With all the weather forecasters, or as i like to call them, lying pieces of poo, calling for 7 inches of the white fluffy stuff to fall on the slopes of Mt. Hood my Friday night was mellow. Dan and i met up with friends for some wings and brew at "Fire on the Mountain." After dousing my burning palate with several hop infused beverages it was time to get in a restful night. I woke up early Saturday morning to check the ski report and fill my belly with nutritious goodness. I quickly discovered, via the wonderful worldwide web, that the day wasn't going to pan out as i had suspected. I could hear Dan rustling in his bedroom and i quickly turned his dreams of powdery goodness into nightmares filled with icy, edge scratching ice sheets. Yes that's right. . .another snowless week on Mt. Hood.
Left to my own devices i did what any 29 year old with a busted plan would do. . .i slept on it. When i awoke the day was bright, sunny and not effing snowing! I considered another trip into the gorge for another lovely winter hike but without Yak Tracks the adventure sounded dim. I decided to dust off the old fat tire and spend some time in Portland's very own Forest Park. After some tuning and lubing the ol' 7k was ready to ride.
I hadn't been on my mountain bike since i catapulted over my handlebars and onto some downed trees in Washington (over a year ago); all my riding had been on my commuter. Reluctant to get myself into a similar situation, i decided to stick to the more stable, less obstacle ridden double track of Lief Erickson Drive, an old fire road that cuts through 12 miles of the park. I threw my bike in the back of the truck and headed up to the north, and less stroller filled, portion of the park. The parking lot was nearly full when i got there, never a good sign. There were two d-bags tearing around the parking lot on their full suspension rigs. Once i got onto the trail i found it to be mostly uninhabited. I crossed paths with a thoroughbred, yes a horse in the city, and a few couples huffing through the hills. I rode about 6 miles out and in turn, rode 6 miles back. The trip wasn't too challenging, some rolling hills and sharp-ish turns. What it was was mighty muddy.
A clean, pre-ride face.
At the turning point.
My iron horse and map.
Two of my three ponies.
Sunday i spent most of my day in the office working on some convoluted project that earned me a bottle of Jack Daniels and a thank you card from the boss lady. Not a bad trade off. This week is "pray for snow week," as i have a 4-day weekend coming to me.
Please join me in prayer. . .
1 comment:
Ahh...seeing the ole' Trekster bike brings back memories. It treated me well on our San Juan Hut trip. The newest Everline will be here soon...have a shot of Jack for me tomorrow. Erin
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