Life is better on a bike!

Tag: CA Bike Tour (Page 1 of 2)

California Central Coast Tour

Wisely we chose to do another multiday bike tour in California to kick off the year of riding. We did a fully supported tour in Sonoma County and the Pacific Coast just north of San Francisco the Fall of 2011 and loved it. If you want to avoid cool temperatures and rain in the spring, California is generally a good place to do it.

Like 2011 we did our bike tour with Undiscovered Country Tours. Not only did we have the very excellent Scott bikes to use, but this year we both ended up with new Scott 2013 CR1 Pro. I ride a Scott 2005 CR1 Pro, with Campagnolo Chorus groupset and I love it. I don’t know of another bike tour company that uses the quality of bikes UDC does and it is one of the things that attracted us to them in the first place.

Our tour this time was a small group, just 6 participants and 1 guide. Like our other UDC Tour half of our group was from Canada, another plus for us  we love Canada and Canadians. I liked the small group; it allowed us to get to know each other better including having a few interesting political discussions at dinner. It isn’t too often Mark and I meet people who have similar thoughts on political and social issues given where we live and we both enjoyed it.

Now for the riding. Our group met in the lobby of the hotel in San Jose then we proceeded to the Amtrak station to take a train to Paso Robles where our tour officially began.


Day One: Paso Robles (4/21/13)

Today’s ride was a 23 mile loop around Paso Robles, We had the hottest weather (the only hot weather) of the entire tour. There were a few miles on a busy highway but otherwise we were on backroads with fairly light traffic.

One thing I was quickly reminded of was that not everyone defines rolling hills the same. To me rolling hills are rollers, up and down – no long ascents. To people on the west coast rolling hills are hills that go up up up, and eventually go down. Case in point: we have a local route we do with approximately the same amount of ascent and descent as this Paso Robles loop but it is up and down up and down. None of our local ascents are a mile long. On the PR loop most of the 1873 feet of ascent was on one fairly long climb so there are fewer downhills in which to recover. The climbs are longer here but then so are the descents which are fun because they are usually not straight – whee!

*Clicking on the Garmin Connect Images will provide you with more data and detail.

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Day Two: Paso Robles to Avila Beach (4/22/13)


We rode to Morro Bay for lunch and beautiful views then to the lovely Avila Beach where we would spend the night. It was our longest day of riding but very doable, 54 miles. 

If you look at the profile you’ll see there was a long climb of about 6 miles with the last 2 miles being fairly steep. To make up for that we had a long descent. One section of the descent was fairly steep and I definitely worked the brakes. I’m not used to climbs or descents like these.

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Much of the ride though had that lovely bucolic scenery we saw on our 2011 trip along the northern coast and Sonoma county.

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Although I take most of my pictures while pedaling along, occasionally I do stop as in this case to get a shot of the beautiful field of California poppies.

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As is the norm on bike tours, we had a great dinner on the boardwalk of Avila Beach and stayed in very nice digs at Avila Beach Lighthouse Suites. We slept to the sounds of the ocean.

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Day Three:  Avila Beach to Santa Maria (4/23/13)

Today’s route took us along mostly rural roads through vineyards and farms as we made our way from Avila Beach to Santa Maria. The ride was similar in mileage and in ascent to our previous day, but vastly different in experience. We had far less traffic along today’s route and far more farmland and lovely scenery. Always a winner for me.

On a fair amount of our route today we had marked bike lanes or separated bike lanes. Another winner.

48.3 miles/3:41 time

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Other scenes from today’s ride

 

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Day Four:  Santa Maria to Santa Ynez (4/24/13)

Today was one of those days on the bike that captured what I love about riding a bike.

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Before taking off in the morning, stable of bikes.

The ride started in a light drizzle and fog. Temperatures stayed cool even after the sun chased the fog and dampness away. We rode from Santa Maria thru the cycling town of Solvang before taking us to Santa Ynez, our home for the next two nights.

Typing on my android tablet is too tedious to write much but a few thoughts and memories:

Riding alongside field after field of beautiful crops of lettuce, cauliflower and bright red strawberries.

The speed of the farm workers working in the fields, literally running to pick.

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The strong aroma of strawberries, cilantro, licorice.

The remoteness and quiet beauty of Foxen Canyon road.

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Lunch at Zaca Mesa winery

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The steep little climb right after lunch/wine tasting

Climbing “the wall”, a very steep little climb and recognizing I can climb even when the grade is steep, I just have to be willing to suffer.

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The thrill of the twisty descent into Ballard Canyon.

Great conversation and coffee with our fellow tour riders and guide at the infamous Bulldog Cafe in Solvang where the Postal/Discovery teams used to hang out back in the day. Interestingly, every single picture of Lance Armstrong has been removed.

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And finally the luxurious Santa Ynez Inn – our home for the next two nights.

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Day Five:  Santa Ynez Loop (4/25/13)

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Day 5 started out great. Our ride was a loop around Santa Ynez through Happy Canyon and an optional climb of “The Fig”. The Fig is Mount Figueroa, a legendary climb in Santa Barbara county. I hadn’t decided whether I was going to do the climb or not, I would decide at the base, depending on how I felt. I didn’t feel great and made the very wise decision to not attempt it. I did ride 1 1/2 miles of the road that takes you to the base of the climb and even it was steep (see the elevation profile on the Garmin details).

Beautiful too.

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The plan today was to ride back through Happy Canyon (love that name) and Santa Ynez and Los Olivos past Neverland Ranch (yep) and to wait for the two riders and support van to come down the descent of The Fig.

As the rest of us made our way through Los Olivos I started feeling dizzy and nauseous. I thought I needed food so I had a gel and a pack of shot blocks. I continued to feel worse, but kept pedaling. Mark joined up with me and we waited under the shade of a tree for the others.

Once they arrived and it was time to head back I did something I’ve actually never done. I got into the support van and quit. I’ve never quit a ride, but I couldn’t go on. I was so dizzy I could hardly stand. Once I got back to the Santa Ynez Inn it went downhill from there. If you have ever had food poisoning, you know. If you haven’t you don’t want to know!


Day Six:  Santa Ynez-Topanga (4/26/13)

I decided to give it a go the next morning. It was bad enough missing yesterday afternoon’s ride (downhill!) and the last (and best from what I heard) dinner with the group, I wasn’t going to miss the final ride too.

It was an out and back route from the Santa Ynez Inn to Topanga State Park. It was a fairly easy 21 miles, but it took all I had to do it. I’m so glad I did.

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In closing, the California Central Coast tour was great, and beautiful, but I would rate it below our 2011 California Coast and Wine Country tour which took us through Sonoma County and from Sea Ranch to Bodega Bay along the coast on Highway 1. Both have beautiful scenery – California is scenic wherever you go it seems. Overall though I would give the edge to the 2011 tour and no, not because of my food poisoning this trip!

Total mileage for the Tour: 229 miles  Total Ascent: 8300 ft.

30 Days of Biking – Day 24

Today was one of those days on the bike that perfectly captured what I love about riding a bike.

The ride started in a light drizzle and fog. Temperatures stayed cool even after the sun chased the fog and dampness away. We rode from Santa Maria thru the cycling town of Solvang before taking us to Santa Ynez, our home for the next two nights.

Typing on my android tablet is too tedious to write much but a few thoughts and memories:

Riding alongside field after field of beautiful crops of lettuce, cauliflower and bright red strawberries.

The speed of the farm workers working in the fields, literally running to pick.

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The strong scents of strawberries, cilantro, and the licorice scent of fennel.

The remoteness and quiet beauty of Foxen Canyon road.

Lunch at Zaca Mesa winery

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The steep little climb right after lunch/wine tasting

Climbing “the wall”, a very steep little climb and recognizing I can climb even when the grade is steep.

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The thrill of the twisty descent into Ballard Canyon.

Great conversation and coffee with my fellow tour riders and guide at the infamous Bulldog Cafe

And finally the luxurious Santa Ynez Inn

Stats: 48 miles, 2398 ft. of ascent, 1985 ft. descent

CA Central Coast Day 4 Santa Maria to Santa Ynez – Details

Posted from WordPress for Android

30 Days of Biking – Day 23

Today’s route took us along mostly rural roads through vineyards and farms as we made our way from Avila Beach to Santa Maria. The ride was similar in mileage and in ascent but vastly different in experience. We had far less traffic along today’s route and far more gorgeous scenery. Always a winner for me.

Mileage: 48.6 mi
Ascent: 1800 ft

CA Central Coast – Day 3 Avila Beach to Santa Maria – Details

Scenes from today’s ride:

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Posted from WordPress for Android

Bodega Bay-Petaluma Stage 6

Friday, October 21, 2011

Bodega Bay to Petaluma

Stage 6, our last day of riding, would take us back to Petaluma, where we began Sunday, October 16.

I was a stronger cyclist when I rode into Petaluma than when I rode out on the 16th. We all were I think. I was tested more as a cyclist on this tour than on the tour we did last year – because of the climbing – we actually rode more miles in the tour last year. I plan to build on what I learned and on my increased fitness – leg strength primarily – and continue to work on both during the off-season.

By the end of today my bike computer would say we had ridden 245 miles and climbed 16,753 feet.

Stage 6 began as all our days did, around the table at breakfast. After breakfast I beat it over to the car and trailer to make sure our stuff got on the trailer! 

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We had another cool, brilliantly sunny day! The weather could not be beat on this trip. I had heard October was the best month to visit this part of California, based on our experience I have to believe it is.

After getting everything ready to go for the day’s ride we paused for pictures. We were a picture happy group!

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Today’s route on paper appeared that it would be the least scenic of the week. We were leaving the coast behind and would ride through predominately farmland. The highlight of the day instead of being beautiful scenery would be food: the Tomales bakery and later in PetaIuma lunch at In-N-Out Burger – both of which I looked forward to.

While we did ride mainly through farmland – I happen to like farmland and wide open spaces both of which dominated the landscape of day 6. It definitely had its own beauty.

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The route followed rolling terrain with a couple of “memorable” climbs – memorable in that they hurt. The most “memorable” climb was right before Tomales and Mike was up at the top taking pictures and offering encouragement. Hope I looked better than I felt.

How I felt improved significantly when I came to Tomales bakery and got even better after some kind of delicious breadstick thing which I inhaled. The bakery was crowded with cyclists from a local club and our group was there as well.

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Shortly after leaving Tomales we turned onto the locally well-known Chileno Valley Road. I can see why it’s a favorite of cyclists – very little traffic, nice surface, easy up and down terrain and beautiful open space. Gaye, Rod, Mark and I rode it together. None of us were in a hurry for the day to end so we stopped frequently to take pictures and enjoy the ride.

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Where the hell are we?

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Once we left Chileno Valley we were on the outskirts of Petaluma. We worked our way through town and over to our lunch stop.

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After lunch it was a short ride to the hotel where everyone was busy getting ready to leave.

I was sorry to see the tour end, I loved riding every day, but who doesn’t. Unlike last year’s tour there was no “farewell” dinner the evening after our last day of riding, most of the group left the afternoon we returned to Petaluma Sheraton so goodbyes were quick.

We began as a group of 16 strangers but ended as friends. That’s what happens on a bike tour if you’re lucky. My new friends are people I wish I lived closer to so we could bike together.

With any luck at least some of us will ride together on another tour some day.

I would add that Undiscovered Tours is an exceptional company. From the guides, Mike and Neal – to the bikes and gear – to the accommodations – to the route – it was all topnotch.

I’ve enjoyed reliving the tour writing the blogs and posting pictures, I hope you’ve enjoyed reading them. I love riding and I love writing about riding and the places we visit. It would be great to have a deal where I could do different bike tours and write and post pictures about them – have blog will travel!

Sea Ranch – Bodega Bay: Stage 5

October 20, 2011 – Day 5

A funny thing happened on the way to Bodega Bay – we were dropped.

By everyone including the team car! In the words of Paul Sherwen and Phil Liggett we were in no-man’s land.

Not really, but I love Sherwen and Liggett–isms and, we kind of were in the middle of nowhere or at the very least, seriously off the back.

When we went down with our bikes to meet everyone else – no one was around. Initially we thought maybe they were in another area of the Sea Ranch Lodge property so we walked around a bit looking but then it dawned on us that everyone had GONE. And we still had our luggage.

So I did what anyone would do in that situation – I pulled out my camera and started taking pictures.

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How did we manage to get left behind? What happened was after our group breakfast Mark and I took a walk along the path in the fog. My understanding was because of the fog we were going to leave a little later than normal; typically we met at the car about 9:30am.

The already beautiful and serene bluffs overlooking the ocean that the lodge sits on were even more so in the fog.

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The walk was worth the time it took, we got to the parking lot to meet the others at 9:45. Once we went inside to check with the front desk, the woman working said we had just missed them by 10 minutes. She put in a call to Terry, Mike and Neal and left messages, we left our luggage and filled our bottles with water.

The Ride:

We headed out onto Highway 1 and the fog was THICK! I was really wishing I had my flashing Blinky taillight. We stayed close to each other and since Mark had on the brighter of the two jerseys he rode in back. I was nervous about riding in fog and traffic. I can be more than a little paranoid about getting hit by a car but as they say – it’s not paranoia if they’re really out to get you… I have been hit before, back in 1995 but once hit – always cautious.

Riding on Highway 1 though made the fog, traffic and nerves all fade into the background. Who hasn’t dreamed about riding (or driving for that matter) on it. It’s the day of the tour that I most anticipated. It lived up and surpassed all expectations.

At times Highway 1 took us through deep and cool woods, other times high on cliffs overlooking the ocean. And still other times almost level with the sea, but then only to go back up (and up) to where the only thing between you on your bike and the ocean below was a few hundred feet of air. No guardrails,  just you and the cars and trucks, the white fog line and the dirt shoulder.

I didn’t really think about any of that until later. My mind and heart and soul were immersed in everything that surrounded me. Total immersion in what lay to my right and in riding.

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The fog came and went but the beauty and peacefulness went on and on.

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Mark had fun on the descent in the two pictures just above. He had to slow because of the travel trailer. He was still smiling when I caught up to him.

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We were to have lunch in Jenner at the Café Aquatica but didn’t expect that any of our group to still be there but lo and behold they were! Neal, Mike and Joelie were there and Gayle and Rod were just heading out. Neal hung around to ride with us – no one gets left behind motto of tours – and Mark and I had lunch – a delicious bowl of clam chowder – the best of the trip for me.

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Jenner is a tiny town but on the map with cyclists because of the great riding nearby. Jenner is also where the Russian River meets the Pacific.

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After lunch Neal, Mark and I rode together – sort of easy rolling hills – still with plenty of beautiful scenes to try and capture with a camera.

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It was a short ride from Jenner to Bodega Bay and our lodging for the night, the very pretty Bodega Bay Lodge. When we checked in we were informed there would be wine and cheese at 5 so off to shower and dress.  Beer before shower, but not wine, just wouldn’t fit.

We enjoyed another beautiful sunset.

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Tonight was our last dinner together. What a fast week! What a fabulous week! What a fabulous group!

The one thing I regret is we didn’t get a group photo of everyone. Too bad, we were really a nice looking bunch.

We dined in a private room at the Duck Club and pretty much everyone had a camera, or an IPad or both. Lots of pictures were taken and downloaded/uploaded and lots of laughs shared. It was a great evening.

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When dessert looks and tastes this good it deserves a picture.

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For the day we rode 41 miles and climbed a surprising 3201 ft.

Sea Ranch to Bodega Bay

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