Maneha One-Way Rides

The Maneha 250:  Riding 250 miles of mixed-terrain in 36-hours is a challenge.  This being early season makes it even more challenging because not everyone has a lot of miles in their legs yet.

This is way we offer a one-way ride version of the Maneha:  The Maneha 125.  We offer two options for the 125-mile single-day ride:

Option One:  Saturday Maneha 125

Route Description:  This is the northbound route from Lexington, MA to Harrisville, NH.  This route has more climbing and slightly more singletrack than the Sunday route.

Grand Depart:  Ride Studio Cafe, In Lexington, at 5:30 am.  You can also roll out anytime prior to 9:00 am.

What's included:  Everything that's included in the Maneha 250 -- including breakfast on Saturday, trail food during the ride, dinner at Mayfair Farm, a reserved campsite, and breakfast on Sunday morning at the Farm.  And, of course, route support during the entire ride.

Overnight:  When you get to the finish, you'll camp out on Saturday night with everyone.  The reason for this is that we can't be sure when each rider will arrive at the finish.  Fast riders will show up around 4:00 pm.  Many riders will arrive closer to 7:00 or 8:00 pm -- so, no shuttle going home on Saturday evening.  Of course, if you have a significant other coming up to meet you, that person can drive you home whenever you'd like.

Getting Home:  We're shuttling you back to Ride Studio Cafe on Sunday morning.  Shuttle departs at 7:00 am.  You'll arrive at Ride Studio Cafe at about 9:30 am.

Option Two:  Sunday Maneha 125

Route Description:  This is the southbound route from New Hampshire back to Lexington, MA.   This route has more descending than climbing -- because it's coming from New Hampshire -- and slightly less singletrack than the Sunday ride.  This route is a bit faster in total hours than Saturday's route.

Grand Depart:  Mayfair Farm in New Hampshire at 6:30 am.  You can roll out anytime prior to 8:00 am.

Overnight:  The overnight is optional.  However, because the ride departs at 6:30 am, we strongly recommend that riders join us for the overnight and have both dinner and breakfast at the Farm; it'll be memorable.  A second option is that, if you prefer, you can drive up to the Farm on Sunday morning but you have to arrive by 5:45 am to register and for the pre-ride meeting prior to the Grand Depart.  A third option is to you have your significant other come up with you on Saturday evening for dinner, camp out, and breakfast the next morning.  Fun for all!  

What's included:  Nearly everything that's included in the Maneha 250 -- including dinner at Mayfair Farm on Saturday night, a reserved campsite, breakfast on Sunday morning at the Farm, trail foods along the route, and some post ride snacks back in Lexington, MA.  Of course we include ride support throughout the entire route.

Getting To the Start at Mayfair Farm:  We're shuttling riders up to the Farm on Saturday at 3:30 pm from Ride Studio Cafe.  You'll arrive at the Farm by about 5:30 pm for a relaxing dinner, camp set up, and a big fire with some tall tales from the trails.  Alternatively, you can come up with your significant other and spend the evening together with the riders.  The third option is to have someone drive you up on Sunday morning, but you have to arrive at the Farm by 5:45 am for registration and the pre-ride meeting.

Register For Either Day -- Or Both

Register for either of these at bikereg.com.

If you've already registered for the Maneha 250, and you're thinking 125 might be a better idea, email us; we're happy to accommodate -- we just have to know by the end of the day, Tuesday, May 10.

Maneha 250 Route Updates

The 2016 Maneha 250 route is about 40% new trails, dirt roads, and pavement compared to last year.  This is true for the northbound and southbound routes.  If you think you know the Maneha, you don't.  So many miles of new ground and secluded pavement.  We've invested many hours in scouting for 2016; it's paid of handsomely -- join us and find out first hand!

Northbound Route

The northbound route has some new trails and roads as it heads out of Lexington toward New Hampshire.  And, from about mile 60 to the finish it's nearly entirely different.  We've reduced the final miles of climbing; there's still a lot, but nothing so steep as last year and not quite so many feet of climbing per mile.  

Rappel Route

The southbound route -- the Rappel -- takes a different exit from New Hampshire.  We've include a lot more dirt road in the first 60 miles.  The route through Massachusetts includes some of the singletrack from last year and some new hidden gems as well.

Register

There's still time to register at bikereg.com.  We hope you'll join us for this unique event.  Don't say you'll, "do it next year" -- if you know anything about Overland Base Camp, odds are the Maneha will morph into something entirely different yet again.  Mark our words.  

Join us!

Diverged Ride: Fundraising Total

The Diverged Ride fundraiser brought in a total of $3,167.  

This exceeded our hopes.

Thank you to very single person that registered for the Diverged Ride 2016!  We'll write about the ride and people's photos, stories, and feedback in a subsequent post.  For the moment, we want to get the dollars raised squared away.

Here are the fully transparent details of the funds raised:

  • 74 Guided Group riders that paid $25 each:  $1,850
  • 25 Solo riders that paid $25 each:  $625
  • 12 Team riders that paid $20 each:  $240
  • Total service fees taken by Bikereg:  $319.90
  • Sum total:  From Bikereg registrations:  $2,405.10
  • 8 Ride Navigators for which Overland covered the cost of entry:  $200
  • Overland covered the cost of Bikereg fees and are putting those dollars into the trail stewards fund:  $319.90
  • Overland is donating an additional $2 per person:  121 riders x $2 = $242
  • Total donation amount:  $3,167

Each fund received 1/3 of the total:  $1,055.67

Checks to those groups will be mailed during the week of 25 April.  The three groups are:

Thank you again to everyone that rode with us.

Thank you to the Navigators that lead groups through the foggy confusing trails.

Thank you to Ride Studio Cafe for hosting us.  All their rides are well worth participating in.

Thank you to the trail stewards that enable us to make rides like the Diverged possible.

We hope to see you again at next year's Diverged.  In the meantime, join us for the Maneha 250  on May 14 &15 and the Dusk to Dawn ride on June 25 & 26.  They are the best of New England Riding.

Diverged Ride: We Are All Trail Stewards

One of the new aspects, of many, for the 2016 Diverged Ride is that we're raising funds for some local trail groups.

When you register for the Diverged Ride, every single dollar of your registration goes directly to the groups that work hard to keep the local trails open -- excluding the Bikereg service fee.  Overland Base Camp is taking zero dollars from your registration.  We're covering all the costs of this project -- including food, RSC's time, rider leader support, and coordinating with the conservation stewards.

Here are the three groups that will be receiving your registration investment:

There are dozens of trail, path, and open space groups worth donating money to.  We decided to limit our list to three so that we can donate a meaningful amount to each.  We chose these specific three because Diverged relies on the trails these groups steward.

Why, you might ask, do participants that register for a team get a $5 discount?  Good question.  Our logic is that teams will bring more riders to the Diverged; more riders mean more funds to donate, so a small discount to incent riders to bring friends is a good investment to increase the total dollars raised for the cause.

Register for the Diverged Ride and help protect our trail resources!

Tips for Riding in Icy Conditions

Winter riding on frozen mixed-terrain is some of the best riding:  No one else is out on the trails, the ice and snow make every trail you've ridden a thousand times seem entirely new, the trails are naturally protected so you can ride anytime, and it's great for skills training.

The tougher the conditions, the more likely you are to have the trails to yourself.  One of the toughest conditions is ice -- and we have plenty of that in New England.

The Icy Trail - photo - Rob Vandermark

Here are some of our tips for mixed-terrain riding in icy conditions.

First, the recommendations we provide here are in no way a guarantee of staying upright.  Riding in the winter can be dangerous, so respect for the ice and the conditions is extremely important.  These recommendations will reduce the odds of an accident but even if you follow all the rules, there's no guarantee that every ride will be a mishap-free ride.

Ride studded tires.  This is the most important safety rule for winter riding on trails.  We're constantly amazed that riders show up to winter adventure rides without studded tires.  Studded tires work.  The studs simply grip ice incredibly well.  Without studs your bike will be much more difficult to control. 

Sliding out on ice is entirely different from crashing on singletrack in the woods.  Singletrack crashes often occur in slow-motion; ice accidents are fast-motion situations.  And, putting your foot out to brace yourself will not help, and is often not even possible due the the speed at which ice crashing occurs.  Crashing due to icy conditions is one of the worst accidents you can have because traction loss occurs with no warning, your body is actually accelerating into the ground as your wheels slide out from under you, and the ground is extra hard.  We've seen some fractured and broken bones from falling in icy conditions.

Ride very conservatively.  If you don’t ride in the snow and ice very often, the surface conditions can be disconcerting; or, conditions can seem fine -- until they’re not.  Ice can be hidden under snow.  Snow can be a lot slippery than you might think.  Black ice is really difficult to see until you’re on top of it.  

When we're riding in the winter we're not trying to win any speed competitions; we’re trying to have an awesome ride -- and to stay warm.  Winter riding, for most of us, is off-season riding, so it's base mile training time.  Our pace is a stay warm pace, not race pace.

Expect continuously changing trail conditions.  Trail traction, temperature, and conditions tend to change throughout any given ride -- whether that's because it's getting warmer or colder, or because mile by mile different trail areas see different sun exposures, subterranean base temperatures, and trail usage by various constituents.  All of these variables make for a ride that changes minute by minute.  Just when you think you've adjusted your riding for the today's trail conditions, everything is likely to change on you.  Always expect the unexpected around the next corner.

Choosing the smart line:  Clear ice, dark ice, or white ice?  Ride the white rather than the clear ice or dark ice. This is counterintuitive for most people.  Your brain may tell you to get off the snow – get onto the clear ice area – but this is wrong.  The white ice has air bubbles in it and that actually provides you traction.  White also indicates that there’s snow embedded in the ice and that typically provides you relatively excellent traction, too.  Dark ice is smooth ice, or new ice, or melting ice -- these are all really bad from a traction standpoint.

Choosing the smart line:  Ride the choppy ice rather than the smooth ice.  Again, this is probably counterintuitive.  Choppy ice provides you better traction options.  Choppy ice keeps your wheels more upright because you’re riding, or bouncing, from rut to rut -- like a pinball in the machine.  Smooth ice doesn’t provide your wheels anywhere to counterbalance against -- if you start loosing traction you're going to hit the deck.  If you start losing traction on choppy ice, by definition, your wheel is going to hit an edge and that will help keep you upright.  Also, choppy ice is more likely aerated and therefore offers much better traction.

Managing smooth ice and boardwalks:  The keys to surviving a slick section of ice, or an icy boardwalk, are steady torque and riding very upright.  It sounds so simple, doesn't it? 

  • "Steady torque" means even pedal pressure throughout the pedal stroke.  This is much more difficult than it sounds; it takes practice.  Steady also means you're not using your brakes; even a slight touching of your brakes, if that causes any torque change, can break tire traction and you’ll be on the deck before you know it.  the trick is to slow down before you meet the ice and then glide over the ice with an extremely even pedal stroke.  Even pedaling is better than coasting, but coasting is better than changing speed - through uneven torque or braking.
  • "Upright" means no leaning of the bike at all.  If you have to turn, turn the front wheel, don’t lean into the turn.  You may be surprised at how much you use leaning in order to turn; don’t do it.  Also, keep your rear-end on the seat; this will help prevent you from using body English, and it provides you more accurate feedback about what's happening between the ground and your tires.

Managing wood bridges and boardwalks.  Wood behaves in unusual ways -- relative to dirt and pavement -- in frozen conditions.  Ice and packed snow tend not to stick very well to treated wood; meaning, ice tends to break up under your tires when you're riding boardwalks, so you have even less traction than you do on regular ice.  This is a bit subtle but the basic recommendation is to do everything you'd do on ice, but even more carefully.  In addition, on a boardwalk, because it's narrow, you have no options of line choosing.  So, be extra careful on boardwalk crossings -- or any wooden bridge crossing.

Set your tires to higher pressure than you do in the summer.  We have three reasons for this suggestion:

  1. Your tires lose pressure as the temperature drops -- like when you go from a 68 degree indoor space to a 20 degree outdoor ride.  For every 10 degree drop in temperature your tires will lose about 2% of their pressure.  The change in pressure from 70 to 20 degrees is a 10% loss.  Over-inflate your tires by about 10% above what you really want for the ride.
  2. Getting a flat is more likely to occur in icy conditions for three reasons:
    • Choppy ice will give you a pinch flat nearly as easily as a protruding rock, although most people don't think about this as a possibility.
    • Choppy ice is difficult to judge; it’s hard to see how sharp, large, or problematic a choppy ice section will be when compared to a section of exposed rocks. 
    • Snow covers rocks, so you can’t tell where the sharp rocks - or choppy ice - live until you hear your rim contact the rock.  Remember that sound?
    • The counter to these ideas is that we all tend to ride slower in the winter due to challenging conditions, and therefore are less likely to have a pinch flat.  However, #3 explains why we still run higher pressures even as slower speeds.
  3. Getting a flat at 20 degrees is really not fun.  We find that the trade-off of a slightly rougher ride is much preferred over changing a flat, with gloveless hands, when it’s really cold out.

Tire pressure is a complicated math equation.  It includes a combination of tire bead type -- clincher, tubeless, sewup -- rim width, rider skill, rider weight, tire volume, tire tread, tpi, temperature, riding conditions, flat proof-ness of the tire, and tire quality, to name a few elements of the equation.  So, whatever studded tire you ride doesn't have the exact properties of your favorite summer tires.  Therefore, by definition, your tire pressures should be different.  Once you've taken tire differences into account, we tend to set our winter tire pressure about 10-20% higher than our summer tire pressure -- for flat prevention; that percentage varies by riding conditions.  Overall these changes mean a 20% increase for room temperature winter tire pressure relative to summer tire pressure.  Meaning, for example, if you typically ride your rear tire at 42 lbs pressure in the fall, we'd suggest setting your pressure to 50 lbs for 20 degree riding.

That covers some of the ways in which we ride in the winter in order to maximize fun and our ability to ride another day.

If this list provides you pause about riding in the winter, that's good; a healthy respect for ice and snow, the elements, and your skill set are all good ideas.  Winter riding is beautiful, and part of that beauty is appreciation for the challenges that Dame Winter offers.

What additional tricks do you use to stay upright during icy winter rides?