I've seen a couple threads on this topic, but they are older and I wanted to get people's updated opinions.
About me- I'm new to bikepacking but not backpacking or mountain biking
- My goal is to just finish the CTR. Doing it under 7 days would be a bonus
- I ride about 3-4 times per week, but only 1.5-2 hours at a time usually (coupled with crossfit & speedskating)
Prep- I've made a full complement of bike bags and tarp tent and done my first overnight trip. I rode from Indian Creek to about halfway through Seg 2, camped, and returned the next day.
- I learned a lot about my gear and made enough mistakes to learn some good lessons.
- I plan to do some more shakedowns (an entire Day 1 ride from Waterton, night riding, rain testing, maybe a CES ride if I can squeeze one in)
Training Questions- Is training to finish the CTR even an attainable goal with the remaining time?
- Do I need to follow the CTR-specific training plan? Or is simply riding a lot adequate?
- Are there any major things you wish you had known prior to your first CTR?
So, what else should a CTR rookie know and be doing 3 months before the race? Any advice would be welcome. I love hearing about other people's experiences!
I'm kind of in the same boat you are. I've wanted to do CTR for a few years now, but there's been some things keeping me from doing it.
I'm from Houston at 40 foot elevation. When did ride it was mostly flat, even in the Texas Hill country 400 feet is a 'big climb'. When I moved here last April, I was very very very discouraged climbing. I put it off last year and decided I need more time just to get used to the climbing. I think most of that was mental. Just thinking over and over "Wow, this climb is STILL going?!?!?!" I found that riding with people made that worse, as I was always the last one up. Since then I'm not also in better shape, but whenever I get to a climb (especially one I've never done before) I just think to myself that it's always going to go up, and I just have to deal with it. Not necessarily a negative thought, but just convincing myself this is the way it is in Colorado; that's reality and complaining about it wastes mental energy. Another thing I've learned is that the 'top' is never where you think it is.
I'm in much better shape this year, and I've pretty much figured out my setup on a few overnight trips and will be doing more in the future. But like again, I just seem to do better alone. When I'm alone, the only one I am 'racing' is myself. I decided that if I don't do CTR this year, and put it off again, I'll probably continue to do it. I'm doing it for myself. Mostly for the adventure of it all. Sure bragging rights will be cool, but no one really cares what I do in the first place, so once again I'm back to doing it for myself.
I've also had a change in my job which requires me to spend about 3 hours a day commuting vs. 30 minutes like I had originally planned. This eats up a lot of training time. But my goal is to finish. I don't care if I'm 'last place' or whatever on the leaderboard. (I'll be on a Pugsley which is not exactly going to help with speed). Last place is better than DNF next to your name. I'm going to shoot for 10 days. Although that time is a bit slower than even the slowest of finishers, that still gives me a more realistic goal.. especially for a CTR rookie, on a fat bike, from Texas. I know there's tons of people I used to ride with back in Texas who think I won't finish. I guess that motivates me, too. This also makes the brain less susceptible to duress if I set a faster finish date and start lagging. More likely to remain calm, less stressed. Thus, making better decisions. I know people who race make dumb mistakes and get hurt on 30 mile races that they'd never do riding casually.
I've never done CTR, so I can't speak from personal experience. But I've done quite a bit of back country backpacking trips, a few weekend bikepacking trips, and everything seems to be more about your mental game than your physical fitness. This is especially true if you become easily mentally stressed, how well you can handle crisis. The longer the trip, the more likely those things are going to appear.
I plan on just taking it minute-by-minute, hour-by-hour, day-by-day; until I'm done. I'm not going to spend time thinking about elevation gain/loss, miles, average mph, etc. I'm just going to set a moderate pace and keep at it. This is probably a different mindset than the 'real racers' out there, but I am not a real racer. I just ride, and I want the adventure of it. To me, it's not the Colorado Trail Race; it's the Colorado Trail Adventure. Apparently some of the real racers don't want people like me out on Grand Depart because I'd 'get in the way' or something. But they'll be way ahead of me, so they don't have anything to worry about.
Less about me more about the discussion. I'm still trying to figure out food. Trying to find the best food I can bring. Shooting for 50% carbs, 25% protein, and 25% fat in the diet, but that might not be the way to go and trying to boost the carb level. I've paid attention to a lot of the common 'camping food' and found that sometimes it just doesn't give much calories for the weight. What I have found, for me, after doing some research is eating something sweet does something good to the brain if you're under duress. So, I've tried snacking on Clif Energy Chews or having a Snickers or something during or at the end of big climbs. This has worked well for me the past few months.
I don't claim to be an expert, but this is what has worked for me although I have not attempted or completed the CT.