Jasper to Hayden Lake, ID - 8 day, 810 k Tandem tour

After we got back from Europe we came up to Jackson while we looked for jobs. Wes happened to find one in Jackson doing robotic engineering. But they didn't want Wes to start for another month so we took off for another adventure. We road our bikes from Jasper to Hayden ID. It was 500 miles of wonderful Canadian Rockies. Here are a few pic.




Happy camper.









Right here the river disappears into a hole in the limestone. It drops 100 ft in a 3 ft wide slot within 6 feet! There are no signs to mark the spot, either. Cool!

Somewhere in Idaho near here, we finally blew out one of out Continental Ultra Gatorskin tires, which we put about 3000 km (many of them rough) on in Europe and Canada, with one pinch and one puncture over some serious roads. After I put on our spare tube and tire, we had - I am not making this up - at least 12 pinch flats in 2 days. We burned up all our spare rubber, patches, and emergency equip, and finally had to to limp it in (pumping the tire every 1.5 km) within hitchhiking range of a walmart for a new spare, etc. I will not be buying the REI brand tires again! Go Continentals!

We sure loved this ride! 4 bears, two sheep herds, and endless beauty! This is a highly recommended route!

Pics from Europe





Thursday, June 25, 2009

There and back again

Hello all! This will be the last update before we hit the states, and then I swear you'll get pictures. We just had some bangers and mash and a big pile of fish 'n chips a block from Piccadilly circus in London, with a pint of ale very much in the flavor of Coopersmiths. Yesterday was our last riding day, and we rolled into Zurich for the best stealth camp ever. The youth hostel was - I am not making this up - $90 plus $30 to get there, but we found a picture perfect hidden park 100 meters from the airport. Park bench, under a tree, the whole bit. We topped off our last night in Switzerland with a fancy-pants cheese fondue dinner, which was 1) amazing, and 2) astonishingly easy to pull off on the dragonfly and highly recommended. Major bonus points here, fellas! 30 km in the morning for coffee and we rounded out our trip at 2345 km! Dinner in Londen, and we'll stealth in the airport tonight.

Cheers!

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

The gorgeous - so we hear - German countryside

Sorry, no pics again! The functionality of USB on the surprisingly rare internet access point has been 1 for 5. I´ll edit all this stuff with real pics when we get home. For now, here´s the update! And Addie, the numbers are the daily/cumulative kilometers. I am loving my GoLite puffy, by the way. Sehr Gut!

From Vienna, which is locally Wien, pronounced 'veen'... from which we get 'Wiener', which is akin to 'one from Wien'...

Day 18. 15/1490 km. Vienna and back by train. We spent a nice off day looking at statues and what not in Vienna, which is really a great city to see on foot, like Rome. I ate approximately every 100 meters.

Day 19. 88/1573 km. St. Polten - Grein. A nice day, but we had a stout headwind. It was obvious we were going the wrong way, with windmills everywhere, facing the same way we were, and spinning like crazy, and oodles of cyclists going the other way giggling. Last night it really howled. We joined the VERY popoular cycle route along the Donau river after 30 km, and stayed at a campground in the evening. We stopped for a bite at a pretty stone building that turned out to be a world heritage site, the Stift Melk, with the most unbelieveable reliefs and gilded carvings in the cathedral, and frescoes to match. Quite amazing and unexpected. The pretty building that drew us in was only a gate post! We also ran into a couple from vail who are doing a similar trip, and we met them again the next day also.

Day 20. 116/1689 km. Grein - Schlogen. I bet we passed 200-300 cyclists today. Only one had a tent. The first half of the day was so-so, but after lunch the traffic died off (most cycle tourists we see are 50-65, and go 30-40 km a day, on plastic) and the scenery improved. I bet our total integrated elevation profile gain/loss today was less than 20 feet. Very flat = very fast! We found a great beach to finish the evening by a great stealtch camping site. A little clevery shrubbery and we were so invisible.

Day 21. 97/1788 km. Schlogen - Egglfing, Germany. After a great breakfast and a nice morning tour, we hit the confluence of the Inn and the Donau, which was very pretty both naturally and architecturally. After luch, where we met a 60+ retired couple about 6 months into a cycle tour, we picked the 'ugly' side of the river for a hot 'n sweaty 40 km to a great campground in Egglfing am der Inn. We met three couples today over 50 who were repeated long-distance cycle tourers. How cool!

Day 22. 66/1854 km. Egglfing - Burghausen. When it rains, it pours! We were warned last night of impending rain, and it opened up before we left camp. In the pouring rain, which never let up, we blew a chain, which ate a deraileur, and killed the front rack during the repair. I screwed up the chain repair, so five hours later when we found a bike shop, the new derailer was similarly obliterated in ten minutes. Back to the shop, a new chain and deraileur, and at 6 pm the shop owner gave up and left us with one functional gear, no brakes, an irreplaceble cable he cut two inches too short, and a bill for 140 euros, and went home. All in the rain. Major suckfest. We limped it into Burghausen, to find the hostel closed at 9 pm... BUT! we ended up at a nice pension next to the longest castle in europe! What a relief! They could have charged us any price at that point...

Day 23. 116/1969 km. Burghausen - Hundham. A very nice day after yesterday. I repaired the new deraileur so we get two gears now, and fixed the brakes, rack, etc. The rain only hit us twice. We stealthed in a pretty forest camp by a stream. It was a very pretty day with rolling green hills and the German alps to the side.

Day 24. 110/ 2079 km. Hundham - Bad Kohlgrub. This was a much nicer day than the previous, with 3 or 4 showers and sun in between. Lunch in Murnau was pretty, and the views were again great. Too bad we never did see the high Alps. We caught up with a cycle tour guide and rode together for 30 km or so in about 45 minutes. I guess the stimulating conversation got our blood pumping! Big rain dictated an impromptu stealth camp a bit early, and it rained all night. We found our first bad wine, too! You have to get really cheap wine for that...

Day 25. 53/2133 km. Bad Kohlgrub - Fussen//Lindau. Quite cold and reainy today. The rain turned to snow about 700 m up, and it really took it out of us. Poor Stef passed out on me from the cold and wet. I also made another 15 km detour - yesterday too - and then we laid the bike down crossing a railroad in the rain, trying to dodge another bike. We limped into Fussen and elected to take a train to gain half a day or so, and to dry out a little. That bike repair day had cost us mileage we couldn't afford, and the wreck left us needing to make 140 km a day to make our flight. Stef's castle was invisible in the murk (she has been talking about it for months. Really Cinderalla and all. Long blond hairs hanging out the windows.) so we got a postcard. Almost the same. It was nice to take the train though!

So, we have today and tomorrow to make it into Zurich, which we should be able to do. We are getting stronger, and the longer days are getting 'shorter'. Stef hurt her knee when we wrecked, so we'll see how she does. Looks like a couple more days of rain for us. We look forward to seeing everyone!

Monday, June 15, 2009

Vienna!

Well, we made it! We've crossed the Alps 2 1/2 times now, and will be following the Donau towards Salzburg for the next couple of days. Let's see, where were we... Ah! Our last update was in Bozen, Italy. Since then, we have followed a series of bike paths east along the Drau and north along the Mur over the center of the Austrian alps. Yes, we did pick the longest possible path through the core of the alps once again, but let it be known that this was ALL STEF'S IDEA. ish.

Day 10. 85/850 km. Bozen-Bruneck.
What a spectacular day! We climbed hard into a headwind all day, but what scenery! It really felt like we were in Austria already, as we passed through rolling hills and farms, surrounded by the alps. We were again reminded that grocers are closed on Sunday. Oops. The route takes a detour west toward Innsbruck, to a really wild and labrynthine old fortress that is now a modern art museum. Very weird, the modern art. Very cool, the fortress. We pushed to get to Bruneck so we could buy food, but no luck. We did find a campground though. Yahoo! and a pizzeria - YAHOOOOO! where we ate two pizza (not small ones) and a pasta dish, and drank a liter of wine. The campground was a longer walk back than I had recalled...

Day 11 - 83/935 km. Bruneck - Lienz.
After a few hundred more meters of climbing, we crossed into Austria and began descending along the Drau. A major bike route, the road and signage are great. Yet another unexpected score! Stealth camping and cheezy pasta by the river. The snowfall this year here was 10 meters - up from an average of 2 - and the downed timber everywhere belied the fact.

Day 12 - 88/1023 km. Leinz - Spittal.
A gorgeous downhill cruise today! Clear skies and the Dolomites made a great backdrop for grillded bacon-wrapped sausages, soon to become a staple lunch. :) Campground action in Spittal, we just beat the rain.

Day 13 - 85/1110 km. Spittal - Maltschachsee
Yet another stunning day! A couple of warm showers int he campground, and another great day rolling down the Drau. We had a six-pack-o´-weiners for lunch in Villach, and got alittle lost after that, after our route left the signed bike route which stuck with the Drau. We found yet another major bike route though, and ended at a great lakeside campground with a frothy pint and a plate of fries. Fantastic!

Day 14 - 68/1178 km. Malthschachsee - Neumarkt?
We had a spectacular day, and outran a huge storm after stopping to eat a chicken, a pig, and a cow, and an acre of potatoes. It was a holiday though, again, and thus we found to our dismay that the grocers were closed. We were unable to get food for dinner after seeing an amaying castle, so we stopped at a tiny bar to eat. What a time! After we began to talk/pantomine with the locals, and shared our plans, things got really interesting whenI asked what a good beer from the region was. Talk about opening a can of worms! The mayor, a dairy farmer sitting across from us, was a fan of Muraurbier, so he bought a round for the foreigners and for everyone else there. The owner of the bar insisted on making us sandwiches, and of course real Nuemarkters only drink Pultigamer beer with their sandwiches - another round is poured... The tunnel inspector insisted on a local weissbeir for his round. It flowed freely until every brewery town on our map was covered, at half a liter each... It was a map of Austria... And Then, when the locals started to stumble, they broke out a bottle of in-house pine-tree moonshine that, let me just say, was really good. Chef insisted that we sleep in the garage. All in all, a teriffic time.

Day 15 - 100/ 1278 km. Neumarkt - Kraubath.
It was so nice today that we just couldn't stop riding... We made sausages in Judensburg center for lunch, and a 35 kph tailwid half the day along with the general awesomeness pushed us into Kraubath for a stealth camp. We stopped and picked stawberries at a farm in the afternoon for a fun snack.

Day 16 - 103/1381 km. Kraubath - Mariayell.
We slept like logs despite the trains, and took a long stint on a side road today through rolling hills and farms, working our way to the headwaters of a branch tributary of the Mur. A nice steady 2%, upwind, to gorgeous Seeweisen at the very steep Alfenze Seegerg pass. Oy! We rolled down the back at twilight to a camp at Erlaufsee where we ate, drank, and were merry. Slept like the dead again. We hadn't even started the real climbing until 80 km into the day, but what a day!

Day 17 - 92/1474 km. Mariazell - St. Polten.
After a nice cup o homebrew joe, we dropped the bags and rode back to Mariayell for the morning. Our ride started with a nice big pass to exit the alps proper, and then we rolled easily down to St polten. We stopped at a festival of some kind and enjoyed a pint of ale, and watched a tractor parade. Dinner by the lake with a swim.

Day 18 - 0 miles. Vienna!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

pics 2

koa italythe dolomites this morning
30 mph tailwind!
planning.... and we only drink the cheapest amazing wine.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Italy

Day 5 - 69/416 km. Torino - Villa 'd Adda.
We had a pretty ride to Caverno or so, where we had coffe, then toured through Bellagio - no wonder they named a casino after it! - to lunch in Vassena: a bottle of wine and some cheese by the lake... 5 km of tunnels, but the bike path from Lecco along the Adda river where we stealth camped .5 km from a cafe was really gorgeous. We took an unpowered ferry designed by Da Vinci and a swim in the evening, before tucking in under 1000 lightning bugs.

Day 6 - 95/505 km. Villa d' Adda - Azzano Mello.
Coffee and croissiants in camp in the morning, and then we followed the Da Vinci pathway and waterworks south to Trezzo to avoid some bigger cities. The path is truly amazing - half a day's ride along canals, dams, and the like designed by the master. Truly a treat. New brakes and our first flat, and then a tailwind took us from Cassano to Azzano Mello through the Greely of Italy. We camped in a cornfield, which was great. We got directions mid day from a runner who, instead of pointing, led us across town (2-3 km) at 18 km/hr! Two old codgers along the river rode and chatted with us as well. Good times.

Day 7 - 95/604 km. Azzano Mello - Bardolino.
We had a great tailwind all day heading east, and then followed the Lago di Garda coast to a neat castle out on a narrow spit. Big tourist joint. The rest of the ride for the day was jammed with RV's around Garda-Land. Garda, apparently, means Walt-Disney. We recovered from the western-style tourism by cooking pasta by the lake and enjoying a terrific bottle of the cheapest wine I could find - 1 euro. And free ice cream! Nice!

Day 8 - 78/682 km. Bardolino - Calliano?
We had another great tailwind heading north along the lake toward Torbole, where we ate and watched windsurfers. Up a hill to Nago, where we literally stumbled onto a spectacular bike path that we took for the next two days! We rode through sunny vineyards all afternoon and stopped at a trail-side bicycle bar. We passed a couple hours there avoiding rain, sharing a pint with a local and sharing biking and climbing stories. He introduced himself like so: 'Americani?' W: Yes. (Squeezing my forearm) 'Climber?' Yes! Good times. We stealth camped in a vineyard later.

Day 9 - 80/762 km. Calliano - Bozen.
Rain! We rode hard like drowned rats, completing our miles before lunch. Bozen is another big tourist joint, so we ate a lot today. I hope to repeat that tomorrow as we continue north on the bike path.

We will be heading east along the Drau in Austria in a couple of days, and expect to be in Vienna in 10 days or so. Right on schedule.
Life lessons so far:
1 - Leave the underoos at home. Seriously. Wash your shorts if you need to.
2 - Sexy tandem bike is AWESOME! Anything below a 2% uphill grade feels like a descent! Except today, because I was pooped.
3 - Wes can eat disgusting amounts of food. Yesterday: a full Blacklite pot of pasta. The big one. With sauce. And sausages. And bread. And a .5 liter beer. And half a bottle of wine. And cookies. That was dinner.
4 - Maps are not waterproof. Neither is our intended route in highliter ink. Or my pants.
5 - This is fun!

Monday, June 1, 2009

Switzerland

Overview:
Cycling in Switzerland is, in a not terribly useful word, indescribable. We would heartily recommend our poorly planned route to anyone who loves gratuitous amounts of awesomeness.
This is also my first blog post, and I'm hungry and sweaty, and the keyboard is covered in weird Italian letters so don't expect much... No usb ports here, so no pics yet!

Day 0: Zurich international airport to slug-infested stealth site. 20/20 km.
Everything arrived in good condition, and they actually let us fly our tandem to Zurich for free, even though checking it to Dallas, which we flew through, would cost c.a. $500. The nice bike route I had planned from home to a campground turned out to be the autobahn. Alas. A quick recovery and we got on a bike path at the airport, and stayed on bike paths all through Zurich. Very exciting at 8 pm. Pizza and a weiss bier calmed the nerves and we stealth camped by the river ?.

Day 1: Zurich-Amsteg. 100/120 km.
We awoke to rain and a massive slug infestation, which I didn't tell Stef about so that I could watch her reaction... Very rewarding. I almost wrecked the bike as I discovered that the slugs liked the handlebars too... Absolutely unfathomable scenery all day. Which pretty much sums up Switzerland. Everyone bikes everywhere, so the trails are amazing, and drivers treat you right. Zug was scary, lunch by the lake in Brunnen was idyllic, and we stealth camped again at the base of the Big Climb by a river that gave me a brain freeze just looking at it. I almost lost by beer, which was cooling in the water, when the river suddenly came up 1-2 feet in 20 minutes.

Day 2: Amsteg-Airolo. 54/164 km.
How had can 20 km be? Very! The Gotthardt tunnel was stopped up and the Gotthardt pass had just been plowed, so everyone in Switzerland was Autobahning past us all day. Relentless 6-10% grades on the 1600+ meter climb to the top of the alps, tunnels up to .5 km, and no shoulder. Ever. Lunch in Andermatt was mind-blowing. Think Estes park, sans tourists, on roids. On top was a tourist stop complete with cheese wheels and german brats. Check out the descent into Airolo and you'll know how much stef liked that...

Day 3: Airolo-Bellinzona. 85/240 km.
A beautiful descent after a late start past village after waterfall-encrusted village. Turns out our raingear works! At 9:00 pm in the rain - still - Stef demanded a hotel so I treated her to the best. A $180 a night suite with poolside views at the Perla Negra. Granted, we weren't in the hotel, per se, but our stealth site behind the mini bar by the pool was sick! Plus they "let" us take showers and do laundry.

Day 4: Bellinzona-Como Italy. 84/337 km.
Started with a nice 400 m climb into the clouds, then a ridiculously beautiful descent through villages replete with slate roofs and vineyards. Lakeside swims, the whole bag. Glorious. You sure know when you get to Italy, though! Bikes are no longer to be seen, drivers are even more psychotic than the stereotype, and Stef was propositioned not 100 feet into the country!