This is Friday's ride.
We are now starting into the serious and beautiful part of the Dolomites. We have a few days of some pretty serious climbing. The hills in the Dolomites are not as long as the alps, but they tend to be very punchy -- steep.
Morning came
early and we were on the road by 0530 a.m. But first we had to figure out how to get out of the campground. The place is fenced and locked and
secured and, I suppose assured to keep the lowlifes out. That’d be us. The electronic gate didn’t work and we couldn’t get any code
to work. So I jimmied it. Probably broke it. But it was 0530 and nobody else was
around except a Hungarian guy who was riding the same basic route as us. He thanked us for helping with his
escape!
We found a café
that was open shortly after 0600 and knew that we had to stop. Good coffee helped brighten the spirits
that had been darkened the night before.
Soon we set off for our big day of climbing into the high
Dolomites. There were no “name”
passes today, and we rode only 75 km to Sorriva, but we climbed about 2000
meters and the climbs were brutal.
The average was 10% but there were long sections of double-digit ramps,
some approaching 20%. We had to
walk at one section of rocky 18%.
I think that I
have heard this in at least 20 different languages, almost always spoken with
absolute glee by a man who is surprised by a tandem riding by: “She isn’t
peddling!” It is like the joke
that goes with a tandem and it is always followed by a huge guffaw. Today there was some old Italian guy
hiking with his wife and he simply shouted it out, smiling the entire time like
a cat eating shit. It is all so
very fun. We are a sight to behold
– you don’t see tandems in Europe very often and never touring. We typically respond appropriately with
me giving an “Oh crap, thanks for the heads up” type of response.
Here's a collection of photos from today's beautiful and rewarding ride:
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| Rocenno Italy |
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| A chilly but beautiful moning |
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| Lost, as usual... |
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| Castelonuevo. Doesn't look that new to me... |
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| Climbing into the high Dolomites |
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| A typical road for our ride |
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| Ooops, lost again. Damned GPS |
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| This a very agriculturally intensive area, more than just grape vines |
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| Mr. Hoffman's services are needed here! |
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A random village where we stopped at a bar for water for our bidons. The locals are always so very happy to help and hear our stories! |
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| Every village has a church, or two |
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| We got stopped here for about 1/2 hour while they cleared a landslide from the road |
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| Crossing some river and hoping that our climbing is near done... |
We arrived in
Sorriva in mid-afternoon. Toasted
we were. We’re staying at a
B&B and as soon as the alimentary opens at 1530 we headed down for some
goodies. Both of us are really
tired. But the B&B is a mastery of architecture. The photo doesn't show it, but it is very cool.
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| Add caption |
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| Outside our B&B -- that's where we go tomorrow |
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| Home sweet home for tonight |
The B&B guy
has not shown up. I called him and
found out where the key was hidden, so we got in fine, but who knows. It is kind of nice having the place to
ourselves. I’ve always found
B&B’s to be awkward in a big way, hoping for the best with this one.
Tomorrow we’re
over the Croce d’Aune, which isn’t too much climbing from here but will
probably be very steep (they make their roads steep here). Then we will probably shorten the ride
by cutting off a big section so that we can ride straight to Valdobiedenne
downhill. We are both really tired
and it could be just the thing.
We’ll see how we feel tomorrow.
For now, we need to find some food in this very, very tiny town. We think that we saw a bar up the road…but we slogged over to a pizza joint for some food and were pleasantly surprised with a great dinner.
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| Lorie's dinner |
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| Mine... |
Ciao!
Is that a fried egg on your pizza??
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