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Jesse Ventura
Jan 14, 2007

This drink is like somebody's memory of a grapefruit, and the memory is fading.
Hello, thread. A friend and I plan to ride the Great Divide MTB Route this summer. We will start in late June and ride from north to south. I've toured on pavement extensively but this will be my first time touring an unpaved route, and my first time riding this cool setup (build is not final but this is the most recent pic i have).



Many people who ride this route start in Banff, but my friend and I were hoping to start in Jasper and ride the road to Banff, because the scenery is apparently top-notch and it will be a nice shakedown before we truly enter the wilderness. My Adventure Cycling Association Map starts in Jasper (although it recommends a less-scenic off-road route to Banff), which suggests we are not the only ones who hope to start this tour in Jasper.

Unfortunately, the summertime transit situation from the Calgary airport to Jasper is extremely dire. There is a Brewster Express Bus which costs $194 per ticket. The only other option I can think of is to rent a large car from the Calgary airport and return it in Jasper, which might be less money but I don't know how possible it will be during peak tourism season.

Is there anyone here who has ridden the GDMBR? If so, how did you manage your preliminary travel situation?

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kimbo305
Jun 9, 2007

actually, yeah, I am a little mad

Jesse Ventura posted:

Unfortunately, the summertime transit situation from the Calgary airport to Jasper is extremely dire. There is a Brewster Express Bus which costs $194 per ticket. The only other option I can think of is to rent a large car from the Calgary airport and return it in Jasper, which might be less money but I don't know how possible it will be during peak tourism season.

We did a similar but not quote as long rental SUV transit from Edmonton to Jasper to start. Long enough ago that prices are probably irrelevant, though. Drop off in Jasper was not too bad.

I did think the road ride into Banff was great, though Banff itself in the summer, for bike tourists, was a letdown.
My blog notes on that leg start here
http://mengs-blog.blogspot.com/2016/08/82-edmonton.html
Not sure how much overlap there is with the off-road route

We crossed paths around Banff with some Great Divide riders -- it was the typical camaraderie of cycling tourists on the road.

Bottom Liner
Feb 15, 2006


a specific vein of lasagna

Jesse Ventura posted:

Hello, thread. A friend and I plan to ride the Great Divide MTB Route this summer. We will start in late June and ride from north to south. I've toured on pavement extensively but this will be my first time touring an unpaved route, and my first time riding this cool setup (build is not final but this is the most recent pic i have).


Haven't done it yet but I've done a lot of bikepacking. Get in as much gravel time as you can to dial in your fit and comfort for 12+ hour days. All the extra impact your body will be absorbing off road adds up compared to road touring, and you don't want to be fighting numbness or worse out on the GD. Your bar angle in particular worries me for your wrists. A weekend shakedown or two will do wonders for getting you comfortable with your kit and packing/unpacking, especially if you can get somewhere cold as you're likely going to encounter snowy conditions.

Mr Newsman
Nov 8, 2006
Did somebody say news?
For what it's worth my wife and I were in Banff in January for a conference/ski trip and it was cheaper to rent a small SUV than it was to take the shuttle from the Calgary airport there and back.

One way trip might be different on all fronts but the flexibility was appreciated.

I'm hoping to do the divide sometime in the next few years. Either when I inevitably get laid off or go on my "sabbatical" at the 5 year employed mark.

Mr Newsman fucked around with this message at 10:51 on Apr 25, 2024

Jesse Ventura
Jan 14, 2007

This drink is like somebody's memory of a grapefruit, and the memory is fading.
Thanks for the input, all! We have reserved a midsize SUV for this occasion. Now the only thing that can go wrong is the Seinfeld scenario.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-brgkkjnHc

Mr Newsman posted:

I'm hoping to do the divide sometime in the next few years. Either when I inevitably get laid off or go on my "sabbatical" at the 5 year employed mark.

I'm just quitting my job for this, lol. :getin:

Mr Newsman
Nov 8, 2006
Did somebody say news?

Jesse Ventura posted:

I'm just quitting my job for this, lol. :getin:

Hell yeah! Gonna be a good ride.

SadBag
Jun 24, 2012

Something has gone very wrong for us to get to the point where Hot Dog is the admiral.
I was biking on the Blue Ridge Parkway + some extra in VA to the West yesterday. I realized that my wallet had either fallen out of the container that I had been keeping it in, or someone had grabbed it (CC wasn't used before I canceled so maybe not?) in the 50 miles after I had last used it. Didn't see it today when I went back the way I came. Killed the trip I was taking on 76, canceled the Credit/ATM card, and am getting a new drivers license tomorrow.

Should I have faith in my fellow man/bikers/hikers? Any of you guys ever get something like that mailed back to you?

Cactus Ghost
Dec 20, 2003

you can actually inflate your scrote pretty safely with sterile saline, syringes, needles, and aseptic technique. its a niche kink iirc

the saline just slowly gets absorbed into your blood but in the meantime you got a big round smooth distended nutsack

i had a wallet mailed back to me minus the forty bucks cash in it. seemed fair

e: mark rober ran a big wallet-losing experiment a while back and iirc a surprisingly high percentage got returned

ee:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnL7sJYblGY

Cactus Ghost fucked around with this message at 02:02 on May 2, 2024

Coxswain Balls
Jun 4, 2001

I dropped my wallet while biking around Kyoto with around half a grand in it. I had to head out but I filled out a form at a police box and when it was found a couple days later they mailed it to a friend in Tokyo so it was there for me when I arrived. Nothing was missing but my friend's Passmo card she lent me, most likely because the name didn't match with my driver's license.

The bigger hassle was when I called my bank about options for getting cash while waiting for my wallet to turn up, and the phone rep immediately cancelled all my cards without my input. After spending a night or two living on pocket change Western Union saved my butt in the short term, and a very awesome person from the Japan thread here happened to be in town for business and was able to hook me up with a few thousand dollars to get me through the rest of my trip. He had a bank account in my country for work stuff so we were able to do an easy transfer to turn the dollars in my bank account into yens.

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Skrill.exe
Oct 3, 2007

"Bitcoin is a new financial concept entirely without precedent."

Coxswain Balls posted:

I dropped my wallet while biking around Kyoto with around half a grand in it.

TBF that's not even $5 these days.

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