Re: Tour Divide 2019
Posted: Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:22 pm
I wonder what they think when the see the riders flying past, kitted up with a certain look on their face!
https://www.bearbonesbikepacking.co.uk/phpBB3/
https://www.bearbonesbikepacking.co.uk/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?t=14885
And a Planet X jersey.NewRetroTom wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:37 pm From the photos of Sofiane that have been posted on the bikepacking.net forum it looks like he's not wearing bib shorts (I thought these were the staple for all serious cyclists, and personally haven't done a proper ride in anything else for a very long time). Also he seems to have a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet. Interesting choices!
Bibs are a PIA if you need to go to the loo, particularly if its pishing down and you have to strip off to get at them.....techno mail wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:51 pmAnd a Planet X jersey.NewRetroTom wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:37 pm From the photos of Sofiane that have been posted on the bikepacking.net forum it looks like he's not wearing bib shorts (I thought these were the staple for all serious cyclists, and personally haven't done a proper ride in anything else for a very long time). Also he seems to have a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet. Interesting choices!
Yup, he is a maverick. It seems to have worked for him on previous attempts. I recall a backwards baseball cap and old skool Yeti jersey. He is a bike courier in Paris when he’s not being a somnambulist.NewRetroTom wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:37 pm From the photos of Sofiane that have been posted on the bikepacking.net forum it looks like he's not wearing bib shorts (I thought these were the staple for all serious cyclists, and personally haven't done a proper ride in anything else for a very long time). Also he seems to have a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet. Interesting choices!
Yeh they appear to be just leggings or perhaps just padded shorts (no bib).larsmars wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 10:03 pmYup, he is a maverick. It seems to have worked for him on previous attempts. I recall a backwards baseball cap and old skool Yeti jersey. He is a bike courier in Paris when he’s not being a somnambulist.NewRetroTom wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:37 pm From the photos of Sofiane that have been posted on the bikepacking.net forum it looks like he's not wearing bib shorts (I thought these were the staple for all serious cyclists, and personally haven't done a proper ride in anything else for a very long time). Also he seems to have a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet. Interesting choices!
He obviously never got the memo: 'never go full retard!'...NewRetroTom wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:37 pm Also he seems to have a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet.
Yyp... definitely gone "full retard"...techno mail wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:51 pmAnd a Planet X jersey.NewRetroTom wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:37 pm From the photos of Sofiane that have been posted on the bikepacking.net forum it looks like he's not wearing bib shorts (I thought these were the staple for all serious cyclists, and personally haven't done a proper ride in anything else for a very long time). Also he seems to have a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet. Interesting choices!
Finally getting to the Lael Wilcox story. #7 all around. #1 female. #1 female breaking her own record. Was being chased by a thunder cell but she was winning until I believe Huckleberry pass where it probably caught her. There has been much talk about her film crew. They consist of 3 people. 2 photographer/videographers and another videographer that is a friend. All 3 are on spot trackers so that their ability to assist are carefully scrutinized. The friend never gets within about 50 yards of her and does not speak to her. When Lael was at the BCC, friend was at the Blackfoot Angler. I was impressed that at this junction they were being very respectful of the rules. Lael takes off on the bike, they stay behind and meet up at the next location.
What for he has only done a mere 600 mile in 2 1/2 days with about one hours non moving time.Looks like Sofiane is finally getting some sleep!
- from bikepacking.net's Ovando reporter.2nd place Josh Kato returned to Ovando a bit over 3 hours behind Sofiane with SEVEN (7) hours of sleep under his helmet. In fact says he has been sleeping pretty darn good.
Lack of sleep "stupid"... amount of mileage- impressive.Lazarus wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:29 amWhat for he has only done a mere 600 mile in 2 1/2 days with about one hours non moving time.Looks like Sofiane is finally getting some sleep!
he needs to find his suitcase of courage
I never know what is the more impressive stat the distance or the lack of sleep
That would suggest that (for the moment) its Josh that would probably eventually take the lead. The body cant (won't, as it concentrates its services to other dept) really keep recovering and protecting self from infection etc....jameso wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:48 am To put SS's lack of sleep and distance in perspective,- from bikepacking.net's Ovando reporter.2nd place Josh Kato returned to Ovando a bit over 3 hours behind Sofiane with SEVEN (7) hours of sleep under his helmet. In fact says he has been sleeping pretty darn good.
*efficientlyredefined_cycles wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:55 amThat would suggest that (for the moment) its Josh that would probably eventually take the lead. The body cant (won't, as it concentrates its services to other dept) really keep recovering and protecting self from infection etc....jameso wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:48 am To put SS's lack of sleep and distance in perspective,- from bikepacking.net's Ovando reporter.2nd place Josh Kato returned to Ovando a bit over 3 hours behind Sofiane with SEVEN (7) hours of sleep under his helmet. In fact says he has been sleeping pretty darn good.
The dot fading out is when the SPOT/InReach has failed to send a location for thirty minutes. Don't know how you do it on mobile/tablet but on a desktop computer if you hover the mouse over the dot then it shows when TL last received a location update. The system buffers everything until contact is made again. With Gen2 SPOTs you had to turn them off and back on again every 24 hours so presumably Trackleaders used that along with timestamps to determine is someone was stopped/bivvying. Not sure how the Gen3 devices interact with Trackleaders to show overnight stops. If you really, really zoom in on Sofiane's position it shows him in a building in Helena so it's possible he and the tracker are indoors and the tracker won't be able to transmit a signal.redefined_cycles wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 8:52 am How does the spot/tracker become faded out so one knows their sleeping... does it just guess itself that the riders stopped moving or is it a button the user has to press??
I dunno, maybe he’s just stopped for a quick pas de deux...and you can see that currently his position is shown with a tent icon, i.e. he's bivvying, well it is 2am local time.
I zoomed right in and saw that his tracker was stopped right next to a hotel/motel/holiday inn. a little bit of cheating rather than insider knowledge :)redefined_cycles wrote: How does the spot/tracker become faded out so one knows their sleeping... does it just guess itself that the riders stopped moving or is it a button the user has to press??
I'm a bit wary of the stopped time on TL. This is again from bikepacking.net so presumably straight from JK's mouth:
If you click on the "race flow" button on TL it shows distance against time. At about 40hrs JK's line is flat so he definitely stopped for a while at that point.2nd place Josh Kato returned to Ovando a bit over 3 hours behind Sofiane with SEVEN (7) hours of sleep under his helmet. In fact says he has been sleeping pretty darn good.