Kancamagus double traverse 100k
I got up at 3am on Saturday and hit the road for the 2 hour
drive to Conway. A large regular from Dunkin’s and satellite radio helped pass
the time. I arrived at the Eastern end of the Kancamagus Highway (route 112)
just before sunrise. http://www.kancamagushighway.com/
I had planned on parking at the Saco River Ranger station but
was surprised to find that parking was limited to 30 minutes. I ended up
driving up 112 for .7 miles to the Albany town forest parking area. It took me
a few minutes to get my gear together and get the ElliptiGo prepared for the
ride. My goal was a double-travers of the highway, up over the pass then down
to the Lincoln Woods parking lot then returning. The 100 kilometers (62.1
miles) would double my longest ride and this was no flat ride with over 4,000’
of climb/descent. I’d done part of the Kanc on bike (last year) but never a
traverse. There is a bike race that does the first 21 miles of my ride and
riding the Kanc is considered New England gem.
I got my gear together (2 liters of water, 4 gels, 2 energy
bars, emergency cell phone) and was off just after sunrise. I started out
wearing a long sleeve t-shirt, it was almost a bit chilly with the breeze on the
ElliptiGo. Earlier I had written up some splits along the way to help break up
the ride and give me some milestones. The going was a bit slower than I
expected as the road climbed at a gentle grade (less than 100’ per mile) for the
first 10 miles. I chugged along at about 13 mph trying to keep an even effort
but not over-exert this early on. Ten to fifteen miles were a mostly flat
section that included a ½ mile that was under construction and slowed me way
down on the rocks and dirt (not good for the Go). The real climbing started at
15 with a tough stretch up to the Sugar hill scenic overlook at about 17
miles.
Sugar hill seemed like a good place to take a quick break. I
jumped off, got a couple of pictures, got out of my long sleeve, and was back on
the Go in four minutes. That would be my longest break of the day. The
remaining climb to the pass was slow but steady I was cranking out 7-8 MPH as
the grade increased from 5-6% with a couple of 8-9% stretches. Having driven it
many times was helpful and knowing that there would be an 8 mile downhill to
Lincoln Woods kept it from being too tough. I hit the top (21 miles) in a bit
under 2 hours and took a 2 minute break to get pictures at the pass.
Zoom! What a blast coming down the road. There were very
few cars as it was still only 7:30am, so I zipped along down the 5-7% grades. I
thought I’d be going faster based on some of the mountain rides I’d done but I
guess the grade wasn’t quite steep enough to really get rolling. I hit 31 mph a
few times but mostly just cruised about 25 mph. I was still working and very
rarely coasted.
I hit the Lincoln Wood turnaround in 2:12 (2:18 total time)
and grabbed a gel and some water before getting going. A couple of bikers had
gone by right before I stopped and I was kind of hoping to follow them. The
climb back up to the pass was shorter going in this direction (8 miles instead
of 21) and there wasn’t quite as much climb. But at this point I was now on my
longest ride ever, so I was a bit nervous about going too hard. I did keep
pushing anyway, figuring the last 21 miles would be downhill. About ½ mile
before the pass I saw the bikers who had ascended and were heading past me back
down to Lincoln. It was great to see the pass come into sight again. I reached
it at 3:13 into the ride and 37.6 total miles.
I thought the next part would be “easy” but I was wrong. The
first few miles weren’t’ bad with some fun descents. After 45 miles I started
to get tired and I was worrying about the 17 miles that were left, part of it
may have been just not fueling enough. One gel and 1 liter of water probably is
a little less than need for 4+ hours of riding. I took a quick 1 minute break
with 10 miles to go, just enough time to take another gel and drink some water.
Next time I’ll have to set up the gels so they are more accessible and I won’t
have to stop (I had a camelback for the water so I was able to drink any time I
wanted). After the break the miles breezed by, I guess I really did need that
gel, and before I knew it I was back at the Albany town forest. I was pleased
with the time 4:13 (moving time) or just one hour from the top and 2:01 from
Lincoln. The final add-on 3.3 miles was not the greatest most scenic part
(out/back on Route 16) but I wanted to bring it in at exactly 100 kilometers,
finishing in a total time of 4:35 and a moving time of 4:26. I was happy with
how it went, no major issues (thank you Paul Bazanchuk for being on standby in
the event I needed roadside assistance) and at the fast end of what I thought I
could do this in.
Here is the data on the ride: http://www.strava.com/activities/167976510
I’m not sure what adventure is next but maybe a 100 mile ride
is in my future.
Personal bests set:
Longest ride – 62.1
Mile – 2:03
5k – 6:45
10k – 15:25
½ marathon – 40:13
Marathon – 1:23:25
Splits:
Location
|
O'all
dist
|
Section
dist
|
Climb
|
Climb
per mile
|
Grade
|
Splits
|
Rolling
time
|
MPH
|
Albany town
forest
|
||||||||
Passaconaway
Rd
|
5.7
|
5.7
|
420
|
73.7
|
1.40%
|
26:34
|
0:26:34
|
12.9
|
Bear Notch
|
11.4
|
5.7
|
-20
|
-3.5
|
-0.07%
|
26:27
|
0:53:01
|
12.9
|
Downes
Brook
|
13.7
|
2.3
|
20
|
8.7
|
0.16%
|
09:17
|
1:02:18
|
14.9
|
Sugar Hill
lot
|
16.5
|
2.8
|
420
|
150.0
|
2.84%
|
13:55
|
1:16:13
|
12.1
|
Break
|
04:00
|
1:20:13
|
||||||
Sawyer River
Tr
|
17.7
|
1.2
|
320
|
266.7
|
5.05%
|
08:17
|
1:28:30
|
8.7
|
Kanc Pass
lot
|
21
|
3.3
|
1010
|
306.1
|
5.80%
|
26:26
|
1:54:56
|
7.5
|
Break
|
01:55
|
1:56:51
|
||||||
Hancock
lot
|
23.2
|
2.2
|
-610
|
-277.3
|
-5.25%
|
05:40
|
2:02:31
|
23.3
|
Big Rock
camp
|
27.1
|
3.9
|
-700
|
-179.5
|
-3.40%
|
09:29
|
2:12:00
|
24.7
|
Lincoln
Woods
|
29.3
|
2.2
|
-450
|
-204.5
|
-3.87%
|
06:00
|
2:18:00
|
22.0
|
Break
|
01:54
|
2:19:54
|
||||||
Big Rock
camp
|
31.5
|
2.2
|
450
|
204.5
|
3.87%
|
13:26
|
2:33:20
|
9.8
|
Hancock
lot
|
35.4
|
3.9
|
700
|
179.5
|
3.40%
|
22:13
|
2:55:33
|
10.5
|
Kanc Pass
lot
|
37.6
|
2.2
|
610
|
277.3
|
5.25%
|
18:21
|
3:13:54
|
7.2
|
Sawyer River
Tr
|
40.8
|
3.2
|
-1010
|
-315.6
|
-5.98%
|
08:07
|
3:22:01
|
23.7
|
Sugar Hill
lot
|
42.1
|
1.3
|
-320
|
-246.2
|
-4.66%
|
02:41
|
3:24:42
|
29.1
|
Bear Notch
|
47.2
|
5.1
|
-400
|
-78.4
|
-1.49%
|
18:13
|
3:42:55
|
16.8
|
Passaconaway
Rd
|
53.1
|
5.9
|
-355
|
-60.2
|
-1.14%
|
20:05
|
4:03:00
|
17.6
|
Break
|
01:13
|
4:04:13
|
||||||
Albany town
forest
|
58.8
|
5.7
|
-420
|
-73.7
|
-1.40%
|
18:26
|
4:22:39
|
18.5
|
Out/back
|
62.1
|
3.3
|
50
|
15.2
|
0.29%
|
12:37
|
4:35:16
|
15.7
|
4 comments:
Nice ride! Dave, how did you decide on your model of the ElliptiGo? I am looking into them...
Thanks Pixie! I decided based on the cost and what I'd use it for. I think the middle model (which is the one I got) is the best all-around deal.
Dave, How long did it take you to build up to this type of time on the Elliptigo? I have been thinking of getting one and putting it on a trainer (since I am a treadmill runner b/c my solo workouts take place at 0-dark-hundred) but have been concerned about how long it would take my legs to adapt to the motion given my lack of elliptical experience. I currently use a bike on trainer (low resistance, high cadence) for XT.
I didn't do much in the way of "long " rides leading up to this. I was riding about 12 miles per day for 2 weeks and then did a 50k ride the day before to give me some confidence. I didn't ride it super-hard so it was do-able this early in my training. Good luck!
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