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Bonus

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Everything posted by Bonus

  1. Thank goodness someone is!
  2. Day 5 was the last day for me to guide my visitors from the Philippines. We split the day up into two rides. An hour and a half on a circuit around the abandoned village of Janovas - which has the Eastern Hemisphere/Western Hemisphere "Greenwich Mean Line" going through it, followed by a couple of hours between Boltana and Ainsa - finishing with us coming down a technical descent that we first did on Day 1. The challenge was for them to "do it better" this time around - and they all did. The weeks riding with them had been a pleasure and their trip here was rounded off with them inviting Andrea and I out to dinner at one of the best local restaurants, where they spoiled us. :-)
  3. That's a lot of laps
  4. You're both welcome. We enjoyed it too........although I haven't forgotten that you ate my next days left-overs before they made it to the fridge! :-)
  5. And on the Intrepid next door they have lots of planes, including an SR-71 and a Space Shuttle . . .
  6. I always like to take pics of the under carriage on planes too. These are all from BOAD @ NYC
  7. That is Concorde in NYC. I have a similar pic from a greyer day last November . . . .
  8. Day 4 was e-bike day! A couple of the guys wanted to try out e-bikes while they were here. Dale and Ant were going to hire e-bikes while Tweed and I rode normal bikes . . . but then they talked Tweed into giving it a go, so they hired an e-bike each and one for me too! How cool is that!? My first time on an e-bike and also my first time on an Enduro style bike. I ride a Specialized Epic 29'er - which is more of a Cross Country Racing Mountain Bike - it handles pretty much everything I want to ride here, but I was interested to give the Enduro frame a go. We went out for 4 hrs and rode every steep technical climb I could find.... and we had a blast. All the climbs we did I've done before on my own bike - the two differences I found with the e-bike were that you climb much faster, naturally, but also - with it being an Enduro bike rather than a Cross Country bike, you don't have to watch where you're going. When I climb on my bike I have to "pick my line", on the Enduro bike you just hit every rock, step or root head-on and you can get over it. On the downside, the e-bike only helps you up to a certain speed - on these bikes the sweet spot was 26.4km/h. So on the flat I rode more slowly than I normally would. Anything above 26.4km/h and the motor stops helping you - then it gets real hard real quick! One of us ran out of battery towards the end, but thankfully within a couple of km's from the end of the ride. Again, with a dead battery the bike becomes a really heavy piece of kit to keep moving.... Overall it was a great experience and I can see why people like them and if you want to, you can still get a good workout!
  9. Zona Zero, Ainsa - This evening . . . . another beautiful evening and another great ride. #lovemylife
  10. We had a couple of South Africans around for lunch the other day. A Hubber and his riding partner who were here in Spain riding the trails and taking in the sights. Was interesting to catch up with how people "back home" are feeling about everything at the moment and nice to see where they were riding and what they thought of it here. :-)
  11. Just finished watching the second season of Mindhunter. We enjoyed it.
  12. Day 3 with the guys from the Philippines and we drove out to Santa Maria de Buil to ride a variation of Zona Zero route 19. I start the route, which is circular, at the halfway point - so I do the second half first and then the first half last..... I think it rides better that way around! The first part of the ride is mostly nice flowy singletrack, then there's some climbing - fire road and technical singletrack. Stop for a quick sandwich at the Ermita de Santa Barbara and then through the trees and out onto "The Balcony" from where you get to see some amazing views of the Pyrenees..... It was a great day out, as always. . . . .
  13. After a week of MTB Guiding, yesterday I got out on my own. Plugged in my music and smashed some hills. This is from a little high point just off of Zona Zero Route 6 that not many people ride up too. I always do, just for the view. You can see the nearly empty "embalse de Mediano" (Mediano Dam) way down in the background - it's been a long hot & dry summer. Standing up here on my own, soaking up the sun and watching huge birds of prey soar silently overhead and I remember why we came here . . . . . This place is amazing!
  14. I always find the "behind the scenes" stuff as interesting, if not even more so, than the stuff on display :-)
  15. On Day 1 we did Ainsa, Boltana, Margudued and Guaso. On Day 2 Dale, Ants, Tweed & I did Ainsa, El Pueyo de Araguas, El Soto & Usana . . . . It was another beautiful day with a picnic break up at the highest point of the ride :-)
  16. About 6 months ago I started helping Dale, who lives in the Philippines, to plan a visit to Ainsa to ride the Zona Zero trails. I helped him arrange car hire & accommodation, we became friends on FB and finally last Friday, after reading and commenting on my MTB posts for months, he and his two friends Anthony & Tweed arrived and I guided them for 5 days. The Philippines only has two seasons - a dry season and a wet season (Monsoon) and averages 90% humidity every day - so the hot and dry weather we have here was very different for them. They are used to riding on dirt (or in mud during the wet season) so the rocks here took some getting used to, but they all handled everything here very well. Some pics from day one - we did a warm up on the singletrack through the Badlands and then rode XC over to Guaso, via Boltana, to see our Build Project. . . . .
  17. Will give it a go. I lived through the development of the PC, I remember when a P75 was cutting edge...
  18. I might watch the Bill Gates one
  19. Had some visitors from the UK earlier this week. Simon has been following our progress on-line pretty much since we started and wanted to catch up with us while he and some friends were riding the trails here at Zona Zero. We did a ride XC from Ainsa up to Guaso so that they could see our "Project". "Wendy" met us up there and we showed them around. It's always reassuring when people tell us how much they love our location and our plans for the place. They've promised to come back and support us when we're done . . . great stuff.
  20. The last few we few weeks have been crazy busy - and it's going to get worse over the next few days! Can't complain at having work though :-) I'm still working everyday at the campsite - I thought things were going to slow down in September but now that the school holidays are finished, all the people without children are visiting and tons of them are cyclists. On top of that I've been either guiding people or training / trail-finding in the afternoons and then at night after I've been back to do the campsite "evening shift" (closing down the swimming pools etc) I'm trying to keep on top of paperwork, updates, guiding enquiries . . . . Today and tomorrow in the afternoons I'll be joining "Wendy", Ramon the Farmer and Rosa up at the farmhouse to stomp the grapes they've all been picking from this years harvest. And on top of everything, I've made good progress translating and updating our Dept. of Commerce Viability Study so that we can use it when talking to private investors about our Project. Just need to proof-read it once more to make sure it all makes sense . . . . I guess we'll sleep in December when everything is finished!
  21. taking off from LHR heading to JNB on a night flight more often than not the flight would fly directly over the town of Worthing, where I was living at the time. I knew the layout of the town (I use Google Earth a lot) so I could make out my street and just about my house. Taking off from JNB I could only see our house on the west rand if we took off south and then swung west and then north. Otherwise it was straight out over Midrand north. Coming into JNB I would often see Northern Farm and the west rand first and then customers factories in Alberton and the ERM on final approach. Once or twice I landed at JNB from the north but I barely recognized anything until the last 2 mins. Once had an aborted landing coming in from the north. We were seconds from touchdown and the pilot opened the throttles and we started climbing. Apparently the plane to land before us hadn't cleared the runway yet. We flew did a loop to the east so I got to see the plots out near Benoni etc. On a flight from HLA to DUR and back once I got to see several of the big power stations out near Witbank where I grew up as a kid.
  22. Check the wing flex in some of these video clips....
  23. Met up with a fellow Brit at the weekend and guided him around some of our Zona Zero Singletracks. Leo lived in CPT for a few years as a teenager so we had lots to talk about! We also had some interesting chats regarding ideas for advertising & promoting ourselves here in Spain and we're going to keep in touch now and help each other out a bit. Always good to share ideas and offer help if you can. It's one of the things that makes the world go around :-)
  24. I have a friend who runs an E-Bike hire company. Closer to the time we can check prices. If I guide you though you'll have to wait for me - I only have a leg powered bike!
  25. Hi Duane! Will be good to see you. I'll have to look into the "Vuelta" question for you - I know it's been through Ainsa before and back in September 2016 "the day Froome lost the Vuelta" happened about an hours drive west of here in Sabinanigo . . . . Re MTB'ing here - yes, you can hire bikes - Normal or E are available. I can help you with that. I'm sure with my car and a couple of normal bikes we can find some pretty awesome but not too difficult stuff to do though - I know the area fairly well . . . . . :-)
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