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DAY PACKING – RIDE OUT THE CITY!

An interesting article by Miles on bike packing & bag gear for touring around us. There are some great bike tours in the area taking in the scenery of a very unique part of China. We suggest starting in Jingdezhen and heading East from there past us to Hangzhou. Stunning, good food, and full of culture.

Author: Miles Gibbons, April 2019

Generally speaking, cities aren’t a great place to ride. Don’t kid yourself, even if you live in Portland, Copenhagen or Amsterdam, the bicycle is still at odds with pedestrians, stop lights/signs and of course automotive vehicles.

Out of the city isn’t devoid of risk, but at least its a little more worth it, due to calmer, more natural surroundings. For whatever reason you ride a bike, you can’t deny the subconscious effect of being with nature. The Japanese even have a specific word for spending time with nature; ‘Shinrin Yoku’, or ‘森林浴’. This literally translates as ‘Forest bathing’.

Riding out from town can take 5 minutes, or 2 hours, depending on where you live. And you can ride out and stay out for a day, two, a week or the rest of your life (wouldn’t that be nice!).

The term ‘Bikepacking’ has come from riders taking their possessions, survival kits and shelter out into the wilderness (just like backpacking), but on a mountain bike and generally without relying on regular, and heavy, touring racks and pannier bags. This means the load you’re carrying with you is lighter and more nimble, especially on rough and tough terrain.

From the early 2000’s, this term has evolved into being the general term for many new and old niche riding disciplines, when carrying possessions in bags on your bike. More and more ultra-endurance events (both on and off-road) such as the ‘Tour Divide’ and the ‘Transcontinental’ have been developed by hard-core bikepackers, and are the ‘poster child’ extremes of it.

But the most accessible entry into it, for most of us that live in cities, is to pack our possessions strap them to the bike, step out our front door, and ride.

I’ll call this type of riding ‘Day-Packing’. More than your regular road ride; a day long adventure by bike can be anywhere from 6-20 hours out on the road. You need to become more self sufficient when you’re doing this, as you are more likely to get further from the safety of a bike shop, a convenience store, and perhaps even people that speak your language!

You should learn how to fix your punctures, know how to check your bike for faults, and carry things that might be important to you for a day away from home.

Weather and temperature can change through the day, and so can your body temperature, so wear and take kit for every condition you’re expecting. Changes in elevation can be a key factor in this.

Everyone has a different bike and set up, make sure you take the right spares for some minor upsets. Most of us have cellphones and ride in signal these days so any major mishaps on a day ride can be solved with a quick phone call.

THE CHECKLIST

FIX

  • Pump
  • Inner tubes (two is good)
  • Glueless patches (These are repair patches that already have glue on them).
  • Tyre boot or bank note.
  • Tyre levers (at least two).
  • A Multi-tool with an inbuilt chain tool and spare link.

EAT

Homemade snacks can be a good way to avoid buying unhealthy snacks at shops when you’re body’s in sugar and salt debt. Check out GCN’s videoon how to make these.

If you’re planning to have a sit-down meal mid-way through, carry enough food with you to do 4/5 hours riding without stopping at a shop. Thats around 2 pieces of fruit and a few energy bars, depending on your riding speed and metabolism.

DRINK

2 x large bottles (750ml/24oz)

Whether you fill them or not, this gives you the option to do so, and also to have two different types of drinks (drinking one type of drink can get boring). Use electrolytes, fresh water, whatever you prefer.

EXTRA CLOTHING

Unless you are certain the weather is warm and stable, I would always take:

  • Arm warmers.
  • Leg warmers.
  • Lightweight wind/rainproof jacket
  • And/Or a lightweight windproof or insulating gilet.

Wearing clothing with reflective panels is always a good thing to do as well, especially as cars these days use day lights. Reflective on moving body parts (legs down) is more dynamic and therefore more visible.

SAFETY

– A helmet is a given.

– Reflective we’ve already touched on.

Lastly, a front and rear bike light that are powerful enough to light the way, not just to be seen by others. For a front light this tends to be something that can produce above 400 lumens. The rear light only needs to be 50 – 100 lumens to be very visible.

You can take a small set of emergency lights as well if you worry about battery life.

ESSENTIALS

  • Your phone!
  • Money!
  • ID!
  • Insurance card (if you have one).
  • A small ‘point & shoot’ camera (If you want to be a bit more professional with your recording of the event).
  • A bike specific GPS with a pre loaded route and full battery (If you’re not sure of your route).
  • A small battery pack (If you want to be safe about your GPS and phone).

BAGS

Some things should be easily available to you while you’re actually turning the pedals. For food, phone, camera, small clothing accessories, consider either a small, top loading Handlebar Bag, Top Tube Bag, or a Frame Bag. Size and position are down to your preference and exact use case.

The other items from your load, such as spares and larger clothing items, can go in a large Saddle Bag, or a small Seat Pack. These are tucked aerodynamically out of the way, but are still very easy to access when off the bike.

If you decide to do an over-nighter (a 2 day ride), and you’re not camping, nothing much changes except for the capacity of your bags. You may want a fresh pair of socks, or a total kit change. You may want to bring a different pair of gloves for warmer or colder weather. You could take more spares, it doesn’t hurt, but definitely take that battery pack for phone, GPS and lights. Adding a Handlebar Bagto your set-up can be another way to add more space and balance it across the bike.

In the end, everybody, every bike, and every place is different. Follow the guide we’ve given, play it safe, then as you become more experienced, you can decide what you think is a necessity, or isn’t, and tune your packing list accordingly. There may be other things specific to the region you live in, that you should take with you (such as bear spray in an area with a wild bear population), so sit and have a think before you go to bed, the evening before your ride.

In the meantime, you can remember these 3 top tips:

  1. ALWAYS check the weather before you dress and ride. (It may not only make you change your dress, you may take one more inner tube, or make you do a couple extra checks of your brakes.
  2. Go short before you go long (if you’re new to it).
  3. Start with everything you think you might need (the worst that’ll happen is you go a little slower!), then trim down with experience!
  4. …..oh, there is a 4th, and enjoy your ride!

This article is sponsored by Roswheel Bicycle bags.

You can follow Roswheel on Instagram @roswheel , or on Facebook at /roswheel2008

TO see more of their products, go to roswheel.com

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MSR – Mixed Surface Riding

A brief intro to the types of surfaces we will be riding for the Dirty Ride and the gear we suggest. For the Nearly Dirty Ride road bikes and road shoes will be fine.

Our Mixed Surface Riding / Adventure Riding / Gravel Riding is all about:

Interesting and technical routes, with a bit of road, off road, and some short hikes.

MSR are about touching the local environment through your bike, experiencing different Surfaces, Different Grades, Different Obstacles and Different Views. Its not about coming first, DNFing is not an issue, its not about cutting it short, thats all fine! Its about Resilience, overcoming challenges while experiencing a beautiful rural environment.

Surfaces & Obstacles

From great roads through to single track.
Following paths that provide great views of the landscape.
Various types of obstacles and challenges to overcome.

Gradients

Flat:If we remember there might be some flat sections but not sure. Maybe 400m.

Gentle Up:5% or below. Yes there is some on great tarmac.

Hard Up: 8% to 12%. Quite a bit on concrete. 

Extreme Up: 25% or thereabouts for some special sections. 

Down:What goes up goes down. Some 10km fast descents on perfect tarmac. Some other stuff too………. New brake pads are seriously recommended.

Some flat but mostly little hills.

Equipment choices

We are receiving lots of questions about the kinds of bike that are suitable for Dirty Weekend. Of course, a dedicated mixed surface race (MSR) or gravel bike is great; but is in no way a requirement. A mountain bike, touring bike, cyclocross bike or lightweight road bike (with some minor modifications) will all work. Overall, MSR bikes will be quicker due to their combination of low weight, greater comfort and more stable handling (due to wider tires run at lower pressures and typically longer geometry), and stronger stopping power from disk brakes. However, the type of bike you turn up on matters less than your experience and resilience. That being said; here are three key gear choices that we think are the most important when tackling events such as Dirty Weekend.

1. Shoes

MSR rides are not suitable for road shoes! There are numerous slippery or uneven surfaces on the course (including some minimal walking on stone steps) that would be a nightmare to navigate in road shoes. And if mud gets in the cleats, your pedals will likely stop working.  We recommend mountain bike shoes and cleats (there are many cheap options, and they are great if you are considering future touring and adventure riding). Otherwise, flat peddles and hiking shoes or sturdy trainers work.

2. Tires

The best tire choice for an event is often a source of endless debate. There is no right or wrong answer; although wider and tubeless is better for MSR events. Of course, your tire choice is dependent on your bike: mountain bike tires are too wide for a CX frame, for example.

Here are your options, in (approximate) order of preference:

  1. MSR tires such as WTB Riddlers or Panaracer Gravelkings are usually semi-slick: they have no tread or only shallow knobs in the middle, and larger knobs on the sides for cornering traction. They work well on roads, excel on hardpack trails, but lose grip in muddy conditions.
  2. Mountain bike tires (these days, typically 2.2 inches or wider) are available for all types of off-road conditions (from hardpack to deep mud). However, the control gained from the larger knobs and increased width will also increase the rolling resistance on roads. We recommend that you choose a tire with a dense central tread pattern, as it will roll better on tarmac. 
  3. Knobbly cyclocross tires. Similar to MSR tires, but usually much narrower (33mm is the usual maximum width). Faster on roads than MSR or mountain bike tires, but will offer less stability and control in rockier conditions due to the narrower width and corresponding higher air pressure. 
  4. Road bike tires (especially wider foul condition tires such as Specialized Roubaix or Continental 4 Seasons) are workable, but you will be forced to dismount more frequently due to lack of traction. You will also probably puncture more often. However, you will make up time on good road surfaces. It will be uncomfortable but just about manageable on some of the rougher descents.

We suggest you go tubeless, especially with anything at or above 30mm in width. This will almost eliminate pinch flats, smaller punctures will seal themselves, and you can run much lower pressures for better traction.

3. Gearing

There is plenty of climbing on the Dirty Weekend course. Most elevation gain is from sustained climbs on shallower gradients, but there is also a number of shorter, sharp ascents (around 200m elevation gain) with gradients hitting 25%. A decent climbing gear is highly advisable! We recommend:

  1. 1*11 – 1 to 1 gearing. We like 42 front 10-42 rear.
  2. Road compact. An 11-28 cassette will be a grind; fit an 11-32 if you have one. 
  3. Mountain bike gearing. Excellent for the rough stuff, but you will spin out on long downhills (and flat roads, if you are a strong rider).

No matter how light or strong you are; it’s always nicer to be able to spin up the last hills, rather than be too tired and have to push. 

Equipment choice is a personal thing, and it will be interesting to see what works best on the day. The right equipment is important, but at the end of the day it’s your legs and resilience (plus enough food & water) that will get you through the race. 

Various other things are important to get correct on the day:

Tech: We need your GPX / GPS files so please use Strava or similar. Routing will be done through a GPX file we give out 24h before the race. Our timing will be done by a simple stop watch with checking of your GPX file for the top 3 positions in each category. There are two check points you will need your cards stamped. Otherwise you could try cutting corners and taking shortcuts but that will end up in very long walks over mountains. We suggest you bring a well charged phone with wechat so you can chat with us if any problem. A small battery bank for phone or other charging is also nice to have.

Spares – 2 tubes, pump and tools etc. Usual Stuff for a long self supported ride.

Food / Drink – Snacks and water will be provided at some stops and there are shops along the way. Nutrition and hydration will be key to how you perform on the day and should not be under estimated.

Lights – Some people might need so best to bring. Flashlights can be bought from local stores along the way but really only as last resort.

We will provide a GPX route and printed map the day before. This shows the drink stands / check points and key climbs and sections of the courses.


More Q&A’s will be provided by EdC and JustinJ along with some of our sponsors. Email or wechat us any questions. More Information on the Dirty and Nearly Dirty Races – www.wildhomestay.com/dirty/


Many thanks to our generous sponsors for the prizes.

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Wildcycling, Weekend Rides 野骑之旅

Our local form of “gravel” “adventure” riding. 我们本地特色的碎石小路探险骑。

Wildcycling 野骑

Some competitive fun, come and compete against some of the best amateur cyclists in Asia. 同亚洲最好的业余自行车手们的骑行竞技乐趣。

Leader Boards

Gallery of some of our spring and early summer visits. 春季和初夏的到付的客人剪影。

Spring & Early Summer Visits 春季和初夏行记

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Spring & Early Summer Visits 春季和初夏行记

Been a busy spring and early summer. A few pictures 野趣乡居经历了忙碌的春季和初夏,照片记录了访客的点滴:

May Visits  五月之行
Some nice rides during may   5月骑行

Josh’s Everest  Josh‘s 的无间断骑行挑战
8 times up Daming – 20h or something in the wet and cloud). Hypnotic. 在云雾湿气之间联系20小时左右往返大明山骑行路段8次之多。

Check out Josh’s full account!  可liu’lan浏览Josh的相册全集

 

April May  江南之春行记

Various guests came to stay and some great rides on old and new routes.  各方游客来访,进行了新旧路线的骑行。