It feels soooo good to not sit on a bike seat today. A chance to rest my legs and pressure points and to refleect.
I am on track to my itinerary. I have traveled 406 miles to date, right about on the target of 40+ miles per day. The riding elevations have been accommodating, being near Colorado Springs elevations, if not below. I am feeling a bit stronger than the start.
Climbing - The route has been kind to me as I estimate I have done 18000' of climbing in the first 10 days. I estimated I would be climbing 3000' per day, so the future hold some big days, me thinks. I will hopefully be in better shape for those.
Sag - Glenda sagging with the trailer is working out well. Glenda is getting more and more comfortable with the trailer towing and even set up. She is getting a chance to explore a bit as well. We have a morning routine where we often depart at the same time after jointly breaking camp. Of course, fresh food, showers, heater and cooling make the camp ritual more amenable. I will mostly certainly miss Glendas company and camping amenities when she heads back home in less than a week.
Other riders - I must have met and talked to a dozen other divide riders, many are doing it south to north. Some observations.
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All other bikes were hard tails. Only a couple had front shocks, one fellow, Mike Shrek had a Surly touring bike with mountain tires; several did comment on my nice bike, envious of the front shock methinks.
Only one other couple with a BOB
The predominate gear carrying method is a bikepacking setup followed by panniers. Suffice to say, I have a lot more gear than some of the leaner bike packers. I will probably triage my clothes down a bit.
More than one rider is using general delivery to get food drops, rotate gear, or replacement gear ( size 13 bike shoes)
Most start at Banff or the Mexico border, though one started at Canadian border and a couple from Pagosa Springs were doing the route pieces over several seasons, working theirway north from WY this summer.
Two or 3 were my age or older, but I estimate not more than 5 years older.
There is about an even mix of solo riders and groups by headcount.
No one seems to be following the books itinerary like we.have been, all have been doing mo re miles. A couple of parties were mostly focusing on mileage.
Montana - on my 4th and l longest visit to this state, I continue to be impressed. It IS BIG SKY country. The valleys are long and wide, watered by substantial creeks and rivers. One see more of the Cabellas sort of outdoor recreation over REI type, which is different than Colorado. The mountains are lower and many are mellower, but are still familar, with aspen and lodgepole forests, but accented with more sage and parkland. The lodgepole.here appear to.have been hit hard by the beetle as well.
By mellower, I refer to the fact I can ride a loaded bike over a half dozen continental divide crossing and many other minor watershed divides. When I think of the continental divide in Colorado, I don't think of gentle grades on gravel roads to mellow forested passes like I experienced here.
Populations here are impressive;, I have seen a LOT of cattle, and not alot of people along the route, even in the forested mountain areas. I think people recreate here, it just that there ia a lot of space in a sparsely populated state.
Looking forward - Uncertainty is heading our way.
Glenda and I have been on a scheduled itinersry, wirh reservations for many stips.aling the qay. Our last two nights of reservations will finish up Thursday.
Glenda needs to score a campsite in the very popular Tetons NP, and the route after that has closures due to fire evacuations from the Lava Mountain fire, perhaps blocking one of 2 automobile routes south as well. I may well need to skip a few days of the route and jump to Pinedale, however that direct auto route closed to traffic this morning due to another, larger fire south of Jackon. Getting Glenda heading back to our kids, and getting my bike, BOB and myself to Pinedale abd relaunched may be another seperate adventure in itself. On the plus side, may get to explore more of the WY-ID borderlands. Looks like they have mountains!