Even worse that that is braking into the corners heading westbound (downhill), when the front end gets upset by the bumps and divots in the pavement.
It's getting to the point that you need a dual-sport to have fun on the App Gap.
--mark
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I was thinking about a weekday run up there next week. Is it worth the long ride or wait till later in the year for the heaves to smooth?
Thanks
It's a great question that I'll always wonder about myself.
Case in point... this guy has his knee down:
http://www.knucklebusterinc.com/feat..._4_cut_800.jpg
These guys don't:
http://img52.imageshack.us/img52/35/kneen.jpg
:plusone:
How far do you have to go to get there?
I wouldn't bother making it a destination -- it's just in too shitty shape. If it's part of a longer route, great, but if you're just heading that way to ride the App Gap, it's not really worth it anymore.
The problem isn't so much the frost heaves, it's the ripples and huge cracks that have developed in the pavement (some of them exactly where you'd typically want to put your tires going around a turn).
--mark
Thanks.
i start a new job week after next, looks like i'll be finishing here this week. Gives me some down time to rack up some miles. Any word on rte 9 across the bottom? I don't want to hijack the thread, but it seems some local VT'ers checking this thread. Maybe some other suggestions? Thanks.
Rt 9 has some nice sweepers, but it tends to be fairly high-traffic.
There are lots of great roads in Vermont -- just look at Google Maps and plan out a loop that looks good. You can't really go wrong as long as you avoid Rt 7 as much as possible (nothing wrong with it, just boring). The Adirondacks have a lot of great riding as well.
--mark
I don't think theres is any question what the dust is, winter salt residue. they use so much of it up there that rain just moves it from one spot to another and never really washes it away
http://sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-..._5975752_n.jpg
I thought the App Gap was closed winters.
Christ. Randy = New England road encyclopedia.
--mark
when I was little, my great grandfathers house was on a dirt road that is now known as Rt 17, the turnpike was paved over the mountain from the intersection with the Gore road. my uncle had a camp just a couple hundred feet in the woods from the A-frame house at the 2nd hairpin. There were several picnic spots on the way up to the top, good trout fishin in the brook
3:50 in the video is where we found a Harley wedged under the guardrail - No Rider anywhere - the next day someone painted on the guardrail "The Mt. Gotta Ya" Here's our outing - bottom of pg. 7 photo of the Harley, pg. 8 gets better,http://forums.pelicanparts.com/bmw-r...-5-31-a-7.html
Then dinner & drinking and the townie come out - good weekend - there's a group going up next weekend - http://forums.pelicanparts.com/bmw-r...y-15-16-a.html
FYI