Repack Rider
Senior Retro Guru
Tamarancho is the poster child of private trails. It's a Boy Scout campground that encompasses several square miles of rolling hills and forest. It's also where there are miles of privately maintained mountain bike trails, and where I ride every weekend, since I can get there on my bike in about 20 minutes from my house. Users pay a yearly fee for the run of the place, and the trails are world-class.
This week Specialized arrived in a big way, renting the entire area and bringing in journalists from (I am told) 40 mountain bike publications from all over the world to demo new bikes and a reproduction of the 1981 Stumpjumper. They're camped out in dozens of tents, and enjoying spectacular catered food, local beer and ice cream. Last night I joined them for dinner.
It's not like everyone gets an invitation. The only other "local" I saw was Ned Overend, who grew up here although he now lives in Colorado. Bill Savage will be showing "Klunkerz" to the crowd tonight, and tomorrow morning we're headed out to Repack to give these riders a shot at Mecca. I'm bringing the clocks, just in case anyone wants to find out how slow they are.
I suspect you'll be reading about this weekend in whatever MTB magazine you subscribe to. These people are having a once in a lifetime experience.
This week Specialized arrived in a big way, renting the entire area and bringing in journalists from (I am told) 40 mountain bike publications from all over the world to demo new bikes and a reproduction of the 1981 Stumpjumper. They're camped out in dozens of tents, and enjoying spectacular catered food, local beer and ice cream. Last night I joined them for dinner.
It's not like everyone gets an invitation. The only other "local" I saw was Ned Overend, who grew up here although he now lives in Colorado. Bill Savage will be showing "Klunkerz" to the crowd tonight, and tomorrow morning we're headed out to Repack to give these riders a shot at Mecca. I'm bringing the clocks, just in case anyone wants to find out how slow they are.
I suspect you'll be reading about this weekend in whatever MTB magazine you subscribe to. These people are having a once in a lifetime experience.