West Side Road and Trail Report

Today was my first lunch ride since the big snow. The recent days have been better for hiking and other winter activities. The lunch hour slush has subsided enough now though, that it looks inviting to ride. I decided to get out and explore the west side of Carson City to see how things looked.

Winter Exploration
The V&T Bike Path is Free of Snow

The main routes, King Street, Mountain Street, Washington Street, Ormsby Blvd, and Winnie Lane, are pretty much free of ice and snow. Just about all the other streets are still full of slush and ice. I still wouldn’t recommend taking your road bike out, but you can pretty much ride all over the west side now on a mountain bike. Most of the wheel ruts in the snow are nearly worn down to the pavement, making a decent path for those with knobby tires.

Winter Exploration
The trails will be under the snow for a while

The V&T Bike path is mostly clear and open all the way from Ash Canyon Road to Combs Canyon Road. Those looking for some good exercise can do the Kings Canyon and Combs Canyon climbs, and connect them with the V&T bike path.

I rode up to the Ash Canyon singletrack trailhead, and it was apparent we won’t be riding these trails any time soon. I gave riding on the snow a shot, but it’s too warm right now. It’s slushy and greasy, making it hard to get any traction. The snow seems to be taking forever to melt, and when it does finally melt, it’ll be muddy for a few days. I think our best bet for trail riding will be the Centennial trails sometime next week.

Tips for Bicycle Commuting in Snow and Ice

Back in May during Bike to Work Week, our message was for anyone and everyone to get out and ride their bikes. And they did! The weather was mild, and the days were long. It was the perfect weather for being outside. But now we’re in December, and Northern Nevada has received some of the harshest weather we’ll see all season. We’ve had winter storm warnings, deep snow, ice, freezing temperatures below zero, and early darkness. This is hardly weather that conjures up images of cycling. I’m not going to lie to you. Commuting during these conditions is not easy, and there will be times when you question your sanity. It’s definitely not for everyone. But if you are determined to ride your bike all year, or don’t have any other options, I’d like to share some tips with you that will keep you safe, warm, and rubber side down.

Morning Commute
Snow, Slush, and Ice

I’m going on my third winter of bicycle commuting, and I have learned much through trial and error. Often times the hard way.  Sometimes painfully.  Having said this though, some of the most fun rides to work have been in the snow. Here are a couple of lists I’ve put together of things that have helped me get through the toughest season of bicycle commuting.

Gear

  • Bike – Mountain bikes work best for traveling over the loose, slippery, and uneven terrain of winter roads.  I like to use my single speed mountain bike for riding in the snow and ice.  There are no suspension parts to ruin, the chain stays clean since there is no derailleur to drag in the snow, and there are less parts to get frozen or jammed.  Disc brakes are best, since the rim brakes tend to get iced up.  I’m running rim brakes on my ice bike, but they get the job done well enough.  I’m never going that fast anyway.
  • Studded Snow Tires – This has been my first full season with studded snow tires, and I wonder how I survived as long as I did without them!  Studded tires don’t help much in deep snow or slush, but they grip to ice and packed snow very well.  With the added traction, you can traverse slippery tire ruts, cross icy parking lots, and brake with confidence.  Crashing on the ice twice last winter got me to spend the money on studded tires. Studded tires range in price from $90 to $200 for a set.  I went with a set of tires from Continental that have tall, widely spaced knobbies, and 240 steel studs per tire.  They transition between snow and ice nicely.  Riders in locations with very harsh winters lasting for months swear by Nokian studded tires.  Their sharp carbide spikes are more durable than the cheaper steel studs of other tires.  Since we usually only need studded tires for a few weeks in December and January here in Carson City, I saved $50 on the set and went with a tire set with steel studs.  If you don’t have studded snow tires, big knobby tires with deep, widely spaced knobs are your best bet.  They won’t help you on ice, but when aired down for maximum flotation and traction, do a good job in the snow.  Just be real careful when changing lines and turning, and give yourself plenty of time to stop!  Seriously though, get some studded snow tires and you’ll ride with confidence and be much safer!
  • Flat Pedals – I took off my clipless pedals, and have been using a flat BMX style pedal with good results.  They work good with my snow boots, and my response time is quicker when I need to put a foot down.
  • Boots – While neoprene covered cycling shoes work decent for cold weather riding during normal conditions, I advise wearing boots during the ice and snow. You won’t gain a thing from a cycling shoe during these conditions, but you will gain a lot with a winter boot. Winter boots are generally waterproof, are much warmer than cycling shoes, and are easier to walk in (you will be walking at times!). I’ve been using Sorel Caribou snow boots for the snowiest and coldest days, and my KEEN waterproof hiking boot for the lighter days.
  • Morning Commute
    Find Roads with Little or No Traffic

  • Clothes – You will be tempted to overdress when it’s below freezing, but after a mile of  riding, you will be uncomfortably hot if overdressed.  Dress in layers, and shed a layer if you get too hot.  For single digit temperatures I wear my winter cycling pants or jeans over long underwear.  Ideally, I’d like to have waterproof over-pants for my work pants.  Up top I wear my work shirt, a fleece vest or jacket, and a wind/water proof shell over the top.  I use waterproof mountaineering gloves with gauntlets that cover my forearms.  They also have rubberized palms for griping the handlebars and controls.   There are a number of good winter cycling gloves available, just look for something warm and waterproof.  Warm handlebar covers are also an option if you don’t like wearing bulky gloves.  Neck gaiters or balaclavas are good for blocking wind and blowing snow from your neck and face.  Check your weather forecast, and be prepared for the evening weather as well as the morning weather.  It’s better to carry a few extra items with you than to not have them when you need them.
  • Helmet – On my head I wear a thin skull cap under a Bern snowboarding helmet.  Snowboarding helmets have less vents and are warmer and dryer during freezing temperatures or precipitation.
  • Lights – These are the shortest days of the year, and you will most likely be riding in the dark one direction of your commute.  A bright flashing red light is essential for the rear, and a light bright enough to see the terrain and alert oncoming traffic is needed for the front.
  • Fenders – I don’t use fenders on my ice bike, because everything is frozen in the morning on the way to work.  There have been times when I’ve wanted them during the melting slush of the evenings though.  If you don’t have fenders and are worried about getting wet, you can pack your work pants in your pack and change out of your cycling pants when you get to work.  Keep a few spare articles of clothing at work just in case.

Continental Spike Claw 240
Studded Snow Tires

Technique and Other Considerations

  • Determine a Safe Route – Before you set out, determine if you have a safe route.  Living closer to town is usually easier, as you generally have multiple options available.  You can use the city grid of streets to customize your route and find the safest way possible.  If you live along a lone, high-speed road on the outskirts of town, you may want to drive it first to asses the risks.
  • Allow yourself more time.  I can do my 2 mile commute in 9 minutes during the summer.  On the worst days of winter, I need around 25 minutes to do this same 2 miles.  Even on the best days, I still need an additional 5 to 8 minutes to make it on time.   If you live far from work, doubling your commute time may not be practical.
  • Pick roads with low speed limits.  Although it is tempting to get out there on the freshly plowed main roads, this is where the traffic is fastest.  Even though the streets are plowed, the shoulders and sidewalks are usually buried in snow.  There is generally not enough room to share the lane.  It’s safer to find a quiet street, even if it is tougher to ride.  By taking a side street, you may even have the whole road to yourself.
  • Yield to Motorized Traffic – Every cyclists is familiar with the mantra, Share the Road.  When you’re riding in the snow and ice though, it’s best to ignore this advice and pull over for the cars when necessary.  Snowy roads are narrow, and many times, cars can’t go around you due to the deep wheel ruts.  Pull over, let traffic go by, and then continue on your way.
  • Vary Your Work Schedule – If you have the luxury, alter your work hours to take advantage of safer road conditions.  When the sun goes down, the temperature plummets and the roads ice up quick.  Riding on wet roads at 4PM is safer than riding on the ice in the darkness after 5PM.
  • Explore New Routes – I quickly found that my standard route was too dangerous to ride in the snow.  I began trying new routes and found ways to avoid the busiest roads and dangerous intersections.  You will also find that while one street may be torn up and slushy, the next street over may be easy to ride packed snow.  The conditions seem to change daily, so keep exploring!
  • Read the Terrain – Look ahead and scan the road.  Plan your strategy for keeping momentum through the snow and ice.  Which wheel rut will take you furthest down the road?  Would a dry sidewalk be safer along a particularly dangerous section of road?  Watch for ice where you need to brake and turn.  Is there ice at the stop sign?  What speed can you carry through that icy turn?

Morning Commute
Early morning icy road

Why Ride in the Snow and Ice?

I know the advice above may seem overly complicated, but during the winter months, your favorite mountain bike trails may be under snow. Riding to work may be your only option to get some riding in, and is way more fun than riding a stationary trainer in your living room. Riding in snow and ice uses a lot of upper body muscles to stay upright, and I find I get a pretty good workout just riding 4 miles. Use these tips and techniques, and you’ll get to ride your bike through the winter.  You’ll stay upright, warm, safe, and have a lot of fun.

Bike Path
Riding in the Snow can be an Adventure!

Your Turn!

What did I miss?  What tips and tricks have you learned for commuting to work in the ice and snow?  The information presented here was geared towards mountain bikes.  Have you used ice tires on your skinny 700c wheeled bikes?

StillerStrong

Once the quintessential accessory to a cyclist’s wardrobe, the millions of yellow LiveStrong wristbands are soon due to become the next platform shoe or bell-bottomed pant. Actor/Comedian Ben Stiller has unleashed what is almost certainly to become the next big thing in cycling fashion. Let’s watch…


www.stillerstrong.org

So how does Lance feel about this new competition? Watch this video from the Conan O’Brien show to see how Lance is taking this!


Lance Armstrong’s response to StillerStrong

Read more about StillerStrong over at www.stillerstrong.org to see how Ben is helping impoverished school children.

Bike Carson End of the Year Celebration

Come join us for an End of the Year Celebration! Bike Carson and Muscle Powered will be gathering at Doppelgangers on Wednesday, December 16th, to celebrate a very successful year!

Beer!
Join us for Pizza and Beer at Doppelgangers!

The Muscle Powered Board of Directors will meet from 6:30 to 7:30, reviewing our many accomplishments for the year. We’ll also talk a bit about the coming year and our board, in preparation for the January annual meeting. The board meeting is open to any member (or prospective members) of Muscle Powered, not just board members, so if you’ve been wanting to find out more about what we do and who does it, come find out. There’s plenty of room at Doppelgangers, so show up when you please (you don’t have to wait until 7:30 if you’re not interested in the meeting).

Following, there will be a Bike Carson & Muscle Powered end-of-year celebration with pizza and beer. Hang out with your friends and make new ones! I’m sure there will be stories of road biking and mountain biking and walking and hiking, and much gloating and dreaming over the coolest bikes.

Bikes at the Ice Skating Rink
What’s under your tree?

Doppelgangers is at 302 N Carson St, in downtown. We aren’t going to make formal reservations for the pizza time, but if you let us know you are coming, we can clue in the staff and help them serve us better.

Bike Carson Photo of the Week

Morning Commute by Jeff Potter

This week’s picture is brought to you by Jeff Potter, a picture taken on his morning commute. This picture pretty much sums up the week. The roads have been snowy and icy, and temperatures actually dipped down into the negative range. It has been SLOW GOING. Just getting to work and back has given me nearly an hour’s worth of daily riding, and it has worn me out!

I imagine the mountain bike trails will by snowy and muddy for days to come. Hopefully next week we’ll have some dry roads to ride. It may be great road biking weather.

This photo was selected from the Bike Carson Flickr Pool. Instructions for adding your photos to the pool can be found HERE.

Stewart Street Extension

by Dan Allison – originally published on MusclePowered.org

Stewart St at the curve, with divided road

The Stewart Street Extension opened in early November (Nevada Appeal article), connecting William Street (Highway 50 East) with Roop St. This project is part of an effort to provide options for getting north-south in Carson City so that Carson Street can be narrowed. The new street segment is divided in some areas (as at right), with right turn only controls going onto or off the street, and part of it is a 3-lane configuration, with two travel lanes and a turn lane (as below).

The new street does not include bicycle lanes. The lanes are wide enough for sharing the lane, which according to the AASHTO Guide for the Development of Bicycle Facilities (“the bike guide”) is 14 feet or more. It does not have share the lane signs.

Stewart St, 3-lane configuation

I’ve ridden on the street a number of times since opening, and I like it. It is much preferable to Roop because it has less traffic and better lane width. The problem of course is that Stewart Street to the south is narrow without lanes or wide lanes, and Roop Street to the north is the same, so it is an isolated segment of bike route.

What do you think? Do you like it or not? Do you feel more or less safe than on a road with striped bicycle lanes? Does it need share the lane signs? [W11-1 and W16-1p] or [R4-11] are the two options.

The classic problem with bicycle lanes is that they accumulate debris as all the vehicle debris (cars parts and items that blow out or drop out, intentionally or unintentionally) and natural debris gets swept into the bike lane by passing cars. Though bike lanes do get street sweeping treatment, it happens less often than any of us would like. Do shared lanes like Stewart St have this problem any less or more than streets with striped bicycle lanes?

As a vehicular cyclist, I (Dan Allison) prefer shared lanes to bicycle lanes. When using a bicycle lane, I have to come out to, or to the left of, the bike lane stripe at every intersection in order to prevent drivers from turning right in front of me or into me. This is the famous “right hook” that accounts for half of all driver-caused crashes. When there is a shared lane, I naturally just move into the center of the lane at every intersection. However, there is a lot of disagreement about this in both Carson City and nationally, with a lot of people preferring painted bicycle lanes. Of course budgets influence what is built, since having a five or six foot bicycle lane often requires a bit more right-of-way for the roadway.

The input of Muscle Powered to Carson City Public Works will influence whether we see more of or less of these shared lane situations in the future, and that is why I’m asking for you opinion. Speak up!

Salsa Caballero For Sale

Bike posted today on the For Sale page: Salsa Caballero $600, 18″ ctr-to-ctr frame, 22.7″ TT. Fits rider 5′-9″ to 6′-1″. Scandium frame, new bushings. SID rear shock. Brand new Rock Shox Duke race air fork, set at 80mm, can be changed to 100mm. Thomson stem and seatpost, Easton bars. Sram Rocket shifters with Shimano XT FD and RD. XTR V-brakes, XT cranks and BB. Mavic Crossmax UST wheels with Kenda tubeless Nevegal tires. Plush full suspension ride and weighs only 25.5 lbs. Have new 29er and don’t need anymore.

Contact: Kary @ 5grabows@clearwire.net or 267-5340 (Kary is in the Carson City area)

Salsa For Sale

More pictures on the For Sale page!