Photo Blog: Working with Winter During Days 5 and 6 of #30daysofbiking
So often we mountain bikers fight against winter: we flee to the desert or to the South to ride our bikes, we complain about the snow and the rain, and we grumble and refuse to do anything when we can’t ride our beloved singletrack. However, I think that most of the time, it’s foolish to …
Singletracks may receive compensation for purchases made through any affiliate links in this article.
So often we mountain bikers fight against winter: we flee to the desert or to the South to ride our bikes, we complain about the snow and the rain, and we grumble and refuse to do anything when we can’t ride our beloved singletrack.
However, I think that most of the time, it’s foolish to rail against the weather and wish that we were in a different season. This is a general lesson I’ve been learning: longing after something that I just can’t have is a sure-fire way to create a spirit of discontentment and dissatisfaction, which is no way beneficial.
Rather, in order to live a happy, contented life, I’ve been learning to accept, and even embrace, what life throws at me, and that includes the curve balls from mother nature. This lesson applied directly last weekend when Salida got pounded with snow, rain, and cold weather. After a month of having dry singletrack out my back door, only to be denied it right at the beginning of the 30 Days of Biking challenge, this was the perfect time to learn to embrace winter, even during the month of April.
Day 5
Unfortunately, I didn’t make it home before the weather hit, so I got stuck finishing the last five or so miles of my ride in freezing-cold rain, which turned to snow. All a part of the challenge!
Day 6
Unfortunately, the snow got so fine and soft up high that I couldn’t pedal any longer. I topped out at about 11,200 feet, about a thousand vertical feet shy of the top of the pass. Still, all in all, it was a beautiful, snowy ride in the mountains!
I encourage you all to embrace what mother nature sends your way!
Variety is the spice of life.... and your story exhibits a good life lesson.
Having spent the last 27 years in northern Wisconsin embracing the weather has become a life necessity. Biking (of all varieties), hiking, running, snowshoeing, XC skiing and even the "time is short/weather is crap get out and walk on the road" have all become staples in our "get out and play" repertoire. It's nice to have the options to choose from for both weather and time constraints but also to keep things fresh.
One thing we're really looking forward to, living in BV, is the increased winter options of snow up in the mountains and dry(er) (usually) down low for most everything else.
2 Comments
Apr 9, 2014
Having spent the last 27 years in northern Wisconsin embracing the weather has become a life necessity. Biking (of all varieties), hiking, running, snowshoeing, XC skiing and even the "time is short/weather is crap get out and walk on the road" have all become staples in our "get out and play" repertoire. It's nice to have the options to choose from for both weather and time constraints but also to keep things fresh.
One thing we're really looking forward to, living in BV, is the increased winter options of snow up in the mountains and dry(er) (usually) down low for most everything else.
Life is Good!
Apr 9, 2014