Day 1, Good News and Bad News
We endured a slightly severe thunderstorm over night. Bright flashes in the sky, very loud thunder, and hard rain.
The good news is that the trails would be in primo condition after some rain, the bad news is that we were packing up wet rain flys to start off the trip.
The good news is that thanks to where we camped, we barely had to ride a mile down the dirt road until we turned on to our first single track of the route. The bad news is that we camped at a fairly popular staging area, so the first trails were pretty whooped out for the first 6-10 miles or so. But after we got about 10 miles from the staging area, the whoops gave way to nice smooth trails (well, except for the rocks, roots, and logs).
On the very first of what would be many, many switchbacks over the next 6 days, I was awarded with the first tip-over of the trip. Good start, good start.
It wasn’t long before we encountered our first trail obstacle on Rabbit Creek Trail. We were both carrying
Silky Bigboy hand saws, an excellent saw, but this one was a little too big for a hand saw. Also too big to jump, the only choice was to go around.
Rabbit Creek Trail led up to our first scenic vista, the Sunset Mountain Lookout.
“This place is lousy with trees.”
Down from Sunset Mtn Lookout we took the excellent Hungarian Ridge Trail, to a short section of Forest Service road, and right into the Barber Flat and Brown’s Creek Trails, which turned out to be a trail of many surprises.
It featured overgrowth hiding rocks and ruts to kick you off the trail.
It featured fallen trees sloping downhill across sidehill trails for us to struggle over.
It featured sneaky mud ruts for us to get stuck in.
It featured creek crossings completely hidden by overgrowth so you can’t see the best line through.
From there we got a break on a graded dirt road along the Middle Fork Boise River with a nice spot to enjoy lunch of leftover pizza.
From lunch it was on to Corral Creek trail with some great scenery and crazy side hill singletrack.
Corral Creek trail features some very long, loose climbs, and my bike was overheating. Given the conditions, I didn’t think much of it; that’ll happen. But then going up Rattlesnake Mountain Trail just a short while later, it did it again, and that’s when I realized the cooling fan wasn’t coming on. So, off with the luggage, seat, and fuel tank to diagnose. I thought it must have been a blown fuse, but the fuse was good. Next, Evan pulled the wires off the thermoswitch, connected them together, and the fan spun right up. The thermoswitch just connects ground above a certain temperature, so with that out of the circuit we knew the fan motor was good, and the switch was the problem. Knowing the fan would come on when the wire was connected to any ground, we freed as much of the wires as we could from the harness and ran them up to the handlebar. I loosely attached a zip tie to my handguard to tuck the spade connector under, and that would be my manual fan switch.