We made it! That is a huge accomplishment for us,
riding to the top of the Stelvio on a bike that is more akin to an RV to a regular
½ bike. It was a super hard day
but both of us are so very pleased to having stuck with it and making it to the
top. Quite a day. What fun!
There's no GPS map today because I couldn't get the website Ride With GPS to pin the Stelvio route. But it was there, really.
We got an early
start from Glurns, shoving off at a few minutes after 0600. It was chilly, about 9 degrees, but
that was much preferred to hot. We
arrived in the tiny village of Prato Alle Stelvio in about 10 km and turned
right to start the climb. We were
definitely at the front of the day – nobody else was out at this hour either in
a car or on a bike or moto. That
was the plan. Since we climb
really slowly we wanted to be ahead of the hordes.
| On the way up, the first avalanche shelter |
The route from
the village is about 24 km to the top and the climb starts out at a civilized
gradient of 6 to 7 percent. We
passed through a very small village of Gomagoi, where a car club of young guys
with supped-up street racers, a few Porsches and two Ferraris were getting
ready to roll before the hordes.
We knew that we’d see them shortly. The climb continued, with a gradually steepening
gradient. Still in the trees, we
hit the first of 48 numbered switchbacks, numbered in reverse order from bottom
to top. Great, only 48 switchbacks
to go.
We heard the car
club guys coming from behind.
Fast. They flew past us but
they passed us with the utmost courtesy – they gave us wide berth (well, as
wide as possible on a road that is at most 1 ½ lanes wide). Through the trees the gradient continued
to increase. Ten, eleven, then
sixteen and eighteen percent. This
hurt and we still had 47 to go.
Then the motos started passing us.
These are the crotch rocket guys who literally fly up the road. But they all seem to be very skilled on
their bikes, if, without a doubt, crazy.
At one series of
very steep switchbacks two big Valkerye bikes had stopped on the switchback
ahead. A group of fast motos flew
past us as we passed to by Velkeryes.
Both of the riders on the Valkeryes remarked something like “WTF, those
guys are nuts!” in proper British.
I was really hurting at this point and was getting a bit flummoxed about
the slow speed we could make. Sure,
it was 14 percent, but honestly…We continued on and the Brits slowed down as
they passed and asked “English?” We
said, “No, American.” They smiled
and said “just enjoy!?
They turned my
day around. Rather than beating
myself up at the slow speed, I relaxed a bit and started to ride for the fun of it
rather than anything else. We
still had 15 km to go, but the rest of the ride was a pleasure. A hard, hard pleasure to be sure, but
what a difference a slight adjustment in mind frame makes. Thanks to those two Brits!
We soon broke
out of the tree line and into the high alpine, where we could see the cliff we
needed to go up. And the numbered
switchbacks ticked off. A few
other bikes passed us, but it was still pretty quite on the Stevio. Ten, nine, eight. We stopped at five for a break. At three we hit a short 16 percent
section. One km to go. Then the road is marked with signs at
each 100 meters. Four
hundred. Three. Two. And then we’d made it.
Fantastic. Super slow. But who cares? Riding the thing on a tandem is so
vastly more difficult than a regular bike and Lorie simply killed it. Never a complaint, other than to tell
me to keep riding and quite complaining.
| This is about at switchback 25 |
We took very few photos on the way up as there wasn't much energy for it. We opted for photos on top and on the way down. The top is a ski
station and tourist have and is clogged with motos, hikers, cyclists, and God
knows what else. We ducked into a
restaurant for coffee as we’d had none on the day and the temp was pretty
cold. The top is at 2754 meters
(8,406 feet). We’d climbed a total
of 6,554 feet over 25 km, and we were done in. Coffee fixed all of that. (There were a lot of ski camp kids around, too, kind of like
Gov’t Camp in summer time ski camps but at a much higher altitude.)
| Small reward |
We wandered around a bit and took some obligatory photos. Lots of people taking selfies – I took to calling them “selfios.” Nice people all around, happy to take photos of us to prove that we made it.
| OK, cheesy but proud |
| Cima Coppi, always, the Stelvio |
| A "selfio" |
Then down. The thing with a tandem is this: going
up is painfully slow, but going down is outrageously fast. Before we took off I tightened the
brakes. And I kept it very
civilized. While I could go down
and around the switchbacks faster than cars (maybe even motos), I have no
interest in that whatsoever. But
that meant that we were on the brakes the whole time. The motos were, as expected, very courteous, and I always
moved into the wide part of the outside corners to let them by. The inside corners on the switchbacks
are so tight that the damned tandem barely makes it around.
| Traffic volume grew throughout the day |
We took our
time, enjoying the ride and stopping to give the hands and the brakes a
break. We took photos of this
fascinating house that is probably at 2500 meters, across the valley, on the
cusp of two obvious avalanche paths.
How, why, who? There has to
be an interesting story behind it.
| Surely a good story here |
| Look closely and you'll see the mystery house |
And art along
the road. Interesting and
whimsical stuff. Fitting that it
is also the same day as the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show.
| Art, ala Stelvio. Or is it Arte? |
| Whimsical, for sure. Fun, too! |
We made it back
to Glurns by 1400 and showered and went to town, where they had a Saturday
market. It was super fun and we
bought bread, cheese, salami (from a guy who had come all the way from Puglio
in southern Italy), and wine. Time
for a celebration, if a bit crude.
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| Cool 72 VW bus with coffee onboard for sale |
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| Dinner. |
Tomorrow we’re
off to Bolzano. We may get a hotel
so we can watch the Euro cup finals (France v Portugal).


Bravo!! Looking good.
ReplyDeleteBenissimo! Enjoy the easier days now.😀
ReplyDelete