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Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Uwharries 400K

To be different, I thought I would title this entry Uwharries 400K instead of Morrisville 400K. The route extends another 32 miles past Seagrove (turn around point of the 300K) into the Uwharrie Mountains of central NC. The name Uwharrie means "rocky field", and some sources claim that this mountain range is the oldest in North America. I will leave that to the geologists to debate, I will just enjoy riding over some of the hills in Montgomery County and admiring the scenery.

The middle 100K of this ride was the new part for me. Having heard plenty of tales of Flint Hill Rd, I opted to use a bike with a 28/28 low gear combo. As we were screaming down the long hill to the Pee Dee River on the outbound leg, I was dreading the return. However, just gearing down and patiently turning the pedals soon left Flint Hill behind. Perfect weather and great riding companions, not to mention the volunteer help at the controls (Richard and Joel Lawrence, Ian H, and Lin) combined to make this a wonderful day (and night). My only mishap was a broken rear rack bracket late in the ride that caused the rack to flip all the way back and drag the rack trunk against the ground. Martin heard a distinctive metallic snap, and commented "that doesn't sound good." Five seconds later, we were all startled by a loud rubbing noise. I really thought my back tire had gone, as I had ridden over some piece of trash earlier in the day. By then it was dark and I was at the back, so no one knew what the problem was until I stopped, turned on my helmet light and looked. A few minutes to fish out some zip ties for a temporary repair to the rack (reinforced later with an old toe strap from Byron) and we were on our way.



Busted rear rack bracket

For clothing, anticipating a possible chill to the air once past midnight, I lashed on "old blue", a warmup jacket originally purchased in 1974 (importer West Coast Cycles - no longer in business). It is not wool, but that mystery material "acrylic" that has stood up amazingly well. As we were getting ready to leave the inbound Snow Camp control, Martin expressed his regret for not bringing along a shell and gratefully accepted the offer to use the jacket, as I was not needing it (long sleeve base layer under my jersey and a windbreaker were enough).

I (almost) learned my lesson about bonking from the 300K two weeks ago, and had a sit down meal at Seagrove both outbound and inbound. I should have eaten some more at the corner of Lystra and Farrington Point (Farrell's, where we took a little break), as I started to bonk about 8 miles from the end. I hung with Martin and Denis rather than stopping to eat, as I decided it was better to follow them and not have to focus on reading the cue sheet (I'm still not totally confident of the new route into Morrisville, especially after being up for 25 hours). When we arrived at Alan's house, consuming a gel and energy bar was my first priority, and then signing the control card. We made our way back to Morrisville Square (the Parkway is wonderfully free of traffic at 4:45 a.m.), and it was time to change and take a sleep break.


"Old Blue" warmup jacket, circa 1974



Glad everyone who started the ride finished successfully (special congrats to the 6 riders completing a first 400K, and to John M for toughing it out after a crash).

2 comments:

  1. "... we were all startled by a loud rubbing noise."

    "Startled" is an understatement. Scared the be-something out of me.
    --------------------------------------------
    Thanks for the loan of the jacket. It definitely helped. ... Who knew it had pockets?

    ...Martin

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  2. Bob, I was having an uncharacteristically good day on the bike. I can tell that, because I was able to keep up with Byron for so long. Congratulations on your first Uwharrie!

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