Roadie in the woods.

Torin isn't just a skinny tire rider anymore. Sorta.

Last weekend I took part in the Bear Brook Classic MTB race, hosted by State 9 Racing and the second stop on the BUBBA Trophy Series.

(Prepare for a lot of bike shots, not many photos emerged from my race.)

Believe it or not, I do not normally race mountain bikes, mostly due to the fact that I do not, in fact, own a mountain bike. To remedy this, I was riding a loaner bike, provided by Tyrol Sports Group.



The ride in question: the SwixHR Circo Gigante M.

Although I do not have much to compare it to, this 27.5+ aluminum hardtail rode rather well, and didn't feel overly heavy despite topping 30 pounds.

My first rides on the bike didn't go quite according to plan.

Day one saw a slow-ish leak in the rear tube where the rim strip decided to poke through. Patched up and continuing on my test ride, I could tell that things were still a tad soft, but left it up to me not fully reinflating the tire.

Next time I rode everything was fine. I topped off the tires for my course preview on race day and went on my merry way. Until I hit the rocky section of the course.
With roughly an hour-and-a-half before my race, and two-and-a-half miles away from my car, my rear tire suddenly went flat. 'Suddenly,' of course, being the term used when you don't want to initially admit that you landed wheel first on the sharp edge of a rock and suffered a massive pinch flat.

Two miles of bikerunning is not the way I imagined my pre-ride going.

I got back to the start with an hour before my start, and not having a 27.5+ tube available, I initially tried to see if I could patch the holes.

I couldn't.

Now having a half hour, I went searching for anything that could help. Turns out not many people carry tubes nowadays (thank you tubeless...).

As it turned out, hidden in the depths of my toolbox was a 29" tube that worked just fine. Five minutes to start.

I sprinted to the line at the last minute for staging, and got a few comments about being a roadie and about the size of my tires.

The gun goes off, and as there was no real 'hole shot' to fight for in our field, we went out comfortably hard. I settled into third for a little bit, but quickly made use of the two-lane access road to move into the lead.

A couple of minutes into the woods, I didn't have anybody within sight, but just kept pushing along, figuring that just because I couldn't see them didn't mean they weren't close. it is the forest after all.

But as it turns out I was wrong. There wasn't anybody near me after the first ten minutes, and I rode the rest of the race solo.

Once I reached the top of the course (where I flatted just hours before), I figured I would be riding the rest of the course blind, having not really previewed it beforehand. Apparently, switchbacked descents handle a little differently on a bike rather than running.

By the finish, I had put nearly four-and-a-half minutes into the rest of my field for the win. And then the waiting began.

Technically, there were two races going on: the one for my age group, and the one for the whole category. I had won the AG race, but we had to wait for everyone to come through for the Overall Cat 3 results.

I won both. My time of 31:46 was nearly a minute faster than the next fastest racer, all on a borrowed bike and my first time.







One last shot - Senior Seasons Ahead

Well, here it is. Three years after I first moved into my double in Ryan Hall, I am slowly settling into the townhouse life on the other end of campus. It's been an interesting three years, ever learning how to be both a student and an athlete at the same time, and a large part of that learning happens when there is no school.


Summer break is the time when many students go off and work so that they can afford to come back to school, others do summer research, while some try to think nothing of the coming school year until it's time to start. As an athlete, I was thrown into all three camps: working at a camp to make enough money to get by for a few months of unemployment while I train and compete this fall and winter, research myself to find out how to not overwork myself both mentally and physically, all while trying to not think about the fact that these will be my last seasons as a college athlete.


A large portion of my time this year has been spent sitting on a bike. There's just something about it that makes me feel more free than my ski or running training. From central NH, it's hard to run or ski somewhere that leaves you with both a great workout and a feeling of having taken an adventure. On the bike, I have been able to test my limits and see how fast, far, and how long I can go for, taking me on some pretty cool adventures.


It is on these where I am able to really absorb what is going on in life. Decisions that need some time, I have found, are best made on the bike. Thinking about what is going to happen this year was a big one, like determining what my senior project is going to look like, how to best avoid my injuries (didn't work, already injured), and how to try and lead both the Men's Cross Country and Nordic teams this year. 

Whatever the case, the work has been put in, most of the decisions have been made, and all I can do is keep up and hope for the best over the next few months.

Summer Update

So school finished a while ago, and summer is here. Just thought I'd throw out a little bit about how things are going!




To be honest, not a whole lot has been going on lately. I'm living in the Burlington area and working at Local Motion, Vermont's Walking and Biking advocacy group! Most of what I do is based out of the Trailside Center (or TC), and involves renting out bikes to people who would like to enjoy the Champlain Valley, but without being confined to a car or bus. 
Look, the outdoors!
Also, this is right next door to the TC. Rawr
I started off the summer with a couple of weeks at home (in NH), training (riding my bike) and visiting friends and family around New England, capped off by a trip to Rhode Island for some Allie's Donuts with Pete (and a Paw Sox game too!), then by my longest ride to-date, a 115 mile ride up and over the Kancamagus Highway and back through Plymouth and Sandwich. it was a long day.
Sports that aren't endurance based!
The Highest point.

Just over 175km with a part of it on Route 175.

That brings me to Vermont, which, like I said, hasn't had much going on. 
 I've been training, working, training some more. 
Riding Dirty-ish

Rollerskiin'
 I did, however, get the amazing opportunity to 'travel' to Montreal to watch part of the FIFA Women's World Cup! The atmosphere in the Stade Olympique was electric for both the Brazil-Spain and the South Korea-Costa Rica matches, a 1-0 victory and a 2-2 draw respectively.