Wednesday, October 31, 2007

The best trail in the world

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Ask me to name my top 3 mountain bike rides - ever - and I'd be hard-pressed to come up with just 3. When your living involves finding the best rides in the world, they all tend to blend into one, magnificent whole. But once in a while something comes along that stands out so clearly, a ride that begs superlatives like 'best ever.' Yesterday's ride was one of them.

Richie, Robbie, Cory (from Ride Guide TV) and Paul (photographer) left in the morning to visit Machu Picchu, and Wayo - my Peruvian partner - and I decided we would go for a nice cross-country spin. Shooting a TV show involves endless stopping and starting while the cameras set up, so we were itching for a real ride.

"I know a great trail up that way," Wayo said, pointing past the houses of Ollantaytambo to a narrow valley. "It's very nice."

Wayo is a master of understatement. What transpired over the next 4 hours was nothing short of nirvana.

We climbed up a dirt road out of Ollantaytambo and soon passed through a small village. Farmers stopped us to ask where we were going and to shake our hands. Soon we passed a slope intercut with massive terraces. "Inca terraces," Wayo said. "They are over 1,000 years old." We would be riding on top of them on our way down. Wow, I thought.

After an hour of climbing, we stopped in a small village to have a snack and get out of the increasingly vigorous rain. As we waited the rain out, two small children came up to us, curious about these strangers in their midst. I guess they were about 4 or 5, one boy and a girl. They were the cutest children I think I've ever seen. More superlatives.

A few more minutes and we dropped into the trail, climbing past local farms on what were Inca trails hundreds of years old. The trail got steep in parts, necessitating pushing our bikes, but I was so stunned by the scenery that I didn't mind the exertion (later I would find the exertion not so easy as we reached 12,000 feet and I got altitude sickness).

We followed a riverbed up a valley, looking for a way to cross to the other side, where an ancient Inca ruin sat on top of a hillside, our ultimate goal. The trail was beautiful: smooth, sweet singletrack, perfect for cross-country riding. After a half hour of climbing, we realized that there probably was no bridge and we would have to return back down and ford the river. The descent was all hoots and hollers, eyes glued to the narrow trail. The trail was only about a foot and a half wide, with a neat little dropoff on the right. We reached a small farm and asked the owner how to get across. He pointed down to the river, looking at us like we were loco.

We forded the river handily, then climbed about half an hour to the ruins. Wow. These ruins sat on top of a ridge, overlooking one of the most scenic valleys I'd ever seen. "Wayo, I think this is the most beautiful places I've ever seen," I said. He nodded and smiled in his laid-back way. I wanted him to jump up and shout with me. It was one of those moments when you feel most alive, most in sync with the universe. I could feel the apus, the spirits of the mountains here.

The ruins, Wayo told me, were the home of the first Inca king. They are over 1,000 years old. I ran my fingers over the rock walls, imagining life here a millenium ago. There was still hemp rope holding together wooden beams, and some of the structures looked like they could have been built last week. Chalk one up for Inca ingenuity.

We finally tore ourselves away from the ruins and prepared for the descent. The ruins sat on top of a terraced slope that had been softened and molded buy time: perfect mountain biking. We raced down the slope, jumping off terraces into the October sky. I was in awe, like I'd never been before.

After a few minutes we reached the trail, screaming alongside houses and farms and terraces. We rode down a hundred-metre-long staircase that predated Columbus by about 500 years. Then we reached the terraces. The trail on top of our terrace was intermittently smooth and technical, perfect for a couple of cross-country freeriders. Sheep dotted the terraces and cows mooed in the distance. We seemed to be the only people in the valley. My skin shivered with glee.

The trail got progressivley more technical, with bigger rocks to negotiate, but we were so high on this ride that we passed through them easily. We reached another set of terraces, even greener than the last, and dropped a few hundred feet quickly down to the road.

The last section of trail meandered through backyards and along a river, finally spitting us out in the narrow streets of Ollantaytambo. We reached the hotel and my altitude sickness finally overtook my adrenaline and I collapsed in bed, content and satiated with the most incredible ride I'd ever done.

Mike

Monday, October 29, 2007

Bikes Without Borders: San Pedro De Casta

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A few days ago, we drove up to a small hilltop village outside of Lima, called San Pedro de Casta. The village sits at 11,000 feet and is home to about 2,000 people. We were there to ride horses up to Marcahuasi, the Stone Forest, and then decend all the way down to 4,000 feet - a descent of about 8,000 feet.

But we were also there on behalf of Bikes Without Borders, a charitable organization we started a few months ago, that distributes used bikes from North America to communities in need in the developing world. The idea was hatched a few years ago in another small community, this one in Nicaragua. Touring the scoolhouse in the remote village of Penas Blancas, I asked some of the children where they lived and how they go to school. Many of them responded that they lived far away - up to 2 hours - and walked to and from school every day. Most of these children walked 3 or 4 hours every day to spend 4 hours in school. Instead of walking, I thought, these kids could be studying, helping out their families, or playing, as children should. Not spending 20 hours a week walking.

For most of us in North America, the bicycles is a form of recreation, but in the developing world they are an invaluable form of transporation where cars are rare. To make a long story short and to stop my rambling, I brought a few bikes with me to San Pedro the last time I was in Peru (in May), and this time I had a few more. I was anxious to see what, if any, impact the bikes had made and if I was wasting my time and money bringing more bikes here.

I met up with one of the teachers at the school where we dropped off the first bikes. He greeted me with a huge smile and a vigorous handshake. When he saw the 2nd shipment of bikes, his eyes lit up. I asked him how the previous bikes were doing and if the community was using them.

He laughed heartily and patted me on the back. 'The bikes are incredibly popular,' he said. 'We are renting them out for 10 centimos a day (about 3 cents), and there is a lineup to use the bikes.' He explained that local farmers were using the bikes to get to and from their fields, whice were often far away, and that the bikes were especially popular with the local schoolkids, who loved riding around the mountains with them. They had even implemeted a program at the school whereby if a student achieves a certain grade, they get a free bike for a day. He looked at the new bikes and told me with a nod and another big smile that yes, these bikes will be very used, and the community is very grateful.

I should mention the bikes came from Huntsville, Ontario, where one of our organizers, Kristi Macdonald, collected the bikes and organized a bike tuning party before bringing them to me in Toronto. Her work and enthusiasm are greatly appreciated by the people of San Pedro!

To say I was moved and inspired by San Pedro de Casta's appreciation and innovation regarding the Bikes Without Borders program would be an understatement. In the coming months, we will be launching a new website at http://www.bikeswithouthborders.org/, soliciting sponsors, and organizing community events across Canada. If you want to get involved, please e-mail me at mike@sacredrides.com (my bikeswithoutborders.org e-mail will be set up when I get back from Peru.)
You can also call me at 647-999-7955 if you have money, your time, or bikes to donate to the program.

Mike

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Olleros Movies, part II

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As promised, here's a couple more movies of Robbie Bourdon and Richie Schley on the Olleros Trail in Peru: 10,000 vertical feet of legendary singletrack. If you want to ride trails like this, then join us on our Inca Adventure DH tour next May or September (there's still 1 spot left in May...)

My next post will tell you all about our trip to San Pedro de Casta, a hilltop community at 10,000 feet, a few hours outside of Lima. This is where we dropped off the first shipment of bikes for our Bikes Without Borders program, and where we just dropped off the 2nd shipment. More details to come...

Olleros Trail, Peru

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Here's the first of several videos I'm going to upload of our epic descent of the 10,000-vertical-foot Olleros Trail. The trail starts at the village of Olleros and ends up at the Pacific Ocean over 50 km later. The helmetcam wearer is my Peruvian partner Wayo Stein and the riders are pro freeriders Richie Schley and Robbie Bourdon. The video's pretty lo-res, but I'll find a high-speed connection later today and get some high-quality video up.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Day 4 - Cusco, Peru

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Just a brief post today until I can get some more time to write tomorrow. We're in Cusco after flying in from Lima. We took the day of riding after 2 epic days of riding and 1 even more epic night of partying in Lima. Robbie Bourdon really knows how to drink Pisco.

On Wednesday we rode a 10,000 vertical foot downhill that was, in Richie's words, 'the best trail I've ever ridden.' The trail was wide open along a perfect ride and we probably hit about 70 km/h on the ridge before dropping into some sweet singletrack for the final 6,000 feet. It was about as spiritual an experience as I've ever had on a bike.

Tomorrow I'll upload some incredible helmet cam footage from the 10,000 footer, and throw in some photos from the last 2 days.

Hasta luego, amigos.

Mike

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Peru with Richie and Robbie - day 1

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Ride Guide TV in Peru with Richie Schley and Robbie Bourdon
Day 1 - Lima, Peru

We got into Lima at 1 o'clock in the morning. Customs once again tried to charge me for the used bikes I was bringing to San Pedro de Casta, but a smile and little sweet talking got me through with no duties to pay. After that, 'customs' consisted of walking up to a button and pushing it and hoping it doesn't show red. This time, it was green. Success.

Robbie Bourdon had been up since 3 am, catching a flight from Kelowna to Vancouver at 6 am, then Vancouver to Toronto, then Toronto to Lima. He looked like he was going to fall asleep in the customs line. Richie Schley looked like he'd been sleeping all day, courtesy of an upgrade to 1st class. The 6 foot something Cory - Ride Guide's producer - and I barely managed to squeeze into our tiny seats on Air Canada.

We met my Peruvian partner Wayo and headed to our hotel. Conversation was at a minimum when our heads hit the pillows at 2 am.

Breakfast the next day consisted of generous helpings of mate de coca - coca tea - and some sort of strange but delicious omelet cake. After breakfast we began to build our bikes and it became quickly apparent to me that I was missing my derailleur hanger: a small, innocent piece of metal that is completely integral to the functioning of the bike. F@#%!

We headed off to Willy Pro, a local bike shop. Willy stocked about 10 different hangers, but no Rocky Mtn hangers. Plan B: we headed to a local machine shop, where for $28 they agreed to make me a new one. This meant I would miss the day's riding, but by this time it was already 2 pm, so we hit the road and I left my bike.

After piling back a massive seafood lunch, we hopped back in the truck and started gaining altitude, heading toward an area known as Amancay. This is the local downhill spot for the freeriders of Lima - big mountains all around, green hillsides, and a fantastic-looking run that featured a whole lot of built-up stunts. Impressive! We met up with a group of the locals at the top of the run and after waiting for us for a while, they took off down the run. These guys had obviously ridden this trail a few hundred times - they handled the jumps with ease and pretty much rocketed down the trail. Looks like the locals may be putting up some competition over the days to come.

The fellas did 3 runs on the course, hitting all the gaps with style and generally showing why they're pros. I could only sit back and salivate at what I was missing. On our last run, at 6 pm, the sun sank below hte horizon, and as it disappeared, a rainbow appeared on the other side of the valley. Perhaps a good omen...

Tomorrow we are heading up to a 10,000 foot downhill that ends at the Pacific Ocean, and my derailleur hanger is fixed. All is right again.

I'm full of Pisco Sour now and ready for bed. Hasta pronto, amigos. I'll get some more photos and videos up tomorrow.

Mike


Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Ride Guide in Peru!

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I'm heading back down to Peru for the 3rd time this year! This time I'm going with pro riders Richie Schley and Robbie Bourdon, renowned photographer Paul Morisson, and Ride Guide's Cory Horton.

Ride Guide will be filming our Inca Adventure DH trip, along with a couple of days of surfing near Lima. The episode will air around the world, starting early next year.

I'll be posting blogs from the trip, along with some of Paul's photos, and hopefully some of Cory's footage. Check the blog daily, starting next Monday. Peru is one of my favourite places in the world - this trip should be as epic as it gets!

Mike

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Sacred Rides on facebook

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By the way, we've now got a Sacred Rides facebook page. If you've taken one of our holidays, or just want to see what our holidays are about, go to 'groups' search 'Sacred Rides,' and then click join. You'll be able to check out and post pictures, videos, and take part in forums.
www.facebook.com

Sacred Rides on NSMB.COM

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Our Ultimate BC holiday is now featured on leading mountain bike site nsmb.com. Writer Stuart Kernaghan joined us on this trip in July; his write-up is entertaining to say the least. [read the write-up]

We've been running this 12-day trip for 2 years now, and I think after ironing out a few early-season kinks, we've got a pretty incredible trip on our hands. Some of the places we visit are: Fernie, Rossland, Nelson, New Denver, Revelstoke, Golden and Kananaskis. Each of these places on their own could satisfy you for a week of awesome riding. But as they say, variety is the spice of life, so we've decided to just sample the best trails in each locale and put it all together for a nice little smorgasbord.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Best New Adventure Trips of 2008

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Smartertravel.com has just named our Surf 'N' Singletrack trip one of the top new adventure trips of 2008.

I put together this itinerary myself, along with a few guide friends in Chile. There's incredible mountain biking in the Andes and the Atacama Desert, awesome surfing in the Pacific Ocean, and plenty of other activities like soaking in a geyser at 14,000 ft. and swimming in The Eyes of The Goddess!

Hope to see you there in March!

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Deluxe BC trip

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Just got back home after an epic, exhausting and incredible 12-day sneak preview of our new 'Deluxe BC' trip. Joining me for the ride were my lead guide Eddy Plant, lead coach Johanna Weintrager, my fiancée Tanya, and 4 media folks: Andrew Findlay, freelancer, Ian MacNeill for Western Living Magazine, photographer Patrice Halley and Cory from Ride Ruide TV.

Aside from a bit of nasty weather, it was everything we hoped for: good friends, great hospitality, and even greater riding. Read on for the dirty details.

Day 1 - Fernie
We started out with some sweet digs at Lizard Creek Lodge. Our first day we rode the awesome Project 9 trail, and got some nice shots in the old-growth up at Island Lake. Good to showcase the home trails. Unfortunately, Cory's videocamera cacked out and he was out for the rest of the trip. Luckily, he's joining us in Peru in a few weeks to film an episode with Wade Simmons and Richie Schley.

Day 2 - Baldface Lodge, Nelson
We hit the road early to get to Baldface Lodge near Nelson early enough to get some good riding in. Fish from Baldface had been telling me about the awesome trails that Mike Kinrade and his crew had been cutting up there, so we decided to check them out for ourselves. Upon arriving in Nelson, we started the climb up to Baldface. An hour later, we were in alpine heaven. The lodge is at around 6 or 7,000 feet, and we'd gotten there just after a snowstorm, which left a few inches of sugary white stuff on the ground. We met up with Fish and proceeded to push our bikes up into the high alpine.

Wow. The terrain at Baldface is epic to say the least. Big ridges in every direction. Big bowls. Big views. We took some snaps in the snow before hopping onto a big descent through meadows, steeps, and dense forest before ending up at Fish's truck where beers were chilling in the creek for us. From the first ride, we were hooked on this place. Eddy and Johanna looked like they were ready to move to Nelson that day.

We ate some deluxe grub in the main lodge that night and reveled in the hospitality, primed up for another big day on Seven Summits.

Day 3 - Seven Summits, Rossland
We'd already ridden Seven Summits plenty of times on our Ultimate BC tour, so we knew what we were in for: one of BC's toughest all-day cross-country epics. Seven Summits starts with a 2,500 foot climb, and doesn't really let up all that much over the course of the next 6 hours. It's a grunt, but a grunt with a view: big sweeping vistas of the Bonnington Range, the town of Rossland and Red Mountain. Most of the time you're riding on ridgelline in the alpine, your jaw dropping at the view while your lungs explode, imploring you to just give up. It's a constant psychological struggle to keep going, but boy is it worth it. Every time I ride this trail, I think I'm going to die, and when I'm done I feel like I've actually kicked the bucket and gone straight to heaven.

Today was no different. Sunshine, good friends, and a cold beer after the ride. Could this be the secret to happiness?

Day 4 - Baldface Lodge & Nelson
Our day started with a 6,000-foot descent down to Kootenay Lake. I skipped out to spend some time with my gal, but Eddy, Johanna and Andrew joining Fish for the ride through Swamp Donkey. Meeting up with them at El Taco in Nelson a few hours later, their grins told the whole story. From the sounds of it, I may have to return to check it out.

We scooted over to Ainsworth to have a soak in the hotsprings, and then headed up to Retallack Lodge near New Denver, where owner Chris and his chef Thomas were waiting for us. Johanna was on her home turf and eager to show us the goods.

The lodge is certainly deluxe, and so is the food. We hit the sack as content as could be.

Day 5 - New Denver
We hit the van running, driving through the ghost town of Sandon before shuttling partway up Idaho peak to catch a 2,500-foot descent to the valley bottom. Tanya and I checked out the Galena trail, enjoying our first cable-car experience while waiting for the others. After lunch, we headed back up to the very tip of Idaho Peak, for the descent down the Wakefield trail. the views from up top are up there with the best in BC, with Silverton down below and Slocan Lake looking like it was served up straight from heaven. The trail starts off with some hefty exposure - a definite no-fall zone - and then ends up being pretty fast and crusiy through the forest before ending up near the pub in Silverton, where the Budweiser's cold and the waitress is even colder.

We tried valiantly to party hard that night, but after riding all day, from 9 am to 6 pm, there just wasn't enough in the tank to keep it going. We must be getting old.

Day 6 - Revelstoke
Some yummy pancakes got us going for the drive to Halfway Creek Hotsprings. I'd tell you were they are, but then they'd end up just like every other hotspring in BC: overcrowded and overused. So we'll keep this one a secret, for now. Suffice to say that these springs are remote, they're awesome, and they're hard enough to get to that you won't find pasty, Speedo-wearing Germans there yet. And did we ever enjoy the hell out of them.

After tearing ourselves away to get to Revelstoke in time for our ride, we hopped on the Galena Bay ferry, scooted up the highway to Revelstoke, and then drove up to the trailhead for Keystone Standard Basin. We were stoked for some sunshine, but the weather had other ideas. Keystone is one of the premier rides in BC, but on this day, we were in a battle against the elements. About halfway up, we hit the snow line. This area is a hit with snowmobilers for one reason: deep, deep snow, about 50 feet of it every winter. And today it looked like Mama Nature was getting a head start. By the time we got up to the upper basin, we were battling about 4 inches of snow, freezing rain, and numb fingers. Andrew and I kept pushing on, driving each other higher up the trail, but finally we had to pull the plug. We raced back down the trail, hooting and hollering, one of the best rides we'd both had in a while. It was one of those days when you'd never think to get out of bed to ride, but when you're done, you're sure glad you did. Salmon steaks at Glacier House put the icing on an already sweet, sweet day.

Day 7 - Salmon Arm
We were all pretty stoked on this day: a sneak preview of a new mega-trail and houseboating on the Shuswap. We met up with Greg Scharf from Skookum Cycles in Salmon Arm, got Patrice's beat up bike fixed, and headed off to the trailhead. Greg is one of the guys behind this mega-project: a 380-km singletrack loop around Shuswap Lake that is years in the making, and will take another two years to complete. Jim, the head trailbuilder, joined us shortly after; his eyes gleamed as he spoke of his labour of love.

We started off with another burly climb, which was just fine since it was about 6 degrees out and raining. Every now and then, we could see the lake poking out through the clouds, thousands of feet below, and we could only imagine what this place must look like in the sunshine. The singletrack was sweet: buffed and windy, with lots of tight switchbacks to keep you honest. I think we rode about 1/15th of the trail, and it was enough to keep us going all day.

Finally, the cherry on top: our own deluxe, 20-person houseboat, courtesy of Waterway Houseboats. This thing was beyond deluxe; we're talking fireplace, 8 big bedrooms, a hot tub, a rooftop deck, full kitchen. Greg's wife cooked up some delicious food while Greg kept the beers flowing. And we just sat there stunned at the hospitality while the boat cruised on. That night, we hot tubbed under the stars while Greg and Jim talked about their dream trail.

I look forward to riding the whole thing one day.

Day 8 - Kamloops Bike Camp
After all the XC, we were ready to do some freeriding. Luckily, Chuck and Devon from kamloops Bike Camp were happy to oblige. Meeting us at the Quaoot Lodge parking lot with freeride bikes in town, we hopped into Chuck's rig for the ride up the mountain. Chuck has been building trails on the land behind Quaoot for several years, hoping to turn it into the ultimate freeride destination. Time will tell if he ever achieves his dream, but for now he's got some pretty epic terrain to work with, including some monster road gaps and some great steeps.

Unfortunately, we missed our evening sweat lodge with Ernie Phillips, the Lodge's cultural director, but we did catch him afterward, in full costume, a big grin from ear to ear. I look forward to taking him up on his rain check. If you've never ever done a sweat lodge, I highly recommend it. A good physical and spiritual cleansing.

Day 9 - en route to Tyax Lodge
Today was a driving day, as we hit the road for the 6-hour drive to remote Tyax Lodge near Gold Bridge, 2 hours north of Whistler. Dale and Tyax Air operate a floatplane service to take you from Tyax Lodge to several nearby epic trails. We got to lodge just before dinner and checked into our 5-star chalet before hitting the main lodge for a massive buffet feast. The surly Germans staying at the lodge gave us some nasty looks during our post-dinner game of Crud, which is basically full-contact billiards without pool cues (don't ask).

Day 10 - Spruce Lake Today was the day we'd all been waiting for, the big enchilada to top off our singeltrack fiesta. We met Dale after breakfast and loaded up his 1961 Beaver floatplane. We were all stoked as stoked can be, practically buzzing with excitement. None of us had ever ridden in a floatplane, let alone in the Chilcotin Mountains, some of the biggest, baddest mountains BC has to offer. We squeezed the bikes in, then squeezed ourselves in. Dale fired up the moter, then gave us the safety briefing as we taxied around the lake. The engines fired and we started to glide across the surface of the lake. As the engine whined into higher and higher RPMs, we picked up speed, and soon the lodge started to shrink as we hit the air. I've been in helicopters in BC, Cessnas in Nepal, Boeings in Peru, but nothing compared to that ride through the Chilcotins. When we finally landed on Spruce Lake 10 minutes later, none of us wanted to get out, even though we had an epic 5-hour ride to come. The flight was that good.

But exit we did. And after putting together our bikes and battling through a few kilometres of swampy trail (it's been a wet, wet fall in BC), we got to the goods: expansive alpine meadows, massive mountains, and velvety-smooth singletrack. This trail was the stuff of legend, the trail that you keep returning to in your mountain bike dreams. We flew down it one by one, railing the switchback corners and hammering the straightaways until we reached Gun Creek road 5 hours later, totally exhausted and totally satiated.



Day 10 - Whistler (well, almost)

Day 10 was supposed to be a drive to Whistler to ride the big epic Comfortably Numb. But once again the weather had other plans, so we scooted right past Whistler, straight to the Sushi restaurants of Vancouver and some couch-surfing at Ian's place.

Good laughs were had all around as we recapped an amazing mountain bike trip, spanning 1,000 kilometres of BC, 5 deluxe lodges, one houseboat, 2 hotsprings, 1 aborted sweatlodge, some 200 km of singletrack and 7 pretty damn lucky riders.

Once again, I think I have the coolest job in the world. And I hope to ride with you someday to show you why.

Mike