Category: General

The bike and gear

Here’s a quick overview of the bike, gear, and key performance highlights post trip…

The bike: Surly ECR custom build

Posing on the waterfront: Seattle on the left, Mt Rainier just behind the seat

The only thing stock about this bike is the frame: it’s a Surly ECR colored ‘pant suit beige’, size medium. Then the fun starts…

Shout out to Mike & Shannon at Edgar Bikes for a robust and fantastic build that carried me up miles of elevation along 2800 miles to the Mexican border with zero issues. Nada. Bike performed great. Mike spec’d out all the key pieces for a hard trail, as well as built the wheels, all designed to handle this trip.

  • SRAM GX Eagle components – Drive train is 1×12, with a 42 cog on the lower side that I used a lot on inclines. Loved the gear shifting…it always felt confident and reliable.
  • Wheels – Mike built out the 29″ wheels, including SON dyno in the front hub.
  • Vittoria Mezcal 2.6in tires – they lasted the entire trip, no replacement needed. Shannon put these on right before I left, and I didn’t have to add any air until southern Colorado.
  • Jones H bar handlebar – lots of room for baggage, GPS, lights, bell, and different hand positions
  • Brooks C17 Cambria seat – handles rain and sweat with no maintenance, comfy for me.
  • Crampon flat pedals – secure footing in wet and dry conditions. The extended studs did occasionally bite me on the lower leg during a bike off, but I trusted their grip and they rolled nicely.

Additional highlights worth mentioning…

  • Partnering the M-sized frame with 29 wheels also reduced space for a larger seat pack used in many lighter build outs, so I added a Surly rear rack to hold the small panniers as well as sleeping bag. This worked out well for the trip, and the back area also served as a drying rack for wet laundry and straggler clothing.
  • You may have noticed the ECR is a rigid bike riding with mid-sized fat tires…how did the combination perform on the trail? Fantastic on gravel, dirt, and paved roads, and so-so on washboards. I like the speed on pavement and chewing up miles. Washboards are tough going, and I’m conflicted whether I would to swap to hardtail suspension if I were to do it again. YMMV.

Gear list

  • Bike luggage – Revelate Designs along the cockpit and front harness, Rogue Panda on the frame bag, Salsa Anywhere on the front forks, Ortlieb Gravel panniers out back, Sea-To-Summit dry bags for the sleeping bag. Everything held up their promise of being waterproof.
  • Shelter – Preferred system is a Warbonnet Blackbird hammock, which I was able to use about a third of the trip, particularly in the northern sections. The hammock was protected by a 8×10 Hyperlite DCF flat tarp, which I also used when grounded. This tarp is solid and spacious, kept gear and myself dry during drizzles and thunderstorms.
  • Sleeping bag / pad – Feathered Friends Flicker UL20 quilt, which was perfect for the sub-50F nights, supplemented with a Sea-to-Summit bag liner for cover on warmer nights, and to help keep the bag clean from my sweaty and dirty days. Sleeping pad was a Nemo Insulted Tensor sized regular and wide.
  • Cycling shorts – I used a pair of Zoic Ether overshorts, and rotating two cycling liners day to day. Tried to make sure one liner received a wash or at least a rinse each day. Body Glide was primary anti-chafing protection, which lasted longer than various creams.
  • Sun protection – My primary philosophy was to avoid letting the sun hit anything above my knee, which mostly worked. Patagonia Tropic Comfort II and two short sleeve sunshirts covered the torso, combined with a pair of Buff UV arm sleeves. My head was topped by the Tropic Comfort hood or bucket hat, and the overall approach worked well. My nose and ears received some exposure, nothing too severe.
  • GPS/route planning – Garmin Edge Explorer, which I have mixed feelings about. The Explorer is fine on the distance/speed basics, but it has trouble with larger GPX track management. I had to split up the full route in 12 different GPX files, and the unit would sometimes hang unexpectedly, requiring a reboot. Fortunately, it would return to previous state upon return…didn’t lose the day’s mileage or track…but it did make me not fully trust it. I will look elsewhere for GPS alternatives on future trips. I also used the ACA GDMBR maps for route planning, which I generally found to be helpful and informative…very glad to have them onboard.

Hydration

Lots of different approaches out there, here’s what worked for me…

  • Hip pack – I don’t like wearing a backpack in the heat, so I used a Dakine 5L Hot Laps pack, which carried a 2L bladder, my wallet, phone, and camera for easy access.
  • Smartwater bottle – 1L of clean water mounted on the down tube
  • Feedbag – 750ml bottle here, rotating through electrolyte/flavor supplements.
  • “Dirty” water – 2L CNOC bag used to pick up water from streams and rivers, filtered with Sawyer Micro filter. I also carried a MSR Trail shot as backup filter, which I found to have better filter flow than the Sawyer.
  • Big storage – 4L MSR dromedary to use for dry stretches through the basin and NM stretches. Only clean water in this bladder, to minimize hygiene maintenance.

On a typical day, I would carry 3.75L across the hip bag and both bottles, then use the other bags as needs arise. While I could max out at 9.75L water storage, the most I carried was closer to 7L, with the storage bags tucked in the bike frame bag.

Bikepacking Across WA, ID, and the GDMBR

Spent two months cycling across Washington, the panhandle of ID, and into Montana to jump on the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route (GDMBR) where I rolled south to Antelope Wells, NM.

Route summary

Cross Washington (XWA) race route to cross WA. XWA details here.
Cour d’Alene Trail across the ID panhandle — beautiful gold standard Rails to Trails…all paved with little incline.
NorPac and Route of the Olympians trails in western MT
I90 interstate into Missoula (had thought about SR 135/200 loop, local folks encouraged me to avoid the small shoulder and lumbering RVs). The interstate turned out to be safe and mostly downhill out of St Regis.
• Visited the Adventure Cycling office in Missoula…awesome to tour the AC HQ!
• Jumped on the GDMBR in Ovando. GDMBR route details here. I also used the Tour Divide race edition of the route for some segments…details here.
• Finished two months to the day in Antelope Wells.

Modus operandi

Mileage: touring pace of 45-70 miles/day, with a couple of centuries along the way, as well as a few ‘nearos’ under 35 miles. Also took 3 rest days. For a trip like this, the mileage is less important than the elevation up and down, as very little of the 2800 total mile routing is flat. Estimated 200,000+ ft of elevation from WA down to the border.
Sleeping: camped for the majority of the route, either in hammock or on the ground. I also stayed with several kind trail angels along the divide, and opted for a few motel stays during bad weather.
Weather: mostly sunny, with daytime highs between 70-90F, nightly lows between 38-60F. Rain made brief and notable appearances: 2 half day rain episodes, as well as a several afternoon and evening thunderstorms, strong enough to put jacket/pants on.
How I ride: With flats, no cleats. No headphones too…a man alone with his thoughts, out on the trail, which leads to either road trip mindfulness or insanity, the jury still is out. Most of the trip was ridden solo, with several riding partners along the way, ages 19 to late 60s. The 19 yr old packed a gun for protection, the seniors packed extra coffee.

Pick one.

Sourdough Mtn Trail

The path up is a beat down – 3000ft gain in the first 2 miles – and the payoff at the top is fantastic.

“Steep and difficult”

 

First creek crossing
First creek crossing

 

Breaking out into the open
Breaking out into the open

 

Looking back and down
Looking back and down

 

Sourdough Lookout
Sourdough Lookout

 

On the registry of historic places
On the registry of historic places

 

Some haze from forest fires
Some haze from forest fires

 

Broader view of the summit
Broader view of the summit

WCT Day 5 and finale: Let’s bring it in

We’re told during orientation to allot 5 hours to go from Thrasher Cove to the ferry at Gordon River…steep up and down, slippery, ladders…and the last ferry is at 4:30. Took me 3.5 hours at a steady pace, and I definitely needed to take my time. Very easy to twist an ankle or fall.
 
Sunrise at Thrasher Cove
Sunrise at Thrasher Cove
 
Back at the main trail junction
It’s a 1 KM climb from Thrasher back up to the main trail junction…ladders, steep rock, roots.
 
Donkey engine
Derelict donkey engine at 72 km
 
ferry approach   ferry load
Ferry at Gordon River
 
Craig and the final ladder
Craig and the final ladder. And it’s the first ladder for those going northbound.
 
Waiting line at Victoria
Time to wrap up…I scooted over to Victoria to get in the waiting line for the ferry
 
house boats
We pass by house boats…
 
leaving the harbor
…before exiting Victoria Harbor and head for home.