Showing posts with label Kazahari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kazahari. Show all posts

08 October 2018

Okutama 200km brevet

At a stop for water refill near Tachikawa, tree heavy with fruit in the background.
On Sunday I joined the AJ Tamagawa 200km Okutama brevet, my last Audax ride of the year. 

The course was a loop entirely within Tokyo prefecture -- from Koenji down to Haneda, then up the Tamagawa to Fussa, then up the Akigawa to Musashi Itsukaichi, the very popular cyclists' route climbing to Tomin-no-Mori, Kazahari Pass (Elev. 1138 meters or around 3800ft), and down the back of the hill to Lake Okutama. Then back down the Tamagawa to Oume, and along Oume Kaido all the way bak to Koenji.

You can see the ride here on Strava.

What's not to like? Much of this route -- the rural part -- used to be an almost "routine" one day Positivo Espresso weekend sortée, but I have not done it in recent years. These days, if I start the climb up the Akigawa, I always turn left mid-way and go through Kobu Tunnel (Elev. 625m), descending down to Uenohara, with another shorter climb on the return (Otarumi Elev 392m), or maybe instead return by climbing the west side of Wada Pass (Elev. 600m), as these significantly shorten the return to town.

The day before the ride, I printed the cue sheet, downloaded the GPS track and took a closer look at the route. From Koenji to Haneda, we would travel most of the way on Kan-nana Dori. Kan-nana is a major "ring road" and, while cyclists are permitted, it is one of the routes I avoid. Still, with a 6AM start on Sunday in the middle of a 3-day weekend, traffic would be very light, so I thought it must be fine. I looked more. The route would continue via Kan-pachi Dori for at least 7 kilometers, to Shimo Maruko. I had never even considered riding on this part of Kan-pachi, another major ring road and one to avoid. Still, it would be early Sunday, and so must at least not be too dangerous.

The route continued up the Tamagawa, on road, not the cycling path. I prefer road to path on most stretches. But further on, the organizers had us take an almost 10km stretch on Shin-Okutama-Kaido, through Tachikawa and beyond. This is another road I try to avoid, at least the stretch through Tachikawa. Jerome likes it as a fast alternative. I am terrified of the traffic and lack of any shoulder. Still, we would be early on Sunday, and so traffic would be light. ... well, actually, by that point, it would no longer be early, but mid-morning. Traffic might not be so light.
My alarm rang at 445AM Sunday as planned. My bedroom felt hot and humid. Indeed, the passage of a typhoon in the Japan Sea north of Tokyo had brought warm, if sticky weather. The high temperature Sunday would be over 30 degress Celsius. Lack of enough sleep and humid weather had me on the defensive from the get go, but at least I had everything ready to go so just needed to grab a quick bite (and a cup of cold brew coffee), clean up, throw on my cycling wear, get on the bike and shove off, almost sweating from the start. I made it to Koenji by 545AM, well ahead of the 6AM start. 
Bike check 
No bicycle parking allowed!



Really, "no bicycle partking allowed"

In fact, I had been assigned to a 630AM "C wave" of riders, so I need not have rushed. I wished I had slept another 30 minutes ...
The C wave was called, and my bike inspected, so I headed out. No one was following, and I made it through the first traffic signal to cross under Kan-Nana and head South just as the light changed yellow. I made the next few signals likewise just as they changed, and for the next 20-25 minutes I saw no one behind, nor anyone ahead from the B wave that had left 10+ minutes earlier.  I enjoyed a side/tail wind and made good time. Of course, it was nearing 7AM, and there was starting to be traffic on Kan-nana, but manageable. And even on Kan-nana, there are traffic signals, and bicycles cannot take the crossing overpasses, but need to take the surface level exit/entrance ramps, and wait at the signal. 

Shrine gate at the entrance to Haneda Airport
Near our turn off from Kan-nana, I caught up with a large group of B wave riders in a line -- maybe 7 or 8 of them. I joined but found they were going too slowly. In Japan Audax riders are very polite about passing each other. But the result is that sometimes one, slower rider, is pulling for far too long. No rotation. And with infinite traffic signals, a large group is awful. The start-up time to accelerate is very long, and it is impossible to time one's speed to try and sprint through a signal, seeing the walk light change from solid green, to flashing green, to red, and the signal go to yellow. You inevitably get stuck. So I passed the group as soon as practical.

Marukobashi
 It was after 730AM by the time I entered Kan-pachi. There was heavy traffic around Kamata (as always), but there were other brevet riders not so far ahead and behind, so at least the cars and trucks would be on the lookout for cyclists. We finally turned onto Tama-dzutsumi Dori and reached the river again at Marukobashi.
Crossing the Tamagawa at Mutsumibashi

Crossing the Tamagawa at Mutsumibashi
From here, the ride upriver was very familiar, and no surprises, just some wind gusting from the front and side to contend with. I made it to Mutsumibashi and the wind seemed to weaken a bit on Mutsumibashi Dori out to Itsukaichi. Our first timed control point was at a Seven Eleven across from Musashi Itsukaichi Station, 79 kms from the start, and over 92 kms from my home. The place was mobbed with cyclists (not from our event) and motorcyclists. Wow. Everyone seemed to have the same idea -- what a great day to head up the Akigawa by bike. But it was getting quite warm now.
Entering the Akigawa gorge area.
As I headed up the Akigawa, I noticed many cyclists coming DOWN the hill already back toward Itsukaichi. Some were alone, but many were in groups, larger and smaller, and many had rucksacks. Cars, motorcycles, and bikes all mixed. Finally, I noticed this sign on the left side of the road:

The road had been closed from 6 to 8AM for the Hinohara Stage, Tokyo Hill Climb. That explained the riders. They had done the Hinohara stage hill climb first thing in the morning, and were headed back down and home. No doubt they had brought an overnight change or warm gear in rucksacks that were delivered at the top. Of course, today no one needed warm gear even on a long descent. The gear stayed in the rucksack.

waterfall at 770m elevation, just past the former tollbooth site.
I really struggled on the climb, overheating if I pushed hard at all on the sections exposed to sun. By now it was almost midday. I had been hot since the beginning of the ride, my feet felt hot. I rested once at the turnoff to Kobu Tunnel. Many riders passed me. ... but as I got back on the bike and continued the climb, I passed many of them. They had just chosen their rest stops a bit further up! I had forgotten that there is actually some up and down, and more up and down, on the middle part of this climb. And the "up" can be steep. I rested again -- laying down -- at a turn off around 600 meters elevation. And rested again briefly at the former toll booth, before a push up to Tomin no Mori. Nothing good about my climbing speed nor these rests, but at least I had plenty of company. The lack of enough sleep, what seemed like a hundred start-stop traffic signals, the heat, and the swirling winds had taken their toll. Still, I knew that once up the hill, I could roll it home, pretty much assured of finishing if I were just careful. So I rested and then continued. 
Tomin No Mori


One reason to avoid the area around Kazahari used to be the motorcyclists who would practice racing through the curved stretches at the top. Then there was a year when motorcyclists were banned, and it was blissfully peaceful.  Well, the motorcyclists are back, and were out in huge numbers on Sunday. I guess after the 6-8AM road closure for a cycling event, they wanted to make sure everyone knew who really "owns" this stretch of road. A group of 6 motorcyclists kept doing a loop between two parking lots near the top -- I think they zoomed past me at least 5 times, some of them passing within inches, as I slogged from Tomin no Mori to their parking lot just shy of Kazahari Pass. I could smell exhaust, and hear their shrill engines, the entire stretch.
Then, I was past their turnaround point. It was like night and day. Peaceful, quiet and beautiful. Then all too soon, I was onto the descent to Lake Okutama, around the lake, and heading down the hill toward Oume. 



The stretch along the lake and the hill toward Oume on Route 411 includes many dark, noisy, damp tunnels. And there was very heavy traffic on Sunday afternoon. At least we were in our Audax gear - reflective vests, good front and rear lights. There were many motorcyclists as well, zipping around the cars and passing, zooming through the tunnels and other stretches. Before long, we came upon the scene of an accident, a car and two motorbikes pulled over, ambulances, police, the whole works. Some time must have passed as the injured were out of sight and the authorities out in force, and the driver of the car was being interviewed by the police. A few minutes later when a Ducati motorbike zoomed around some cars and cut in just in front of me ... I having foolishly left a safe distance between myself and the next car -- I screamed at him. I doubt he could hear. Another ten minutes, and I could hear more emergency vehicle sirens ... they seemed to be coming from across the river, on the bypass route. In Okutama-cho, near the train terminus, I passed a huge new fire station that has been built in recent years. At least the emergency vehicles do not have so far to travel now for these inevitable motorcycle accidents. Another 10 minutes on, I passed two motorcycles with sirens, ridden by blue-uniformed firemen/paramedics racing up the hill. These fire department motorcycles looked outfitted for medical care. I don't remember seeing them before. How many accidents in total?
I once knew that it is best to avoid Route 411 between Oume and Okutama mid-afternoon on a warm weekend day. This was buried somewhere in the depths of my local cycling knowledge. I needed, and got, a reminder.

Wow, Sunday's route included long stretches of Kan-Nana, Kan-pachi and Shin Okutama Kaido, as well as Route 411 (Oume Kaido) tunnels around Okutama and down to Oume ... so many roads that I usually want to avoid, all in a single event!

From Higashi Oume, we cut inland less than 1km on Nariki Kaido then took a road along the edge of the hills. This was a nice route, at least in the Sunday late afternoon. It was noticeably cooler, with the sun far down. I missed the next control point -- a Family Mart across the road -- as I focused on traffic congestion and turning cars at the relevant corner. A few hundred meters further, I approached a brevet rider at a red light. I said "we should be at the control point soon." His response "we just passed it". I thanked him and turned back.

After the control, we took Iwakura Kaido, which goes just along the western edge of the Oume tea fields (茶畑). The sky was beautiful and blue as dusk neared, the fields stretching out to my left. 

The last 30 kms back to the finish was unmemorable. Many, many, endless traffic signals, and long lines of cars. We took Oume Kaido most of the way. The last ~10kms it was a wide road with several lanes each direction, and a real tailwind. But before that, there were long stretches of standing single-file traffic, and bicycles needed to pass in a narrow space wedged against the curb. It was impossible to make good time. At least I felt strong again, fully recovered from the earlier struggle on the climb.

What can I say about Oume Kaido? Well, it is better road into town toward Shinjuku than Koshu Kaido. But not much better. I think there is a very good reason we take the Tamagawa in and out of town to the West and NW.

At the finish there was a party going on. The always professional Yoshida-san logged me in. Naito-san and a team of volunteers were serving us ramen wearing "Ramen Naito" or ラーメンないと t-shirts.  I wondered, is this "Naito" a play on his name and "Knight"? They were like knights to us.

I sat at a table of Audax regulars - Ryuu-san from Saitama Audax, Yoshiaki Philippe, Sugibuchi-san and others. They all did the 5AM start, or just came by for the ramen and company.  The ones who had ridden looked as if they had been at the finish already for hours by the time I arrived. Takemura-san, the head of AJ Tamagawa (now Vice Chair of Audax Japan), sat down and joined me. He said he welcomed me participating and sounded eager to get my help. He struggled in English, but I got the general idea. I think realizes that with a role in the AJ leadership, he will be called upon to coordinate with the global Audax organizations, and he will need help when they hold events that are open to riders from overseas. He said AJ Tamagawa wants to host a 1400km event in 2021, with international participation. I told him that, subject to time, I am delighted to help out.

The ramen was delicious. What type of ramen, I asked Takemura-san? Hakata? Sapporo? Some other region? He said it is "Jiro-inspired".  Jiro-inspired?! Jiro is the famous Tokyo ramen whose HQ shop is just next to Keio Mita campus. A Keio institution, where the line forms before the shop opens in the morning. But if this is Jiro-inspired, where are the bean sprouts? Where is the garlic? The massive portions? Well, he explained it is all in the style of noodle and the broth.  In any event, it tasted delicious:  Perfect noodles, delicious pork (cha-shu), and the salty broth really hit the spot for a dehydrated rider.

I chatted for quite awhile, then got back on the bike and rolled home, bathed and slept. 

30 May 2015

Kazahari Rindo with Graham

Today I had the honor of initiating Graham into the joys of climbing Kazahari Rindo.  It was a beautiful day, if a bit hot.  Graham's reaction at the top, I think he said something like "that was a bit too much".  By the time he uploaded his ride GPS track to Strava it had become "Madness, Insanity, Lunacy."  Actually, I think he said this as well as the top.
"Madness, Insanity, Lunacy!"
Yes, it really is 2.0 on the MOB Wada Toge scale, or 0.54 on the DGL Mortirolo ("rolling death"?) scale.  Not an easy climb.
Graham climbs, just past the Kinoko Center as we enter the rindo portion.
The rindo ... cannot be as steep as what we just came up, right?
Well, at least there are some sections that offer a short breather.

View from around 1050-1060 meters elevation.
Still some nasty stretches ahead to climb the last 75 meters elevation or so!
The return down the usual route via Tomin no Mori was fast and uneventful, ... except Graham seemed a bit exhausted while ordering lunch at the Tomin no Mori rest area, becoming flummoxed at concepts such as no cold sansai-udon.  And he got even more confused when told that I (who had been ahead in line) had gotten the last rice dish.  Been there.

I met and rode on much of the descent with a Japanese cyclist visiting from Aichi, who said he had parked his car in Oume and come over Kazahari from Okutama-ko, and meeting and chatting at the top with a Brit named Ian, who said he lives in Komazawa (North side of 246) and rides out on Sunday mornings with the "Tokyo Cranks".

Near the mouth of the Akigawa
Same
Everywhere azaleas this time of year.  From my neighborhood to Itsukaichi.
Photo from the end of the main route up the Kita Akigawa.  Two women cyclists (one quite elderly) 
Photo taken by the elderly woman cyclist.
Today's ride.  154 kms and either 3600 or 1600 meters, depending on whose GPS you believe.
Basically just one big hill ... 


04 April 2015

Riding into the Mist and up Kazahari Rindo with the Tominator

At Kazahari Pass, Elev 1137 meters.  Via the nasty rindo approach.
Jerome was on a 200k brevet today, so missed the mountaintop ceremony this time.
Today I rode with Positivo Espresso member Tom S.  I do not ride with Tom very often.  Why? He is too strong!

There was that time in 2008 when we were on the Positivo Espresso inaugural team for Tokyo-Itoigawa.  We started together in a nice paceline.  My adrenaline was pumping so I pulled the team the first kilometer or two -- starting up the hill from Takao on Route 20, Koshu Kaido, toward Otarumi Pass.  Then Tom went past and zoomed ahead up the hill.  MOB, Juliane, David J. and I could not follow.  The four of us continued to work together the next 12+ hours.  The next time we saw Tom was when we arrived at Itoigawa.  We were exhausted.  He had arrived hours earlier, showered/bathed, changed, and was well into a meal and enjoying a beer looking rather relaxed.

When I do ride with Tom, I like to do it on Sunday, since he will have ridden 250 kms on Saturday and is softened up a bit so I can try to keep up during his Sunday warmdown.  Maybe his Saturday trip will have involved multiple passes in Chichibu and Gunma, like this.  Or maybe it was a one day (daylight) trip out Doshi Michi to Yamanakako, a quick trip AROUND Mt. Fuji, then home again for dinner.  A fast 275 kms, like this, a week ago.  He is in a different league. Naomi W., herself holder of most of QOM (Queen of the Mountain) badges on Strava in the hills around Tokyo, recently called him the "Tominator".  Perfect.

And of course, Tom is Belgian.  Like Eddie Merckx, greatest cyclist of his era, and likely of all time.  Eddy the Cannibal.  To race against him was to feel yourself pounded into submission, near death, like being eaten alive.  (Today Tom was even wearing a "Molteni" wool jersey, from Merckx's team.  Tom the Tominator.)

Liege-Bastogne-Liege 1980 -- snow!
The Belgians excel at cycling in tough conditions -- cold and rain, mud.  This time of year, it is Spring Classic season.  Lots of cold, rain and mud.  And grueling cycle races.  The Tour of Flanders.  Liege-Bastogne-Liege.  Gent Wevelgem, Paris Roubaix ... and on.  All those, except Paris Roubaix, in Belgium. And Roubaix is just over the border -- Northeast of Lille, France, in an area where France bulges into Belgium.  If the border with Belgium were straight, Roubaix would be in Belgium, not France!

So I was a bit worried this morning.  Not only was it Saturday (well-rested Tom), but we were going to climb the Kazahari Rindo past the Kinoko Center and to Kazahari Pass.  The climb takes you from 500 to 1137 meters, and many sections are 15-20 degrees or even steeper.
Is there any other bigger, badder hill so close to Tokyo? Not that I know of. If you can do this hill twice, you have done the Passo di Mortirolo, considered by many the toughest climb in road cycling in Italy, in Europe .. in the world even. Kazahari Rindo really should be included in the road cycling stage of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics .. it is, after all, in Tokyo.  DO NOT try this road without your climbing gear.

Last Monday I had ridden up to the base of the climb.  A few cyclist friends commented on the blog or Facebook "so you went to the Kinoko Center?" ....  A harmless question, but it stung me.  Ouch.   Errr, actually no, I did not climb to the Kinoko Center.  I turned around before the steep climb.  My ears were turning red as I saw the comments on my computer screen.  Tom offered to ride the "Full Monty" (in this case meaning "the full mountain") with me, and I leaped at the chance to recover my honor.

Today was Spring Classic weather -- dry in the city, but no longer once we neared the mountains and started to climb along the Akigawa; the mist started and the road surface was wet.  The mist continued all through the mountain segment of our ride, and at Kazahari Pass, Elevation 1137, it was about 5 degrees and very damp.  My bike was a mess by the end of the ride.
Spring classic road grit
More gunk
My rear Gokiso hub -- maybe time to clean the inside and put my maintenance training to use ...
Anyway, we met at Koremasa Bridge around 715AM. Tom had brought a Fizik Arione saddle he does not use and had offered to give me following my recent diatribe about the decline of the Arione in its newer, fancier iterations.
Tom was riding one of his steel Panasonic bikes (via C Speed) -- this one with 700x28 tires and lots of mud clearance.

Thanks for the saddle, Tom!  One of the good, old Ariones, and like new condition.
I arrive after Tom at the end of the Akigawa climb ... bottom of the Kazahari Rindo section!
Where we came from and where we are going -- does not look so steep does it?
We just climbed a 10% grade.  The steep section starts just around the next few bends.
The road turns up gradually to around 20%, even steeper in places.
Only 1.5kms to the Kinoko Center.  But over 200 meters up.
We were passed by one little local "kei" truck as we took these photos before the big climb, ... but did not see any cars otherwise the entire way to the top. We quickly entered the clouds.  ... I was tempted to stop and take a photo of the dramatic plunging hillside and clouds below.  But did not.  The #1 rule for this climb is NO FOOT TOUCHES THE GROUND.  It is very hard to start again, and motivation goes entirely if one touches the earth.

Of course, Tom went ahead, and waited at the top.  It was only around 5-6 degrees C, and misting, at the top.  We put on our warm gear, posed for a victory photo and started the long descent down the main road past Tomin No Mori and back to Itsukaichi.
I arrive at the top!
Accurately conveys how I felt!

Tom forgot to switch on his Garmin recording, so I am not sure how much faster he was than me. When I uploaded my GPS data to Strava, I learned that Strava shows me as the "King of the Mountain" for 2015 so far on Kazahari Rindo, despite our rest before the climb.  Great ... but ridiculous. ... This is why they really need to change the feature so that instead of just rides since January 1 (only 2 or 3 showing who have done this entire Strava segment) it shows the past 12 months.

This is the kind of ride I need to do to be ready for another attempt at an SR600 in late May or June, and for Europe in late July.  Thank you, Tom!  Let's ride again soon.  Next time if the weather is better let's add a second, or third pass.

02 November 2014

Fall "Challenge Recovery" Ride with Traditions Galore

Jerome and I have not had much chance to ride together lately -- his travel schedule prevented him from joining recent Brevets, even those he signed up for.  So we wanted to get in one decent ride over the 3-day weekend.

He styled it a "challenge recovery" ride.  Recovery for me from 2 weekends in a row with Brevets, for him from too much travel and food and drink.  Challenge?  Not really consistent with recovery, I think, but the general idea was to not push the pace TOO hard, but go fairly long and do some climbing, at least.  I was looking for more recovery than challenge, having ridden almost 3000 kms over the past 2 months.
The Upper Tamagawa from near the top of Yoshino Kaido
We decided to honor the traditions of Positivo Espresso to the extent practical, and headed out a traditional route up the Tamagawa then the Asagawa toward Takao.  There was dog show going on along the Asagawa at a park in Hachioji.  Lots of dogs of all types, but mostly typical Japanese breeds.  And lots of older dog owners.


Ready for the show.
We stopped at the traditional 7-11 on Route 20 in front of Takao Station.  Then a climb up to Otarumi Pass, and down the far side and out to Uenohara.  The traffic was light, and no trucks on a Sunday in the middle of a 3-day weekend.

We stopped briefly at a new landmark on the way to Sagami-ko.  A used car lot (junk yard?) right next to the road named Rookie had an interesting looking superhero guarding the inventory.

At Uenohara, we stopped at the Daily Yamazaki along Route 33 (which no longer has benches in front since the renovation a few years ago ..., but is still a traditional stop), then took the "old road" -- deserted -- through wooded areas and to the base of Yamanashi Route 18.

As we reached the base of the climb to Tawa Pass, we turned left onto Steve T.'s alternate route around the pass.  We stopped at the steep field next to the road, glad to see it well-tended, the persimmons mostly removed from the trees in the adjacent orchard.  We followed tradition and looked to see if the little old lady was working in the field.  I did not have high hopes, as she has not been there the last few times I passed here.
Is the old lady at work in the field?  Can you see her?
We were delighted to find that she was, indeed, at work.  She looked up and saw us, and returned our wave.
How about now?
Further up Route 18, we made the traditional stop at the covered picnic table, rest room and gateball court just above 700 meters elevation on the climb to Tsuru Pass.


Jerome looks at the Shark and thinks "I want one"?
For there, we quickly made it to the top of Tsuru and down the North side of the hill to Okutama-ko.  Of course, we stopped at Yagyu-tei, better known as Watanabe-san's cafeteria.   Mrs. Watanabe was off, but her younger sister, Ms. Sato was there.

Just as we were heading into the restaurant a group of well-dressed, younger women cyclists rode by and looked at the much fancier restaurant/coffee shop down the block, next to the lake.  But there was a line outside (!), so they turned around and came back up the block and into Yagyu-tei.  It was the women's only Rapha Tokyo Club ride.  No wonder they were stylishly dressed.  Or "CCTYO Women’sライド 奥多摩".


Lots of women's bikes at Yagyu Tei!
Jerome wanted more climbing, whereas I needed to get home, having done almost 100km of "recovery", with another 80km just to get home.  So Jerome headed up the back approach to Kazahari Pass, while I rode along Okutama-ko then down toward Oume through the tunnels.  It was a fast trip home.

Tradition.  Recovery. Challenge.