Archive for the ‘Christopher Pike’ Category

Pedaling through Adversity -Lake Baikal- Part 1: You need to read this… very cool.

Monday, June 7th, 2010

“The beginning of the trip was much harder than we had anticipated.  We struggled for 3 days just to reach the lake.”

On the morning of February 25 we hauled all of our bikes and panniers down 5 flights of a narrow staircase out into the courtyard of the Baikaler Hostel in Irkutsk, Russia to begin what we hoped would be the first ever human-powered winter circumnavigation of Lake Baikal.  Opening the door to the outside was just like entering a walk-in freezer.  The cold air looked like smoke as it poured through the rusted steel frame of the entry way and crept along the seams of the walls like a hungry phantom.  It is safe to speculate that questions arose in all of our heads at that moment regarding the rationality of our proposed plan.  There were many unknowns: the amount snow on the lake, the condition of the ice, the reliability of our equipment, and above all – the effect of sustained cold temperatures on our health.    In the preceding three days I had met with many of my Russian friends and acquaintances who cautioned us to the dangers of Lake Baikal in winter.  The ice of Baikal forms in plates and chunks of various sizes. These plates can press into each other and splinter, forming fields of jagged broken ice miles wide.  Or they can separate, leaving deep cracks covered by snow, areas of thin ice, or even open water.  Several cars disappear into the frozen lake every year, and few passengers survive.  We were told that just a week before we left a driver had gotten out of his van to go to the bathroom.  When he turned back towards his vehicle, it, along with its 3 passengers, had disappeared.  The plate of ice which he had unknowingly parked on had flipped over like a pancake due to the weight of the van upon one its edges.  The ice of Baikal moves at time as if it is alive.  We were advised to respect Baikal’s capricious and potentially dangerous temperament.

www.cyclebaikal.com

Photo: Maikey Lopera

www.cyclebaikal.com

Photo: Maikey Lopera

The day of our planned departure turned out to be the coldest day of a two-week cold snap.  Daytime temperatures were around -38 Celsius.  We were tempted to wait a day or two for warmer weather, but our schedule had already been compressed to 35 days and we couldn’t afford to delay any longer.  We packed our gear and set out.

www.cyclebaikal.com

Photo: Maikey Lopera

We had planned to ride 65 kilometers from the city of Irkutsk to Lake Baikal along the frozen Angara River, reaching the lake in 2 days. It had seemed plenty reasonable behind a coffee table back in Eugene, Oregon.  It turned out, however, that this year had seen an unusually high amount of snowfall, and the frozen river that I had easily ridden my cyclocross bike on 5 years ago was covered with 2+ feet of snow. We rode in the ruts of a track carved out by automobile traffic, our panniers often bouncing off the snow walls, knocking us off balance and occasionally sending us to the ground.

Eventually the track dead-ended at the mouth of an inlet and we made our first camp, covering only about 20 kilometers.

As the sun faded into the horizon we could feel the temperature dropping. Several questions came to our minds: “how cold will it get”, “will all this high-tech clothing keep me warm”, “What are we going to do if there is this much snow on the lake?”  Battling the self-doubt that accompanies any significant endeavor we set ourselves to the task of pitching the tent and getting the stoves lit to make dinner.

It was at this point that we learned that in very cold temperatures liquid fuels such as kerosene and gasoline do not give off enough vapors to be flammable. After holding my lighter directly against the kerosene until I burnt my thumb I was ready to toss the stove into the endless white and eat frozen bread for dinner. Fortunately, Eric was more patient than I, and after tossing a half-dozen slowly-burning matches into the pool of kerosene, the fuel eventually heated up to the point where it gave off vapors, and ignited. Eric became the officially designated stove operator. After a dinner of freeze-dried chicken enchiladas we crawled into our down sleeping bags to await our first night in the Siberian winter.

That night I slept in full clothing: primaloft insulated pants, primaloft insulated jacket, expedition down jacket, and hat – all cocooned in a -25 degree down sleeping bag.  It was not uncomfortably cold, but I had to cinch down the collar and hood of my sleeping bag to keep the cold air from stealing my heat.

The first thing I saw when I woke up was a small patch of light at the end of the tunnel of down created by my cinched-down sleeping bag hood.  Long and jagged ice crystals had formed around the rim and inner 5 centimeters of the down reminding me of the exogorth scene in The Empire Strikes Back.  Emerging from the comfort of the down sleeping bags and facing the morning chores with frozen hands was a challenge.  After every task that could not be tackled with mittens on we had to spend 5 to 10 minutes warming our hands back up.  My preferred method was swinging my arms in circles rapidly while clenching my hands into fists at the top of every rotation.  This seemed to work pretty well, especially if I swung both arms together and jumped up and down a bit to get my whole body working.  As entertaining as this exercise was, it got old quick, and after a couple days my shoulder joints began to ache from overuse.

The amount of snow on the river made us reconsider our plan to reach Baikal via the Angara River. From the inlet where we had camped we would have to push the bikes for 2 long days to reach Baikal. We decided to cross the river in order to reach the road on the north side of the river and ride the automobile route to the town of Listvianka, the most accessible tourist destination on the lake.  We pushed our bikes for 4 hours before reaching the other side.

www.cyclebaikal.com

Photo: Maikey Lopera

The road wasn’t exactly a piece of cake either.  There were some tough hills and with our 2-speed single speed set up it was often the smart decision to push the bikes rather than risk straining a joint or a ligament.  Our equipment was also taking a beating.  The welds on our front racks became brittle and failed.  We lost several hours to gear modifications and repairs.  At the end of the second day we had travelled only 25 kilometers on the road and had still not reached the lake.

www.cyclebaikal.com

Photo: Maikey Lopera

The morning of the third day we arose determined to reach the lake.  We were very concerned about the amount of snow that we encountered on the Angara River.  If there was that much snow on the lake our chances of completing a circumnavigation were non-existent.  Pushing our bikes we could hope to cover at the most 25 to 30 kilometers a day.  We needed to cover 60 kilometers a day.  The success of our trip hinged on there being ride-able conditions on the lake.
We reached the lake in the early afternoon.  The first thing we noticed was a large body of open water where the Angara forms a basin as it flows out of Baikal.  Along the edges of the basin we could see what looked like blue ice in the distance.  We climbed up and around a long bluff before finally dropping down to the edge of the lake and earning our first look at the oldest and deepest lake in the world, Lake Baikal.  Refrigerator-size chunks of blue ice had stacked up against the shoreline and for as far as we could see the mirror-like surface of the frozen lake reflected back at us a confirmation of all that we had hoped for – blue ice!  The expedition was now officially under way.

www.cyclebaikal.com

Photo: Maikey Lopera

Somenights the Temperature sucked the thermometer to -50C (-58F)

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

February, in the dead of Siberian winter, a group of experienced adventurers set off to circumnavigate the deepest and oldest lake in the world:Lake Baikal. If you have been reading this blog then you have probably seen some of their stories leading up to this journey. The crew recently got back from their epic adventure and are recovering as I write this. Chris, one of team members, sent me this letter today along with a link to a Russian online magazine article (check out the pictures, even if you don’t speak Russian), and a video also in Russian but with some interesting shots.

Once they have had a chance to recover and sort through the video and images they have, we should have more posts to share with you.

Hi Cadeyrn,

I wanted to send you a short note to let you know that we are back from Lake Baikal after a fantastic trip. The expedition was a success and despite some challenging conditions we managed to finish the circumnavigation only 1 day behind schedule. Highlights from the trip were the many cultural interactions along the way and the incredible scenery at the northern end of the lake. We took a ton of photos and captured over 30 hours of video footage. We are in the process of sorting through all of our photo and video material in order to provide Axiom with quality captured material. I will also send you a new blog post within the next few days.

All the gear worked great!! We had minor problems with the front racks,our thoughts were that perhaps the cold (night-time temperatures of down to -50 C) may have weakened the aluminum and made it brittle, but aside from that everything held up remarkable in difficult conditions. Thank you so much for your support!

Our expedition was very well received in Russia and in Venezuela and we have generated a significant media presence there. I’ve attached a link to an article with some photos as well as a link to a news clip from Russian television.

We will sort through all of our material and soon start the process of getting the best photos and video to you.

Chris

Warm clothes, bicycles and a taste for adventure: Months of planning and we leave tomorrow.

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

And… we’re off!

It has been a hectic couple of weeks full of last-minute preparations, gear purchases, and logistical arrangements.  If there is one thing that I’ve learned recently, it is that organizing an expedition is a LOT of work!  Yet it truly is an exciting time.  In less than a week we will begin an adventure that I have been dreaming about for over 5 years.   It seems impossible that in such a short time my daily routine will change from sitting behind a computer in a t-shirt with a coffee cup in my hand to waking up each morning to -35 degrees and a world encased in ice.  I can’t help but wonder what kind of unforeseen challenges we will encounter, who we will meet along the way, and what moments will become forever engraved in my memory.

In the first weekend of February the three members of the team that live in the United States got together for a short training camp in Eugene, OR.  We worked hard to get all the bikes fully winterized, built, loaded, and tested.   Maikey, being a native Venezuelan, found ways to modify the bikes to our needs in half the time of his American counterparts.  By the time I had changed the grease in one pedal Maikey had fashioned a wine cork to function as a grease-injection plug and had purged all the old grease out of four sets of pedals by forcing in the new grease with a grease gun.  Eric and I learned quickly that Maikey has a few tricks up his sleeve.  I have no doubt that his ingenuity will come in handy on the trip.

On the last day of the camp we headed up to Willamette Pass to test the bikes on snow and meet a photographer for the local Eugene paper, the Register Guard.  The bikes performed exceedingly well, and the Axiom racks and panniers were rock solid.  It is great to be able to head off on a trip of this extent having full confidence in the gear that we will be using.

Baikal post 1

A few days later the article came out in the Register Guard.  It can be found here –
http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/web/sports/outdoors/24416763-41/lake-baikal-pike-bike-russia.csp

We have had a lot of success lately raising interest in the trip.  The Mayor of Eugene, Kitty Piercy, has given us her blessing as well as pins, chocolate, and official mayoral pencils to hand out to citizens of Irkutsk, Eugene’s sister city.  The non-profit environmental organization Pacific Environment will be working with us to increase our media presence and network with local environmental activists in the regions surrounding Lake Baikal.  Men’s Health Russia is our main informational sponsor in Russia, and has already published a couple of articles about our trip.  If you read Russian you may enjoy their articles here –
http://adventure.mhealth.ru/sp/adventure/blog.php?page=post&blog=adv&post_id=564
http://www.mhealth.ru/form/extrim/824845/

We were also fortunate to be awarded a “Be First” grant from Eddie Bauer for product support.  Eddie Bauer will be providing us with some of their world-class expedition clothing to keep us warm in the frigid climate of Baikal.  Although average daytime temps of -20 Celsius are not exceedingly cold, with occasional sustained wind speeds of up to 120 kilometers an hour, conditions on Lake Baikal could get cold indeed.  Outwear garments from Eddie Bauer such as their   Peak XV Down Jacket and Igniter Pant will help ensure that we remain protected against the fiercest elements.

One of the unique features about our bikes that people are often curious about is the 2-speed single speed drive-train.  We will be using a double chain-ring up front (34 and 32 teeth) with a single-speed cassette hub in the back with two cogs on it.  (18 and 20 teeth)  The chain is tensioned with adjustable sliders in the frame and there are no derailleurs.  It is a standard single-speed drive-train with the exception that we have two gears to choose from.  By dropping the wheel out of the frame using the quick release, we can manually move the chain from the 34/18 combination to the 32/20 combination without adjusting chain tension.  In this way we have two gear choices to deal with the various terrain challenges that we may encounter.

Baikal post 2

The tires that we will be using are the Nokian Gazza Extreme.  We chose this tire for the simple reason that it is the only one available in a 29 inch size.  It seems very well built and has 294 steel carbide studs to bite into the ice.  The only thing we don’t like about it is that it seems a bit narrow for a winter tire.  I would love to see these things in a 2.3 or 2.5 size.

Baikal post 3

As we enter our final 24 hours of preparation our thoughts are on the weeks ahead.  Have we thought of all possible problems and the best ways to deal with them?  Will we be warm enough?  Will there be so much snow and/or broken ice that we will spend most of our time walking?  There is always a degree of uncertainty and self-doubt before starting out on a big adventure.  We can hope and plan for the best result, but in the end we have to be satisfied with just getting out there and giving it a shot.  If you are interested in following us on this Siberian cycle tour, check us out at www.cyclebaikal.com We will be updating our location with a Spot locator device and texting via Twitter from the field.  We will also upload blog entries and photos when possible.  We wish you the best of luck on your winter adventures, whatever they may be, and hope that you are able to enjoy this unique cycle tour vicariously in the comforts of your home.  Toss back a cup of hot cacao for us on occasion!  We’ll be toasting you in return with a Russian-sized glass of vodka to fight off the cold.  Cheers!

A Tandem Tour of South-Central Oregon – part 2.

Monday, October 5th, 2009

We were fortunate to have perfect weather and not a drop of rain for our 10-day tour of South-Central Oregon.  We carried everything we needed to be self-sufficient: sleeping bags, tent, stove, fuel, and food.  Our tandem was not light with the four pannier bags, and it took us a couple days to get used to the extra weight.

From Eugene we rode out Highway 58 to Oakridge, the starting point of the scenic Robert Aufderheide Memorial Drive.  Aufderheide Drive was named after and dedicated to the memory of Robert Aufderheide, a Willamette National Forest Supervisor in the 1950’s who was instrumental in helping the Forest Service complete the transition from custodial management to professional intensive forest management under multiple-use principles. It would seem that despite these efforts by the Forest Service, Aufderheid’s memory has been forgotten amongt the locals, as we received strange looks whenever we referred to the road in this way.   The most common reply we received in response to our inquires was, “You mean Highway 19?”  The road itself is a pleasure to ride; smooth pavement and long windy climbs and descents.

Our next challenge after Aufderheide was the climb to the top of McKenzie Pass at 5,325 feet.  This was the hardest climb that we had ever done together on the tandem, so we felt a rewarding sense of accomplishment as we finally emerged from the forest onto the summit plateau and were presented with an expansive view of volcanic rock and distant peaks.

A Rocky View

The long descent from McKenzie Pass to the town of Sisters was exhilarating.  Afterwards we spent the rest of the day walking around the town and enjoying fresh local peaches in peak season.  From Sisters we travelled south to Bend and visited the Newberry National Volcanic Monument, where were able to walk the Lava River Cave, a one-mile long cave that at times is large enough to drive a truck through, and at other times so narrow that you have to crawl.

The next morning we decided to treat ourselves to a nice breakfast and stopped at the Red Rooster Café in the town of La Pine.  It turns out that King Abdullah Hussein of Jordan himself had stopped there for a cinnamon role while on motorcycle tour of the Pacific Northwest on his brand new Harley Davidson.

A Rocky View

From La Pine we headed west back into the mountains and enjoyed two glorious days of riding along the Cascade Lakes Highway before descending down to make camp near the translucent waters of Crescent Lake.  The area southwest of Bend and just east of the cascade crest holds a large collection of alpine lakes.  Crescent Lake is one of the most popular, and during summer the campgrounds and resorts are filled with vacationers.  The next day we rode down to the slightly less popular Diamond Lake, which would be our camp for two days, and the launching pad for our long-awaited ride around Crater Lake.

As stunning as the many alpine lakes along the Cascade Lakes Highway were, they all paled in comparison with Crater Lake.  I now understand why Crater Lake is considered one of Oregon’s premier scenic attractions.  It is simply stunning.  For a cyclist the lake holds additional appeal in that the road that circumnavigates the crater is ideal for cycling.  After making the initial 2000 foot climb from Diamond Lake to reach the crater rim and the first view of the lake at 7025 feet (2142 meters), the road continues to climb and descend in dramatic fashion for 33 miles as it wraps around the crater rim.  The whole day our cyclometer read speeds of either the low teens or the upper 50’s and very rarely in between.  It was one of the most aesthetic and enjoyable rides that I have done in 20 years of cycling.

A Tandem Lake

From Diamond Lake we headed west back over the cascade crest along scenic highway 138; a 40-mile descent to the town of Steamboat.  This long descent was much appreciated after all the climbing around Crater Lake the previous day, and it was good that we were not too tired before facing the tough grind over Sharps Creek.  Before the day was over we understood how Sharps Creek had earned its infamous reputation among cyclists in Eugene.  Not once during our tour had we used the drag brake on a long descent.  Down Sharps Creek I had it maxed out for nearly 15 minutes.  The chip-seal surface and narrow tight corners inspired much caution.

The following day was our last and we reflected on time well spent as we travelled along familiar roads through Cottage Grove and Lorane on our way back to Eugene.  We were fortunate to meet many nice people on our trip, and were surprised by the high quality of the roads and designated paths for cyclists even in relatively out-of-the-way areas.  The beauty of travelling by bicycle is that you see every little bit of ground that you cover, rather than driving from destination to destination and missing everything in between.  Sometimes this can mean enduring a bit of misery as you ride a congested highway section with no shoulder, or get soaked in a rain storm, but other times you find things you had not expected, like a quaint little town or an unofficial secluded camp spot on a gorgeous river.  Being a relatively uncommon site, you also have the advantage of being strange enough that people are interested in talking with you.  And best of all, at the end of the day you have a sense of accomplishment for the distance you’ve covered and the experiences you’ve earned entirely with your own volition and capacity.  Bicycle touring is a beautiful thing!

A tandem tour of south-central Oregon.

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Scenic of Baikal

Lake Baikal and Crater Lake have many things in common. Baikal is the deepest lake in the world, while Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States.  Both have been regarded as sacred sties, and are renowned for their beauty and breathtakingly cold water.  But while our trip to circumnavigate Lake Baikal on bicycle is a committing winter endeavor and still months away, a trip to ride around Crater Lake is a pleasant summer vacation that will only take us 9 days.  While our final goal is to ride around Crater Lake, we have planned our trip to include many of the hidden treasures and curious sights in south-central Oregon such as McKenzie Pass, Lava River Cave, and Hole in the Ground.

The starting point of the trip is Eugene, Oregon. From here we will ride to Oakridge and head north to highway 242 via the acclaimed Aufderheide memorial drive. This road travels first along the South Fork of the McKenzie River, then along the North Fork of the Willamette River, and finally through Box Canyon. We will ride over the red covered bridge in Westfir, the longest covered bridge in Oregon, built in 1945. Once we reach highway 242 we will ascend to the summit of McKenzie Pass.

At the summit of McKenzie pass we will visit the Dee Wright Observatory – an open shelter in the midst of a large lava flow. It is constructed entirely from rough black lava stones. If we are lucky we will be able to enjoy a view of many of the mountains in the area.  After the heights of McKenzie Pass we will descend, down, down, down, until we have reached a place deep in the earth called Hole in the Ground.

USA LAKEThis “hole”, located near La Pine, OR, is actually a large explosion crater, or “maar”. It is approximately one mile across and its floor is about 490 feet below the surrounding ground level.  In pictures it looks more like a moon crater or a giant pimple than a hole, but perhaps it will be more impressive when witnessed firsthand.  After the Hole we will continue our subterranean exploration at our stop at Lava River Cave near the town of Bend.  The Cave is a lava tube of 5210 feet in length which was formed approximately 80,000 years ago

Many towns we will be passing that were established in the 19th century were previously inhabited by Native American tribes. Many of the peaceful forests and fields surrounding these towns witnessed some of the last fighting between Native Americans and European settlers in the Pacific Northwest.  One of the most famous of these sites is Fort Klamath, where the Modoc, Klamath, and Northern Paiute tribes fought to retain autonomy over their lands.  These were the last battles to occur in California and Oregon.  One of the interesting things about the Pacific Northwest is that much of its history is told outside of museums and the hustle and bustle of the bigger cities.  One of Oregon’s richest historical museums is its nature. Even the trees here are over 200 years old and stand as monuments of a dramatic past.

Along our way we will also enjoy the simple pleasures of eating wild huckleberries and blackberries on the side of the road.  One of the best things about travelling by bicycle is that your focus is not so much on reaching your goal, but having fun on your way to it.  The goal simply functions as a good reason to get out of the house and make a go of it – the hardest part being just getting out the door.  With so many fascinating aspects of our world to explore, why not throw a pair of panniers on a bike and set out?

Enjoy your summer!

Chris

Motivation and Promotion: The Baikal Cause

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Another factor that has motivated me to plan this trip is my desire to promote and contribute to the efforts of a small but dedicated group of local environmentalists – the non-profit organization Great Baikal Trail (GBT), located in Irkutsk, Russia.  GBT is working to preserve Lake Baikal and promote environmental conservation in the region through the construction of the first recreational trail system in Russia.  Over 540 kilometers of trail have been built so far during summer trail-building projects that involve members of the local communities as well as volunteers from all over the world.  You can find out more about GBT and how to volunteer for a summer trail-building project here -  http://www.greatbaikaltrail.org/index_en.html

We will be promoting this expedition through various mediums.  The most notable will be a medium-length film produced by Venezuelan team member Federico Pisani.  Federico is an experienced photographer and film maker who has won awards and international recognition for his work.  His last film, “La Ventana”, a documentary of a climb of Cerro Torre in Patagonia, was featured in the official selection of Banff Film Festival World Tour and won Prize for Best Photography at the Festival Ascenso in Venezuela in 2007.  Our hope is that the film will acquaint audiences with the unique beauty and ecological significance of Lake Baikal as well as with the preservation efforts in the region in order to engender interest and encourage international cooperation in dealing with issues of environmental conservation on a global level.

We will also be organizing a number of slide-show presentations in Oregon and Washington.  These presentations will be an opportunity for us to publicize our trip, promote our sponsors, and increase awareness of Lake Baikal and the current conservation efforts in the region.  In addition, we hope to contribute articles to leading adventure journals upon completion of the trip.  Two members of the team have published articles in American Alpine Journal, and there is strong interest within the team to publish.  Finally, we will be maintaining a website which will feature reports from the field, route descriptions, pictures, and links to sponsors’ web pages.  The website, a work in progress, can be found here – http://www.cyclebaikal.com/

Lake Baikal: The team

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

I have been very fortunate to assemble a highly motivated and experienced team of athletes for this trip, all of which have extensive experience either climbing or cycling in demanding conditions in remote parts of the world.

Venezuelan Maikey Lopera has established new rock and alpine climbing routes in Canada and Venezuela, was a former member of the Venezuelan National Cycling Team, and is ACLS and Wilderness First Responder certified.

American Eric Noll has recently finished a 6-week bike tour through the Indian Himalaya, has completed a self-supported 2-week solo bike tour through the Altai Republic in Russia, and has extensive bicycle touring and mountaineering experience in the USA, Alaska, and Canada.

Federico Pisani has established new rock and alpine climbing routes in Venezuela, Chile, and Argentina, including the first ascent of Upuigma in Venezuela and Cacao de Chuao 5.13 in Tepuy Roraima (Venezuela).

van-on-ice


I am responsible for the general organization of the trip and logistics on the ground as I am the only member of the team who speaks Russian and has previously been to Lake Baikal.  I have extensive experience bicycle touring and mountaineering in the USA, Canada, Russia, Mongolia, and China, including riding from Irkutsk to Beijing and a 3-week self-supported winter mountaineering expedition in Kamchatka, Russia.

Training for this trip should be pretty straight forward, just a matter of spending time on the bike, although we will need to put the bikes on hard-packed snow roads in winter to see how they handle and to test the gear.  Bearing in mind that Baikal is completely flat, we are considering using fixed-gear or single speed drivetrains.  I like the idea of having as simple a bike as possible to minimize possibilities for gear failure and general malfunction due to the extreme cold.  Opting for a fixed-gear drivetrain would allow us to run a cable free bike as brakes would become superfluous.  We may even choose to run a 2-speed fixed-gear, allowing a back-up lower gear in case of snow accumulation, winds, or tired legs.  It will be important beforehand, however, to test the bikes fully loaded on snow to make sure that the gear we choose is the right size.

I am very excited about this expedition.  Like many of you I’m sure, since childhood I have been fascinated by cold and remote places.  This trip allows me to combine my love of bicycle riding with my love of winter plus it has the added benefit of engendering contact with another culture as well as with a unique natural wonder – what the Russians refer to as “the gem of Siberia”; Lake Baikal.  Many thanks go to Axiom for supporting us in this endeavor!

Keep dreaming those Arctic Dreams!

Christopher Pike

We are expecting to take 43 days to cover 2300 KM

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

We are expecting to take 43 days to cover the 2300 kilometers of Lake Baikal’s shoreline, averaging 55 kilometers per day.  Although there are certain to be days where we will ride more than 55 kilometers, we also expect to encounter significant disruptions in the ice, which will impede our progress, as well as inclement weather such as high winds and snow storms which could confine us to our tents for days.

Our primary challenges will be dealing with bone chilling temperatures, dropping to as low as -40 degrees Celsius, on a daily basis and contending with variable ice and snow conditions.  In the event of significant snow accumulation we may have a hard time making distance.  It is not uncommon for large areas of ice to become fragmented, forming trenches and walls of fractured ice that require considerable detours.

iceProvisions, we are hoping will not be too hard to come by, as there are many small settlements around the lake.  We expect the maximum number of days that we will travel between settlements with no opportunity to buy food or unleaded fuel for our stoves to be 14 days.  Both the northeastern and northwestern sections of Baikal’s shoreline are remote, with no road access and very few areas of human settlement.

Keep dreaming those Arctic Dreams!

Christopher Pike

It Seemed to me to be the best way…

Friday, June 19th, 2009

It was sometime around the middle of the third day of skiing on the delightfully translucent but relentlessly hard, blue ice of Lake Baikal that I began to think of mountain bikes and studded tires.  Thanks to the weight of our packs and the firmness of the ice, the edgeless touring skis that we were using were completely flattening out in the middle, which was making it a real challenge to make them track straight.  Before we set out for this six-day excursion along the western coast of Lake Baikal, from the town of Listvyanka to Olhon’ island, I had envisioned spending our days kicking and gliding on hard-packed and wind-swept snow.

on-the-lakeInstead we struggled to stay upright and keep our skis parallel as we steered and maintained our speed by double-poling on the slick ice.   We were quickly made aware of how seldom we use the muscles of the insides of our thighs and groin.  Not long after my buddy took a fall that split his eyebrow we decided enough was enough and spent a couple of days with local villagers before getting a ride back to Irkutsk, where I was living at the time.

Although the trip turned out to be shorter than we had planned, the icy expanses of Lake Baikal in winter left an impression on me that has proven unforgettable.  The lake has a powerful spiritual presence that most likely comes from the fact that it is the oldest and deepest lake in the world.  Even in winter the lake seems alive; the ice groans and pops as it moves.  On that third day of squeezing my thighs together as if I were trying to crack walnuts I dreamt of swapping my skis for a mountain bike.  It seemed to me to be the best way to experience Baikal in winter and to explore its more wild and remote corners.  From that day I have dreamed of returning with a group of friends to complete the first human-powered winter circumnavigation of Lake Baikal on mountain bikes.  It has taken 4 years for this dream to come to fruition, but circumstances have finally aligned, and we are set to embark on this adventure in February of 2010.

Keep dreaming those Arctic Dreams!

Christopher Pike

lake-map


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