Fifty Plus (50+) - Mt. Diablo Low Key Hill Climb Results

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Velodiva
10-21-07, 10:33 PM
This Saturday, Oct. 20, was #4 in the Northern California Low Key Hill Climb Series and featured Mount Diablo in Danville, CA. I was looking forward to this challenge as I had never done this ride before – and only heard the stories. Driving up that morning, Hermes and I could see Mt. Diablo beckoning on the distance – the summit still shrouded in clouds. It was a beautiful morning and temperatures in the 60’s. The staging area was at the Athenian School and by 10 AM we had 75 cyclists ready to climb.

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Athenian School Staging Area

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Hermes at the staging area

There are two approaches up Mt. Diablo – the North Gate and the South Gate. This hill climb started from the South Gate. We started in small groups and I was in the fifth group – again adhering to my philosophy better to pass than to be passed. Besides, I had heard about the very rough uneven pavement, cracks and potholes near the beginning. A friend of mine got crowded out there a few weeks ago at the Mt. Diablo Challenge (the big difference was that that event had almost 1,000 participants) but I wanted to play it safe.

http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/dd160/velodiva/1665535545_961c68bd46.jpg

South Gate entrance

OK, before I get on with my story this is the low down on the climb: 11.7 miles, 3170 feet of climbing, average grade of 6.8%. To culminate the experience, the last 250 meters is a very steep section appropriately called “The Wall” at a grade of 20%.

http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/dd160/velodiva/mountdiablo_aalt.gif

The altimeter map of Mt. Diablo

As I snaked up the mountain, I was in awe of the views. It was pretty windy – we all paid the price in the headwinds, but there was one section in particular where the wind just blew us up this a steep section at 12 mph!

http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/dd160/velodiva/210738532-X2.jpg

Velodiva climbing Mt. Diablo – bottom section

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Fellow cyclists on the climb

The ride up was uneventful (i.e., no mishaps) but for a wrong turn into a campground – oh well, this was not a race! I held back and kept my heart rate at lactate threshold – this was my first climb that was this long, and I wanted to make sure that I had even left for “The Wall.”

http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/dd160/velodiva/210760412-X2.jpg

Fellow cyclists – The Wall

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Velodiva climbing The Wall

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The Summit!

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View from the Summit showing the road we climbed

I finished in 77:08 and placed 5th out of the 13 women (13 women and 62 men – again, a sea of testosterone). The “winning” (this was not a race) men’s time was 50:51 and the first place woman finished in 65:00. The event was really well organized and it was fun to see and chat with people I met on the King’s Mountain hill climb.

The ride down was SO chilly – almost hard to control the bike with all the wind and my shivering!

The next low key hill climb event that I plan to do is Mount Hamilton on Thanksgiving Day.

Today, Hermes and I rode the tandem on our own metric century down the peninsula from San Mateo to Los Altos Hills in Silicon Valley and back. A beautiful fall day!


BluesDawg
10-22-07, 05:09 AM
Terrific!
:beer:

zymans
10-22-07, 05:49 AM
Congratulations!
:beer:


Beverly
10-22-07, 06:06 AM
:beer::beer:

Outstanding climb! The view from the top is great.

What type of gearing do you have on your bike?

cccorlew
10-22-07, 10:38 AM
Wow. Thanks for the cool photos. I wish i'd have been more on the ball and done this with ya'all, even if if was cold and windy. I just forgot the date.

Artmo
10-22-07, 11:06 AM
Well done and thanks for the great photos. Beautiful bike!!

stapfam
10-22-07, 11:24 AM
Looks a great ride, and up a good hill aswell. I am sorry but I have to say this. The age is beginning to show.







That front tyre definitely has a flat on the tread so time to get onto the mechanic and change it

Hermes
10-22-07, 12:26 PM
Congrats on your time and place.:love:

SSP
10-22-07, 01:21 PM
Way to go Velodiva, and thanks for the photos. Mt. Diablo is a great training ride...a few years back while preparing for the Death Ride, I climbed it twice in one day (and met some riders who were doing it 3 or 4 times!!).

BTW - for the long downhills, bring some arm warmers and maybe a vest. Or, stop by the gift shop and get a newspaper - the old school trick of putting a newspaper down the front of your jersey works quite well, and it's kind of cool employing a 100 year old cycling tradition.

rm -rf
10-22-07, 01:54 PM
A 9.1 mph average for the climb. Wow! I have a similar grade here, for .9 miles, about 300 feet of climbing, and I can do it at 8-9 mph at maximum effort. Your climb is 13 times as long.

I haven't been to Mt Diablo in a long time. From it's summit, I remember seeing the Sierras on the horizon all the way across the Central Valley.

LynnH
10-22-07, 02:30 PM
That's inspiring! The pictures are great too!!

Sevenrider
10-22-07, 08:43 PM
Great ride! It makes Volterra seem like an easy climb.

It looks like there is a tandem in one of the pictures. Any idea how they did?

Velodiva
10-22-07, 08:44 PM
What type of gearing do you have on your bike?

I have 52/39/30 chainrings and a 12/25, 10 speed cassette. I rode most of the ride in the 30/21 combination with an occassional shift to the 39 chainring. The only time I used the 30/25 was to climb the wall.

Dchiefransom
10-22-07, 10:17 PM
Nice ride. That's good climbing.
I'd be in my 28-32 wondering why I didn't get a 26-34. My other biggest problem would be I SUCK at descending.

Velodiva
10-22-07, 10:41 PM
Great ride! It makes Volterra seem like an easy climb.

It looks like there is a tandem in one of the pictures. Any idea how they did?

Thanks, Sevenrider. Yes, there was one tandem team - they are both racers and belong to our Webcor Alto Velo racing club. They did it in 74:09. They ride a Santana scandium (to the best of my knowledge).

http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/dd160/velodiva/210736705-X2.jpg

Velodiva
10-22-07, 10:44 PM
Looks a great ride, and up a good hill aswell. I am sorry but I have to say this. The age is beginning to show.







That front tyre definitely has a flat on the tread so time to get onto the mechanic and change it

OMG, I had my dermatologist on the phone before Hermes told me you were talking about my front tire!

Red Rider
10-22-07, 11:04 PM
Well done! The pictures are as inspiring as your narrative. Congrats on a great ride! :beer:

Tricycle Blue
10-23-07, 12:15 AM
Inspiring ride for a just returned to cycling guy like me, Velodiva. I've walked (trudged) up the Wall; your facial expression after all that climbing looks so relaxed...like you're still having fun. Anyway-- great pics, great ride. Something I'd like to do someday-- with a lot more training behind me!

Beverly
10-23-07, 06:43 AM
I have 52/39/30 chainrings and a 12/25, 10 speed cassette. I rode most of the ride in the 30/21 combination with an occassional shift to the 39 chainring. The only time I used the 30/25 was to climb the wall.

Thanks for the info.

stapfam
10-23-07, 01:26 PM
OMG, I had my dermatologist on the phone before Hermes told me you were talking about my front tire!

If we brits look for humour in the Americans- We look at Irony. We brits are a little more subtle in our sarcasm. So don't waste money on those beauty treatments- they Won't do any good. ** You'd be better off getting new tyres.








**(In sarcasm it could be taken two ways but I mean it in the pleasant way of you do not need it)

:o:o:oSays me sucking up to one angry female that would probably come over here and let my tyres down to 25psi so I would have a hard time.

gcottay
10-23-07, 07:49 PM
Wow!

I could do that climb any day. Or two. Or three. With a strong tail wind.

Is the difference between a regular climb and a low key climb sort of like the difference between six and a half-dozen?

Thanks for the great pictures and inspiration.

Velodiva
10-23-07, 10:39 PM
Is the difference between a regular climb and a low key climb sort of like the difference between six and a half-dozen?

Thanks for the great pictures and inspiration.

That is a good question - I think they call it a low key hill climb to encourage all levels of cyclists to participate. Although it is a timed event, it is not a race. The philosophy of the Low-Key series is to allow each cyclist, no matter what his or her level, no matter what his or her speed, to establish goals, and meet them.

berts
10-24-07, 02:20 AM
Thanks for the great report and photos. Touring N. CA is on my dreamlist.

cgallagh
10-24-07, 05:32 PM
Congratulations. That is one ride RR and I have talked about but never done. I want to do it tandem. We should get together with Smoooth and Sassy and you and Hermes and make it a run some time. I know some great dining places nearby for after riding repasts.