^that looks fun!
Perspective is so hard with pics, but that is definitely steeper and bigger than it looks
^that looks fun!
Perspective is so hard with pics, but that is definitely steeper and bigger than it looks
I picked up a battery powered, modular weedwhacker for clearing spring growth. Modular = can pop the front half of the pipe with the head off, makes it easier to stow in a pack. Man, so much nicer on the back than my hedge trimmer for trimming low grass / blackberries / poison oak. Counterpoint: it fucking vaporizes poison oak instead of just lopping it off. So I'm learning pretty quickly to dress like a gardener with hoody, glasses, and a Buff covering most of my face. Any little gap in coverage, weedwhacked poison oak will find. It goes through batteries at a decent clip too, the first day I used it I think I drained 2x 6aH and 1x 4aH batteries in a bit over an hour.
I would be scared to death at the thought of weedwhacking poison oak. I have a hedge trimmer that attaches to my weed whacker body, but the thing is kinda massive and not condusive to biking with
Had a great couple days trail work to reopen an old mining road. Once passable it will provide access to a 3k descent that is currently an up and back ride. Lots of deadfall to saw in an old burn area. Will post more when I get home.
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That looks like a ton of saw work. Also looks like a sanctioned build, so hopefully many hands helping
I’ve been really busy out in the woods. Got an active with my local trail org a few years ago, and due to currently very supportive leadership in our local area we are able to build some sanctioned black/double black trails.
We have a paid crew building the climbing trail and one of the descents.
I’m leading the crew building 2 of the tech trails.
The trail we’re building right now is a higher speed tech trail with a mixture of hand built berms and exits off rolls with sections of hand built trail that are left fast but rooty & rocky.
It all ends in a big granite slab. Like 200’ long slab. It’s cool.
So far we are about 30% complete, and making substantial progress each week. Mostly working on it on nights and weekends.
Here’s a few random pics as we build:
I’m not trying to self promote but given the circumstances with TGR, I’m posting more build pics here:
https://www.instagram.com/panhandle_loam/
(Edit: of course the fucking photo upload doesn’t work… [emoji22])
^^^ pics not working, but I checked out the insta link. That looks rad! Is that in the Sandpoint area?
Tapatalk is the only way to load pics apparently
Yep! Right off the Schweitzer road. It’s crazy the caliber of riding that has been tucked away literally a few hundred feet from existing trails. But zero development, all the stuff we find for old school abandoned trails are just random poorly built wood ladder drops to flat, well away from the granite.Originally Posted by toast[emoji638
Yup, lots of saw work. This is in the burn scar of the 2009 Station Fire. Most of the dead trees still standing are oaks. They're heavy and tough to cut out, often with many branches. And always more of them falling down each time there are high winds.
The project is interesting. We have USFS permission, but apparently they said - "we don't know what you're up to, but go ahead". Lol. The trail we are accessing is an abandoned section of Pacific crest trail. It isn't a system trail but is still in the FS trail inventory. The mining road is similar. It's in inventory, but marked as closed. Apparently if it is still in inventory, it is possible to get approval to work on it. The local group I'm working with has a great relationship with the Angeles NF. They have completely restored several trails that were destroyed by fires.
Not so many hands helping (4 this day, about the same last year) but there were other events going on.
Fack, all the work you guys are putting in is impressive. Makes the bandit loamers Mrs jm2e and I work on feel like small potatoes.
Too much tick, Yellowjacket, snake, ivy, humidity, jungle for us to do much more until the fall.
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However many are in a shit ton.
If I could get away with scratching in and riding loamers I'd be all over that. No choice but to put in the work though when the hills are covered in thick brush and deadfall.
yeah but loamers don't stay loamy for long. Most of our man made trails start out as loam based but in 4/5 years (even with very little traffic) the loam erodes and you are riding roots and rocks, that is when the real work begins.
Who says we’re not also building loamersOriginally Posted by jm[emoji638
Yeah, nice work!
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