
Party Van, with Pickle Fork and Trailer
The ‘Party Van’ came from Tucson yesterday, filled to the gills with people and bikes, and ready for some serious shredding. Normally, we might have joined in on the Sunday Club Ride in Sedona, but like Gabe said, “When the Party Van rolls through town with the pickle fork (nickname of the rack that can hold several bikes) on it, just get in and don’t ask any questions.” So, that is what just what we did.
Rolling 13 deep, we drove up the winding road through the cliffside town of Jerome to the tippity-top of Mingus Mountain for a few thousand feet of downhill back into the town of Cottonwood. The gate at the top was closed, so we humped it up the road to the Mingus Launch where the Maverick trail takes off to the east. Lucky for us, there were hangliders getting ready to put the launch to good use, and we got to see them soar off the mountain top! And then, we launched ourselves off the mountain, on a trail carving through boulder fields at the top, switch-backing down about 1000 feet with some great traversing across the scrub slopes (full of unforgiving, pokey plants: crashing not advised!). The final few thousand feet were loose, steep and rocky through even more intimidating cacti and sharp rocks. Fun, you ask? Oh hell yes!

Launching off the Mingus Launch
Coasting into town on the road, we loaded up the Party Van again, and went for Round 2 of the Mingus Shredfest. This time, we did double the mileage, half the braking, and twice the pedaling, on a much more cross-countryish trail once we cleared the heinously steep downhill start. The trail was literally an average of 1′ wide, cut into the steep mountainside. One wrong twitch of your wheel, one unfocused eye and you could be sent off the edge. It was one of those trails that was as mentally exhausting as it was physically demanding–if not more.
People tend to think that downhill riding and shuttling is just about coasting downhill, easy peasy. My friends, this is not the case. I am more worked over today than on a cross-country ride twice it’s length (we rode 20 miles yesterday)! You stand up, quads working, the whole body working the bike (indeed, my upper body is the sorest part today), you are going ripping fast, and your reflexes have to be lightning quick.

Black Canyon Trail
The thing about Downhilling is you do pedal and you can get a good workout!
Reporting from Sedona, I am happy to be in the company of Red Rocks and bikes-o-plenty! We are staying at the Sedona Bike and Bean, and I am watching a group of about 30 kids get ready to go shred as part of a school field trip. That’s what I call education; I dream of a day when all kids get to go mountain biking during school hours as part of their curriculum!
Be well, and Happy Trails!
Val