I just got turned back from a ride. 5k from the house I realized my bits were getting too cold not only for comfort (in which case, apply Rule #5 and move on) but safety (i’ll take my vasectomy in the hospital, thank you very much). It’s a lovely sunny day, the only problems being the minus 12C temp, biting headwind, and leg warmers that stop mid-thigh. Having to pull the plug on a ride is a bummer. Thankfully, it doesn’t happen all too often and I’ve still got the rollers set up in the house. But the silver lining here is that it was only my 4th or 5th training ride of the year for the Heck of the North which is still 7 months away.

Some would say gravel riding is here to stay. Others would say gravel riding has always been a part of cycling and all we’re doing now is applying intention to it. It’s undeniable though that the gravel scene has taken on a prominent role in cycling of late. From open-registration races all over the world to the Strade Bianche, graveling has ignited a passion in many of us. Riding dirt roads has a certain unique aesthetic, an aesthetic that is best described as taking place on the margins.

The tarmac, as we move further from the center of town, gives way increasingly to gravel. As the rider begins to stitch together longer gravel stretches of road he needs to go further out on the margin of the city until finally, any reminders of the city are gone. This is where the margin is blurred between “civilization” and “wilderness”. The Graveur’s bike is marginally a road bike. Road bikes can be fitted with wider tires but are limited by frame and fork design as well as clearance at the caliper. Cyclocross bikes can run with skinny tires which is usually preferred and then we’re left often with a higher BB, heavier bike, and a position that’s closer to sit up and beg. Only just recently have bicycle companies begun to manufacture equipment intended specifically for the booming gravel scene. But even still, the rider has to select a hodge-podge of gear from road, cross, and even MTB that will suit his needs and the particulars of the course.

This year, I’m experimenting with new bars. I’ve decided to give the Salsa Cowbell a spin. Maybe you’ve seen bars like this on Randoneur and drop-bar 29er’s common in the adventure bike and UltraCX scene. I’m trying to achieve a few things with these flared bars: flat hood-to-top area while maintaining horizontal drop, more upright position with a shallow drop, lot’s of drop for secure grip, and leverage provided by wider-than-Lampre-Man 46mm span. Gianni recently referred to the geographically curated bike as a “Terroir Bike”. I like this turn of phrase.

Toeing up to the start of a gravel race can result in sensory overload of Rule-breaking gauche.  Riders operating on the margins of The Rules show up with frame bags and EPMS’s, Camelbaks, zero saddle/stem drop, facial hair, MTB shoes, and even aero bars. The list goes on of Rule violations. Be mindful though that Rules are often bent consciously and  broken for geography, practicality and self-reliance. The most Rule compliant of Velominati on the road may seemingly be found out on the margins of decorum riding gravel. Don’t be too quick to judge.

It is the margins that attracted me to gravel riding and is partly what keeps me excited about it. For one, I have little choice in terms of the roads I have to ride. I live on a gravel road that mostly leads to other gravel roads. I’m closer to the margin of wilderness than civilization. Graveling is a necessity if I want more places to ride. Keeper status aside, I’ve always been one to eschew rules and authority and go against the grain. Gravel riding allows me a damn good reason to blur the Rules from time to time to see what works. Here are a few Rules worth breaking when it comes to gravel road riding:

  • Rule #29. If you’re way out on the margins you just may need the extra space for tools or food.
  • Rule #32. Two bidons won’t cut it often times. So unless you have the ability to filter or treat water, try a hydro pack or frame bag.
  • Rule #34. You will find yourself walking or running out there. Wear shoes that allow this.
  • Rule #44. I’ve found, especially on technical trails and ultraCX, that less drop reduces fatigue and improves visibility over a long ride.
  • Rule #50. I live in the woods, hipster. I’m growing a fucking beard and riding my bike if I damn well please.
  • Rule #52. Pfft.
  • Rule #54. I haven’t done this and won’t. But the guy that won the Heck in 2012 had aerobars and used them. Just sayin’.
  • Rule #61. I ride a Fizik Antares VS on my gravel bike and appreciate the extra padding (although the saddle is compliant).
  • Rule #68. It’s been said riding gravel saps an additional 10% of energy and thus requires an additional 10% of V over a course of the same distance of tarmac. Therefore, the quality of your ride will be 11% more on gravel. That’s one higher.

Vie la vie Velominatus

Marko

Marko lives and rides in the upper midwest of the States, Minnesota specifically. "Cycling territory" and "the midwest" don't usually end up in the same sentence unless the conversation turns to the roots of LeMond, Hampsten, Heiden and Ochowitz. While the pavé and bergs of Flanders are his preferred places to ride, you can usually find him harvesting gravel along forest and farm roads. He owes a lot to Cycling and his greatest contribution to cycling may forever be coining the term Rainbow Turd.

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  • @Marko

    @Endurimil You're living in the snow globe that that douche keeps shaking too, eh? We're a good month out still.

    Yes I do. In 12 years since I moved out to Ontario seems to be the worst.

  • @frank

    @Endurimil

    Unfortunately it it will be a few more weeks before we see anything resembling gravel or minimaly maintained roads.

    As many of you know, we lost our Great (well, fair to moderate, anyway) Dane about a month ago, and our plan was to spread her ashes and plant a tree in her honor at a river near the campsite was always took her to north of Cle Elum. She loved that spot and would always get real flirty and playful. Such a fun dog.

    Anyway, we drove up there last weekend and found the road to be covered in a similar layer of about 2-3 feet of snow. So the tree is now potted and the ashes await a warmer season before we can get up there. "Hey, its dry and sunny in Seattle, there can't be any chance of loads of snow in the mountains, right?"

    Is there a moron tattoo?

    Tattoo? I can confirm no. Because if there's was one my VMH would have gotten me at least two based on some of the in her words " Crazy idiot rides" I have done in the past.

  • Kinda fuckin' sucks that one big part of why gravel riding is awesome is that you don't have to put up with irrational, aggressive auto drivers. In cycling heaven, road cycling won't involve those bastards either.

    I also forgot to mention that I can't imagine cycling in that sort of cold anymore. Too long in the south; low single digits seems pushing it a bit nowadays, as we're generally subjected to mild winters. Road riding feels slow in that cold, with all that gear. Off-road is such a blast you forget you feel like a marshmallow barely moving along.

  • @Ron

    I also forgot to mention that I can't imagine cycling in that sort of cold anymore. Too long in the south; low single digits seems pushing it a bit nowadays, as we're generally subjected to mild winters. Road riding feels slow in that cold, with all that gear. Off-road is such a blast you forget you feel like a marshmallow barely moving along.

    Kind of got used to the cold from my days freezing my ass off alpine ski racing at Whistler.

    Speaking of Cougars....25 plus years of doing all sorts of stuff in the BC woods and have only seen a Cougar once. Exactly 3 seconds as it ran across a logging road and all we saw was it's tail heading into the bush.

  • @PeakInTwoYears I read about a guy who rode from Spokane all the way to Snoqualmie. Lots of thorns at one point but I think the mountains should be fine. I'm in if you do it!

  • That cowbell bar looks a good shape. Zipp flares their road bars too (though not that much). I think it makes a lot of sense.

    Not sure I could ride a 44cm bar though.

  • Peakin', Frank, G'rilla,

    I went up to the Iron Horse Trail at the end of last summer.  It's a great trail, but I got to the section with the tunnel through the top of the pass and found that the surface through the tunnel is seriously shitty.  Like, fist-sized or baby-head-sized pointy rocks.  I'm not sure I'd even want to do it on a mountain bike -- a fatbike might be in order.

    The good news, if anything, is that I think I might have found a route that drops down from the Iron Horse trail down onto the access road for the Denny Creek Trailhead (the road is 1 to 1.5 lanes wide) that then continues up to the Alpental ski area and, beyond that, to Snoqualmie pass proper.  I'll be checking it out later in the spring.  If it's like what I imagine, the whole ride would be terrific on a graveur: mostly gravel, a little singletrack, some bad roads.

  • @PeakInTwoYears Hi, no its in the Austrian Alps - Zillertal, about 15kms from Italian border.  I am from England but live here now.  You can ride over two thousand metres here - many many tracks to explore...

  • @frank  Hi Frank, Austrian Zillertal Alps where I now live (from the UK).  The bike is a Klein Pulse Comp from 1997.  Recently got rid of fork for rigid Project 2.  Total XT 10 spd group upgrade, Dura Ace shifters and new Mavic rims, specific for the Berg - so many rules broken but it works fantastically well!!  Just as a point of interest, I do have a Gunnar with Srampag mix, 10 spd for the Alps climbing - 32 at the back.  Works perfectly, no gadgets required.  I can post a pic if you like.

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