Category: Countryside

Another Grand Loop Ride

        It is mid-November and the weather in Oaxaca continues to be ideal for mountain biking. The thermometer registered 54ºF / 12ºC at sunrise, with a forecast high of 81ºF / 27ºC for the day. The morning boasted clear blue skies, but clouds built up by mid-day, though with no threat of rain. A biker who is a relative newcomer to Oaxaca proposed riding a long and rather challenging loop south out of town through San Bartolo Coyotepec, then across a mountain ridge to San Sebastian Teitipac in the Tlacolula valley to the east. From there the way home would loop through Rojas de Cuauhtemoc and Tule. Four fellows met at the appointed place and began the ride at 9 am. It took an hour to pedal to San Bartolo, using mainly country roads. Then the climb began. The trail was a rough jeep road that ascends 925 vertical feet (282 meters) to a pass crossing the ridge of hills. The riders spent 1.5 hours getting from San Bartolo to San Sebastian Teitipac. From there it was an easy ride on mainly paved roads to Tule and thence back to Oaxaca on the bike path. While riding through San Sebastian our cyclists encountered ten members of the Chalinos bike club from Rojas de Cuauhtemoc who were also enjoying a Sunday ride. They were an impressive sight, as all wore matching uniforms. It was early afternoon by the time the group reached Tule, so it was decided to stop for lunch at a seafood restaurant there. Some cold beer and ceviche really hit the spot!                                                                                                                                       Here are the stats for the day’s outing.  Distance ridden: 35.9 miles / 57.8 kms.  Total elevation gain and loss on the circuit:  1524 feet / 464 meters. Low point on the loop:  4959 feet / 1511 meters.  Highest point: 5891 feet / 1796 meters.  Total elapsed time (including lunch break):  5.5 hours.  Rating:  difficult because of length of ride and roughness of uphill sections on jeep road.

Ride on the Los Molinos Trail

It is a good bet that some fellows will get together for a weekday ride every Tuesday morning. A flurry of emails usually precedes the outing as people are informed of the ride parameters and sign up for the excursion. Cyclists congregate in front of the church in San Felipe del Aqua at 8:45 am prior to a 9 o’clock departure. Most days the group rides the network of trails in the hills above San Felipe. This affords everyone an opportunity for some serious exercise but does not eat up too much time, as the ride is finished by 11:30 or 12:00 noon. On this particular Tuesday in early November, though, the riders opted for something different. Ron, Larry and Steve rode east on the hillside above San Luis Beltran and Donaji, first on the Libramiento Norte and then on a great single track trail that winds along the contours of the mountain and terminates in Huayapam. After stopping at a juice stand in the local mercado there for some liquid refreshment, they continued through town to the two presas, then pedaled on to the start of the Los Molinos trail in Tlalixtac. This lovely trail is a perennial favorite of hikers and mountain bikers alike. It was a glorious day for a ride in the countryside, with bright sunshine and a forecast high temperature of 84ºF / 29ºC. After posing for a photo at the ruins of the old water-powered grain mill, the three headed back to Oaxaca using a combination of country roads rather then returning on the foothills trail. Once arrived back in San Felipe they stopped for a tasty lunch at the Mónica Hindu restaurant. The day’s excursion covered 20.1 miles (32.3 kms) and encompassed an elevation gain and loss of 2101 feet (640 meters) along the way. The high point was 5802 feet (1768 meters) on the Libramiento above San Felipe. Time in the saddle amounted to 4 hours and 25 minutes.  The second map, below, shows just the Los Molinos trail itself.

Sunday Ride In The Zimatlan Valley

Mexico switched from daylight savings to standard time overnight, so although our group ride started at the same time by the clock, the day was an hour older. That gave people more time to get going and the sun longer to burn off the morning chill. Seven fellows showed up at the rendezvous point for a pleasant ride into the Zimatlan valley to the south of Oaxaca city. Our original destination was the village of Santa Ana Zegache, where flowers are grown for the Day of the Dead festivities. We thought we would find lots of color in the farm fields thereabouts. It was a gorgeous day to be out on a bike. However, we did not find as many fields of flowers as we expected and we did not quite make it all the way to Zegache. Instead, we were content to turn around at the gigantic figure of a danzante which stands atop a hill overlooking Zimatlan, 4.5 miles short of Zegache. The group stopped for lunch and cold drinks at a convenient curb-side comedor coming back into the city. Here are the stats for the day’s outing:  Round trip distance – 33.3 miles / 53.6 kms  Elevation gain and loss enroute – 840 feet / 256 meters  Elapsed time – just under five hours.

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Still Pedaling

With the arrival of October it was as though someone turned off the spigot. Where September 2020 was unusually wet, October has turned out to be quite dry – which is in keeping with the historical switch from the rainy to the dry season at the end of September. On this 18th day of October the landscape is still lush and green, and now fall wildflowers are in full bloom across the Valles Centrales. The wild marigolds may go unpicked this year, though, because the coronavirus pandemic is still running at full gallop and most public Day of the Dead events have been cancelled. Local families will doubtless still construct the traditional ofrenda in their homes, but the time-honored tradition of decorating graves and celebrating the season with noisy comparsas in various neighborhoods will be muted, at best. Our group of expat mountain bike riders continue to schedule regular weekly rides, though. The outing this Sunday was essentially a repeat of the loop ride of August 30 (see “A Ride In The Country” reported below) except we rode the circuit in the reverse direction just to be different. Alee, a bike-packer pedaling from Argentina to Alaska, was in town and joined in today’s outing. There are now six such long-distance riders recuperating in Oaxaca before continuing their epic journeys. We enjoy their company on the trail and are fascinated by their tales of seeing the world from the viewpoint of a bicycle saddle. Alee hales from Australia and has bicycled across all five continents. Today’s ride of 24 miles (38.6 kms) was but a drop in his bucket and he hardly broke a sweat, even on the gnarly sections of steep jeep road. Ride on!

Ride to Jalapa del Valle

The summer of 2020 will go on record as one of the wettest in recent memory. Since June we have had consistent cloud cover over the Valles Centrales, with frequent rain showers both day and night. As a result, farmers are delighted to have excellent crops and the mountains are as lush and green as can be. The concern now is that fields are saturated and so harvesting the crops may be problematic. Oaxaca city received 6.8 inches (17.3 centimeters) of rain over the past five days, so bike riders encountered numerous puddles and lots of mud along country roads today, and not a few landslides on steep hillsides. Needless to say, streams and rivers were running fast and presented some challenge to cross. That said, we had mostly clear skies for our ride this Sunday morning in late September. Our destination was the village of Jalapa del Valle, located along the Rio Jalapilla about 11 miles (18 kms) to the west of the city. We were a small band of four riders as we set out at 9 am from the plaza in front of the church of Santo Domingo. For the outbound part of the loop ride the group chose the less strenuous of two routes crossing the ridge of hills between San Pedro Ixtlahuaca and Jalapa del Valle, then opted for the easy way home along the river valley roads passing through La Union, San Felipe Tejalápam and Atzompa. The stats for today’s excursion are as follows:  distance ridden – 36 miles / 58 kms; elevation gain and loss – 2501 feet / 762 meters; high point on the ride – 6239 feet / 1901 meters; time in the saddle – 5.5 hours, counting a snack break in Jalapa del Valle.

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