Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Mountain Biking 100 Miles: A Race Report from the High Cascades 100

Tom Phillips competed and completed the High Cascades 100.  He sent a really great synopsis of the race that has inspired a few of us to consider doing this race next year.  100 miles of mountain biking sounds insane but Tom's race report breaks it down in a way that makes it seem fun, doable and a pretty cool accomplishment!

"I thought I would give a quick race report on the High cascade 100 that Randy, Scott and I did last Saturday in Bend, Oregon. First of all I think it was the funnest racing event I have participated in except for Crosstoberfest. It was fun to me because of the great trails, the scenery, the support, the weather conditions and the attitudes of the other riders. The event was very well organized and had tons of support. At the finish was a full barbeque including beer that were provided.


The race consisted of 3 loops; a 42 mile loop around Mt Bachelor, the ski area and the Alpine Lakes; a 44 mile loop (they called it the epic loop) on the north side of Mt Bachelor that crossed a couple ridges and led to the base of Tumalo Falls where a 13 mile climb started an ended right at snow level and passed through incredible high alpine meadows; a third loop consisting of 13.5 miles that led towards Bend and came back. All loops began and ended at Wanoga Snow Park on Century Drive about 3 and ½ miles north of the Sun River cutoff road. There is plenty of room for camping or RV’s at this location. There were two big food/water stops and an aid station on the first two loops and one at the start of the third. You only need to provide your own food and water at the beginning of loop 1. The stops also included mechanics who lubed chains, changed flats or did whatever was needed. I had my bike lubed 4 times and drive train adjusted once.

The course consisted of about 3 and ½ - 4 miles of pavement and about 4-5 miles of unimproved dirt roads. The rest was single track in great shape that included everything from rock drops, stream crossings, switchbacks, smooth winding trails, pumice, all types of descents and climbs. The promoter advertised 12,500 feet of climbing but it really didn’t feel like it except on the Tumalo Falls climb. There were numerous fast, flowing and long descents to make up for the climbing.

The start line was quite different. It was dark at 5:15 am and was about 39 degrees. People were a bit quiet and not talking much about was ahead of them. I was stressed immediately when I discovered that my front tire was flat at the start line. I filled it and made it about 3 miles up the road before I had enough light to change. Then my big air can and valve broke. I was last place at the first turn, mile 3. Things quickly settled in after this point. It helped tremendously when the sag wagon told me not to panic in that there was 97 miles remaining. By the time I met up with Scott about two hours in, I had passed about 150 people. I thought I may be in trouble though so I started popping Endorlites that another racer recommended. Good news, they worked. Or it may have been the 6 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, one entire watermelon, two pro bars, bag of beef jerky, one gel pak, three cliff blocks, numerous cookies, bagel, several bananas and 200 ounces plus of fluid.

I thought about the race one loop at a time otherwise it was overwhelming, at least to me. I knew that if I could make it over the big climb at Tumalo Falls that I could finish the loop and then make it through the last 13 mile loop. The last loop ended up being the hardest. I feel apart with about 8 miles to go. I didn’t bonk though. I was just tired out, sore and totally done.

I think it helps to have someone you know at some of the stops or planted at various spots on the course to cheer. Lisa did this and it was always a welcome sight to see her. It is easy to drive or ride to many portions of the course.

In conclusion, this really isn’t a race unless you are attempting to be in the top 10. You have to find your rhythm and a pace that you can maintain all day. I was just “riding” on a course in beautiful country at a much lower heart rate, eating and drinking as much as I could. I think Randy was racing though. He would not talk to me at the stops and would take off without saying good-bye. We all used Camelbacks and one water bottle. The race provided water bottles pre-filled at the stops or you could fill up Camelbacks. I highly recommend this next year to anyone on the team."

Tom at the start:


Tom at mile 50 or so:
Thanks Lisa for the photos!

Cyclocross Training

A few of us Ragnarokers signed up for 4 weeks of Cyclocross Training with Russell Stevenson and the Cycling Northwest crew (aka Aaron Mickels). The folks from Bikehugger.com came out for the final session and took some photos. Here's a link to the short but sweet story. Photo below credit belongs to Bikehugger.com and Mark V.


Monday, August 23, 2010

Tour de Fat

Every year New Belgium Brewery hosts the Tour de Fat in Seattle.  This year's event at Gas Works Park brought out the best of all cyclists.  Ragnarok teammates showed up in full force!  Not hard to get a bunch of us out there given New Belgium is one  of the world's greatest sponsors and the beer tastes really good too! 

Olympia Traverse

Rich and Debbie wore the Ragnarok colors while partipating in the 1st annual Olympia Traverse.  The multi-leg event started in Capitol Forest with a trail run, a mountain bike leg was up next followed by a road bike section and a paddle.  Folks could do this solo or in teams.  The final leg was the entire team meeting at the end of the paddle and running to the local brewery- the Fish Tale.  Rich rode the mountain bike leg for his team and ended up with the fastest time of the day.  Deb rode both the mountain and road bike legs for her team.  Good times.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

One of Many Ragnarok Wins

Congrats to Randy I for getting first place in this weekend's High Cascade's 100 Miler in Bend, Oregon!  Check out the coverage in Cycling News.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

2010 Ragnarok Mtn Bike Race Update

It's now August and there are only a few mountain bike races left in Washington State.  To date, Ragnarok Racing has:
  • Participated in 14 different local races over the past 6 months.
  • Had 86 race finishes of which:
    • 66 were top 10 finishes
    • 42 top 3 finishes
  • Placed well in two of the local series races:
    • Molly Martin:  2nd Expert Women 40+ Budu Race Series and 2nd Expert Women 35+ Indie Series
    • Doug Graver:  2nd Expert Single Speed Indie Series and 7th Expert Men 45+ Indie Series
    • Paul Berkshire:  3rd Sport Men 45+ Indie Series
    • Lisa Miller:  7th Expert Women 35+ Indie Series
    • Nikole Rock:  10th Sport Women 35+ Indie Series
In addition Ragnarokers could be found in Oregon racing the 100-mile mountian bike High Cascade Challenge, getting rowdy at the Tour de Fat in Seattle, racing the first Olympia Traverse (trail run, mtn bike, road bike and paddle), and just generally out on the trails.

Click here to see a google doc that lists all the team results in the various races this season.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

2010 Mountain Bike Race Results

As of June 1, 2010 Ragnarok has 29 top 3 finishes in 10 races!  Highlights include Molly Martin's 2nd place finish in the Budu mountain bike series; Doug Graver's 1st place at Ephrata and Whidbey Island; Elizabeth Salvo's 1st place at Fort Ebey; Nikole Rock's 1st place at Ephrata and Paul Berkshire's 1st place at the Dirty Dozen race.  More recently, 12 Ragnarokers took Spokane by storm and placed well in multiple categories at the 24-hour Mountain Bike race.  Joe Martin competed in the solo division, completed 13 laps and secured an 8th place in the solo men 40+ category. 

Click here for results (link will take you to a Google spreadsheet).  A few photos from some of the races to date:

Molly- Budu Overall Podium:

Lisa and Molly line up for the start of the Ephrata Beezley Burn
Nikole: 1st place,  Debbie: 2nd place and Suzie Hodges: 3rd place at Ephrata's Beezley Burn
Sean ready to get the Whidbey Island Mudder started.

Pre-race strategizing.

Tom, Mike, Leroi, Doug and Carl Win the Combined Age 200+ Category at the 24-Hour Race in Spokane.  Ross and Sean's team took 2nd!

Nikole, Debbie, Lisa, Annie and Suzie take 2nd in the 5-person all female division of the 24-hour mountain bike race.

Joe Martin solo-ing at the 24-hour mountain bike race in Spokane.