Monday, July 28, 2008

Yesterday I made my third attempt of the summer to get up the the 2.75 mile climb of the App Gap. I have to ride uphill 3 miles just to get to the "starting point".

Here's what the elevation looks like from the starting point to the peak.

The first arrow is where I've bailed previously (twice). The second is about where I got to last night (2.5 miles). The yellow line is the peak. You can see that the last bit is a freaking wall.

appgap

I almost bailed at the same spot again last night but goaded myself to the next sign (50 ft away) then to the end of the guard rail (another 100 ft) and then to the picnic tables (another 200 ft). Then once I got past the picnic tables, it eased up again and I got all the way to the last wall, but there was just no way I could do the last little bit. Now that I realize that it gets easier past that first spot, I can definitely push myself through it again.

However, since I had started out hoping to just get past my last bail point and maybe to the picnic tables, I was surprised to get as far as I did. I wasn't the least bit disappointed not to get to the top because that wasn't my goal.

On the way up, I saw my neighbor, Joe, flying down on his bike. He does the gap ride all the time. It's not big deal at all for him. :-) It's his little ride for when he doesn't have time to go out for a real ride.

One of the things that helped me was deciding to just go right up into my granny gear at the start - save my strength, not my gears.

Okay back to work.

Monday, July 28, 2008 9:32:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [2]  | 
Monday, July 28, 2008 10:56:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Ahhh....the day's of riding App Gap. Julie, I love reading all your Vermont posts as I miss living up north - although I don't miss riding my bike in sub zero temperatures!

Once you make it to the top you can start playing "App Gap Ping Pong" :) During my Mt. Washington training days I would start on your side and do 2 ascents on each side! The trick to that last section is to stay seated as long as possible.

Andrew
Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:08:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Haha! I remember you telling me about that and I was thinking about that (and laughing) as I was struggling up. Stay in the saddle! I'll remember that. Thanks. Sure is different than riding in the rockies - those 16 mile long 6% grade climbs.
Julia Lerman
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