T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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695.1 | TWO NOTES ARE BETTER THAN ONE | IMPULS::MCDONOUGH | | Wed Jun 01 1988 08:51 | 9 |
| Hi Tonnie,
I think you should post this question in the conference called
HOLIDAY_TRAVEL as well as keeping it here in BICYCLE.
JPOIND::HOLIDAY_TRAVEL
Good Luck,
Jim
|
695.2 | | ANRCHY::SUSSWEIN | He Who Dies With the Most Toys Wins | Wed Jun 01 1988 13:07 | 10 |
|
You can also try posting it in the COLORADO notesfile
(COMET::COLORADO).
Most of passes are open by the beginning of July (this year, without
much snow, they opened by late May). Your best weather is likely
to be in late August to early September.
Steve
|
695.3 | CONTACT BIKECENTENIAL | AKOV11::FULLER | | Wed Jun 01 1988 14:51 | 19 |
| I would highly recommend contacting BIKECENTENIAL, a non-profit
touring organization located in Missoula, Montana. They have
organized rides and publish maps all around the US. There is one
well known ride called the Great Parks North which goes from Missoula
to Jasper, Alberta. A complete set of maps will run you about 10.00US
and are extremely well done.
To contact them:
BIKECENTENTIAL
113 West Main St
Missoula Montana 59802
Phone: 406-721-1776
I agree with 695.2, end of August is a perfect time of year, although
if you are heading north into Alberta, being there in July will
give you daylight until 10:00PM or later.
steve
|
695.4 | | AKOV11::POLLARD | | Wed Jun 01 1988 14:57 | 21 |
| I went for a week last year in late June. We went from Durango
to Denver, and the weather was fine. In the afternoons, there were
generally rain showers, and the passes were colder than the valleys.
I carried a wind jacket and leg warmers in a fanny pack, but generally
needed nothing more than lycra clothing on the bike. With four weeks,
you may want to head up into Wyoming as well as go through Colorado.
As far as steepness, the climbs tend to be long and gradual,
compared to what I've heard about Europe. I have never ridden there.
Without bags (we put them on a truck) most people were comfortable
climbing in gears of 42x24. One person rode all week on 42 x 21, but
I don't think he would do it again. He had to really jam on every
climb to stay ahead of the gear. Another (very fast) person used a
42x26. It wasn't especially macho looking, but nobody made fun of him
as he spun away from the rest of us. If you are planning loaded
touring, I really can't help you with gearing. Perhaps someone else
can.
Good luck, and have fun!
John
|
695.5 | I also recommend Great Parks North route! | MARKER::WARD | | Thu Jun 02 1988 17:12 | 11 |
| I agree that the Great Parks North trip is wonderful. You do bike
camping, and the weather can be wet, but the scenery is wonderful,
the road surface is good, the climbs are well switchbacked, and
the route well thought-out. It's about a 700 mile route, and you
could take time out for day hikes.
At the end of the trip, you could take the overnight train from
Jasper, Alberta to Vancouver, which is a beautiful city, and then
fly home from there.
Patrick
|
695.6 | Good Routes, Awful leaders | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Mon Jun 06 1988 11:22 | 56 |
| >< Note 695.3 by AKOV11::FULLER >
> -< CONTACT BIKECENTENIAL >-
>
> I would highly recommend contacting BIKECENTENIAL, a non-profit
> touring organization located in Missoula, Montana. They have
> organized rides and publish maps all around the US. There is one
> well known ride called the Great Parks North which goes from Missoula
> to Jasper, Alberta. A complete set of maps will run you about 10.00US
> and are extremely well done.
By all means get their map. It's a good route. BUT: If you want to
know where you are, or detour at all, you need other maps. They
put the "crib sheet" in parts of the map that the route doesn't
touch. The problem is that if you wonder what that mountain over
there is, the name is probably hidden behind a block of text. Also
the maps have 1000 ft. contour lines. All of San Fransisco is
below 1000 feet, so the hilliest city in this country would look
flat on their maps.
DO NOT GO ON A TRIP THEY RUN!!! I made that mistake (we did Great
Parks north, a very nice area.) The leader was incompetent (he
didn't know which way to turn a freewheel to remove it), couldn't
cook, and was utterly incapable of dealing with extraoridinarily
bad weather. As a result of his pep talk when people were cold, we
had 3 cases of hypothermia. We should have hitched rather than
continue in conditions that some people weren't prepared for. (We
had sleet and hail in Aug., the worst weather they ever saw on
that route.)
Since they took a lot (over 1/3) in overhead the food budget was
too small. We barely had enough food for dinner, and always had to
buy lunch ourselves, which was hard some days when there wasn't a
convienent store. The trip was supposed to include all meals. This
was partially the leaders fault. I was able to bring in the meals
that I cooked in under budget, but almost no one else did. If the
leader knew about the problem, he might have advised people on how
to do it.
Drinking was encouraged. This affected other planning as we had to
eat in a restaurant on Sun. nights because the liquor stores were
closed, so the only way to have beer with dinner was to eat out.
I wrote Bikecentennial complaining about the trip, and suggesting
that they find a more competent leader in the future, and got back
a form letter ignoring my complaints. I resigned with a letter
stating that as far I as I'm concerned their trips are a major
hazard.
My advice is to use their routes (carefully, there were some areas
where the route used poorly chosen roads, the locals steered us on
to better routes a few times), bring a topo map, and maybe a local
road map to add flexibility, and avoid the trips they run like the
plague.
--David Wittenberg
|