Back from the Divide
Got back on Friday, just before midnight. I rode from Banff in Canada to Salida in Colorado in 20 easy days, with some short days and one complete day off in Butte, too. My plans to wake up and start pedaling early flew out of the window right from the start;) Usually, I started some time between 7:00am and 9:00am local time. I based it on how hard and how much climbing I had ahead of me that day. The goal became to cycle close to or over 100 miles. Plus, time-wise I tried to spend about 8 to 10 hours in a saddle.
As 2 years ago, I again finished my Divide adventures in Colorado. This time it was unintended. I felt the three weeks spent mountain biking on the GDMTBR were about enough. Besides, Colorado is so hard to pass through too fast: good food and coffee, nice bike shops to hang around, plenty of fellow cyclists. Despite eating all the time, I returned home 10 pounds lighter, 167 lbs which is closer to my optimal weight.
Salsa Fargo performed perfectly. This bike was created to eat up miles on a route like this. First of all, in my mind 29″ wheeled mountain bike is the future of off-road touring. There is no way, I will go back to anything smaller. The rolling efficiency of two-niners allows for faster and more comfortable riding. I had no mishaps whatsoever!!! I only did one tune-up in the Outdoorsman bike shop in Butte. Just to clean up drive-train and re-adjust shifting for cable stretching. The combo of Salsa dropbars and Syntace aerobars was a winner, too. Not a slightest trace of pain in my wrists, unlike in 2007 with flat bars and Ergon grips. No flats either!!! I think my Slime tubes might have been an overkill though. WTB Nanoraptor tires had plenty of grip on this route. The only complaint: the rear tire was getting worn out a bit too fast, after almost 2,000 miles. Not sure if this is normal. Epic Designs bags carried all of my equipment and distributed it properly and held up fairly well in rain.
For now, I started uploading pictures to my Flickr photostream and you can also see my GPS logs over at Garmin Connect (if that doesn’t take you directly to my activities just search for the username: “richdrogpa”). At Garmin website, you can see my daily routes mapped out and HR, elevation and speed data plotted over time.











