Quantcast

Flash - Tour de Fat Ass

24 Aug 2008 09:00
24 Aug 2008 13:00

What? A 125 km road ride from Stanley Park up Cypress, Seymour, then out to Indian Arm and back to Stanley Park

Who? Anyone with the equipment, skill and stamina. There are steep hills here, experienced riders with fully functional bikes (especially brakes) should come on the whole course as we will be coming down the mountains and out in traffic. Please wear clothing that will make you visible for the conditions and be prepared for a long hard ride. For a much less extreme challenge if you're riding a banana seat bike with no brakes consider riding with us to the Lion's Gate bridge and then around Park Drive.

Where? We will meet at Stanley Park near Mile 0 and go from there. The route will follow Park Drive through Stanley Park to the Lions Gate bridge then towards West Vancouver and up to the Cypress Parking lot where we turnaround. Washrooms and water are available here. From here we return to Marine Drive and head out towards Seymour. We follow Mount Seymour Parkway up to the resort parking lot where we turnaround. Again washrooms and water. From here we head down Indian River Drive which we follow to the end before returning to Stanley Park and taking the east side of Park Drive back to Mile 0.

When? Sunday, August 24th, 9:00 AM

Entry: There is no fee and you don't need to be a member of Club Fat Ass to participate in a Flash event, however whining is not allowed. No registration is required but please indicate your participation via the comment form below. You are responsible for your own well being and safety and should be self sufficient.

Please read the Release of All Claims. By participating in this event you agree to the terms of the Release of All Claims.

http://mapmyrun.com/ride/canada/bc/vancouver/794595261556

 

Comments

Ryan Conroy's picture

Tour de Sogging Wet Fat Ass

I know I posted this last minute so I wasn't expecting a lot of turnout. This morning when I woke up to a the steady falling of water droplets I knew 'Rain No Train' Jackson probably wouldn't be showing up at Mile 0. He was the only one who had posted expressing interest but I figured I would pop by Stanley Park on the way to Cypress in case someone decided to show up. I don't know who would be stupid enough to want to go ripping down mountains at 75 km/h in the pouring rain other than me though. I stopped for a couple of minutes at Mile 0 and when I didn't see anyone I headed off down Park Drive. The ride through the park was nice and flat for a warmup even though I was soaked before I had even got there despite a cycling rain jacket and water resistant booties. After crossing the bridge, I saw a new cycling lane that had been completed, and having been used of being on the other side followed the sign to West Vancouver rather than North Vancouver. After a bit of a detour I found my way up to the other side of the highway and headed to the Cypress Bowl turnoff. The weather began to worsen, and its funny since its August but I thought to myself that the second I saw anything that even resembled snow in the mountains above me I would get the hell out of there. It wasn't quite that bad but it definitely got worse and worse the higher I went, mostly just due to lower temperature and much worse wind conditions. The KM signs ticked away slowly especially when I would come around the corner to be hit by crazy blasts of wind that always seemed to come at me head on. I was shivering despite climbing steadily for some time and wearing a thermal long sleeve cycling jersey under my rain jacket. I swear it said the altitude was 675 metres on the mapping website I used but the brown posts kept going until 885 or so. Finally it flattened out and I could see some power lines, then some ski slopes, then the parking lot. Normally I would have been raring to rip back down the hill but I was shivering badly, and I wasn't going to be pedalling much for some time, so I decided to stop in the ski resort wahsroom and warm up for a few minutes. After a couple minutes I decided there was no time like the present and headed back down. It is the first time I have been able to ride this bike I recently bought off my sister (a titanium-frame Quintana Roo Ti-Phoon with the aero bars and all that) on a long downhill and even with the weather conditions it was a blast. There was no traffic due to the weather so I was able to just go in the middle of the lane and go full out. When I recently did a 1/2 iron distance triathlon on a hilly course I borrowed a road bike and I noticed that although I passed well over a hundred people on the bike, on the downhills despite pedalling my ass off I was getting passed by people with the aero bars who weren't even pedalling. By the time I reached the bottom I was shivering with frozen hands and feet, so I decided to skip the climb up Seymour for today and save that for a day with better weather. So if anyone wants to do this, or a portion of, before there's snow up there let me know. I am trying to get out for a long ride once a week.
Sibylle's picture

Hi Ryan, Good for you for

Hi Ryan,

Good for you for perservering up Cypress.  We were thinking of you!  There are definetely nicer days for long bike rides.  Hope you have warmed up by now.
Ean Jackson's picture

Interested, Weather Depending

Hey Ryan, My fat ass has not felt the hard leather of my road bike seat yet this year. According to my new years resolutions (ride at least once a week), I'm a bit, uh, behind on my goals. The triathlon in the Olympics have inspired me. No way I'll be able to keep up to you for the whole 125K, but will aim to meet you for at least the first bit and one hill (Cypress). I'm out if the weather is crappy 'cause I hate to clean my bike.
Ryan Conroy's picture

Could have your bike cleaned for free...

You should have come. It was coming down so hard up there that mother nature would have washed your bike for you all by herself. Not mention exfoliating your face and any other exposed skin on the way down.
Ean Jackson's picture

My Bike Was Clean...

and it still is! Good on 'ya for taking the plunge, as it were. I tipped a beer to you around noon, but really didn't think you'd be out there. How about a rain date? Ha ha ha.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.