6:00am alarm, snooze...
6:08am alarm, snooze...
ugh...
I could get up right now and go for a sunrise ride, or I could keep sleeping.
I'm going riding.
I manage to get my things together without waking my family up and I make it out the door by 6:30.
I'm off!  Spinning at a much faster cadence than I'm used to and going almost nowhere....
This  morning is my first single speed ride!  I am riding Mosaic's Mountain  Steel Single Speed 29er, and loving the feel of steel.  I haven't even  made it onto the dirt yet and this bike already has me riding wheelies  off of curbs and whipping around corners.  I should be focusing on the  task at hand, testing myself and this bike, but I can't help playing on  it.  I did just wake up, didn't I?  As I ride west on the Spring Creek  Trail heading to the Pineridge Natural Area I enjoy the simplicity of  the single speed.  I may not be rolling as fast as I normally do but  it's actually relaxing because I'm limited to a nice warm up cadence.   But I am really looking forward to that dirt...
The paved trails end and I find myself climbing a gently ascending  trail.  I am very familiar with these trails, they are very near my  house and I ride them several times a week when the weather is nice.  I  know every climb, every rock and root, and each line that gets me  through the technical sections.  I know that the first climb is coming.   It is short but steep with loose rocks, climbing over the first hogback  of the foothills.  On my XC bike I normally downshift several times and  start to hammer just before the climb starts to generate momentum.
Now  I don't need to shift.  I can focus on the terrain and hammering the  climb.  I pour on the juice at the same point that I normally would and  with shockingly little effort I am at the top!  I couldn't help but  laugh out loud as I reached the top of that first insignificant, but yet  significant on this morning, climb.  This is going to be a great  morning.
I roll down the back side of the hogback and start rolling South to make   a longer connection to the Maxwell Natural Area to the North.  As I'm   rolling along I can't help but notice how quiet everything is, the   morning is peaceful.  The only noises I hear are the sound of the wind   blowing through the tall smooth brome grass lining the trail and the   sound of my tires, rolling.  As I look around in the new morning light I   see two bucks bounding from a field off to my left, jumping over a 4   foot high fence, and then across the trail 20 yards in front of me.    Awesome.  I love moments like these.  I may have only been a   quarter-mile from civilization but I feel connected with nature here,   now.
This is where I will really test myself and the bike.  The A-trail  climbs up behind the Colorado State University football stadium, it's  steep and technical.  It can be tough to clean this entire climb on any  given day, even if you've done it many times before.  I go forward with  an open mind and determination.  There is something magical happening  with every pedal stroke on the climb.  I'm hooking up, every stroke  transfers 100% of the power to the wheels.  There's no suspension sag  sucking up energy, there's no energy loss from climbing in a granny gear  with the chain all crooked, just pure transfer of energy.  It's kind of  an addicting feeling.
I like climbing, call me crazy, and this feeling  is awesome!  Just as amazing, the Mosaic steel frame, White carbon  fiber fork, and Maxxis Ardent 2.4 tires are doing an incredible job of  soaking up the bumps in the trail.  I don't clean the whole climb this  morning, and I'm ok with that.  The fact that I'm doing this on a single  speed is a serious milestone for me!  As I make it to the top of the  trail I stop to reflect on what just happened and take in the views of  Horsetooth Reservoir, Horsetooth Mountain Park, Lory State Park, and  Fort Collins.  Now I am realizing that I have to ride that rocky  technical trail back down.  On a rigid bike...
 Once again, the Mosaic bike really shined.  Whipping around corners and  through lines that I take on my full suspension bike, I couldn't tell  during my descent that I was on a rigid.  Ok, that's not entirely  true... I did get jarred pretty good one time and thought that I gave  myself a hernia, but aside from that it was great!  And I didn't have a  hernia.  Coming down the final descent on the trail there is a little  booter that I always like to hit.  This morning was no exception and  launching this amazing bike off of it felt like a great way to end the  ride.
Once again, the Mosaic bike really shined.  Whipping around corners and  through lines that I take on my full suspension bike, I couldn't tell  during my descent that I was on a rigid.  Ok, that's not entirely  true... I did get jarred pretty good one time and thought that I gave  myself a hernia, but aside from that it was great!  And I didn't have a  hernia.  Coming down the final descent on the trail there is a little  booter that I always like to hit.  This morning was no exception and  launching this amazing bike off of it felt like a great way to end the  ride.I start spinning back to my house and wishing that I could have kept  going, but I need to get back to the real world.  It was a refreshing  start to the day.  Challenging.  Exciting.  Awesome.
Watch for more stories and adventures in the next couple of weeks with the Mosaic Mountain Steel Single Speed 29er!
Ride on!
Chris Herron
Local Bike Enthusiast and Grasslands Research Extraordinaire
 


 
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