Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Time keeps on crawling, crawling, crawling... into the future.

Life has slowed down considerably. School is back in and my time at the shop is done for the year, minus the winter bike expo which I am really looking forward to. My schedule for the semester is really tame and I am excited to have all the extra time to ride and rediscover some of the things I like to do that have fallen by the wayside. It will also give me the needed time to start looking for jobs and a place to live as I will be graduating at the end of this semester. It will be good to be back in Minneapolis, I miss it terribly.

So what is coming up? Well at the end of September the Headwaters 100 is on my calendar, this is up near Itasca. I will be camping out there with some friends for about three days. I may bring the fat bike and do some exploring out in the woods, but if someone car pools with me that won't happen. As the name implies the Headwaters 100 is a century ride. This will be my first century in a couple years. I'm pretty excited, I've got plenty of 60 and 80 mile rides under my belt so I am confident that I will be able to handle it without much issue. I'm probably more excited about camping, I love camping a lot. Something about sleeping outside and just being away from everything really recharges my batteries.

Then in October I've got the Filthy 50. I don't actually know why I signed up for this, gravel does not interest me that much. It seemed like fun at the time. It will be fun though, I'm not too worried. Apparently the course is in the same county as Almanzo, so I am assuming that the route is probably a piece of that ride.

With school back in my thoughts turn to fall, with fall always comes dirt fever. I've been bouncing around the woods out here in Maple Grove with my fat bike. I've got my eye on a new bike however, the El Mariachi Ti. After riding one at the Salsa demo, I think it could easily accommodate everything I want to do on a mountain bike, but weighing in at half what my fat bike weighs. I am still up in the air whether I will pull the trigger on it or not, time will tell. It is a slick looking bike though, that much is for sure.

This photo came from Bike Rumor.

Other than smaller rides that's all that has been going on recently. In the next week or two I am planning to take the DSLR down to the river bottoms on the fat bike and spend the day down there exploring and goofing around. So I should have some fun pictures from that. Stay tuned.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Salsa Demo

Salsa Cycles was holding their annual demo at Carver Lake Park in Woodbury, where it's all good in the Hoodbury. I have to admit, I never really thought of Salsa as a relevant mountain bike company, that has changed.

I showed up to the Salsa Demo and recognized the East coast sales guy, E-Fred from the last demo. We chatted a bit, I met the new Midwest Sales guy, Freewheel's new Q rep, and the global sales manager for Salsa. They were all really nice guys, as they all were last time as well.



Chips?


I was really excited to take out their new Horsetheif, it is a full suspension 29er with 130mm of travel in the front and 120mm in the rear. I was pleasantly surprised by it last year but it was still lacking something that I just couldn't put my finger on. I was really ready to try the new model with the split pivot, which is essentially the same thing that Trek has on their bikes that I love. To put it in simple to understand terms, your rear suspension still works while breaking. On most bikes when you use the rear break, it takes up some of the travel of your rear shock, so if you hit bumps while braking you can easily bottom out. Alternatively if you are speeding along and hit the rear brake you can get quite a bit of lurch. Split pivot fixes this issue.

E-Fred helped me get the suspension set up and off I went. I liked it. A lot. It rolled over rocks like they were not even there. It was great in the loose corners even with the wide knobbed tires. It was just smooth and buttery. This years model has a really improved geometry as well. They shortened the chain stays on most of their bikes which is evident while riding. For a 29er it has a lot of giddyup and the center of gravity was perfect for me. The split pivot was the icing on the cake. I was able to fly around the singletrack with no issues at all. I liked it so much I ended up doing two laps on it.

After my second lap Thad and Ben from Freewheel showed up. Thad and I both went out on the Spearfish next. Other than the tires being a bit low, it was phenomenal. The bike was pretty much perfect for single track, at least the kind we have around here. If I lived in an area with a little more terrain, I would opt for the Horsetheif.


Spearfish and me.


The next bike I had in my sights as I am looking at purchasing one, was the El Mariachi Ti. I know the advantages of full suspension, they are real, it is just that I would never ever utilize a full suspension bike to its full potential. I want a bike that is in between the fat bike and the cross check. I have done some crazy stuff on the cross check and the fat bike but I recognize there is a time and place where those bikes are either not quite enough or conversely too damn much bike to handle what I want to do. Enter the mountain bike.

I picked the damn thing up and it was so light I could hardly believe it. The frames are triple butted this year, it has saved them a lot of weight believe it or not. I threw a leg over the beast and just started bombing off and up curbs and the first thing I noticed was they had shortened the chain stays on this one as well. It just took off. Add to that the set back of the seat post and the center of gravity was dead on. I was pretty much instantly sure that I was going to be making the right decision. Even with the triple butted tubing the ride was still really stiff where you wanted it to be but super comfortable. I'm pretty excited for that!

The carbon Beargrease is pretty cool as well. A lot of people were coming specifically to ride that. For those of you that don't know, I'll let you in on the secret. It is nothing like the Muluk, it is a totally different bike. If you want to race winter stuff, you want a Beargrease. If you want to just go out and have a good time and possibly do any kind of "touring" in the winter, the Mukluk should be your weapon of choice. The geometries are toootally different.

The Colossal is still the Colossal, a steel road bike with disc brakes. Pretty cool.

Ben took out the Warbird and was really impressed with it. It sounds like he may be getting one of them. If you have not ridden a Salsa lately, I recommend you go check one out for yourself. They are a lot of fun.

All in all it was a good day, talking to some good dudes, and riding some good bikes. What more do you need?

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Labor Day Weekend.

Last year for the laboring weekend I did my first little tour with my buddy Brian. This year was a little different but still lots of fun.

Friday night I hung out with my buddy Thad and we rolled around by the falls and Hidden Falls park. We had a couples beers before the ride, which ended up being a mistake, not a big one but it was pretty hot and I had never been down to Hidden Falls before, the hill going back up was super gnar. The view from the river bank was quite awesome however.

View from the river bank.
We left Hidden Falls and bombed back through Minehaha Falls park and much to our pleasure Surly Brewing was there serving beer. Huzzah!


Beers and bikes.
We headed back to the mother ship and fired up the grill, not before picking up some bacon for the burgers. Thad fired up some beef and I got the fire pit raging. We had ourselves a couple of heart attacks on a bun and then just hung out and drank for a bit.

Burgerssss!
One of Thad's buddies and his wife stopped by and brought some wine from their recent wedding that was left over. We sat and chatted and drank and after about an hour or two they took off and Thad and I decided to go on another ride. We packed up the rest of our beers and headed for Lake Nokomis. We went to the secret ninja spot of drinking concealment, though it was about 2 am at this point so I doubt anyone would have bothered us any way. We hung out and took in the scene. The lake was really still and everything in the sky was reflecting on it. We talked about everything under the sun and when the last beer had been drunk (don't worry we brought our trash home with us), we headed back. We finished the night out with some smores and a visit from Thad's new neighbor who was just getting home from work. Then we attempted to watch Super Troopers but 4:30 am was just too much for both of us.

I rode a few more times over the weekend but mostly solo and mostly to work off all the beer and those burgers. It was a far cry from last year but it was still a lot of fun. I got a lot good time in with some friends I had not seen in a while and even made some new friends. I wonder what next year will be like.