BC Bike Race 2015: Day 1 Cumberland

Jun 29, 2015
by BC Bike Race  
BCBR 2015 Day 1: Cumberland presented by BC Ferries

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Dry hot conditions led to some dust and some amazing sureal photography.

Saturday Registration in North Vancouver saw over 600 racers meet for the first time as they signed in, got their race bags, and dropped off bike boxes to meet them a week later in Whistler. Those pieces of luggage will soon be forgotten in the daily journey to the finish line after riding in an event known for the bubble it creates for its riders on their travels to the ultimate singletrack experience.

600 Riders from 24 countries on BC Ferries. From the mainland to Vancouver Island .

After the Day Zero registration in North Vancouver, to get to Day One of the BCBR, riders took a scenic BC Ferries ride across the Strait of Georgia to Vancouver Island's town of Nanaimo, then hopped a bus up the coast to the home of the opening stage in the small and rider friendly town of Cumberland.

The front line of the 2015 BC Bike Race.

This turn of the century mining town with a past reputation governed by frontier laws has been a stage of the BCBR since its start nine years ago. It's the community that makes the trails of the Cumberland Community Forest a destination spot for riders from across the globe and it's the BC Bike Race that brings the world to these trails and its storied past.

Geoff Gulevich somehow got 69 and a Red Racer beer when he checked into his hotel

After a hot introduction to their tents Saturday, racers awoke to a relatively cool Sunday morning, but temperatures quickly climbed in unison with riders on their opening miles of the stage. The gravel road leading to the first section of trail provided little respite from the sun and the relief of dipping into the woods this year was tempered by dusty conditions that made following the rider ahead too close less than ideal. With the usual loam now turned to dust, riders had plenty of traction but were treated to a taste of the organic material their tires were slowly churning to powder. Despite the dust caked faces and obvious signs of battle with the heat, the rider's enthusiasm for the course continued as it has throughout the years.

Women's Solo

There is a strong contingent of women out ripping the trails this year .

For the stage one winner of the Women's Solo open, Katerina Nash (Luna) "The first hour was pretty challenging with the heat, but once we hit the trails things changed for me and I was just having a really good time riding the trails." Nash raced in Colorado on Saturday and had a midnight arrival in Vancouver, but didn't seem to suffer to greatly from the previous day's efforts.

Vicki Barclay shreds some delicious singletrack.

Vicky Barclay (Stan's NoTubes) made the first move of the day on the opening climb after seeing Nash's opening tentative effort. Rebecca Hodgetts countered after the two reached the top of the classic trail Further Burger. With Nash waiting to turn up her efforts and a failing rear brake Barclay soon found herself back in third position till the end. Hodgetts pulled in eight minutes behind Nash and only three up on Barclay. The BC Bike Race has traditionally been a male dominated event but the women who have chosen to race have routinely displayed an ability for shredding trails that demonstrate that flow and skill isn't limited by gender.

Men's Solo

Spencer Paxson drops into the first trail of the week -Further Burger -leading the pack.

The men's podium has an equal amount of potential for shuffling throughout the week. Last year's second place finisher Spencer Paxson (Kona Bikes) started 2015 with legs good enough to take the first top spot of the week. Paxson made an early move of the day and crested the top of the first climb on Further Burger with Quinn Moberg of Rocky Mountain Bicycles within the same second. Barry Wicks and Kris Sneddon (Kona Bikes) followed soon after with the Texan Tristan Uhl (Competitive Cyclist) and Thomas Turner (Team Jamis) from Georgia only a minute behind.

Thomas Turner and Tristan Uhl put their skills to use chasing for the podium.

After Moberg fell off of Paxson's pace Wicks and Sneddon maintained their position while Uhl pulled up to them after dropping Turner before the bottom of the final gravel climb to the Feature Trail Blue Collar. Uhl continued to push for the wheel of Paxson while Wicks covered his moves to a sprint finish. Wicks took the sprint for second with Uhl in third and almost two minutes behind Paxson. Last year's race champion, Sneddon, came across 17 seconds later for 4th. Moberg held onto a fifth another three minutes behind.

View full Day 1 results here.

The newest addition to Day 1.

BCBR Feature Trails

They re not all buff and easy

In an effort to showcase the trails that each community has a special relationship with, this year the BCBR is designating certain trails as "Feature Trails" to promote awareness of singletrack the community has put their hearts into. Every stop of the BC Bike Race is in a community that builds and maintains trails through thousands of hours of labor and often these trails become the source of great community pride. The BCBR diligently gives back to these groups every year to help them build or maintain more trails.

"Blue Collar" was the feature trail of today's Cumberland stage. As an older trail it was in need of a major rework. Originally built as an uphill trail it has become a favourite piece of downhill trail for the Cumberland community. Riding Fools Hostel owner Jeremy Grasby flagged the trail 8-10 years ago after discovering the zone on a hike. He used to haul his daughter in a trailer up the Trent Main road on adventures and realized the network of trails in existance needed a climbing trail to fill a gap. Because it was built from the bottom up the grade ended up being sustainable because of the grade and in turn became a favorite of the locals for descending. Grasby gives credit to the communal nature of building new trail, where an initial walk and flag is only an idea that is best hashed out with friends and other riders. The end result is an undulating trail that encourages full bike and body separation with good sightlines and no need for excessive braking when pointing the bike downhill.

All trails have a history and early on Blue Collar dealt with losing a large part to logging and has been reworked recently to the point that the local Kids Club has been taken to the trail. This year Grasby was able to ride Blue Collar with the same daughter he towed up the gravel roads eight years ago.

BCBR Kids Races

Five stages of the race this year will feature a kids' race while riders are out on course. Cumberland saw over two dozen kids completing 1-6 laps depending on age. As an annual event the kids' races have become a yearly destination for the families of the communities.

Aid stations are well stocked and easy to find.


Words: Harlan Price / @BCBR
Photos: Margus Riga, Dave Silver, Erik Peterson, Todd Weselake / @Margus / @DSPhoto
Videos: Connor Macleod, Max Berkowitz, Chris Fisher / @cmac / @MaxBerkowitz

Author Info:
BCBR avatar

Member since Nov 3, 2011
150 articles

21 Comments
  • 26 0
 How about a BCBR Bike Check!!!
  • 5 0
 Wick Nasty was on a new Hei Hei at Fontucky and then it was never seen again (and I'm not sure that anyone noticed). Are the Kona boys on that at BCBR?

www.pbcreativephoto.com/GALLERIES/CYCLING/MOUNTAINBIKE/CROSS-COUNTRY/2015-US-CUP-1-FONTANA-PRO-XC-M/i-J8LsKXq/A
  • 6 15
flag parallaxid (Jun 29, 2015 at 11:43) (Below Threshold)
 probably snapped.
  • 1 1
 There's a Kona rider at 0:53 and 2:15 in the video, it's hard to tell though.
  • 2 0
 I think he rode it at Missoula XC
  • 4 0
 @jason745 I asked my brother, he's one of the kona riders... he said "Hei Hei. Barry and Spencer are on the 2016 prototypes"
  • 3 0
 You're Kris Snedon's sister aren't you.
  • 2 0
 Sweet. They look great.
  • 5 0
 Is it just me that thinks that the Font of the "BC BIKE RACE" looks just like something from "Intense" ?
  • 3 0
 Haha result number 176, Sir Geoffrey Gulevich.
  • 1 0
 I get just as excited about BCBR as I do EWS and the UCI DH...... think I I just like acronyms. Really need to pull my finger out and do this race one day.
  • 2 0
 Wish I was there!
  • 2 0
 Great coverage!
  • 1 0
 More of this.
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