Category: Foothills

Nitos Ride Near Santo Domingo Tomaltepec

This second Sunday in January proved a fine time for the Nitos bike club to resume their Sunday morning rides after taking a break during the Christmas holidays. The destination for the day’s outing was the mountain valley upstream from Santo Domingo Tomaltepec, a small farming village in the Tlacolula valley that is one of the oldest settlements in the region. The dirt road that winds up the valley is picturesque and most famous for the seven creek crossings encountered before the road ends and a footpath (not suitable for biking) continues into the hills.

The thirty participants in today’s ride accumulated 23.6 miles (38 kilometers) riding out and back from the center of Oaxaca city. The terrain was mostly flat, so the group gained just 842 feet (256.6 meters), reaching a high point of 5718 feet (1742.8 meters) before turning back.

El segundo domingo en enero era un día ideal para el Club de Ciclismo a reanudar sus paseos matutinos  de domingo después de un descanso durante los días festivos de fin de año.  El destino era el valle dentro las montañas aguas arriba de Santo Domingo Tomaltepec, que es un pueblo en el Valle de Tlacolula y uno de los asientamientos más antiguos de la región.  El camino de terracería en el valle es pintoresco y afamado por sus siete cruces de arroyos. El fin del camino se desemboca en una senda que conduce dentro de las colinas pero no es adecuado para ciclismo.

Los 30 participantes  viajaban 23.6 millas (38 kilometros) del centro de la ciudad y regreso.  La ruta es casi todo plano asi que el cambio de altura era de 842 pies (256.6 metros) alcanzando una altura de 5718 pies (1742-8 metros) antes de regresar a la cuidad de Oaxaca.

OAXMTB YouTube Channel and First Trail Video

Two bits of news, campers:

1) Trail work on “Vela” is done and the trail is ride ready.  The upper part is still a bit thick with grass on the tread, but it opens up as you reach the middle and bottom.  Get out an ride it as the more it gets used, the better it will roll.

2) I finally got around to trying out my new GoPro knock-off video camera – an MHD (MonoPrice) Action Cam.  Earlier efforts using the chest harness were a total fail (unless you’d enjoy watching the trail tread go by with my knees wobbling around).  First halfway watchable video that I made is from a run down the freshly cleared “Vela” trail.  The video starts on Trail LLL, runs the bit of Trail PC that is used to get to Vela, and then ends as the 1 5meter walkout at the end of the trail where it pours back onto Trail TTT (aka Pista las carnívoras). The lighting is poor, there is a smudge on the camera lens, and I’m not sure I really like the handlebar mount perspective, but this is an experiment for now….

 


On that note, and with the hope that we will be able to provide a full collection of trail videos eventually, OaxacaMTB.org now has a YouTube channel to share these videos as they are created/provided.  That also means there is now a Google+ page to go along with our previously existing Facebook page.  We hope you’ll add these additional outlets to your social media lists.   Here are the links:

 

OaxacaMTB YouTube.com Channel

OaxacaMTB page on Google+

Nitos Ride on San Felipe del Agua Trails

For this Sunday’s ride the Nitos bike club tried something different. Carlos, an experienced rider and mountain bike racer, was asked to accompany the group and give basic instructions on mountain biking along the way. He did a very thorough and professional job — starting with how to get a proper bike fit and how to set up the bike; then going on to give riding tips and demonstrating how to ride, climb and descend. Various segments of the San Felipe trail network provided the backdrop for Carlos’ instructions and the terrain for participants to practice using his advice.

The ride began, as usual, at the Church of St. Augustine in el centro. Riders used city streets to climb to San Felipe, where they set off on dirt roads and single track trails that continued on into the foothills of the Sierra Norte below Cerro San Felipe. The ride totaled 13.1 miles (21.1 km) and had an elevation gain and loss of 1690 feet (515 meters).

Este domingo el Club Nitos decidió intentar algo diferente. Carlos, un ciclista de mucha experiencia, nos acompañó y ofreció instrucción básica sobre ciclismo de montaña durante el viaje. Carlos fue un excelente guía y muy profesional—empezando con como escoger subicicleta y como equiparla luego dió consejos y él mismo mostró como elciclista se debiera montar, subir y descender durante un paseo o una carrera.Varias partes de la red de San Felipe se prestaron un terreno muy adecuado para que los participantes podían practicar lo que él enseñaba.

 

Nitos Ride to Huayapam

Twenty-five members of the Nitos club set out this Sunday morning for a ride along the lower flank of the Sierra Norte, following roads and trails running from San Felipe del Agua through Donaji and into Huayapam. The circular route ran a total of 15.0 miles (24.1 km) through some steep and heavily wooded terrain, with an elevation gain and loss of 1747 feet (532.5 meters) along the way. Weather conditions were excellent, and for the first time in a long while there was no mud to slither through. The group set out from downtown Oaxaca shortly after 8 am and finished the ride back at our starting point by 1:30 in the afternoon.

25 socios del Club Nitos emprendieron un viaje a través del costado de la Sierra Norte viajando por carreteras y caminos pasado por Donaji y terminando en Huayapam.  La ruta de ida y vuelta era de 15 millas (24.1 kilometros) y pasó por áreas de empinados caminos y bosques, con un cambio de altura de 532.5 metros durante el viaje.   Las condiciones de clima y terreno eran excelentes y por primera vez en algún tiempo no había lodo.  El grupo salió del centro de Oaxaca a las 8 de la mañana y terminó el viaje donde habíamos comenzado a la 1:30 de la tarde.

Nitos Ride Near Huitzo

Thirty-one members of the Nitos bike club headed into the hill country northwest of Huitzo for a challenging 18.2 mile (29.3 km) ride on a beautiful Sunday morning in late September. (The ride was supposed to cover 16.4 miles, but most riders missed a turn on the way back and so wound up pedaling another 1.84 miles by mistake.) There were significant hills to be negotiated (elevation gain & loss totaled 3302 feet or 1006 meters), so there was a good amount of hike-a-biking along the way, particularly as the grade ran 12-15% on some of the hills. The gorgeous scenery more than made up for the physical effort required, however.

At the conclusion of the ride the group took advantage of a comedor at the trailhead to wolf down an assortment of typical Mexican dishes, with pitchers of lemonade and plenty of soda pop and beer to help re-hydrate after the ride.