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bikes canada general moosling trip reports

Biking the Elbow Loop with a Chariot

The Elbow Loop is one of those rides I kept coming across in lists with descriptions like: “Classic K-Country Rides”. And in fact it is a classic – in the sense it comes from the days when mountain-biking was all about riding on rough dirt roads, back before the day when someone realised they could ride single-track, and that was actually a lot more fun.

With all that double track, we figured we may as well take the Chariot along. I’d never ridden the loop before. Alex had, but seemed to think it was worth doing again – and it was, in that it was one of the double-track rides around that’s possible to do with a Chariot. Otherwise, there are a lot of much more interesting rides in K-Country (although the scenery is quite nice, and maybe I’m just a little spoilt from living in the mountains now).

We headed out along the Little Elbow trail first, riding the loop anti-clockwise. After passing a few hikers we had the trail to ourselves for most of the climb up to Tombstone Pass. The climbing was pretty relentless, but we risked the perils of inertia and made one stop along the way so the Moosling could get out and throw rocks around (mostly at Mama).

The trail reports had threatened snow at the pass, but although there was a little hiding in the trees, the trail itself was clear. I’m increasingly having no faith at all in the trail reports out here.

Crossing Tombstone Pass

We didn’t spend much time at Tombstone Pass, but dropped down into the Big Elbow Valley, where the trail narrowed, and became a lot more like single trail (although still passable on the Chariot). At the same time, the scenery got a little more spectacular, and I could see why people would rave about the ride.

Descending into Big Elbow Valley

Some of the more interesting sections were found on this side of the circuit, and I was glad I wasn’t towing the Chariot – so I could zoom on the single track, and so I didn’t have to haul it uphill after the stream crossings. A couple of sections here the Chariot was walked, both uphill and downhill, but never for long.

Eventually we left the hills behind, and followed the river out along the flat. And along the flat. And along the flat. That interminable flat track, it eventually spat us out back at the carpark, and we were relieved, as we’d had enough of riding mountain bikes along flat rocky roads.

The Big Elbow River

Distance: From the campground carpark, the whole loop worked out to be a little over 42km
Elevation gain: About 850m of climbing. Basically it’s uphill for nearly 20km, to an elevation of about 2,230m, then mostly downhill for the 20km back home.
Chariot-ability: Mostly double track. A few sections narrowed to single trail, but it was always forgiving wide single trail that was easy to get the Chariot along. The creek crossings were numerous and interesting though, especially the rocky ones. And a couple of rocky downhill sections we opted to walk.
Rating: Nice views, fun if you’re bike packing through the area, feel the need to explore somewhere new, or have to pick an adventure that is Chariot/trailer friendly.

Categories
bikes canada general trail running

Revenging

Rundle’s Revenge – a race around a course at the foot of Mount Rundle, at the Canmore Nordic Centre. Riding the loop on bike the first day, then running the same course the next day.

There were a few different course options: I opted for the middle length, with the relatively sane 50km bike and 25km run. The crazy people biked 100km and then ran 50km the next day (no females actually completed both). Lots of people just did either the bike or the run, but not both. Also a relatively sane option.

It had been raining and raining the week beforehand, so the course was lovely and muddy. I strangely enjoyed the mud, as it didn’t really slow me down much, but it did slow down all the people who would have been riding faster than me. And there’s a strange pleasure to be had in a muddy course (provided it’s not so muddy that your bike wheels no longer turn).

I spent most of Saturday afternoon eating several lunches and then several dinners, before piling up some snacks on my bedside table in preparation for running at 8am on Sunday morning.

All of the eating seemed to pay off, and I was feeling suspiciously energetic as I ran up the first hill and into the cloud. Tired legs, but somehow I convinced them to keep running. They enjoyed the muddy course too, and I spent a good chunk of my time pretending to be a bike as I zoomed along the muddy single track. The first lap flew by – except for that last climb into the stadium, which was then followed by the first long climb out of the stadium. The middle of the loop was always pleasant enough, being mostly downhill, and by the time you arrived back at the final uphill grind, well, you were nearly done by then.

Who would have thought you could have so much fun playing in the mud? The question now is, do I want to try and do the full length version of the event next year…

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bikes canada general moosling trip reports

A very bikey weekend

On Saturday, a plan was hatched to ride “Kananaskis 8”, a route described in one of the trail books. I’d never heard of it. After a few kilometres of riding, I had a fair idea why. Although the trails might have been great in the dry, as it was, it was a corrugated mess of sloppy, muddy horse track. Do not want! So we decided to bail out onto the Prairie View trail, and rode up Barrier Mountain (this was all Chariot and Moosling-free, otherwise the mud would have been even more fun).

Then as none of us had ridden Razor’s Edge before, we thought we’d finish up that way, and then bike along the highway back to the car. It would have worked much better if it wasn’t so hideously windy. In a typically windy area, riding a technical trail along a ridge, on an especially windy day – well it was interesting. The last section of trail we walked, and the wind was catching at my bike and blowing it into the air.

Sunday was a family outing with the Chariot, biking from Canmore out to Skogan Pass (about 45km return, with 1300m of climbing). Instead of continuing out along the old road beyond Three Sisters, we turned towards the highway and followed a rough road that sits near the highway, and is a lot flatter and more sensible riding than the higher option we’d ridden before. There was still the big climb up to the pass, but at least we weren’t already exhausted from hauling the Chariot up and down a steep “road” with fallen trees across it.

There were still a few snow patches higher up, but nothing the Chariot couldn’t be ridden across. And then there were summit baguettes and scroggin, and flying back downhill again (briefly interrupted when we saw a cinnamon-coloured bear cub, and waited until he got off the trail and went back to hang out with his mum).

(Sorry for the slightly dodgy quality photos, I haven’t been taking my good camera out biking, so it’s strictly phone photos)

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canada general moosling

The standard summer snowstorm

So perhaps it’s not technically summer yet, as Solstice hadn’t been and gone. But June snow is still June snow.

Fat and wet, but quickly melted and gone again though.

Categories
canada climbing general

A day at the crag

The first day out on rock this “summer”, at Heart Creek. Playing on cold slabs above a flowing creek.