Onion Valley Road


ONION VALLEY ROAD IS COMPARED TO MT VENTOUX, FRANCE

I was back in Lone Pine this “weekend”.  I write weekend in quotes because currently my days off are Thursday and Friday and that is my weekend.  Not the traditional weekend but it is two consecutive days off.  Lone Pine has become my favorite place to escape city living.  A small town with great people and some of the best climbing for cyclists California has to offer.

When I visit Lone Pine I stay at the Whitney Portal Hostel.  I am now a repeat customer with three great visits in the last six weeks.  The hostel is  conveniently located at the base of Mt Whitney.  You can make reservations at (760) 876-0030.  Rates are reasonable and it is a nice clean place where you meet a lot of interesting people.  I highly recommend it.

SUMMARY

6 hour mountain training ride.  78 miles with 7800 feet of climbing.  High temperature while I was still riding was 105F.  Personal Best Onion Valley Rd (1:47). Partial climb of Horseshoe Meadow.

THE RIDE

My goal for Friday was to get in as much climbing as I could possibly achieve before the heat would be too much.  Lone Pine had been in the high 90’s for the past week but it was forecasted to be over 100 F on Friday.  I rolled at 630am and headed North on Hwy 395 towards Independence.  It took less than an hour, 48 minutes,  to travel the 16 miles required to reach Independence.

Sunrise on the Eastern Sierras

Onion Valley Road really starts off as Market Street.  I made the left turn and began the long., 13 mile,  hard climb up to the Onion Valley trailheads.

If you’re not careful you’ll miss the turn to the hardest climb in California

 

Make your turn at the Post Office

Look for the road and the switchback- there are a series of switchbacks

Look for more switchbacks

I didn’t notice the well on my first ascent back in June. But you have to get to the to the trailhead to refill your bottles.

Felt F2 with Di2 and new 7900 wireless SRM Power Meter

I thought this was funny.

Onion Valley Climb

Ok now it’s time to geek out.  I did a Personal Best on the Onion Valley Rd climb.  Nothing really exciting to the real climbers out there but it was a another milestone for me as I get my climbing legs back.  On this trip I installed an 11-25 cassette.  I remembered how much I suffered on the climb with an 11-23 cassette on my first ascent of Onion Valley in June . Armed with a 25T cog and a little better fitness I was able to increase the following metrics:

I was still grinding way too much and the 12% grades had me standing way too much to keep  my momentum up.  Notice the grey line on the power chart goes up as the power goes down.  That grey line is torque and it really shoots up when the grade is steep.  You’ll notice my power and cadence go in the opposite direction — as in down!  Next time I climb Onion Valley Rd I will take an 11-27 cassette and see if I can improve the average cadence and average power by spinning a little more.

Power and Heart Rate of June 10 and July 9 compared

Cadence and Speed June 10 and July 9

Onion Valley Grade Analysis

Onion Valley is one hard climb.  Just look at the chart from mile 3 to the top at almost mile 13.  It stays in the 7.5% to 10% grade range for almost 10 miles!!  With the only exception being when it pops up and over 10% grade.  Onion Valley gains over 5,000 feet in those hard miles.

Onion Valley Road compared to Mt Ventoux, France

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Whitney Portal Again Today


The view from my room at the hostel - how wonderful is that?

Clouds still hanging around Mount Whitney by the time I decided to ride

Today after languishing around the hostel in the morning I decided to ride after all.  I needed the extra time to just recover from yesterday.  I was still dehydrated so I blogged with a water bottle at the ready.  I had a good breakfast and a good lunch and my 2pm I felt fully recovered.  Additionally, the clouds were hanging around at the higher elevations and it appeared to be really windy.  The clouds were still hanging around by the time I got on the bike.

I got on the bike for a short but intense ride.  My plan was ride up Whitney Portal at tempo.  I felt good considering I had done 17,000 feet of climbing the day before. After a few minutes of warm-up and a few minutes at tempo I felt good and rode harder.  The 53/39 crankset and 11/23 weren’t so painful today.  Of course the legs were “fresher” from not climbing something else before Whitney. I am happy with my result 1:27 with an average power of 238 watts (3.5 w/kg) and Normalized Power of 241 watts and an average speed 8.2 mph.

When I arrived at the hostel, purely by chance, there was a Yoga class in session in the main room.  I strolled in with my noisy bike and noisy click clack shoes and felt bad for interrupting.  But then I was invited to join in.  I thought wow that is nice of them.  I guess they had just started because it was about an hour before we finished.  It felt great to stretch and perform all the movements after riding hard for two days.  Walking into that room was the other end of the extreme from what I had just experienced on my ride.  My climb up to Whitney Portal was a hard effort.  The descent was scary because of the gusts of wind were so strong they would upset my line.  The high-speed of the descent was an exercise in total concentration with every one of my senses on overdrive.  And then…the calm and the soft-spoken instructions were so soothing and relaxing.  It was unplanned,  it was unexpected and it was …just perfect.

I feel like I have been on a mini-vacation for the last 2.5 days.  I’m in a different setting than my home.  I have woken up to the majestic Mount Whitney right outside my window.  I sat in the main room blogging and seeing the mountain from where I sat.  I have been riding my bike and hanging out with backpackers.  I have listened with amazement to the stories of their ascents and they have listened to my bike stories with just as much amazement.  I have had a wonderful experience staying at the hostel.  I hope all my stays are like this.  I plan on coming up here again very soon.      So much more climbing to do up here.

Dawson Saddle in the Freezing Rain


My ride today was cut short because of really bad weather.  But I accomplished my first goal which was to climb to Dawson Saddle from Duarte.  The climb is an 8,000 foot gain in 35 miles.  The good news is all my times were better and my power numbers had improved from two weeks ago.  The bad news is I had intended on more climbing today.

When I arrived at Encanto Park in Duarte it was overcast but the temperature was in the high 60’s.  I looked off to the mountains and saw clouds but didn’t think too much of them. However, the higher I climbed in elevation the weather got worse and worse.  At lower elevations it was a light drizzle and chilly.  By the time I crested Dawson Saddle, 7901 elevation, it was pouring freezing  rain and the temperature was in the 30’s.  My hands were so cold it took me nine minutes just to put on knee warmers and a vest!

I was miserable I was shivering and I struggled to keep the bike steady while descending at below 20 mph on Angeles Crest Hwy. I was going much slower on Hwy 39 (10 mph).  Visibility was less than 20 feet — no exaggeration.  The Caltrans trucks would dart to the other side of the road when they realized a cyclist – me – was coming towards them.  I’m sure they thought I was crazy being up there.  The crews I passed had full-on winter gear and they were huddled around the big Cat units enjoying the heat being displaced by  their massive engines.

“Get down from elevation it WILL get warmer ”  I kept repeating those words over and over and over as a means of motivation to keep me moving.  I hadn’t been this cold since the San Diego 300km Brevet where half the field DNF’d because of rain and freezing temperatures.  I was wearing a base layer, two jerseys, a vest with wind stopper, arm warmers, knee warmers, booties over my shoes, gloves and I was still freezing.  I was soaked to the bone and had lost dexterity of my fingers.  I couldn’t open wrappers of my bars or gels and resigned myself to eat hardy once I got down off the mountain.  I tried to pull my bottle out of the cage and couldn’t squeeze my fingers together.  The only thing I was capable of doing was maintaining steady pressure on the brakes.

Alright enough about my tales of woe.  Let’s look at the positive outcome of this ride. Below is the power chart from two weeks ago 5/13/10.  You should be able to notice that my  power (yellow squiggly line) trails off significantly later in the climb.  When just looking at time it took me 3:38 to climb from Duarte to Dawson saddle.  Today that same climb in terrible weather took me 3:20 which includes 11 minutes off the bike for a flat.   As I mentioned before I didn’t have dexterity so changing a flat was a long painstaking process.  Most of that 11 minutes was spent trying to warm up my hands.  I stuffed them down my shorts — yeah I know TMI but you gotta do what you gotta do right?

Another absolute measurement like time is average speed.   Two weeks ago my averages speed was 9.7 mph today it was 10.7 mph. I think I will set a goal of 3 hours flat from Duarte to Dawson Saddle.  Doing some rough calculations I would have to increase my average speed for the climb to 11.7 mph to complete the climb in three hours.

Power Chart from May 13, 2010

Data from May 13, 2010

Now let’s look at today’s data.  My power doesn’t trail off as bad on the latter stages of the climb.  Don’t forget this is A THREE HOUR CLIMB.  Let’s put it in perspective — what most people call a training ride of 30-35 miles I’m doing that whole distance going up a mountain.  Also look at my Normalized Power it increased from 191 watts  to 220 watts (3.27 w/kg). It is the end of May and my goal event is in October.  I still have about three solid months to get my mileage and climbing up to race quality.

I was teased by one of my blog readers because I have been climbing with a 53/39 standard crankset and an 11-23 cassette.  Well the truth is, it is difficult for me to climb in those gears too 😉  But here’s the thing, when I started riding with the road-racer type guys most of them have close ratio cassettes.  It was very hard to keep up with them on climbs because they would be hammering in an 11-23 cassette.  Or when on the flats and slight downhills they had that 11T cog and I was in a 12T cog just barely hanging on at 36 mph.  So I switched to an 11-23 and I have been racing on one all year.

Today’s improvement in data was due in part to riding a different gear set up.  Two weeks ago I rode my Cervelo R3 SL – Rebecca, which is my dedicated climbing bike.  She is equipped with a Compact 50/34 crankset.  Today I rode Felicia which has a standard 53/39 crankset.  I felt myself working harder and at times noticed my cadence dropping significantly.  I remained focused on increasing my cadence which in-turn  produced higher power and consequently faster times up the mountain.  You can see in the difference of the lap times that today was faster in just about every lap.

Tomorrow I will be climbing Palomar Mountain.  I haven’t been out there in a long time.  I don’t have data to go from since my hard drive crashed with about three years of power data on it.  Oh well I guess I will just have to set the bar tomorrow.

LA Daily News Captures the Red Eyed Vireo on Film


On Thursday when I previewed the Tour of California Stage 6 route, I had a car come up alongside me.  There were two gentlemen in the car.  One was driving, of course, and the other was holding a DSLR camera.  He identified himself as working for the paper and asked if he could take a few pictures and ask a few questions.  I didn’t mind but I also wasn’t going to slow down to have a good ol’ fashioned chin wag.  I was less than two miles from the Dawson Saddle summit, 7901 elevation, on the Angeles Crest Hwy, and I had been climbing for over 3 hours on the 35 mile climb from a starting elevation of  600 foot in Duarte.

He snapped a few pictures asked a few questions asked my name and then was off.  I didn’t think much of it at the time.  Actually, I didn’t think they would use pictures of me in their story but a few days later I saw the article online.  Here is the article on The LA Daily News site There is a video available on their site and from there I performed a few screen shots for you below.

Furnace Creek 508 2009


T- 17 days until Furnace Creek 508 2009. I go into this event burnt-out from a full year of ultra racing. My season began with the San Diego 200km Brevet back in Jan 3rd and will end with FC508 on Oct 3rd, a full 10 months! Follow labels such as Race Reports, races, Brevets, or training, mountains, high intensity to read up all the races and training leading up to the Furnace Creek 508, my goal event of the year.

On my website, http://www.epictrain.com/follow the link “Race Reports”. There you will find 2006, 2007 and 2008 Furnace Creek 508 Race Reports. Or you could “skip the book and see the movie” here in my video gallery.

Subscribe to my blog!!!

Glendora Mountain Road (GMR) Personal Record


64 MILES WITH 10,000 FEET OF CLIMBING

Since I don’t really have a PR for GMR I’m going to use 45:50 from the gate to the crest on GMR (which is .2 of a mile past the little shack that everyone stops at).

SCREEN SHOT FROM TRAINING PEAKS

NORMALIZED POWER WAS 247 WATTS WEIGHT WAS 149 LBS OR 67.5 KG

3.65 W/KG FOR 46 MINUTES

The graph below is the descent from the top of GMR to the Gate. I was curious what my time and average speed would be. For the locals I included the small roller

AVG SPEED 31.3 MPH
TIME 15:33

216 miles with 13,500 feet of gain

A weekend of climbing in the San Gabriel Mountains


I spent Saturday and Sunday climbing in the San Gabriel Mountains. It was great to be out in the mountains again. The climbing was intense. I feel fatigued and sore but “it’s good pain”.

Sunday concluded a five day training block which included commuting with various intervals and back to back climbing “centuries” (Sunday’s was a little shy).

Wed pm 65 miles
Thurs am 30 miles pm 65 miles
Friday am 30 miles recovery
Saturday 100 miles with 11,280 feet of gain
Sunday 85 miles with 10,600 feet of gain

for a total of 375 miles and 26,380 feet of gain.

CLICK HERE FOR A WRITE UP ON THE TWO “CENTURIES”

WHEW! I AM READY FOR A REST DAY.

^^ SATURDAY 100 MILES 11,280 FEET OF GAIN

^^ SATURDAY DETAIL OF FIRST 67 MILES WITH 10,000 FEET OF GAIN

^^ SUNDAY 85 MILES WITH 10,600 FEET OF GAIN

Onyx Summit on a Fixed Gear…


VIDEO OF ONYX SUMMIT ON A FIXED GEAR HERE

THE VIEW ON THE DESCENT OF HWY 38 LOOKING UP FROM 5,000 FEET

CHICKEN QUESADILLA FROM LA MULITA ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF BIG BEAR CITY

ANY QUESTIONS?

Yeah I had this crazy idea to make Onyx Summit even more epic. I’ll post some more pics and some type of report later.

8,800 feet of climbing in the first 60 miles

Total of 9560 feet for the 90 miles

Big Bear Training Ride April 18, 2009


It’s that time again. Time to get your climb-on. Brandy and I will be going to do the ride you see in the graph above on Saturday. It is about 13,000 in 88 miles. You can read about my last trip to Big Bear City here. I also created a video here. Click on Big Bear City. Internet Explorer seems to work best with the media player.

Start: Mill Creek Ranger Station
34701 Mill Creek Road
Mentone, CA 92359
(909) 794-1123

Start Time: 0600

The route begins at Mill Creek Ranger Station we will climb over Oak Glen in both directions. Then we will climb up and through Onyx Summit to Big Bear City. Refuel and climb up and over Onyx Summit and back to Mill Creek Ranger Station.

Everyone welcome– Climb at your own pace. This is not a beginners ride. However, there are plenty of bailout points. Just think if you get tired of climbing just turn around and head back down the mountain and the pain is over. This is a hard ride with lots of climbing and not much in the way of support.

As always only you are responsible for you.

RSVP at vireo508@gmail.com