Prisoners of Gravity, Part B
More ups and downs along the way!
We left Oxford and headed north along the Connecticut
River to Haverhill (pronounced hayve-ril). This is about as nice a route as
one could want. The farms, villages, and vistas were all
beautiful. The weather was nice too. At Haverhill we would begin to
climb Mt.Moosilauke. I actually
looked at my GPS and noted that we started the day at 450 ft. We topped out
at 1,850 ft. The climb was slow and uneventful except for crossing the
Appalachian Trail near the summit. The downhill was very steep and we had
to brake a lot to stay around 30 MPH. We let it roll on a couple of
straight sections and easily went over 40 MPH. Near the bottom, the pitch
was less and we had a long period of coasting at 20-25 MPH. At that speed
you can actually relax a bit and enjoy the
scenery. We
got a motel room a few miles north of Lincoln NH, near Franconia
Notch. Franconia Notch is where the Old Man of the Mountain used to
be. The Old Man of the Mountain was a rock formation that resembled the
profile of a man’s head. This symbol is on all NH road signs and on
the back of the NH quarter. It fell off the mountain and now resembles a
rock out-cropping. For some reason we went up to see something that
wasn’t there.At dinner we
discussed tomorrow’s climb of Kancamagus Pass. We are ready. We
have replayed all of the climbing to this point. Brian noticed that we
called all of the climbs mountains until we had gone over them, at which point
they became hills. While Kancamagus Pass is longer than anything we have
climbed, it is not as steep. We both feel that we are
ready. We
woke at our usual time of 5:30 to a pouring rain. We found the weather
channel on TV and it appeared that the rain would clear later in the
morning. We layed around and stalled waiting for the rain to
stop. Finally we packed up the bikes, put on our rain gear, and went across
the road for breakfast. We each ordered a huge breakfast and drank lots of
coffee and watched rain in the stream outside our window. Our patience
seemed to be paying off. It seemed like it was starting to
clear. We
rode 3 miles intoLincolnand stopped at a market. We bought sandwiches,
fruit, chips, and pop for lunch. Kancamagus Pass is in a National Forest
and there would be no place to get lunch on the mountain. By the time we
left the store, the sun was trying to pop though the clouds. We shed the
rain gear and started the climb. We started the climb at 8:45 and reached
the summit three hours later. The climb was steady but not so steep that we
weren’t in control. What a great feeling of
accomplishment!
We had lunch at
one of the outlooks and took a trophy photo at the summit. The ride down
the mountain was fast but not as steep as some that we had ridden. We came
down the mountain in 45 minutes. We had conquered what we had feared the
most about this trip. Not bad for a couple of Fat Riding Old
Guys. Wes
Posted: Sun - December
19, 2004 at 01:35 PM