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341  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: 9 x 10 ? ¿ ? on: February 17, 2011, 07:34:51 PM
thumb shifters, suntour. work with everyting, do not break.
smimano long cage shadow xt
342  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: 9 x 10 ? ¿ ? on: February 17, 2011, 06:58:05 PM
Maybe I'm asking, has anyone removed their 9 speed cassette and replaced it with a 10 speed cassette?
Instead of making a guess, ( sometimes I guess correct, sometimes incorrect).

Or, when I replace the LX 12 - 36 some time soon, what is the new and improved does not weigh a pound or more option, with a 36?
343  Forums / Question and Answer / 9 x 10 ? ¿ ? on: February 17, 2011, 12:53:51 PM
What would happen if I put a 10 cog cassette on my bike and left the 9 speed xt cranks on?
The old Suntour thumb shifters should not have a problem with it.
would the 9 speed derailleur and cranks object?
344  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: My First Seat Bag... on: February 17, 2011, 12:40:30 PM
looks like a well designed seat bag
345  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: What do people put in frame bags? on: February 14, 2011, 08:28:50 PM
To stop the frame bag from bulging to much, I have a Velcro strap in the center.
un like everyone else, mine is a roll top.  I pull it over the top of the frame and Velcro it on the other side. I like this better because there is no zipper to fail. As far as water proof,  even the Ortlieb bags get wet inside after 4 days of constant rain.  Light weight and water proof is only a dream.
346  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: What do people put in frame bags? on: February 02, 2011, 07:17:47 PM
5 liters of water
347  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: discover an old world on: December 28, 2010, 03:58:32 PM
Mr Efuentes
Are you aware of any bicycle supply houses in Mexico with 29 inch tires or tubes or even 29 inch wheels that could be ordered and sent to Baja if needed? 

It seems that UPS does not recognize B.C.S. as an address. Some road bikers in San Ignacio waited 4 days for overnight delivery, then received an email saying their credit card had been refunded. 

I'm going south again in a few days.  The 29er is better, ... until you need a new tire in Loreto BCS
348  Forums / Bikepacking / discover an old world on: December 24, 2010, 06:44:39 PM
Pedal a bicycle into the mountains.  The Sierra Pedro in Baja.  At the last tienda before the pavement ran out a guy in a funny hat said [ back, you go back ].  All right, he really broke a stick into pieces in an attempt to show me what to expect from the road.  
 
I have a good stock pile of water, three days worth.  Route finding should be easy, my map shows only a couple of roads.  The road follows the river,  river of sand.  Soft sand great for camping.  A little hard to pedal in though.  With most of the water gone my bike gets a lot lighter and easier to push through the sand.  
 
The canyons in the lower foot hills are,  worth a look.  The pools of cool clear water appear, and flow under ground again.  The caves show signs of human use for thousands of years.   Lost on the wrong road.  A blessing.  A wonder land.  people know not from wince they came.  The caves show signs of human use for thousands of years.
 
Another day, I meet a man in a truck, taking some sheep to market.  Sir, is this the road to San Pedro? Taking his hat of, he puts his hand on his head and shakes it no.  There is a language barrier.  He is pointing and then motioning to go left.  This becomes the daily routine.
 
A man invites me into his mountain home for coffee.  Adobe bricks, palm frond roof,  dirt floor.  His wife makes the best coffee.  When I ask about the road to San Pedro, he motions that I have to go up up up.  With a stick he draws a map in the dirt.  He talks on his CB radio. The only words I pick out are Americana, and San Pedro.  He says the odd motor cycle passes this way, but this is the first bicycle to pass by.  
 
Sometimes the road is fist sized rocks, sometimes football sized rocks., other times, hard packed dirt, always more sand.  Some times I pedal sometimes I push.  My map does not show all the roads all the small ranchos.  I am told there are many ranchos that have no road.  Every person I meet asks if I have food and water, I do, yes.  
 
One afternoon; I accept an invitation to lunch.  Rice with small pieces of tomato cut on top, beans, tortiass, and coffee.  The plates look like depression glass, the kind my great grandmother had.  I try to use my best manners and  eat only a little.  His wife and two daughters are beautifull.  His open air, palm frond roofed dinning area separate his sleeping quarters, and his dirt floor kitchen.  on the way out I hand him 50 pesos.  He reaches back from his chair and picks two oranges and a lemon for me.  There are some fine horses here.  Did I forget how to live right?
 
As I gain elevation the road gets steep.  I take three steps up, slide back two. and give the bike a push.  The cowboys are riding donkeys now.  They look at me take their hat off and scratch their head. San Pedro?  By know they all heard about the loco gringo crossing the mountain.  When was the last time a cowboy stooped to let a bicycle go by?  I find gates open, 100 feet up the mountain I look back and see a man close the gate.  I see five more cowboys in leather chaps push a tree branch aside and ride donkeys out of a rocky creek bed.   Muchos ranchos no camino.  
 
Is the mountain to much for me? No. I can make it.  Dark this early? Full moon, winter solstice. I have to make it to the top.  Going down is not so easy.  I have modern brakes, they are no match for the mountain.  miles go by,  at last a flat spot to lay my tired self down.  To tired to cook food, guess again.  Plain rice never tasted so good.  
 
Shortest day of the year.  Plenty of time to explore an old mission.  My supplies all but gone, my water very low,  I can not find the mission water.  Two oranges and a lemon, yes!  
 
The hills are ride able now.  The 29 inch wheels roll over football sized rocks quite well, when I need water, I'm brave on the long down hill.  A bridge building crew has running water piped in from Huh?  Running water all I want.  Drink, wash,  all I want. Cool clear water.  
 
At last a tienda in a mountain village.  Tuna, crackers, cold coke.  Does the lady yell at me for having a weeks worth of dirt on my shirt? No.  She knows I don't read Spanish, so she puts what I think are crackers back on the shelf, and hands me crackers with a picture of tuna on them, thanks.    
 
More miles of rocky down hill, one last camp,  last of the 20 patches on my tubes.  Only 20 miles of highway 1.  Whats wrong with the fat lady in the silver Honda with the California plate, must be her road.  
hotel,  hot water, sleep.
349  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: How to thicken up bar wrap? on: December 23, 2010, 06:23:08 PM
1
I use it on bar ends a lot, when I do I use the bar ends more often.
way better than high dollar cork wrap
350  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: How to thicken up bar wrap? on: December 23, 2010, 03:42:46 PM
wilson tennis racket wrap.  $3 walmart
351  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Water filters on: October 29, 2010, 05:33:41 PM
the sawyer water purification works
http://www.sawyerproducts.com/SP135.htm
the faucet adapter can be used to filter water from a one or two liter bottle, then reversed to flush the filter.
the bottle it comes with is not grovie but the black filter is.  also works with hydration pack.
the fine print on all filters say they must be replaced if they freeze.
352  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Water filters on: October 28, 2010, 03:12:38 PM
boiling water works best
http://www.rei.com/product/768513
tea kettle 5.5 ounces
matches .1 ounce
set kettle directly in fire

353  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Inuvik on: August 27, 2010, 10:42:05 PM
Eric
I see a small inflatable raft in some of your videos.  Would you trust it to go down river 300 miles where loss of raft means bush whacking with no resupply?  The path from Norman Wells to Inuvik is the river.  Do those little rafts hold up when dragged across rocks, crashed into tree branched etc?
354  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Inuvik on: August 17, 2010, 10:34:28 PM
My purpose in starting this thread was to get help in finding out what the Yukon holds in store.  Most years I come up with an idea of some place that sounds cool, think about it for a year, maybe two then go there.  Last year the Olympic mountains called my name. this year I walked a lot of trails over there, (my feet hurt at the moment, they don't make shoes like they used to).  A couple of years ago Baja sounded good.  I'll make a third trip there this winter.  It rains and snows in Baja. Maps and roads don't always match up in Baja.  The things an old Crow Indian told me as a young child are more useful in finding my way across Baja than any electric device.  A few years before that Florida sounded  like a good place to explore.  Somewhere down the line south America sounds good.  (Why do Peruvian girls advise against traveling alone in Peru).  
At the moment I'm attempting to find out what is up there, (Yukon), come up with some ideas of what to see.
355  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Inuvik on: August 17, 2010, 09:57:29 PM
Is not exploring the Yukon considered bike packing? 
What about the Canol Heritage Trail, is that bike packing?
I don't consider racing with nothing but a credit card in your pocket bike packing.
Drink some water, you sound dehydrated.
356  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Inuvik on: August 08, 2010, 10:16:08 PM
I wonder if anyone has ever pedaled from Whitehorse all the way up the Canol,  pulled a small raft out of their pack, paddled across the Mackenzie river resupplied in Norman Wells, then hitched a barge ride to Inuvik, pedaled south to Skagway and hoped a ferry home?
probably not
357  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Inuvik on: August 07, 2010, 09:27:55 PM
up to date info on the Yukon is hard to come by.
http://sonic.net/~ckelly/Seekay/canol.htm
358  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: Inuvik on: August 07, 2010, 11:13:39 AM
Anyone know how to swim a river with your bike?
359  Forums / Question and Answer / Inuvik on: August 05, 2010, 08:40:42 PM
To plan
a trip to Inuvik, whether by road or air, takes a lot of vision and
research and we hope you enjoy your journey and stay with us.
If you venture up the Dempster Highway to reach us, you will see
and pass many unforgettable sites such as the Arctic Circle
http://www.inuvik.ca/documents/Inuvik%20Guide.pdf

Sounds good for next year. Information and resupply are scarce at best. 
Inuvik to Skagway is 1,400 kilometers across the Yukon.  leaving plenty
of time to explore. 
NEEDS TO HAPPEN
360  Forums / Question and Answer / Re: bike fit on: July 23, 2010, 10:52:26 PM

 I thought I'd have to give up riding until I got some shorter axles for my pedals.
I've been wondering for a year if it was a mistake to put all 3 spacers that came with the xt cranks on the Fargo.  For a long time I had an old Specialized 135mm ti stem and flat bars.  I kept moving the seat forward and up until my knees hurt. 
now I've got a collection of old stems of various sizes, and searching for the correct one.  Also I put the black Terry seat from my old ugly comfortable bike, (to bad the frame broke),  on because the Selle anatomica seat seams deceptive in measuring.
Anyone else find the leather on their Selle stretched after just one year?
funny how an old bike can be more comfortable than a shinny new one.  I've always wondered about the front hub the old bike came with,  it has a etched in 3mm picture of a bicycle and no words on it.  It spins better than the new xtr hubs.  Spins so well the hub maker in Portland took the axle out so he could see what it's made of. No name brand?
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