Whidbey S24O Ride Report

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Brian Hanson

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Aug 26, 2016, 12:45:42 AM8/26/16
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This with pics at http://www.stonehog.com/:

Not much action on the camping front this year, so I grabbed a chance to do a quick overnight (S24O) from my place in Freeland, WA up to Fort Ebey.  It's about 30 miles one way, and a great chance to try:

  1. Hunqapillar on singletrack
  2. New road exploring
  3. Hammock camping

This also echoes the distance of a Lake Crescent trail I want to do later this year.  That gig is mostly singletrack, but I would use the same equipment.

I got underway around 4:45pm on Monday.  I figured it would take 2-3 hours, so I would likely have light to set up camp.  John and I had explored Fort Ebey's mtb trails a few days earlier, so I knew where the hike/bike campsites were.

I packed light. There was a burn ban, so I didn't bother bringing a stove. Just 2 water bottles, a toaster pastry for breakfast, and a can of salmon for dinner. Easy. I wore the clothes on my back and brought along a pair of wool long underwear for sleeping. No rain in the forecast. Other than that, just my hammock, fly, sleeping bag and roll. Oh yeah - I strapped some sandals on, in case the feet got sore, but that was just unused extra weight. I think the whole thing weighed in under 10 pounds (not that it matters).

The way up was stunning and uneventful. Heading north, I passed South Whidbey State Park, and Greenbank Farm. The stretch from Greenbank up to Coupville had some great hills and views, and the Navy Growlers were out practicing on the outlying field near Admirals Cove.  The long stretch across Keystone to Fort Casey yielded a few seals and many sea birds, but I saw not much traffic on a Monday night.

I searched through Fort Casey for a back route, and thought I had it following a gravel trail by the lighthouse, but it ended in a private road. I left it to chance, and wasted a few minutes, but it was worth the views.  Hill road down to Ebey Beach is amazing - no shoulder, but equally no cars.  After a short hop up to the bluff, and across an amazing open farming area, it was a quick ride to the new pavement of Madrona Way past the mussel farms in Penn Cove.

At this point, I was starting to worry about sunlight - it had taken me about 2 1/2 hrs to get this far. I hurried on into Fort Ebey State Park, and set up the hammock. There was one other person in the hike/bike spot - a Pacific Northwest Trail through hiker. After a dinner of canned salmon on the bluff overlooking the Straight of Juan de Fuca, and a great sunset, it was off to bed.

The next morning was sunny, so I geared up and chatted with the hiker to learn about his journey. He was a 65 years old Granite Falls, WA resident, and 7 weeks into the trail that started in Glacier National Park. After 8 bears (one grizzly at about 10 yds), a pack of wolves, and countless coyotes, he was just heading to the ferry to Port Townsend to have a lunch reunion with his wife before finishing the last 150 miles to Cape Alava.

After a nourishing breakfast at the same scenic overlook on the bluff and a water bottle refill, I was off to ride the Kettles trail on the loaded Hunq.


Needless to say, the Hunq made short work of the trail, and I found myself heading back south and past the barley fields to Ebey Beach.

stonehog-24.jpg

I stopped at the old "Ferry Building" on the bluff to explore and take some pics, then it was back down to Keystone, Greenbank, and finally back to Freeland for some rest and a meal. 

Route out and back are here:

http://cyclemeter.com/51cfa6724f84c700/Cycle-20160822-1639

http://cyclemeter.com/51cfa6724f84c700/Cycle-20160823-0934

Brian Hanson
Seattle, WA
@stonehog
stonehogboɥǝuoʇs

René Sterental

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Aug 26, 2016, 9:50:13 AM8/26/16
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Very nice report. It makes me wantnto go on one...

René 
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Ryan Fleming

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Aug 26, 2016, 11:33:06 AM8/26/16
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Hi Brian

How do you like those Choco-moose bars? I thought you had different bars on that bike...Albas?

I'm getting the Choco-norm on my mixte and I'm just interested in people's experience with them; usually I ride moustaches ...have one Riv w. drop bars. Plan to run the Chocos flipped as you do ...saddle and Tallux stem level....I hope.

Thanks

Kai Vierstra

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Aug 26, 2016, 11:58:05 AM8/26/16
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Don't try running the choco-moose flipped, it's uncomfortable for you and the bike. Choco-norm, absolutely. I love my choco-mooses very much. More than albastache or albatross or Bosco even!, for now...
-Kai
Brooklyn NY

Kai Vierstra

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Aug 26, 2016, 11:59:27 AM8/26/16
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BTW, nice looking trip, bike, and rider.

RoadieRyan

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Aug 26, 2016, 12:41:56 PM8/26/16
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Great report, as a West Satellite I will have to file that one away.  Love the Grey and Kidney Bean scheme on the Hunqa always thought that was one of the classic riv color combos.

stonehog

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Aug 26, 2016, 1:18:06 PM8/26/16
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I like the Choco-moose more than the albas - better wrist position at the bends for me.  That said, I think the perfect bars for me are still Noodles (mostly road) or Albastaches (mostly dirt).  I like the brake position on the Albastache - more of a MTB orientation where you are always ready to brake when descending.  It feels a bit odd descending with my body upright and hands way back on the ends of the Albatross or Choco bars.  That said, I tried my buddies Jones this past weekend, and that was a riot - felt like I was skiing on the singletrack - sitting almost bolt upright with the wide jones h-bars.  

BTW - the Choco-moose works for me, but I think I would prefer a normal stem so I could have more fore/aft adjustment as I fall into and out of fitness.  If I stick with these for a few years (not likely if you know me), I would switch to a Choco-norm.

Brian

Hugh Smitham

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Aug 26, 2016, 1:19:39 PM8/26/16
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Hi Brian,

Great ride report! I rode that section from Fort Casey up over Deception pass to Anacortes last Summer, a really amazing beautiful area you have there. The Hunq looks great and of course the pictures make me drool to get back up there.

~Hugh
  Los Angeles, CA


On Thursday, August 25, 2016 at 9:45:42 PM UTC-7, stonehog wrote:

Ryan Fleming

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Aug 26, 2016, 2:49:12 PM8/26/16
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ha ha pretty funny :)

I was going to try Albas bu GP suggested I might like the Chocos..also suggested Boscos but I'm not there yet

Actually, Brian, looks like a really nice trip and superb photos and very handsome bike as well...sorry didn't mean to highjack the thread

stonehog

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Aug 26, 2016, 5:42:28 PM8/26/16
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FWIW- I have Boscos on a Miyata and love 'em. No problem going distance as they give you the stretch forward position of flat bars, and also allow you to sit bolt upright. That's my island road distance bike, and also works great as a round towner cruiser.

Brian

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