Seeking a quieter alternative to the busy roads she
encountered on previous bike tours, Alissa Bell took to the byways of Idaho and
Oregon for her first bikepacking trip. In this piece, she shares her first
impressions and lessons learned as a new bikepacker…
The canyon twisted in blissfully endless descent.
Every time I thought it was over, the bottom dropped out yet again. Finally, at
the shore of the John Day River, the downhill and the pavement both came to an
end.
I had been waiting for this since pedaling westward
out of Boise a week prior, a bicycle traveler on a mission to ditch the
panniers and pavement and try this bikepacking thing. Central Oregon’s martian
landscape and empty gravel roads beckoned. I paused to scarf a protein bar and
tightened the ever-loosening straps on my cheap new seat bag, ready to ride off
into the wilderness.
Alissa Bell, Exploring Wild
A UPS van, immaculately shiny and brown, rattled to a
stop beside me and comically shattered the illusion. The friendly driver pulled
me back into a familiar world with the usual questions: “Where are you going?
You’re out here alone?” I guess some things about bicycle travel don’t change,
no matter how you’ve packed.
I’m actually no beginner when it comes to bicycle
travel. With thousands of miles under my wheels in the US and overseas—and
usually solo—I know what it feels like to live on my bike for weeks or months
on end. But those trips couldn’t be called bikepacking; too much pavement, too
many panniers, usually both.
Since surviving a few thousand miles of road riding
across the US, I’d felt pulled away from busy pavement. I craved a return to
the peace of trails and dirt from where I’d first started cycling, a trail
runner and backpacker with a budding bicycle travel problem. I’m not usually
one to fixate on labels, but the term “bikepacking” seemed to describe the new
adventure I was looking for: rugged, peaceful, efficient. I needed to try it.
So I set out on a messy, boundary-blurring ride, an
intentional experiment with all the makings of a turning point. I outfitted my
beloved (but comically inappropriate) Long Haul Trucker with the widest tires
that would fit and the cheapest bags I could find. I flew to Idaho for the
Smoke ‘n’ Fire 400, where I had a blast and also learned why people don’t
typically bikepack on rigs built for touring on pavement. It was worth a try.
Then, because I like long lines on maps and am
fortunate to have the time, I started pedaling westward out of Boise. Quiet
highways led to quieter back roads that intersected with my final objective,
the Oregon Outback route, heading south to Klamath Falls and the Amtrak that
would take me home to California.
Along the way I came to understand more about the term
“bikepacking.” Finding the perfect stealthy campsite on the shore of the John
Day River, without vehicle access or any other humans in sight for hours, felt
like bikepacking. Patching puncture after puncture and pondering how I might
cover a few dozen miles of remote dirt with no air in my tires? Still
bikepacking. A few days later, losing a race with a September snowstorm into
Klamath Falls? Definitely still bikepacking.
A beginner’s perspective is a rare gift, and one that
fades quickly with experience. While the nuance and curiosity are still fresh,
here are my first impressions of bikepacking.
BIKEPACKING DEMANDS SELF-RELIANCE.
Muttering choice words to the bushes, I pulled four
thorns from my tires and patched the holes. Half a mile later they were flat
again, bristling with more thorns. I had just crossed Cherry Creek, a veritable
minefield of the little suckers, and hadn’t seen a person or vehicle since the
previous afternoon. I started cutting patches into halves, then into quarters, and
contemplating a very long walk.
I fixed more flats that day than in my entire history
of bicycle travel combined. While nothing like this had ever happened while
touring, I knew what I probably would have done if it had: stick out a thumb.
When riding roads in all but the most remote areas, the kindness of strangers
counts as a viable backup plan. When riding trails and rarely used dirt tracks,
not so much.
Eventually I limped into Prineville and purchased some
trip-saving tire liners, but the lesson was well learned: if you get yourself
in, be prepared to get yourself out, whatever it takes. Next on the bike to-do
list: figure out this tubeless thing everyone is talking about.
PACKING BIKEPACKING BAGS IS A PUZZLE.
When I toured with panniers I packed like a traveler,
just dumping things in and half-heartedly balancing the weight left to right.
When I ditched the rear rack it felt like a precision operation. Everything I
packed needed to become a cylinder or triangle. Parts of my frame I’d never
even noticed needed to be optimized and filled. Staps and electrical tape
littered my living room floor.
As I experimented and studied others’ setups, I
realized creativity is part of the process. To make it work with bags that fit
my small bike frame and even smaller budget I needed to create my own systems.
My decent collection of lightweight backpacking gear was a good start. Creative
finishing touches, like storing my repair kit in a small water bottle that just
barely fit beneath my downtube, finished it off.
Despite the frustrations of gear tradeoffs, tires
rubbing on bags, and figuring out where to strap that sandwich from the gas
station, I kind of liked the puzzle.
BIKEPACKING IS A REMINDER THAT NATURE IS IN CHARGE.
When touring, I divided my days by uphill and
downhill, and maybe pavement versus gravel. In specific areas, such as
Patagonia and Nebraska, I cared a lot about wind. Barring a mechanical issue or
a wickedly steep hill, moving at walking pace was unexpected and most days went
as planned.
Not so when bikepacking. Roads that should have been
smooth dirt turned to impassable mud. Where I planned for blissfully downhill I
found loose, rocky slopes. Uphills where I expected some hike-a-bike were so
steep that I could barely make forward progress at all.
Then there was the unexpected snowfall in early
September. While trying to outrun it I rode straight toward an ominous plume of
smoke, expecting a very long reroute until the fire crews let me ride through
their burn when the wind was right. And then, freezing temperatures and biting
wind and nowhere to hide for dozens of miles. All of that in only three days!
Weather and terrain influence a pavement-focused tour
too, and traveling by bicycle in unfamiliar cultures breeds its own kind of
chaos. But bikepacking, with its more committing routes and exposure to the
elements, reminded me that nature is in charge. Bikepacking challenged my
illusion of control and reminded me that in bicycle travel, as in life, it’s
wise to expect the unexpected.
THE BIKE DOESN’T MATTER, EXCEPT WHEN IT DOES.
I nod in vigorous agreement when people say “the best
bike is the one you already have.” I admit to a perverse satisfaction in
pushing the limits of my trusty Long Haul Trucker when everyone else shows up
with a mountain bike. I absolutely believe anyone with interest should try
bicycle travel on whatever bike they can get their hands on.
But I walked my Long Haul Trucker through more
sections of rocky Idaho singletrack than I care to admit. I struggled with
bar-end shifters on rough terrain. I pushed the limits of my strength trying to
heave the heavy steel beast—which weighs half as much as me even with my most
minimal load—up steep and slippery hike-a-bikes.
There’s no doubt that bikepacking, especially on
technical trails, benefits from a specialized bike more so than standard
touring. My touring bike is reliable, stable, and with the right tires she can
eat gravel roads for breakfast. But the lure of wilder trails has me dreaming
of something a little more rugged.
BIKEPACKING REQUIRES ACTUAL BIKE HANDLING SKILLS.
I certainly fought my way through stretches of bad
gravel from time to time while touring, getting better with practice. But rocky
singletrack in Idaho and rutted dirt in Oregon required real mountain biking
skills, which I don’t currently possess, especially on a loaded bike. Clearly,
it’s time to start practicing.
Though I’ll always appreciate the smooth rhythm of a
zoned-out pavement spin, I like how the technical variety of trail keeps my
brain occupied during long days in the saddle. I’ve always been into endurance,
but now bikepacking requires that I develop more specific athletic skills.
Challenge accepted.
BIKEPACKING CAN BE A SOLITARY, INTERNAL PURSUIT.
Bike touring, especially outside the US, can sometimes
feel like running a gauntlet of friendly people: drivers honking, kids yelling,
families waving from their front yards and asking where I’m going. It’s fun,
and also exhausting.
My first impression of bikepacking involved seeing no
other humans for nearly 24 hours, something I had never before experienced on a
bike. For me, this is neither a pro nor a con. Intensely introverted, I soak up
solitude like a dry sponge. I usually ride solo and like it that way. But I
also find cultural variety fascinating, and rely on extroverted strangers to
pull me out of my shell and create memorable moments when I travel.
Of course it’s possible to bikepack in populated areas
or tour in empty areas, but rougher roads and trails definitely tip the balance
toward solitude, at least in the US. It’s nice to have the choice.
BIKEPACKING MEANS INTIMATELY EXPERIENCING THE LAND.
During Smoke ‘n’ Fire I had the interesting experience
of popping out from a dirt track onto a paved highway I’d previously ridden
while touring. When I’d first ridden that highway it felt dramatic and wild as
it snaked up the valley, my first taste of Idaho.
But now, after days of riding, walking, and stumbling
up and over the mountains on dirt and gravel, that highway seemed like it
missed the point. I felt a new sense of connection with the land, its rutted
dirt and freezing nights, and all its different types of rocks. I felt like I
truly knew it, instead of just passing through on the path of least resistance.
BIKEPACKING FEELS SAFER.
As a woman riding solo, the concept of fear is never
far away. If I ever manage to forget that I’m supposed to be afraid, some
well-meaning stranger kindly reminds me: “You’re all alone? Aren’t you afraid?
Be careful out there!”
I tell them that riding in traffic is the most
dangerous part of bicycle touring, and this risk doesn’t discriminate based on
gender. For this reason alone, bikepacking on trails and lightly used roads
increases my odds of a trouble-free ride.
But there’s more to it, unfortunately. I personally
believe most people are good and bike travel is fairly safe, even for solo
women. But that doesn’t mean I’m immune to the pounding surge of adrenaline
when I imagine footsteps outside my tent at night, or a car lingers too long on
a lonely road. Our culture teaches me to believe I’m vulnerable, and to some
extent, I am.
When I bike tour in populated areas my threat sensors
are always working, evaluating, trying to read people. This part of my brain
can rest in the solitude of the backcountry. Instead, I’m free to focus on
risks I can mostly control: monitoring my water supply, staying warm and dry in
the cold, riding carefully on sketchy terrain. It’s peaceful, and a big relief.
MY FAVORITE ASPECTS OF BICYCLE TRAVEL DIDN’T CHANGE.
Whether we move quickly or slowly, pack panniers or a
seat bag, or roll on pavement or dirt, trips taken by bike will always have
some things in common.
Bicycle travel will always be total immersion, whether
in a perplexing culture or a raging storm. It will always include the curiosity
and kindness of strangers, whether by the hundreds or one every few days, their
dreams and fears revealed in their reactions to a visitor passing through. Bicycle
travel will always be simplicity: the privilege of stripping life down to
essentials of sustenance, shelter, and getting from A to B.
And finally, to me, bicycle travel will always feel
like freedom: freedom to move through the world on my own terms, to follow my
intuition and curiosity, to linger or to move on.
So, what’s the result of my bikepacking experiment? Am
I converted? As you can probably tell, I’m a fan. I’m not ready to toss my
panniers just yet; they may still come in handy for certain rides on my
wishlist. But bikepacking is a very welcome addition to my pedal-powered
repertoire. With this new set of skills to develop and routes to explore, my
two-wheeled world feels a lot bigger and wilder.
No comments:
Post a Comment