T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1230.1 | Up or Down? | ANT::CRITCHLOW | | Thu Jun 29 1989 09:29 | 5 |
| Green Street from Northboro to the Boylston Golf course with a 35
pound kid on the back.
JC
|
1230.2 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Thu Jun 29 1989 09:34 | 9 |
| The Mont Vernon hill in Mont Vernon, NH. My car barely goes
up that hill, let alone me on the bike.
I know, Reg thinks the Mont Vernon hill is no hill at all.
A friend works with a fella who used to ride up that hill
5 times every day at lunch time.
Scott
|
1230.3 | COUPLE MORE FOR CENTRAL MA | AKOV11::FULLER | | Thu Jun 29 1989 09:41 | 9 |
| o Base of mountain road to the top of Mt. Wachusett.
o Short, but sweet, Upper North Row Road off Rt 140 (near Mt Wachusett)
towards Sterling. This hill is a real surprise after just climbing
the mountain.
Steve
|
1230.4 | Southern NH | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Jun 29 1989 10:53 | 8 |
| Joppa Hill Rd in New Boston. I think the 3rd lump is the worst of
them. (Coming from Chestnut Hill/New Boston Rd, not Amherst)
Uncanoonuck in Goffstown.
The last 700 ft of Pack Monadnock in Temple.
ed
|
1230.5 | in Manchester NH east side.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Is there life after drywall? | Thu Jun 29 1989 11:19 | 6 |
| Nobody who lives around Manchester NH should go without trying the
Harrison St. Hill..... it's real short but there's a moderately steep
section at the start which serves to burn off any speed you might have,
then the REAL climbing starts. I couldn't ride up it even with my mtn.
gears on (45-24). Coming down it is a whole 'nother experience, too...
ken
|
1230.6 | Thorn Hill Road | EXIT26::SAARINEN | | Thu Jun 29 1989 11:54 | 11 |
| Thorn Hill Road in Jackson, N.H.
Not too long, but some nice steep inclines,
just enough slope to make you think you can
attempt it, and then it thrashes you good
making youwish you hadn't. 8-}
I'm trying it this 4th of July weekend.
-Arthur
|
1230.7 | Hills, Ya gotta Luv'em | MCIS2::DELORIEA | Common sense isn't | Thu Jun 29 1989 11:57 | 14 |
| >> Where is the worst hill around?
I second the vote for Mt Wachusett(sp) climb (Mile hill road then up the
auto road to the top.) The Mile hill road section is the harder than the auto
road.
Also, Dead Horse Hill<- good name, (aka Stafford St.) in Worcester. This is a
long hill that dosen't have any let up sections on it. It got its nick-name
from the Milk mans and the Junk mans horses dying trying to climb it on hot
days. They have a antique auto race up it in the summer.
Tom
|
1230.8 | hot rims on the way down... | CSCMA::J_BUSH | | Thu Jun 29 1989 12:51 | 6 |
|
Well as long as New Hampshire "hills" are being mentioned I'll cast
my vote for the toll road up Mt. Washington. But what a view!
Jonathan
|
1230.9 | How 'bout... | NAC::KLASMAN | | Thu Jun 29 1989 13:36 | 13 |
| < Note 1230.8 by CSCMA::J_BUSH >
How 'bout the road up Mt Kearsarge in Warner, NH (near New London). Ed, you
remember that one, right?
I'd have to agree that Pack Monadnock is the worst hill 'around here'. The
last pitch is claimed to be steeper than anything on Mt Washington. Short,
but 'wicked' steep!.
And then there's the short route up Mt Greylock. Ed remembers descending that
one, too!
Kevin
|
1230.10 | here in Atl. | ODIXIE::PENN | | Thu Jun 29 1989 13:39 | 5 |
| My vote would have to be the hill on Freemanville rd where it starts
at Mountain rd. It's long steep and no let up. I hit this hill with
in the first tem min. of my ride so I'm not really warmed up. But,
going home it's great to go down. At the beginning of the season
I had to climb this in my 52-50 fixed gear.
|
1230.11 | TRY THE BERKSHIRES | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Jun 29 1989 13:48 | 15 |
| I'll drop the third vote for thee MILE Rd. prior to getting on
the actual mountain entrance at Mt. Wachusett. Unrelenting up
and up and up. Once you actually hit the mountain it's like a
walk in the park.
Ever been in Barre heading toward Hubbradston. There are a couple
of short climbs, but climbs they are! Probably in the vicinity of
45-50 degrees. You can't climb 'em in the saddle unless your feet
weigh in at 100lbs. a piece.
Hill interval work would have to go to Rte. 202 south through N.
Salem - Shutesbury - Belchertown. You have some 2 milers there that
test your metal. The Berkshires are wonderful aren't they?
Chip
|
1230.12 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Jun 29 1989 14:51 | 3 |
| RE:.11 & Barre. They can be climbed in the saddle.
ed
|
1230.13 | Mini-Mt. Washington | BOOKIE::CROCKER | | Thu Jun 29 1989 15:05 | 4 |
| Pack Monadnock's the hardest. The grade at the finish is about
the same as the grade at the finish of the Mt. Washington Hillclimb,
only it's longer (and it's washboard pavement). Come to think of
it, Pack Monadnock's kind of a mini-Mt. Washington.
|
1230.14 | off Rt 62, Hudson,MA | USMRM5::MREID | | Thu Jun 29 1989 18:05 | 7 |
| Right off of Rt 62 in Hudson,MA there's a very short (under 1/4
mi) road that goes up to a water tower. I'd say the grade is similar
to the final section of Mt. Washington. It's great for hard hill
intervals - though you have to be careful on the way down since
there's a chain across the end of the road to keep the cars out!
Mark
|
1230.15 | BACK IN THE SADDLE | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Fri Jun 30 1989 07:39 | 10 |
| Re; 12 > I was running a 13x23 gear last Sunday. We had already
chunked about 70 miles out through the Berkshires and we were
running at a 19-20 mph average when we hit these babies and were
really hashed. I suppose if we were fresh (the other guys were
running 13x24's) and they could be had with 26's easily, but who'd
want to do a climb like that and feel refreshed anyway. I'd rather
look for the A1 sauce and dump on it the hamburger that used to be
my legs!
Chip
|
1230.16 | Cathedral Ledge in New Hampshire. | AITG::HUBERMAN | | Fri Jun 30 1989 09:13 | 2 |
| How about the road to the top of Cathedral Ledge in North Conway.
Short but steep.
|
1230.17 | Don't forget Hurricane Mountain | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jun 30 1989 09:59 | 6 |
| Well, since the white mountain region keeps getting mentioned:
My number one vote goes for Hurricane Mountain Road. There is
none better or worse. I did it 3 days before my first assault
on Mt W.
ed
|
1230.18 | SKI HILLS | USMRM5::MREID | | Fri Jun 30 1989 15:25 | 7 |
| Has anyone ever tried to ride a mountain bike up a ski hill?
I rode up Jericho Ski Hill in Marlboro, MA ... on the third
try. I figgured that I could climb up the side of the World
Trade Towers with my 28x32 low gear ... but it was quite
difficult making it up this short steep ski hill!
Mark
|
1230.19 | | THOM::LANGLOIS | DT Data Networks | Fri Jun 30 1989 15:37 | 2 |
| I second the vote for the hill going into Barre, Mass. Especially
after riding through all the hills around there first.
|
1230.20 | Anothe vote for Mt. Wachusett | WITNES::HANNULA | Well, you see, I have this cat....... | Wed Jul 05 1989 11:32 | 15 |
|
> I'll drop the third vote for thee MILE Rd. prior to getting on
> the actual mountain entrance at Mt. Wachusett. Unrelenting up
> and up and up. Once you actually hit the mountain it's like a
> walk in the park.
Well, I'll cast the 4th vote for Mile Hill Road. I rode up the
mountain last Friday, wishing to God that my pride hadn't gotten
in the way, and wishing that I had put the old 13-28 freewheel on.
But, I don't know where you get this "walk in the park" idea after
the Visitor's Center.
-Nancy-who-deos-not-like-any-road-with-the-word-HILL-in-it
|
1230.21 | short and sweet | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Jul 05 1989 12:13 | 3 |
| Rte 25B out of Center Harbor, NH. 14%.
-ed-who-rode-it-with-a-flat-because-it-was-easier-than-getting-off-
|
1230.22 | up up and away | SVCRUS::CRANE | | Wed Jul 05 1989 12:14 | 18 |
|
Let me see, Some of the toughest climbs huh
o The Killington acces road
o Rt 73 starting at the Elizabethtown border and heading up into
Lake Placid N.Y.
o Rt 122 in worc. Going up past the airport main entrance into
Paxton
JOhn C.
|
1230.23 | try Warren Ave. | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Wed Jul 05 1989 12:20 | 11 |
| Years ago I built a pendulum type incline measurer and measured
most of the hills in Harvard for a 'Hills of Harvard' ride. Woodchuck
hill came out about 12 or 13% as I remember, one of the steeper
group of hills. The steepest (neglecting a 5' section of Lovers
Lane that measured 20%) was Warren Avenue at 17%. Pinnicle Road
up from Littleton Road is about 10% and is on my route to work.
Spent the weekend at the LAW National Rally in Salisbury, MD
where they do not know the meaning of the word 'hill'. It's even
flatter than around Buffalo! Great place to do loooong rides. I
got in about 230 miles over the weekend. - Chris
ps. Nancy: no bad hills on the Arcadia ride.
|
1230.24 | An Update | ANT::CRITCHLOW | | Wed Jul 05 1989 13:56 | 17 |
| Geees....
I had the silly idea when I replied to this note that the base
note was talking about every day local hills. I suppose if the
note is "What's the worst hill I ever rode?" then I need to
update: :-)
The worst- the hill from Jeffersonville VT to the top of
Smuggler's Notch road then down the switchbacks into Stowe VT on
the season's first century...... Not sure which was worse up or
down.
Second worst- Appalacian Gap from Waitsfield Vermont past the
bottom, then the top, of Mad River Glenn ski area. Also a century
the very next weekend after the Stowe abuse...
JC
|
1230.25 | "you've got to be kidding!" | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Jul 06 1989 00:09 | 10 |
|
For me, the worst routine local-to-you hill is the Mont Vernon one ...
because I manage to encounter it frequently, and know what's coming.
It's open enough that a headwind can increase your "effort" noticeably.
The worst hill I've failed to ride up is part of the CTC Land's End to
John O'Groats route (which includes some 20% and 25% grades which I did
mainly manage), namely a coastal road to Bude, Cornwall, posted at 30%.
-john
|
1230.26 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Thu Jul 06 1989 09:21 | 9 |
| RE: 1230.25
John Lee,
I thought you lived in Charlotte. How come you encounter the
Mont Vernon hill frequently? Don't tell me your training rides
bring you all the way to Mont Vernon. 8-)>
Scott
|
1230.27 | "frequent" is relative... | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Jul 06 1989 12:54 | 9 |
| RE: .-1
Scott,
With the Mont Vernon hill, even 3-4 times a year seems "frequent"!
What I meant was, it's frequently on my routes for the days I'm up in NH.
cheers,
-john lee
|
1230.28 | VELO VERMONT | FSTTOO::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Thu Jul 06 1989 13:30 | 27 |
| It was a few years ago, on the Velo Vermont ride.
It was either Brandon Gap or Middlebury Gap, can't remember which
(Steve, can you help here)? Anyway, the hill was hell. And then I
had to peddle just as hard to get back down because of the headwind.
That was the toughest hill *EVER* done.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Cute antidote from the same ride. That year Velo Vermont did a
route similar to TOSRV-EAST, but more hills and 135 miles per day.
Coming back south on Route 100, day 2, I stopped at the foot of the
wall of Terrible Mountain. I had never seen anything that steep
before.
At that moment Fran, the wonderful trip organizer, came by in a car
and noticed my fixated gaze. She stopped and asked if I wanted
something. "An apple, sandwich, or drink perhaps." I said no
thanks, noticing the car full of goodies. Fran asked again, "are
you sure?" I again declined. She then asked "Is there anything I
can get you?"
I replied, looking back at the wall, "How about a pep talk!"
~Mike
|
1230.29 | BRANDON | AKOV11::FULLER | | Thu Jul 06 1989 14:26 | 7 |
| re: .28 Mike, the climb you were talking about was Brandon. We
did Middlebury two years later (1986) but that didn't seem too bad.
I believe the reason Brandon was to tough was the heat.
Maybe someday we'll reorganize this annual event again.
steve
|
1230.30 | EEEKK! A HILL! | WITNES::QUERCIA | | Thu Jul 06 1989 16:58 | 6 |
| I usually go into convulsions if I get too near a HILL, but thar's a
big one I can't avoid when I ride home from work and I believe it's
Brook Street in Marlboro close to Hudson. This may be cheatin but
I ain't never seen HILLS like I done saw in the Black Forest of
Germany...they are hard to WALK up!
|
1230.31 | A few local hills ... | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert, UCS | Thu Jul 06 1989 18:54 | 12 |
|
California has a few good hills...
Mt Bache Road (Santa Cruz Co, 4100 ft asl
Waterman Gap (Santa Clara/Santa Cruz Co, 2700 ft asl)
Mt Hamilton Road (Santa Clara Co, 4400 ft asl)
Mt Tamalpais (Marin Co, 2700 ft asl)
Tioga Pass is open, also. Starts at 5500 ft asl above
Yosemite Valley, then reaches out 60 miles over the backs
of the Sierras, crests at 11000 ft asl, then drops like a
stone into Bridgeport, Calif.
|
1230.32 | Don't forget Colorado | SSDEVO::ATKINSON | NC2693V | Thu Jul 06 1989 19:17 | 13 |
| Also don't forget Colorado. There's the Mt. Evans ride
that starts in Idaho Springs (about 7000 feet) and goes
to the top of the mountain (14,264 feet high) in about 29
miles. This is the site of the annual Bob Cook memorial
hill climb. Also Trail Ridge Road and Independence Pass
(both 12,000 foot passes.) Plus numerous other good
climbs throughout the state.
The steepest hill that I have ever seen was in the lake
district in northern England. There was a sign posted
claiming that it was a 33% grade! Anyway, it was
impossible to ride up it, even with a touring bike and
fairly low gears.
|
1230.33 | Well, if we're going to get far and wide... | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jul 07 1989 07:45 | 5 |
| 33%!! That's what they claim for Fargo St in Los Angeles. That
sucker's steep. I'm told that if you S the hill you hit your pedal on
the pavement. The LA Wheelmen have an annual "race" on it in April.
ed
|
1230.34 | Never Say Impossible | FSTTOO::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Fri Jul 07 1989 11:55 | 16 |
| < Note 1230.32 by SSDEVO::ATKINSON "NC2693V" >
> The steepest hill that I have ever seen was in the lake
> district in northern England. There was a sign posted
> claiming that it was a 33% grade! Anyway, it was
> impossible to ride up it, even with a touring bike and
> fairly low gears.
> impossible to ride up it.
IMPOSSIBLE to ride up it, huh. Never say impossible to an ice cream
and hill eater.
Guess I'll have to book a flight to England and give it a try!
~Mike
|
1230.35 | Hills I have known and "Loved" ? | ULTRA::BURGESS | | Fri Jul 07 1989 12:25 | 20 |
|
Ummm, lessee now;
Around Mass, yes "the mile and the mountain" at Wachusetts
is a bit tough, according to how you are geared - 12/18 straight block
with 53-43 NOT recommended. Probably worse for grade is the entrance
to Barre; though coming into Princeton on 62 is tough all the way from
140 on - specially on 48x19 fixed - and it really gets nasty for the
last 1/4 mile or so.
Mt Washington is just a long low speed grind.
Burke Moutain, Vt. is the worst in my opinion, there really
ARE places where wheelie_vs_rear_wheel_spin becomes a delicate
balance, and its a smooth black top surface with good traction all the
way.
Reg
{Oh, back to Mass., there's a few minor slopes in 'arvard.}
|
1230.36 | Grossglockner, Mt. Evans | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sat Jul 08 1989 22:59 | 17 |
| RE: Idaho Springs climb (Mt. Evans)
I did this in September, 1984, which is not "in season" for the Mt.
Evans road, it turns out ... at least judging from the fresh tar
they had sprayed on the final 5-mile stretch (complete with a "road
closed" sign). Didn't daunt me at the time... figured the tar would
give better adhesion against the winds on the switchbacks. Had to
take tar remover to the bike and shoes later on, but it was worth it!
Whilst we are awaiting Nancy's report on the 33% from the Lake
District, I was thinking today about the Grossglockner, which is mile
after mile of unrelenting 14% grade. This is a road that auto
manufacturers from far and wide send their brake-test drivers on.
I had a hard time with this one - sometimes it's not just the grade,
it's the duration.
-john
|
1230.37 | More hills | DELNI::B_FLANNERY | Running in Cycles | Mon Jul 10 1989 10:02 | 22 |
| I second (or third) the motion for Hurricane Mtn. Road, and add its cousin,
Evans Notch Road, on the Maine--NH border. I recommend riding down the
notch only midweek, when you can use both sides of the road. Riding up the
notch isn't too bad (with grannies), and there's a long downhill north to
Gilead, ME. Evans Notch, Hurricane Mtn. Road and Pinkham Notch can be
combined for a really good day trip, about 70-80 miles in all.
"Toe Jam Hill Road" on SW Bainbridge Island, just west of Seattle, Washington,
follows a steep hill from the Sound for about a half mile - mile. I travelled
it last summer on a loaded touring bike, and couldn't keep the front wheel
on the ground. It'd be easier on an unloaded bike, but is a nice challenge
either way, and can be part of a good day trip from Seattle (via ferry to
Winslow).
For real obscurity, the road from Chilhowie, VA, to Konnarock, VA offers a nice
challenge over the Appalachian Ridge (southwest Virginia, just off I-81). The
road (there's only one) rises from one valley in switchbacks to a forested
summit, and then descends to the next valley, also in switchbacks. It was
laid by a prison gang earlier this century, and appears to have been draped
over the mountain, similar to Hurricane Mtn Rd. Traffic is very light, and
the road connects with the Mt. Rogers N.R.A. and Blue Ridge Parkway on the
south side. The road is about 12 miles from Chilhowie to Konnarock.
|
1230.38 | Konnarock | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jul 11 1989 11:16 | 11 |
| RE: .-1
>For real obscurity, the road from Chilhowie, VA, to Konnarock, VA offers a nice
>challenge over the Appalachian Ridge (southwest Virginia, just off I-81).
Aha, I've ridden that one! You're right, it's quite picturesque,
especially in the autumn when the leaves come out. The scenic quality
distracts from the sizable exertion required. The switchbacks are very
"tight" - they don't make 'em like that anymore.
-john
|
1230.39 | Cliff-paving is an Italian art | CESARE::JOHNSON | At home he feels like a tourist | Wed Jul 12 1989 06:01 | 3 |
| 30% is nothing. I carry rock-climbing gear on my training rides. :~)
MATT
|
1230.40 | | SVCRUS::CRANE | | Wed Jul 12 1989 16:51 | 6 |
|
good one Matt.
JOhn C.
|
1230.41 | | WMOIS::N_FLYE | | Wed Jul 12 1989 19:59 | 5 |
| Speaking of paving mountains. The hill going into the center
of Barre on rte. 62 has just been paved. Now we can ride down it
as well as up.
Norm
|
1230.42 | what goes up....comes down at 60 mph! | WECARE::PAMMER | | Thu Jul 13 1989 16:57 | 7 |
| o Mnt. Kearsage
o Whiteface Mnt. road in Lake Placid (hit the 60 mph going down, passing
cars blows my mind!!)
o Good climb from Keene, NY into Lake Placid....10 kilometres of
good outta-da-saddle fun!!
|
1230.43 | MTB climbs are great | CSC32::T_DAWSON | Tomas Dawson DNT:522-4549 | Mon Jul 17 1989 12:27 | 5 |
| Just did a good climb this last week on my MTB... 3000' vertical, from
9000' to 12000' on a jeep road, very steep. I had to portage a couple
of snow fields but it was well worth the descent. :)
|
1230.44 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt @ UCS | Mon Jul 17 1989 21:04 | 3 |
|
Yow! You guys must have great lungs up there! I can
hardly walk, let alone hillclimb, at 9-12Kft...
|
1230.45 | Box Hill (there's another one near Bath) | JUMBLY::MACFADYEN | Red nose | Wed Jul 19 1989 06:48 | 16 |
| Hills in the south of England are pimples compared with what you can find
on the Continent or in the US, however, I was up a very enjoyable short
climb in Surrey last week.
It was Box Hill near Leatherhead, which consists of 1.4 miles at about
10% or a little less, done in three long straights with two hairpins.
The nice thing is that you can really spin up it, so you get some good
exercise without actually feeling like throwing up. For the literary
minded, this hill features in Jane Austen's "Emma".
Around that part of Surrey there are a lot of very steep climbs, 15 to
20% steepness. I tackled a few, but I wouldn't say I enjoy it when you
need maximum effort just to get the pedals round...
Rod
|
1230.46 | Better Route up Mont Vernon Hill | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Helmets for Kids | Thu Aug 03 1989 17:12 | 26 |
| re. 1230.2
> The Mont Vernon hill in Mont Vernon, NH. My car barely goes
> up that hill, let alone me on the bike.
If you want a real thrill, try climbing it heading from
Amherst on Amherst Road. If you climb the normal route via
N.H. 13 from Milford to Mont Vernon, you get some relief by
climbing the lower portion (by the saw mill pond) with a one
mile flat stretch before the big hill which starts at Purgatory
road. If you are heading from Amherst village you climb Amherst
Road (Turns into Purgatory Falls Road at the Intersection of 13)
for about a mile and then take an immediate right turn onto the
big hill in Mont Vernon.
> I know, Reg thinks the Mont Vernon hill is no hill at all.
Reg must be an Animal. I use this hill as my *fitness*
benchmark. On my training rides I climb up Amherst Road and decide
at the intersection if I'm fit enough to try to tackle the big hill.
I've wimped out on many occasion.
> A friend works with a fella who used to ride up that hill
> 5 times every day at lunch time.
Quick....had me the bag...I think I'm going to throw up !
|
1230.47 | stowe VT | DNEAST::PFISTER_ROB | and I'm off to the rodeo | Fri Aug 04 1989 12:23 | 6 |
| I raced over Stowe VT once, that sure felt like the worse hill I ever
climbed. I only had one freewheel...42X21...[ack!!] I made it over the
top in about 8th in the CAT III race. It sure was lots of fun watching
riders behind me fall over because they couldn't turn their pedals!!
Robb
|
1230.48 | Cowhampshires Finest Hill | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Wed Aug 09 1989 09:37 | 24 |
| I think I've found the answer to the toughest hill question.
Last night on our GSW Club ride, we were about to ascend a short
but very steep hill in Wilton, N.H., when I saw something peculiar
spread across the road a short way up the base. At first, it looked
like a truck had dumped sand across the road. Upon approaching the
debris, a foul smell started to burn my nostrils, and since I was
in the process of climbing the hill standing on the pedals in my
largest cog at that point I could do nothing but *gasp* for air.
Upon arriving at the sand patch, I pushed right thru the middle
thinking this was just another obsticle in the road. Well my front
wheel went thru with no problem but as soon as my rear wheel entered
the patch a peculiar thing happend. The whell just sat and spun round
and round. Their I was standing on the cranks in the middle of this
huge hill, going nowhere. It was like being on a windtrainer in
a cow barn since the patch was obviously left by some farm vehicle
trying to climb the hill while overloaded with Cowhampshire's
finest :-0) Thinking I had better keep my rev's up since I would
simply fall over if I stopped peddaling I remembered this note.
It'll be a long time before anyone finds a hill *tougher* to
climb than this :-)
Jerry
|
1230.49 | That stuff's eminently recognizable | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Aug 14 1989 08:41 | 11 |
| Jerry (.48),
I recognized the stuff from 100 meters, but then I was a farmer once
when I had to work for a living. Then, I decided that I would throw
away the wheel if I got a flat.
(I did however fix 5 flats this past weekend instead of pitching the
wheel, it would have been a long walk back from Montreal if I hadn't
but heck that's fodder for another note....)
ed
|
1230.50 | Was BMB difficult this year? | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Mon Aug 14 1989 09:21 | 6 |
| re. -1
Ed,
Were there any hills worth mentioning on the BMB route. After
that distance I'd have a hard time climbing my drive way :-)
Jerry
|
1230.51 | Lots of Uppers and Downers on BMB '89 | NOVA::FISHER | Twice a BMB Finisher | Mon Aug 14 1989 13:14 | 19 |
| Were there any hills worth mentioning?
119 from Groton (more or less) to NH 63 to NH 9 to VT5.
Andover Ridge before and after Terrible Mt (did 'em both ways).
Killington on VT 100, Middlebury Gap on VT125 (both ways on each
and one after the other).
Oh, and after all that the bridge on rt 2 crossing from VT to NY :-)
:^)
And we returned through Barre and Princeton.
Now was this note about fantastic up hills or downhills? Doesn't
matter, the above have both. And they're more even exciting in the
rain.
ed
|
1230.52 | Col de Vence, outside Nice France | NOBOZO::MILLING | | Mon Nov 06 1989 18:52 | 11 |
| Hey, there are hills outside the U.S., too. :-)
The worst I ever encountered was the Col de Vence which starts at the
town of Vence (just outside Nice, France) and goes almost straight up
into the mountains for about 10 km. What really bothered me was that
I was in a low gear and about to drop into a granny gear when I was
passed like I was standing still; a string of racers when by like they
were riding on flat ground. I was even in decent shape at the time.
Made me feel real old...
Bob
|
1230.53 | Hills and hazards | DECWET::BINGHAM | John | Fri Jan 19 1990 17:57 | 11 |
| re .37 Toe Jam Hill Road
It has hazards in addition to being a steep hill. As one descends it
drops off in increasingly steep sections and as you enter the last,
steepest one with Puget Sound coming into view, you pass a sign that
says "right hand turn ahead, 5, five, mph". Brake pads, good ones, are
essential to stay off barnacle covered rocks lurking beyond the sharp
right hand turn at the base. It turns onto a narrow road, if it can be
called that, that runs above the high tide line.
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