body{background-attachment: fixed ! important; }
Showing posts with label Biking Central Taiwan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biking Central Taiwan. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Disappearing Into The Nantou 56: Nobody Can Hear You Scream

Untitled

This is a story about a road. In cycling culture there are roads-- the ones we all know and enjoy-- the ones that lace across common stretches of countryside and draw the fabric of our community tighter together with shared experiences of triumph, failure, surprise and heartache. In central Taiwan these roads come with the shorthand monikers of Guguan, Wuling, Bagua Shan and the 136. We all know these names and rides along with a slew of others that carry some of the most absurd titles the lust for Strava glory can inspire. There are roads-- and then there are fucking roads. These are the chunky scrapes of mountain slopes slathered in a veneer of budget asphalt that arc, coil and slither through the psyche-- the roads that stamp your passport across the border of the local. These are the roads that, for good reason, hang like phantoms high up on ridge lines where the periphery begins and toys with the imagination.

The 投101 through the 投56 is one of these routes that practically defines local knowledge when it comes to cycling routes.


Untitled

I rode this route for the first time last year and wrote about it in Nantou 56: The Lost Highway of Central Taiwan. Since that ride this road has been a regular visitor to my imagination as I reflect on what makes it such a defining gem among the tangle of roadway engineering projects that meander across local maps and terrain.

This time I was eager to show this route to Michael Turton from The View from Taiwan. Michael is a good friend, experienced local cyclist and an intelligent critical blogger who has seen a lot of roadway from a bike in Taiwan, but he had never seen anything like this. Showing a special route to someone can be a bit like a Masonic handshake-- imparting of the secret knowledge.

We were also joined by the slight, yet salty Eva L. Eva is a relative novice rider, but has close ties to the cycling industry.    

Untitled




















For us, this route started in Taichung and took the unremarkable Highway 3 to the Highway 16 in Mingjian. As we passed through the urban nightmare between Taichung and Nantou City, the air pollution was unbearable. I donned a mask several times to keep from directly inhaling the atmosphere of Venus. 

We soon turned onto the placid 投131 toward Lugu. The 投131is a great alternative to the busy 投151, which skips the foreplay and charges directly into the weekend tourist Hell of Sitou. 

Untitled

Not too far up the 投131 is the turn-off to the 投101. It is such a nondescript roadway it could easily be missed. 

Untitled
The 投101is something of a growing rarity as it hosts a living local culture rather than a packaged vision of a consumable local culture that appeals and panders to the exotic expectations of a tourist junket. It is a meditation in cycling as the road follows the mostly gentle contours of the river valley.  

Untitled
The asphalt is in excellent condition and the climbs are neatly contained between plateaus that seem to appear just when they'd be convenient. The lower reaches of the 投101act to lull the rider into euphoric complacency, clobbering over each rise amid a panoramic landscape of earthy greens and golds. Although the surroundings are unquestionably rural, there is still a sense of safety of the occasional car or the mechanical sound of a distant irrigation pump.   

Untitled

Untitled Untitled
Under the flickering shade from leafy overhanging trees, it is easy to forget about the gradual rise in elevation as the road stair-steps into the tea fields of Lugu. A few windows occasionally open up onto the hills below and out into Zhushan. 

Untitled Untitled
The 投101spills out onto the 投56 and effective ends the Sunday drive for the day as the sights and sounds are entirely the calls for the tourist dollar. There are hostels, restaurants, walking trails, campgrounds, tea emporiums and souvenirs. We stopped for a quick lunch before continuing on out way into the 投56 or into the Heart of Darkness

Untitled

The opening section of the 投56 is a long, straight, smooth, subtle grade that passes the tourist Disneyland for tea drinkers. The hills peek out over the shops and fields. The entire atmosphere is remarkably tame for a Taiwanese local road.  

Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled Untitled
Then, just as it seemed the road had ended at the Phoenix Valley Bird Sanctuary (鳳凰谷鳥園生態園區) parking lot, the ride took on an entirely different character. 

As you approach the gate to the bird park, there seems to be no way through as they have set up an official looking sign and false ticketing counter. If you make your way past and keep right, the road drops into a narrow, crumbling gorge surrounded by nothing but wild.  

Untitled Untitled Untitled
Crossing the threshold beyond the bird sanctuary is like dropping into the Land of the Lost. The road becomes an almost random collection of bends and humps amid overgrown embankments and decaying infrastructure. 

This entire section of roadway assumes the haunted air of the abandoned, like the ghostly images of failed humanity in Chernobyl or Fukushima--a derelict archaeological layer of a recent and much different past that was deserted at a moment's notice. It instills an innate sense of anxious unease juxtaposed to the tranquility of humanless noise. There is an urgency in this loneliness and it weighs heavily on the mind. Can I safely get out of here?


Untitled

Untitled Untitled Untitled
The 投56 is only 20km in length, with much of it taken up by flats or a lengthy final descent, but it launches upward for almost 250m in about 2km of thigh snapping climbs.    

Untitled
In this section the tiny mountainside lane keeps a tenuous grip to the section of mountain that was not cleaved from its perch by a massive earthquake and landslide. 

Untitled
Each bend is a revelation of sights, wonder and sobering fear. 

Untitled

Untitled Untitled

The road is unrelenting in a sickly comical freehand scribble of lines flopped upon each delicate grassy terrace. Michael and Eva took it easy for a little hike below with the valley of the Xinyi district reflecting back upon the mountain. 

Untitled Untitled
The heavy shade of forest evaporated and we all simply marched our bikes through a silent bamboo grove with the only conversation being between the pops and cracks beneath skinny bicycle wheels. 

Untitled Untitled

The crest of the road could not have come any sooner and we were soon negotiating the claws of neglected and damaged pavement that can rip any rider off a bike in the blink of an eye. 

Untitled Untitled Untitled

The road drew us faster and faster through the fulcrum of each bend...slingshotting each rider toward the river in Ai-guo Village.

Untitled Untitled
The final act of this ride was the Highway 21. Everyone was tired and spent from the slipshod grades of the high mountain road. The two or three rises in the Highway 21 were simple torture when we simply wanted to arrive in Shuili at the train station. Of course, the upside was that the Highway 21 toward Shuili is also running downhill and it was easy to build momentum and cling to a good draft on the way out. 


Untitled Untitled

Just as the sun started to hollow out long, deep shadows against the hills, we rolled into Shuili for a train to Taichung after a quick transfer in Ershui. 

We were tired and spent, but we had all spent a day together riding one of those special roads that most people are never ever going to see in person. It was a phenomenal experience for all and really shows what can be done on the bike. For cyclists, roads like these are the C-Beams in the dark near the Tannhauser Gate. Riding these roads stays in the memory for a very long time as something wondrous and truly special. 

Untitled


Dont Miss: Michael's take on the ride. 


Route 3473635 - powered by www.bikemap.net

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Friends, Fun and Filth: The Songboling Tea Gardens

IMG_8737

As I mashed my way up Bagua Shan, I kept thinking about an article I had read about how Cadel Evans, the 2011Tour de France winner, had been feeling a bit slow coming into form before mounting a defense of his title. It is a funny thing, the feeling of measuring yourself against a better year, but we do it. It is the mysterious internal force that sells countless sports cars, gold chains, boob jobs, and divorce settlements.


I am doing my best to come back to the form I was in at this time last year, but I feel I still have much further to go. It is frustrating that it can't all fall back in place after a couple weeks like it used to and that the fat seems to know exactly where to go after only a brief introduction to the waist for just a few short weeks.


I spent Saturday assessing my personal metrics as to how far I have come and how far I need to go to be satisfied with my riding and to make a good showing at the races.
The plan was to ride Bagua Shan to Songboling and then drop down into Douliu, before charging back on the flats with a healthy tailwind.


At least that was the plan.

IMG_8629
A makeshift Gentlemen's Club under the freeway. See the lanterns hanging down. Classy.

I left my house a little late, but the cloud cover was perfect for a day of riding. I figured I would just take Huanzhong Rd. to the HSR station and then cross the river before coasting along the Highway 14 to Fenyuan. I felt much better on the bike, but not quite "there".
IMG_8633
Boys of the Bike Industry

I felt excellent on the climb out of Fenyuan to the Route 139 along the top of Bagua Shan. Just as I was clearing my legs of the heat from the climb, I ran into a few familiar faces parked at the side of the road with a mechanical to contend with.


It looked like a bicycle industry convention. Attie, the Asia product representative from Dorel (Cannondale et al.) was working on another flat. Nico from Birzman seemed eager to take out his tools and maybe give Attie a hand. Josh Colp (left) was also hanging with the Peanut Gallery. Josh has just introduced his own bicycle brand with a complete line of road bikes. Keep an eye out for Culprit Bicycles at this year's trade shows. When I first met Josh a few years ago, he was working as a test rider for Trigon, one of the world's top OEM/ODMs for composite frames and components. At that time he was already deep into his research for launching his own bicycle brand. It is great to see his hard work paying off in the shape of actual equipment.


On Saturday he was enjoying his Arrow-One road bike, which is supposed to be quite stiff. Right now he is in the middle of a soft rollout before he has his big coming out to the industry at Interbike 2012 this September.

IMG_8634
Colp's Culprit Arrow-One. We will forgive the tower of spacers this time.

I left the group in good cheer and plodded my way over the rolling hills toward the Fengshan Temple where I could refill my water bottle.

IMG_8639
Sidra

IMG_8640
Very Fresh Pineapple

IMG_8643
Puppet Theater

Fengshan Temple is a regular rest stop for weekend cyclists as there are supplies and refreshments readily available to ward off a mid-ride bonk.

IMG_8644 IMG_8647 IMG_8653
Andy Jiang of the formidable Nantou Cycling Club

Just as I was about to leave I noticed some riders coming in from the Nantou Cycling Club. I have a lot of respect for the Nantou guys as they seem to have a well trained and well disciplined team. That is how the races are won. I have a lot of respect for these guys. 
I was especially happy to run into 江衍迪 (Andy Jiang), a Facebook friend whom I had never met in person. He introduced me to the gang as they took a few minutes from training for the Tour of Changhua next month. 


It is always great running into friendly faces on the road to share a few laughs or exchange war stories. This is the importance of a healthy cycling community. 

IMG_8650
The Players

After a few pictures I claimed the high ground at the end of the ridge before descending down the 139乙 to Songboling. 


It had started to sprinkle and the road was still in a state of post typhoon clutter, so I took the descent a little slower.

IMG_8672
Messy Roads

I finally reached the Nantou Route 38 and hammered away at that with the hope of dropping onto the Route 152 toward Douliu.

IMG_8681
Nantou Route 38

IMG_8683
Crossroad Blues

At the 5 point crossroads I slid over to the Route 3, which is a gorgeous country road that charges straight through fields of tea, pineapple and other crops. 

IMG_8698 IMG_8701 IMG_8705 IMG_8679
Tea Gardens of Songboling

I finally landed on the Route 152 near Mingjian and headed toward Ershui. 

IMG_8706
Nantou Route 152

At first the road seemed fine with just a few patches of dirt cluttering an otherwise pristine surface. Then more and more sections of red clay passed under my wheels. I was fine with a little dirt and kept on going.  

IMG_8714
Slurry

One reason I had chosen this route for Saturday was the fact that a typhoon had just passed and I assumed the mountain roads might still be cluttered with debris. Little did I realize that any road that hugs the base of a hill will also hold the runoff and storm slurry that takes about a week to wash out of the loose clay.  

IMG_8718
The End of the Road

The road got muddier, but it was ok. I can handle a little mud. Just pick a line and avoid hard turns and you can stay on the bike. Easy. 

IMG_8722
I dismounted cyclocross style and prepared to walk across the last stretch of submerged roadway. Then as a few cars passed, I noticed the water was much deeper than I had anticipated. With nowhere else to go, I turned tail and retraced my steps back to a 7-11 to reassess my return trip. 


My bike was caked with clay about the same consistency as pancake batter. It covered everything. I was thankful that I could still get a reliable shift every time. It was crunchy and loud, but shifting.


I neared Mingjian and saw another rider heading toward the Sippi Hole on a nice looking Look 585 road bike. I noticed too late and when I tried to ward him away from a similar fate with a head shake and a wave indicative of a "whoa/no", he responded with a friendly wave and kept spinning madly for a date with a Muuuuuuud Pit. 

IMG_8729
I couldn't help a little dirty bike photo spread. There is something appealing about dirt and titanium tubing. 

IMG_8734 IMG_8740 IMG_8744 IMG_8745 IMG_8746 IMG_8747 IMG_8749 IMG_8753 IMG_8757 IMG_8759 IMG_8761 IMG_8775
For my return I plotted a slightly different rout through the tea gardens on Songboling, Taiwan's center for low altitude oolong tea. The lower altitude teas pare often cheaper to purchase, but they are pretty robust and harder to ruin when brewing. They make a great daily tea. 

IMG_8781
Ripe Betel Nut

I lurched along through the tea and betel nut groves sounding like an old WWII tank as the gears on my bike crunched and chewed the fine particles of sand. Not a great thing for the smaller components of expensive equipment. 

IMG_8779 IMG_8783
IMG_8794 IMG_8799
A Taiwan Icon

I finally stopped at a gas station in Songboling to use the water at the restroom sink to do a basic rinse of the more delicate parts of the bike so I could cut some of the noise. With a hill climb dead ahead, I figured cleaner derailleurs couldn't hurt. 
IMG_8807
Tea Picking

IMG_8809 IMG_8817
The Return

I put the legs back to work after getting a little lazy in the saddle and made much quicker work of the climb than I had imagined. I was turning a good 24kph up to the top before returning along the same route I had taken earlier. 


120km on the day. I could have been faster, but I need to learn to be more patient with my training. 


The area around Songboling is excellent for any type of biking. The roads and scenery are always interesting and the traffic is always light. Aside from the blocked road, I highly recommend these roads as part of a longer ride. 

IMG_8822
Pineapple Jackets