T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1671.1 | goin' to biker's heaven.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Hat floating? It's MUD SEASON! | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:28 | 21 |
| > This September, my wife and I will be travelling west from Minneapolis
> through South Dakota and out to Montana (Yellowstone, Grand Teton).
> From there we plan to head north through Montana (Glacier), and up into
> Canada (Calgary, Banff)...
Oh, GO FOR IT! All these areas have relatively flat sections and are
frequented by quite a number of bikers. They also have some truly mondo
hills, like Going to the Sun road in Glacier (just got back from there).
But west of Logan Pass by Lake McDonald should be nice riding
(restricted at peak traffic hours in places). In Canada, the Icefields
Hwy between Banff and Jasper should have a number of short ride
opportunities and is exceedingly bike-popular. When you get west of
Jasper I think you should find some nice riding near Mt. Robson. Also,
some of the side roads off the Icefields will provide you with nice
rides, and the possibility of doing just enough hills so you won't die
of it, but get a nice sense of having 'done it'. Don't know how much
time you have, but if limited, get to the Can. Rockies for the bulk of
it.... Also, be aware that it can start getting CHILLY up there in Sept!
Glacier had fresh snow on the summits 3 weeks ago..... pleasantly warm
during the daze, tho.
ken
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1671.2 | Bikecentennial | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Jul 27 1990 22:13 | 8 |
|
Bikecentennial has some routes for that region, I believe.
You can get their maps without joining (or with joining).
It *is* indeed possible to stay on relatively level ground
and see these sights.
-john
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1671.3 | Sounds like the bikes should go - keep it coming! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Sat Jul 28 1990 01:46 | 21 |
| re .1:
Sounds great. We'll be out there about 2 weeks and we're just going to
play it by ear. Get as far as we get - my wife is one of the ALL-TIME
GREAT "relaxers"...
re .2:
> Bikecentennial has some routes for that region, I believe.
> You can get their maps without joining (or with joining).
Anyone got a phone number for these folks?
> It *is* indeed possible to stay on relatively level ground
> and see these sights.
Now John, I've read your other notes... exactly WHAT does "relatively"
flat mean to you? To me, it is the equivalent of train grade trails
(you have those where you are?) - you know, the trail rises at a rate a
train could climb, somewhere around 1-3%. You wouldn't steer an old,
fat guy wrong would you?
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1671.4 | Bikecentennial phone & address | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sat Jul 28 1990 22:14 | 15 |
| David,
"Relatively flat" in this case means "from hearsay" (namely, from
reading some route-descriptions) - so this time you're pretty safe
with that appraisal. :-)
Bikecentennial lists its address as P.O. Box 8308-A2, Missoula MT 59807.
Their telephone number is (406) 721-1776. ("1776" - cute, huh?)
Let us know what you find out.
-john
PS: I'll have to get out a protractor or something to answer your other
note. The bike I used in Japan was my 52cm De Rosa. "Your angles may vary."
|
1671.5 | | TECRUS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Sat Jul 28 1990 23:17 | 43 |
| My wife and I lived in Montana for 3 years, and we have spent
a lot of time in Yellowstone and Glacier. Probably a couple
of months cumulative. However, we have not been back since
1979, and I am not sure how well I can remember the details.
We brought our bikes to Yellowstone several times. We would
usually camp in the Madison Campground. The road from Madison
Jct. to W. Yellowstone Mt. is quite flat. It follows the
Madison river. There were always a lot of elk in that river
valley. Also, the road between Madison Jct. and Old Faithful
area follows the Firehole river and may not be too bad. I
can't remember this too well though.
One of favorite little rides was on a hiking/biking trail that
goes to Fairy Falls and Imperial Geyser. It is a dirt path,
but was flat and hard enough for a road bike with 27" standard
tires. This might be closed to bikes now based on a recent
report from a friend. That would be too bad. I still
recommend the hike back to Fairy Falls. It could be that with
all the mt. bikes that they want to keep people on the roads
to avoid impact.
The Haden Valley area of Yellowstone is flat and open. Avoid
the area south of Tower Jct. That road goes over Mt. Washburn
and is quite alpine. Also avoid the area south of Old
Faithful (toward Grand Tetons) since that road crosses the
continental divide twice.
Glacier National park is very mountainous. We took our bikes
up there but did not use them too often. Unlike Yellowstone,
Glacier has one primary road that runs through the park. It
is called the "going to the sun highway" and is not much of an
exaggeration.
We have only been to Banff and Lake Louise area in the
wintertime for ski trips. I can't really help you with biking
plans for that area.
It sounds like you will be having a great vacation. I wish I
could be doing a similar trip. Have a great time.
/Jim Pappas
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1671.6 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Uphill, Into the Wind | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:28 | 29 |
| The area is absolutely gorgeous. That's the good news. The bad
news is that the Rockies are Mountains. Bikecentennial's "great
Parks North" route is a good route from Missoula to Jaspar, but
has some vicious hills.
In particular, avoid Going to the Sun highway. I spent 4 hours in
a 22" gear climbing it, and I was in decent shape. The roads in
Canada have nice wide clean shoulders, and you can often ride two
abreast safely in that area. There were a lot of pickups on the
roads, so I suspect that you can hitch with your bike when the
hills get too steep.
Banff is wonderful (I recommend going to the White museum in
town), Take the glacier tour in glacier national park (Canada).
Lake Louise is pretty. If you don't mind a monster hill, Mount
Edith Cavell (sp?) just south of Jaspar has some great views, but
the road up it may be the toughest bicycling I've ever done.
(Steep, twisting, narrow, horribly paved; It's the only time I've
ever been hoping a downhill would end.) It's almost worth the
climb.
Waterton is a nice spot, take the boat out on the lake, and walk
around where it lets you off.
Sounds like a great trip, but do ask about avoiding the hills, as
it is a mountanous region. (I was younger and more foolish, so we
considerd the hills to be part of the fun.)
--David
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1671.7 | Thanks for the input so far! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Wed Aug 01 1990 00:47 | 11 |
| re all:
OK - THE BIKES GO - I'LL LEAVE THE WIFE AT HOME!!!!!!!! From all your
information it sounds like an incredible place to see, with plenty of
areas where we should be able to get in some nice reasonable rides.
And, where things aren't so reasonable, we'll do it in the car or on
foot.
thanks for all the ideas - keep it coming! Anybody got anything around
the South Dakota area (Rushmore, Black Hills, etc.) or the southern
Saskatchewan province between Banff and Minneapolis?
|
1671.8 | Native NoDak puts in a plug for home state... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Hat floating? It's MUD SEASON! | Wed Aug 01 1990 10:30 | 16 |
| > the South Dakota area (Rushmore, Black Hills, etc.) or the southern
> Saskatchewan province between Banff and Minneapolis?
So. Sask in general is pretty flat. Not even just relatively flat. A lot
of folks ride thru there and I'd say the biking is pretty good, but not
particularily scenic.
As for the Black Hills, there may be some riding to do there, but a lot
of the roads I recall down there are hilly, curvy, and trafficy, esp. in
the main part of summer. Later in the year it may calm down a bit, but
certainly in the height of season you should be a pretty aggressive
rider to take on the BH's. Now the Badlands (Theo. Roosevelt Nat Pk) in
SW ND - now THERE's an nice place to ride, with a 27 (?) mile loop road,
and just a couple of killer hills :-), and the potential opportunity to
see what bison think of bicycles!
ken
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1671.9 | Beep Beep my A$$ | WFOV12::SISE | | Wed Aug 01 1990 13:14 | 12 |
| Bison and bikers......hummmmm???? I have never thought of that.
One time in CXO I was in mu small renault R10 and came across a
VERY LARGE bull Bison. We stopped as he was in the road. He was
bigger than the car! and had NO fear of us at all. Beep! Beep!
as best as a R10 can do, no luck. I thought for sure he was going
to flip us over, but he moved on.
What is the REAL story with these beasties. If you ran at one waiving
your arms and yelled would they scram??
John_who_has_no_REAL_bison_experience_one_on_one!
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1671.10 | Bisontennial :-) bicycling... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Hat floating? It's MUD SEASON! | Wed Aug 01 1990 15:05 | 14 |
| > What is the REAL story with these beasties. If you ran at one waiving
> your arms and yelled would they scram??
Well, from having had a couple of these kinds of encounters, I'd say
they'd either run, or flatten you, or ignore you completely. I've
encountered behaviours 1 and 3 to date, thankfully. As for outrunning
one of 'em, forget it. They can trot along all day at about 30-35 mph.
BTW, for you mtn. bikers, next time you're in Glendive, MT check out
MakoSica State Park. Terrain includes thrilling climbs and descents,
gullies and washouts, loose rock and generally rugged riding. Then, if
you go *off road* it really gets ferocious! Check it out.....
ken
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1671.11 | Don't let hills get in the way of the highs | FSTVAX::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Mon Aug 06 1990 17:04 | 24 |
| I too just got back from there on Aug 1. I did the Bikecentennial
Glacier - Waterton Loop. About 10 days, 35 to 70 miles per day.
It was a ten day high in all respects!
Yes, there are hills (and headwinds), but if you are using a car you
can ride only the flatter areas if you wish. That way, you still
get to see the highlights (such as Logan Pass on the Highway to the
Sun). Crowsnest Pass, also a Continental Divide crossing, is much
flatter and relatively short and easy.
Actually, I found the up to Logan Pass easier than many local (New
England) climbs. It is a constant 5.6 percent, no "Terrible
Mountain" walls to climb. On the other hand, it is a constant 5.6
percent with no levels on the way up -- but then you want to stop
occasionally to eat and photograph the views anyway. If you do do
it by bike (with or without the wife), be aware that you must be to
the top by 11:00 am, so start soon after the sun comes up.
Whatever you do, don't miss the unbelievable views and hiking
because of biking the hills. Glacier and Waterton -- just getting
high writing this note.
~Mike
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1671.12 | | TECRUS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Tue Aug 07 1990 00:59 | 28 |
| My wife and I had an harmless "encounter" with bison on our
bikes in Yellowstone back in May '79. We biked from Madison
Campground to Old Faithful area and took the hiking
trail/bikepath shortcut from the main road to the lower end of
the geyser basin. This saves a couple of miles if I remember
right.
The trail was not in great shape. As we got deeper into the
woods, we started hitting snow patches. Eventually we needed
to walk our bikes as the snow became constant and deep (waist
high). Finally we approached the geyser basin and the trail
was once again rideable. We went about 100 yards and came
across two bison very close to the trail. One was about 10
feet from the trail, the other about 30 feet. Both were
laying down.
If it wasn't for the snow we just crossed, we would have
turned around and taken the longer route. Instead, we got off
our bikes and walked slowly past the bison. Debbie stayed
behind me by a large distance (she let me be the guinea pig).
I passed them OK, but just as she was passing the closer of
the two he decided to stand up and stare her down. Nothing
happended, but she sure was scared.
Debbie just read this over my shoulder and is shaking just
thinking about it.
/Jim Pappas
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1671.13 | I'm getting excited to be going already! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Tue Aug 07 1990 17:51 | 19 |
| re .11:
>Yes, there are hills (and headwinds), but if you are using a car you
>can ride only the flatter areas if you wish. That way, you still
>get to see the highlights (such as Logan Pass on the Highway to the Sun).
Sounds like a good setup. Ride some areas. Tour others on foot or by
car.
>Whatever you do, don't miss the unbelievable views and hiking
>because of biking the hills. Glacier and Waterton -- just getting
>high writing this note.
NO PROBLEM. My wife is one of the GREAT relaxers of all time. I, on
the other hand, will have at least three camera-bodies and a full
complement of lenses with me (only one body and two lenses in the bike
bag though). I plan to do PLENTY of viewing, wandering, camping,
goofing off, and get in some riding too.
|
1671.14 | I wish I'd had more time to ride! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Wed Sep 26 1990 02:44 | 39 |
| Mountains ARE!
We've made it back from the wild (and hilly) West. And, as usual, y'all
were right. There are some excellent places to ride in the parks. You
get a whole different perspective of the world from the back of a bike
than you do inside a car. As a photographer I concluded that the
bicycle is an excellent way to go. You can cover more territory than
walking, but still get the same detailed view.
In Yellowstone we drove both loops and it looked like both could be
easily and comfortably ridden, but the lower loop is 90 miles and the
upper is 74, so you'd have to be in good enough shape to do a bit of
climbing and go those distances.
I did some riding in the lower loop on the Yellowstone Lake side
because I'm a wimp and didn't want to climb Craig Pass. Being late in
the year there was VERY little traffic and the roads are excellent.
In Glacier, the areas on either side of Going-to-the-Sun Road have lots
of flat areas for riding. All around Lake McDonald is great. I even
tried going up Logan Pass from the East side but I started too late in
the afternoon and only made it up about 7 of the 11 miles before it
started getting dark and I headed back down. Next time!
Waterton, just north of Glacier is also nice. Its a small park and had
a couple nice areas for riding.
Banff is an excellent place to ride. The whole town is full of
bicycles and you can go for miles out past the Vermillion Lakes,
through the Fenland, along the Bow River, and all through the area.
I met a number of people that were bicycling through the area. The
roads from Yellowstone north through Glacier and the Canadian rockies
to Banff and into the Columbia icefields all had nice shoulders (many
were marked frequently stating that they were bike lanes) and lots of
good places to stop and rest.
Next time I'll have to do fewer parks and more riding.
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1671.15 | Riding in Banff | IAMOK::FRERE | Ellas Danzan Solas | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:19 | 31 |
| RE: .14
Spending a couple of years in Banff, I agree that you can find some
real challenges when riding is concerned. Although you can go for long
scenic and relatively flat rides, there are some good short a steep
rides. A few suggestions:
Banff to Johnston Canyon - 30 km: Short and moderate hills, nice if you
have but a few hours. Make sure to bring some hiking boots to walk up
along side the canyon to the "Ink Pots" A MUST.
Banff to Lake Louise (past Johnston Canyon) - Relatively flat until you
turn off to ge to the lake. Watch out for the Pepsis (Tourist that are
empty from the neck up...). Continue to the Valley of the Ten Peaks
(Moraine Lake).
Quick ride up to Norquay will get the ticker pumping. Norquay is a ski
hill only a couple of miles away from Banff but what a climb...
A good loop for an evening ride would be from Banff to Lake Minnewanka
via the Buffalo Paddock and return through tunnel mountain. Moderate
climb.
For a full day ride, try Banff to Radium Hot Springs (about a century).
Godd variety and the hot springs are a welcome for those muscles. .
Return the next day (if you can...)
Eric_who_obviously_misses_the_place...
P.S. Yes Banff to Jasper is always a nice ride, passing by the Columbia
Icefields.
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