Chautauqua Talks: Mountain Biking in the Santa Monica Mountains

March 2nd, 2015
Victor Vincente is a pioneer of the sport

Victor Vincente is a local pioneer of the sport

You’re invited to a free presentation by one of CORBA’s and IMBA’s founders, Jim Hasenauer. The presentation is called “Mountain Biking in the Santa Monicas” and is a part of the MRCA Chautuaqua Talk Series. The talk will be held at 7:3o p.m. on March 17, 2015.

An appreciation of off-road bicycling in the Santa Monica Mountains with a focus on its history, its growth, bike advocacy, and relations with other trail users. Once called the “new kids on the block”, mountain bicyclists have now been riding the trails and contributing to the trails community for more than thirty years. Come learn about the evolution of the sport, public policy, and sustainable trail design. Learn where to ride, what to ride and how to ride. What does the future hold for mountain bicyclists in the Santa Monica Mountains NRA?

The talk will be held in Woodland Hall at the Temescal Gateway Park, 15601 W. Sunset Blvd, Pacific Palisades (Map).

Attend our Board of Directors Meetings

March 2nd, 2015
REI-Santa-Monica

March 2015 Board Meeting at REI Santa Monica

Did you know that CORBA’s monthly Board of Directors meeting is open to our members and supporters? We’d love to hear from you, and give you the opportunity to learn first-hand what’s going on at CORBA.

This year we are doing things a little differently. Since our territory is so large, we have begun rotating locations to give more people an opportunity to join us.

Meetings are posted at http://meetup.com/corbamtb, alongside our trailwork events, group rides, and other activities. You can RSVP there or by email to info@corbamtb.com. RSVP’s are recommended, as some of our meeting locations have limited seating. If you’re unable to attend, but would like to tell us something, you can always email us beforehand at info@corbamtb.com.

Meetings are held on the fourth Monday of each month at 6 p.m. This month we’ll be meeting at REI in Santa Monica. We thank REI for their ongoing support of CORBA.

See you there!

What: CORBA Monthly Board of Directors Meeting

When: Monday, March 23, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m.

Where: REI Santa Monica, 402 Santa Monica Blvd, Santa Monica, CA 90401

RSVP: http://meetup.com/corbamtb

Join or Renew CORBA/IMBA in March and Win a Bike (if you’re lucky!)

March 2nd, 2015
Spring Membership Drive for CORBA/IMBA

Spring Membership Drive for CORBA/IMBA

Over the past year, CORBA leaders attended over 150 meetings and public hearings in support of trails and mountain biking in Southern California. We helped get Strawberry Peak and many other trails re-opened after the Station Fire in the Angeles National Forest. We maintained trails in the Santa Monica Mountains and Conejo Valley, and we’re working hard to bring urban Bike Parks to Southern California. But we need your support, your membership, to keep doing it.

March is a great time to join CORBA!  Everyone who joins or renews their membership to CORBA/IMBA during the month of March will be entered into a random drawing for either a Scott Genius 750, or a VIP trip for two to the Burning Can Beer Festival at the REEB ranch in North Carolina. If your membership doesn’t expire for a while, the renewal will add a year to your existing membership. There are additional incentives continuing into spring.

Otto, a CORBA member and supporter, won a beautiful hand-built, all-American Reeb belt-drive single speed during the fall membership drive at Interbike.

Join CORBA, or renew your membership this month. Your membership supports our efforts at the local level in Los Angeles and eastern Ventura County, and IMBA’s efforts nationwide.  Full details of the giveaway are available from IMBA, and official rules are available here.

Girlz Gone Riding news for March

March 2nd, 2015

It’s been a VERY busy 1st quarter for GGR!!

I am so very proud to introduce a new page on the GGR website to honor and acknowledge our amazing women athletes! http://www.girlzgoneriding.com/featured-women-athletes.html

We are starting to solicit vendors for this years 2015 GGR Rocktober event! Signed on so far:

  • Clif
  • Liv
  • Trek
  • Specialized
  • Petal Power
  • ZOIC
  • Kali Protectives
  • Dirty Jane
  • G2 Bikes
  • Michael’s Bicycles
  • Apothecary Muse
  • Ultimate Health.

For these sponsors direct weblinks, please click on their logo here: http://www.girlzgoneriding.com/event-sponsors-2015.html

Look for a new GGR chapter coming soon in San Diego! Talks to start in April!

We have had some super educational and fun clinics so far this year! Thank you to Ninja Mountain bike skills who put on private skills clinics just for GGR! http://sandiegomountainbikeskills.com/

Thank you to Michael’s Bicyles in Newbury Park for hosting a Wenches with Wrenches clinic! http://www.michaelsbicycles.com/

Thank you to Cycle World Chatsworth and Brian Peterson for hosting a hands on weekly bike trail repair class! http://cycleworldbikes.com/

And finally, GGR is all about learning to be a better skilled, safer and confident rider so that all have a great mountain biking experience, we have a weekend skills clinic coming up with Kat Sweet and http://sweetlines.com/ co hosted by G2 bikes and GGR! http://www.g2bike.com/

COSCA Spring Trailwork Day March 21st

February 26th, 2015

Come out and join the Conejo Open Space Conservation Agency (COSCA), CORBA, the Santa Monica Trails Council and other volunteers for the Annual COSCA Spring Trailwork Day. We will be working to restore part of the Lizard Rock Trail, and other nearby trails that are accessible from Hill Canyon in Wildwood Park.

At noon, following the morning of trail-building, workers will be treated to hamburgers / vegi-burgers, chips, fruit and drinks while enjoying the camaraderie of fellow trail enthusiasts!

Wear protective clothing (long-legged pants, long-sleeved shirts, sunglasses), sturdy shoes, gloves, hat and sunscreen.

No experience is necessary and you work at a pace that is comfortable for you. Tools and instructions on how to use them safely and effectively will be provided. Must be 18+ years of age or accompanied by a parent or other responsible adult. Beware of poison oak, ticks & rattlesnakes.

Follow directions of park rangers and trail crew leaders at all times.

Pre-registration is required so that COSCA will have enough tools, crew leaders and food!

Directions to the meeting place and other details are included on the online registration page.

Report on Feb 21 Wood Canyon Vista Trail Restoration, and Photos

February 24th, 2015

As part of the restoration process of the trails in Pt Mugu State Park after the heavy rains and mudslides in December 2014, twelve volunteers from CORBA, along with about two dozen hikers, trail runners and navy personnel, spent this past Saturday working on the Wood Canyon Vista Trail, a segment of the Backbone Trail. Trail crew leaders from CORBA and the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council led the volunteers, showing them how to properly, safely and effectively fix the trails using hand tools.

We had three tasks: repairing the ruts caused by water flowing down the middle of the trail, creating and repairing drains to direct water off of it, and leveling the tread where mud had flowed across it, making it uneven.

About two weeks previously, a smaller crew had worked on the bottom one-third mile of this 1.8-mile long trail. The remaining 1.4 miles was split into three; CORBA was assigned the lowest third. The trail runners worked on the top third after most of them ran to their work area from the parking on Potrero Road. The rest of us carpooled from Potrero to the bottom of the trail on the main Sycamore Canyon Trail in as few cars as possible.

Fields of wildflowers surrounded us as we worked to restore the trail.

Fields of wildflowers surrounded us as we worked to restore the trail.

On the hike to the work area and during the frequent rest breaks, we took in and talked about the carpets of green and fields of wildflowers next to the trails – lupines, California poppies, wild hyacinths (blue dicks), shooting stars and more. I’ve never seen so many wildflowers there before, and never more than a few California poppies. On Saturday, we saw thousand of them, if not tens of thousands, with every indication that there would be more to come! The last time we were here was after the Springs Fire when the ground was barren and charred. What a difference a little rain can make!

When we were finished, long stretches of the trail were leveled to remove the center rut, and many drainage nicks were cleared of debris or built anew. In some places, the old ones were so full and covered by grass that we couldn’t tell where they used to be.

All in all, a great group of volunteers contributed to another successful trail restoration project!

You can view more photos in our photo gallery for this project.

February 2015 Skills Clinic Photos Published February 7th

February 7th, 2015

As always, the free Basic Skills Clinic was conducted on the first Saturday of the month in Malibu Creek State Park. This month we had seventeen riders on a cool and cloudy but dry day. You can see the photos in our February photo gallery.

Scouting the trails of newly re-opened Pt Mugu State Park

February 4th, 2015

Here is what I found when I rode all the multi-use trails a few days after Pt Mugu State Park re-opened on January 30th. The park had been closed since mid-December when heavy rains brought mudslides to the fire-denuded park. During the closure, heavy equipment was used to clear up the extensive damage on the fire roads, and small groups of volunteers were fixing some bad spots on singletrack trails, using hand tools. In fact, volunteer groups will be converging on the park throughout February to help fix the trails. You can help! Here’s the schedule: 2015-01-22 PMSP Trailwork Schedule.

My first impression was that there were a lot of people in the park for a Tuesday morning. No doubt they were as curious about its condition as I was. (There are a number of photos below that show a typical condition, and a much larger photo gallery to show more trail problems, large and small.) One pleasant surprise was that the wildflowers are coming out, in abundance in some places. I’ve included pictures of some of them in the photo gallery.

I entered the park from the north end, through Rancho Sierra Vista/Satwiwa. There are signs posted at the entrance to Pt Mugu State Park (PMSP) indicating that you can’t get through to the coast, and that there is no water in the park.

On the main Sycamore Canyon Fireroad, there were numerous shallow mudslides that had come down the hill and crossed the road. Some were narrow and others were quite wide. All of them had been cleaned up. The whole road was smooth and quite broad. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to make it to the campground because the road was closed south of the point where Overlook Fireroad comes into it.

Piles of dirt that were removed from the main Sycamore Canyon Fireroad.

Sin Nombre and Two Foxes Trails had had lots of tiny mudflows across them, leaving small ridges perpendicular to the trail. They make for a bit of a bumpy ride. There were several ruts in the hillside above and below the trail where a small stream crossed, but did very little or no damage to the trail. There were a few spots where larger streams did damage the trail, leaving ruts and/or rocks and dirt.

A small stream crossed Sin Nombre but did little damage to the trail.

On the Wood Canyon Vista Trail, a segment of the Backbone Trail, there were five notable kinds of features on the trail. Most noticeable was the lack of serviceable drainage dips. Of the 84 drains we installed after the Springs Fire in 2013, almost all were choked with debris, and many couldn’t even be distinguished from the rest of the trail. Large stretches of trail had mud and water flowing across it, leaving small ridges perpendicular to the trail. Other large stretches had water running down the trail, removing all the dirt and sand, leaving a very rocky surface. The clay stretch about 2/3 of the way up has become deeply trenched and rutted. Finally, some trailwork has already been done, and there the surface was generally smoother and outsloped, but slightly loose.

Water running down the Wood Canyon Vista Trail has removed most of the dirt, leaving a lot of exposed rocks.

Climbing the old ranch road section of Guadalasca, I saw a lot of damage. However, it was mostly easy to avoid because the trail there follows an old wide roadbed. The top 20% of the singletrack downhill, where we had worked after the Springs Fire, was in very good shape. However, it was a different story for the rest, where it had already been quite rutted. Most of it was only slightly worse, but the worst sections were much worse than they had been. You can avoid the ruts now by using the very edge of the trail, but that won’t be an option once the vegetation grows up again. In the two places where the trail crossed a small stream with a culvert under the trail, the culvert had become blocked and the upstream streambed was completely filled with silt, while below the trail, the streambed was scoured down to bare rocks. The trail crossing the stream had acted as a dam and held back the dirt and rocks that were washing downstream. Finally, the lower old ranch road section had also become much more rutted, and the culverts under the trail had become exposed.

A really bad section on Guadalasca

During the Santa Monica Mountains Trail Day in April 2014, a large group of volunteers essentially rebuilt the Sage Trail. After the December flooding, the trail remains mostly intact, but we were very lucky that it wasn’t annihilated. The trail runs near the outside edge of an old roadbed. For most of it’s length, water and mud streamed down between the trail and the hillside creating a wide trench, crossing the trail occasionally and flowing off the edge. Most of the armoring rock walls we built to protect previous washouts were intact, but the water flowed around them to enlarge the washouts, generally on the downhill side. Two of the armoring walls didn’t fare well at all.

The next heavy rain may obliterate sections of the Sage Trail if the rut gets much wider.

Finally, here’s what you can see in one spot at the side of the Wood Canyon Vista Trail.

California Poppies at the side of the Wood Canyon Vista Trail

Don’t forget, you can help restore the trails! Here’s the schedule for volunteer work days: 2015-01-22 PMSP Trailwork Schedule.

Sedona MTB Festival March 6-8

February 4th, 2015

 

SMBF ad send

Our neighbors to the east in Sedona, AZ have invited us to partake in the Sedona Mountain Bike Festival the weekend of March 6-8, 2015. There will be bike demo’s, a beer garden, rides, shuttles, camping, music, and more. If you’ve never ridden Sedona’s deep red trails and slickrock, you’re in for a treat. It’s some of the most breathtaking scenery in the country. Festival organizers have offered a 20% discount code to be entered at registration: COMERIDEWITHUS. For more info and to resister, go to SedonaMTBfestival.com.

School Mountain Bike Teams Help Build a New Trail in Calabasas

February 2nd, 2015

Riders, coaches and parents from Calabasas HS, AE Wright Middle School, Royal HS and other schools in Simi Valley spent six hours this past Saturday to build 300 yards of a new trail. This was half the length of a trail that was roughed in last year to bypass the swamp along the Historic Trail, part of the New Millennium Loop trail system in Calabasas.

The day started at 8:30 AM when the 27 volunteers, including a trail crew leader from each of CORBA and the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council, plus Pat McQuaid, fire crew chief for the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority (who owns the land we were working), listened to the safety talk, grabbed tools, then hiked the half mile to the work area. CORBA’s crew leader explained the work that was to be done, then demonstrated how to use the tools safely and effectively. The work was to widen the trail from the current 1-foot to 3-4 feet, ensuring a slight outslope so rain water would run off.

The tail end of the caterpillarThe teams started to work on the trail in groups of about 6, each with their own section of trail to complete before moving on to another section. Because of recent rains, the soil was soft and easy to dig into, but as we got a little deeper, we hit heavy, sticky clay that often stuck to the tools, making them much heavier to lift that they otherwise were.

At noon, we broke for a hearty lunch of Subway sandwiches, delivered by CORBA’s president, Steve Messer.  After the half-hour break, we headed back to work for another hour. Pat McQuaid showed us the technique the fire crews use to build trails – the pace picked up a lot, but it was probably too tiring for volunteers to use for the whole day.

These teams, part of the SoCal High School Cycling League, are committed to several trailwork days in the year, and this was the first for 2015. The next ones will be squeezed into their busy spring training and racing schedule.

CORBA thanks the teams, their schools and the league for the support of maintaining and building new trails. Everyone did a great job and we’re looking forward to the next event in about a month!

You can see more photos of the event in our high school trailwork photo gallery. (Thanks to Diana from Simi Valley for adding her photos to CORBA’s!)