John’s closing notes on this’n’that The weather was surprisingly clement. We never had all of the awkward 4Hs (heat’n’humidity, hills’n’headwinds) at once. We had three overnight showers in the first half of our tour, none of them a problem. We would dry out our tents at the next day’s lunch stop – see photo #1 below, ballooning tents catching a brisk westerly off Lac Mercier, just west of Tremblant. As mentioned above, we also had a brief afternoon shower just north of Maniwaki, and the weather gods held back on the thunderstorms until we had settled in for the night at the Château Logue.
We enjoyed
chatting with cyclists at different points along the way. On our first night, we shared les Berges (The Banks), the site reserved for cyclists in le parc national de Plaisance, with half-a-dozen other cyclists. We came from different places and generations. Ron and I were the only ones with Rohloffs, testimony our wisdom and experience (he said, immodestly.) (The others were intrigued by our Thorns-mit-Rohloffs.) There was a fellow from Alberta and his lady from Wisconsin, exploring Québec (his birthplace) on their first cycling tour together. A fellow from Toronto, recently retired in his mid-50s, was cycling to Oka, just west of Montréal. Unlike the rest of us, Luc was fluently bilingual, borne into a francophone family in Toronto, and raised there. Interestingly, he knew about Thorn bikes.
When we stopped at Camping parc Joan, just east of Mont-Laurier and the end of our ride along le P’tit Train du Nord, we met other cyclists from the U.S. who had journeyed north (by car and train) to ride its full distance. Two young women from Chicago were finishing their tour, having started in St-Jérôme; and a man and women from Boston were just beginning theirs. We were interested to know what had brought them here – turned out that they all had learned about le P’tit Train from the internet, and were keen to visit Montréal. (No surprise there!)
On the Véloroute des draveurs, just north of Gracefield, we chatted with a woman who had a cottage a little east of Gracefield, near the Gatineau River. She and her husband, both retired, live near the village of Carp (on our homeward leg) and spend much of their year in their cottage. She’s a keen cyclist, and was on a 60-70 km day ride to Blue Sea. We shared a grumble about our fellow cyclists’ evident unfamiliarity with bells, or with vocal signals such as “passing left”.
Lastly, as we expected, we saw several clusters of cyclists on e-bikes. At our lunch stop in Gracefield, we chatted with a group of four at their turnaround point before they headed north towards Maniwaki. A couple of them were quite new to cycling; the leader was an experienced cyclist. They were all enthusiastic about their steeds, and looking forward to more such rides.
The last leg of our tour included
a ferry ride south across the Ottawa at Quyon. (See photos 2 & 3 below.) It’s always enjoyable, and this time, we learned that the noisy diesel engine of the ferry had been replaced with a sturdy cable and an electric winch. “Jeez,” sez I to myself, “hope they’ve got a spare in place, ‘cos the river’s 800 metres wide here…” No fuss or bother, thankfully.
Remarkably, we had only
one bad vibe, and this we more or less expected: We rode the wide shoulders of Highway 117 for about five kms east of Mont-Laurier and another twenty west of town. 117 is the major route from Montréal to Québec’s northwest border with Ontario, and carries a lot of truck traffic. The noise of engines and tires was no fun at all, but to their credit the drivers were courteous and safe. They all gave us a wide berth, which was especially welcome first thing in the morning as we left our campsite at parc Joan and laboured up a loooong steep hill in 1st.
And what’s next?Rethinking touringI hugely enjoyed our week-plus in Québec – the land- and waterscapes, the variety of terrain, the food, and especially the companionship with Ron. I learned quite a bit about Freddie’s capabilities as a light-medium touring bike: briefly, very good for a tour like this. (A few more thoughts on that below.) I was pleased that I could handle the physical challenges of our ride, even though our days were too full to allow my regular 60-plus minutes of stretching and strengthening exercises. As I look to the future, though, I’m rethinking touring, looking more towards one- or two-night rides rather than tours of a week or more. Marcia, bless her, has been very tolerant and supportive of my two-wheeled obsessions, but she and I are well into the latter half of our eighth decade, and although we both enjoy good health ATC (all things considered), I don’t want to leave her alone to manage all the “stuff” of the household for any length of time.
Living in Ottawa, I’m privileged to have all sorts of enjoyable cycling routes and camping spots within a day or two’s ride in all directions. (For a sampling, have a look at José Albornoz’ website, here:
ottawabybike.ca). Some of these routes include more gravel roads and tracks than my original estimate of 5-10% of Freddie’s likely touring mileage. So, my rethinking touring leads us into --
Tweaking FreddieWe rode over a fair amount of loose and/or fresh gravel on our tour, especially on the Véloroute des draveurs. I was impressed with Ron’s evident comfort with the big fat Mondials on Nozomi. Freddie’s 650B x 1.6 Marathon Supremes were brilliant on tarmac and fine on hard gravel, rather less so on loose gravel and the accompanying threat of sand. (In addition, I have much less experience with a full touring load on Freddie, than has Ron with his Raven.)
On returning home, and after talking with Ron about his experience, I looked into getting a pair of 650B x 2.00 or 48mm slicks. A little to my surprise, 2.00 Marathon Supremes were available at a reasonable price – but only from Korea. Ron suggested 48mm Panaracer Gravelking slicks as a well-made and less expensive alternative to René Herse’s 48mm Switchback Hill tire with an “Endurance” casing. Happily, I found a pair of Panaracers at a nearby bike shop at an end-of-summer price, the pair costing about as much as a single RH counterpart. To these I added a pair of Velo Orange smooth alloy 58mm fenders, sourced from a Montréal shop. So far, I’m very pleased with the result, shown in see Photo 4 below.
The Panaracers weigh about 600 gms each, some 80gms more than their RH counterpart. I might “pay” for some of the extra weight by switching out my Thorn alloy seatpost for my spare carbon-fibre Deda Elementi. Freddie now weighs 30 lbs with rear rack, lights fore and aft and a bell, but no seat or frame bag or water bottles.
(There is a “BUT” to be inserted -- my
headache experience installing the Panaracers. The switchover on the Thorn alloy front wheel was quick and simple, as expected. Changing the rear tire was unexpectedly prolonged, frustrating and discouraging. Just switching out the Supreme took me half an hour, instead of two minutes. After finally removing it, I found that the rear wheel, a Ryde Rival, was set up for tubeless tires, with a U-shaped channel for seating the bead. This in turn radically restricted the access and leverage of a tire lever. Mounting the Panaracer took much longer, and only after a more knowledgeable friend recommended that I use liquid detergent did I succeed in easing the bead over the rim and into its channel. The same friend also recommended getting a Kool-Stop Tire Bead Jack. That will soon be a part of my toolkit, along with a small bottle of washing-up liquid. Amidst everything, I wondered whether we could have changed a tube or repaired a puncture on our Québec tour.)
For future overnights and two-day rides, I’ll use my 32-ltr Arkel waterproofs on the rear rack, along with my Revelate frame bag, and at the front, a Revelate Sweetroll and a small Axiom handlebar bag.
Should I do a longer tour in the future, especially one with hills comparable to this one, I’ll consider lowering Freddie’s gearing. My current setup, with 650B wheels and a 36 x 17 ring and sprocket, gives me a hair less than 16 gear-inches in first gear. Changing to 34 x 17 would give just over 15 gear-inches in 1st.
All for now, with thanks for your patience