Slept undisturbed. Temp inside was 54 degrees, single down blanket right @ being cold. Ran the heater for fresh blue berries & local Vermont maple syrup.
Finally left for ride at 9:30, no cars in parking lot. Rode up Darling Hills road & found a few in an upper parking lot. Riding route laid out by staff woman. Glad to have ridden down fenceline as it had a bit of climbing on the up & wet roots. Spent all of stopped time navigating from map. Trails for most part were labeled well. Lots of little ups & downs for like 2700′ in 20 miles. Base elevation is about 875′
Ran into same group of riders several times and saw a few others. Could see the tracks in the mud. Many of the leaves have dropped covering the trail. Again, that’s what happens:
Find the bike and then find the trail.
Places almost all the leaves are down which opens the light.
Added another fall to the log: Almost at end of ride roled over a root drop & strayed too far to right edge & maybe a touch of front brake. Front wheel quit but I kept going. Slow speed but a hurl none the less.
Checked back in with the staff wopman to compliment her on her route she laid out for me. She said she lives here and rides the trails front wards & backwards: She lives on the trails.
Parking lot behind Outback was plugged but didn’t see all those people. Never did see a bike patrol person.
Drove up Burke Mtn road to check out the showers at the XG. No office person there; drove around found small building with shower & lots of bikers. Figured line was long & no idea how much $. Burke looks steep. Narrow cut runs. Wonder what tree skiing is like. Mostly all broadleaf.
Plan B was to drive North to state XG for shower. More back roads, just so beautiful. Colors and how man made objects fit in. Roads are mostly in valleys. Abandoned farms & broke down barns. Farming as an income failed. Imagine farmers who had been on the land for generations moving to some city job or just quit. Found XG which was closed. Drove a little further & found a private small XG. Pulled in & proprietoress was just walking away. I asked if I could buy a shower. She said they normally don’t do that but I could put my quarters in the box and have one. Washed sweat & mud off.
Drove down E side of Lake Willoughby on 5B. Just beautiful. parked at same spot on road behind Outback & kingdom parking lot. Fixed dinner. Going back to Outback to watch baseball, drink some beer.
Tomorrow is off to White Mountains in NH.
Oh, catch this: maple sap trees are plumbed to the syruping kettle:
Mostly all roots, little inkling of rocks.
Thanks for the departure from trail and shower reports by showing the maple sap tubing. How does is work? Doesn’t it get gummed up?
Showers & place to spend night are dirt bag big tent items. How I manage to take one is an important event.
You engineers know airplanes don’t know woods squat. When the temp warms and the sap starts to run a tree is drilled and a tap is inserted. The phloem, which usually transport down from leaves, reverses itself and the sap, which is very watery and stored in the roots, is pulled upward. The tap interrupts that flow to old time bucket hung under the tap. This ol’ guy collects the sap via the tubing plumbing. The sap is collected and boiled off in a sugar shack. Its something like 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of sticky syrup.
And you still believe milk comes from bottle farms.