D36-108A

~SPONSOR~
Dec 3, 2002
367
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Saturday February 15, 2003

Morning

Waiting for the rides to come together, I warmed up on the trails and paths around the rock formations which, apparently, give Moonrocks its name. Recent precipitation left the ground slightly moist, just enough to keep most of the dust down.

Still waiting for a ride to form, I spied the only other KTM 440 on Earth besides mine and sought Farmer John. He invited me to join him on a short warm-up loop. While I was waiting for him to gather a couple other riders, the hill drag races were underway. I wasn't sure if this was a grudge match kind of thing or what, but I pulled up to the gate when it looked like a lonely 250 pumpkin rider was going to have to race himself. I realized it was BigLou and introduced myself on the line. I was glad to meet somebody who likes this so much he's willing to drive from Missouri. When the gate dropped, he immediately shot ahead of me. I don't know if I was spinning or what, maybe BigLou's buddies were holding my rear fender, but he got a big jump on spodely me. But my aluminum wonderbike found some traction and put some power to the ground and I reeled him in, then, miracle of miracles, I passed him and beat him to the top. (I was thinking, "WTF, did his bike seize?")

I couldn't wait around to figure out what happened, or gloat, because Farmer John and NVR FNSH were waiting for me at the top of the hill and we immediately began a short loop. What a way to start your first trail ride at Moonrocks, drag race up a hill to the trailhead! It was pretty uneventful except for my bronco-riding demonstration for Farmer John, and I got something in my eye that left me half-blind for the rest of the day. I did get a preview of the infamous whoops, and I didn't care much for them.

Finally, the rides started to form. I was torn between joining the intermediate and advanced groups Strick described. I am an experienced enduro/XC racer--but an ex-racer (and a mediocre one at that), I just got back into riding after a five-year layoff, and I didn't know whether Strick's "technical" meant "goat trail" (acceptable) or "no trail" (unacceptable), and I was on the harshest MX bike known in recent memory--not jetted correctly, I didn't want to hold them up, etc. I had almost talked myself into the intermediate group, led by Bobby on the #111T pumpkin, when Strick described the intermediate loop as having less whoops. That sealed the deal.

I don't know if we made it two miles before the first delay, when we waited for a couple fallen and/or stalled bikes. A YZF rider had to go back and start the four-stroke. Meanwhile, a Gas Gas was undergoing Kiwi Kiwi repairs repairs. Somewhere early on we lost a rider and waited while Bobby searched for her in vain. The group sorted itself out with a couple Canucks, dave186, 380EXCman (on a deafening Husaberg), and Firecracker22 in the lead pack, all candidates for upgrades to the advanced group. Bobby led a good intermediate pace.

I followed a Bob Hannah replica YZ250F across a steep gully and he got out of shape and bailed at low speed right in front of me. He was hurt so I picked his bike off him while he moaned about his back. It looked bad at first, and I was thinking backboard and helicopter. After witnessing his suffering and hearing his description of the crash, I was thinking he could catch a ride on a quad or even ride his bike back. I diagnosed him with snowboarder's @ss, a bruised tailbone. All the snowboarders knowingly agreed and discussed their experience with the malady. He had hit the gully too fast, sitting, bottomed out his suspension, and his tailbone smashed against his seatpan. Bob Hannah was finally perched atop his Yamaha and sent back with a buddy. We were real careful crossing gullies after that.

Meanwhile, another intermediate group met us from the opposite direction. (Hey, you mean there's a group that doesn't stop every two miles?) They had picked up our lost rider. Traitor!

Dave186 lost a rear brake part somewhere along the way and didn't have a functional pedal. More waiting for repairs. I was trying to figure out how to ride in the soft soil, not quite sand. My 490F kept me awake by tucking in every once in a while. My worn 695 spun everywhere traction wasn't perfect.

We finally got into some good stuff, riding down a snaking singletrack wash with a couple technical obstacles such as rocks. Firecracker stalled coming out of a gully and struggled getting her 200 re-lit, then got in more trouble when her tire spun in the soft soil and started moving her bike down into the wash. 380EXCman and dave186 were idling ahead of me, watching the horror show. I'm all for letting somebody work out their own problems, but she was stuck and getting more stuck, and I had used up all my patience stopping and waiting every two miles before this. I ran over to Firecracker and gave her bike a push, then ran bike to my bike, glowering at the two guys ahead of me. When I crossed the gully and went down the hill into the wash, Firecracker was off the trail with her front tire embedded in a shrub. Oops, did I push her into the bushes? She waved me on, or maybe she was taking swings at me. Either way, I decided it was prudent to continue down and soon caught up to dave186.

Dave186 looked a little out of his element in the snaking wash trail but I couldn't find a place to make a friendly pass. It was by far the best trail of the day. But not for the person who suffered a knee injury. More waiting. Dave186 joined 380EXCman, who couldn't take the constant stops, and left the group. Traitors! I stuck it out with the Canucks, loyal to our group.

Somehow we managed to lose our ride leader and, after waiting, the #226 pumpkin led the way back to camp. Bobby found us on the way back. We all made it back safe.


To Be Continued with Saturday Afternoon and Sunday rides...
 

D36-108A

~SPONSOR~
Dec 3, 2002
367
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Saturday Afternoon

For my Saturday afternoon loop I joined NVR FNSH, Unkle Moose, RetSenior, Farmer John, and a cast of thousands. We got into the whoops almost immediately. They were a larger species, Whoopus Nevadus, characterized by their soft, deep, sandy soil, great depth, and wide spacing. The alloy wonderbike demands aggressive whoop riding, keeping the front wheel light and skipping across the tops. However, it takes a lot of attention and energy, and I couldn't keep up the pace. I settled for rolling over most of them.

After the endless whoops, we were rewarded with the mother of all wash trails. It was an E-ticket roller coaster ride downhill, with good traction, big berms, and only a few rocks. We liked it so much we headed back up it. If you ever saw McGrath and Steve Lamson "geek riding" you know what I looked like.

Somewhere along the way a guy on a showroom-new WR450F joined us. The only riding gear he had was a helmet; he wore rain pants over jeans, under which were white socks and oxford shoes. I figured the dealer must have pitied him and thrown in a free helmet with his new bike. The consensus was he was a non-DRN local.

We hit some nice single track going down the side of a hill. It was unusually dark, packed soil, and was one of the best trails of the day. Somewhere around there RetSenior broke his chain and the group started falling apart. It was getting late so we wanted to head back to camp. Farmer John headed back to rally the RetSenior group, while Unkle Moose and the rest of us were to follow the fence line and at least one of us was to wait for the other group at a trail junction.

Unkle Moose waved me on and I rode along the fence line until I got to the roller coaster wash, where I ran into LongTime, CJ (?) Rider, and TTRguy from Missouri. (Those Show-Me state people must really love to ride!) They went down the wash while I stood guard so nobody else would go down when they came back up. It must've been fun coming up knowing there wouldn't be any oncoming traffic. TTRguy came flying up on a very loud 200 pumpkin (gospeedracer's bike, sans silencer end cap). We saw a group parallel the fence line a few hundred yards away, and it looked to be Farmer John with the RetSenior group. I thought they were supposed to ride the fenceline back. Oh well.

I followed my new group up the fenceline, and Unkle Moose and company soon joined us. The fenceline trail was seriously whooped-out and my left leg soon got whooped out itself with a painful charlie horse. Riding those whoops all day was like doing a few thousand repetitions of weightlifting squats.

LongTime on his Gas Gas led us back to camp safe and sound before dark. That was a much better loop than the stop-and-go ride I did in the morning.
 

gospeedracer

Chat Mom
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Feb 8, 2000
3,136
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Originally posted by D36-108A
Meanwhile, another intermediate group met us from the opposite direction. (Hey, you mean there's a group that doesn't stop every two miles?) They had picked up our lost rider. Traitor!
Uhhh, that wasn’t “another intermediate group”, we were the splinted faction that somehow got separated from the main group about 1 minute into the ride! :confused:
It turned our just fine though. Tree, BigLou, GETMETOCA, Bratt, Dirtygirly and I had a great time. When it became apparent the rest of you were nowhere to be found we decided to continue on our own. Poor dirtygirly’s KX100 started to give her fits as we kept going up and up and up but she gave it hell and kept on truckin’. It was on our way down the mountain we were reunited with the rest of the original group.
Did I mention I LOVE the desert?!!!!!! :yeehaw:
 

Unkle Moose

~SPONSOR~
Jan 16, 2001
155
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D36-108A Great ride reports, :thumb: it was nice to meet and ride you. I hope in your Sunday ride report you don't mention the SPODE :o who did a small tip over on the Goat Trail and then a nice smooth & calm ride throught the bushes.

Looking forward to go back and ride Moonrocks again.
 

dirt bike dave

Sponsoring Member
May 3, 2000
5,349
3
Nice reports!

Here's mine:
I got there Friday afternoon and only rode until Saturday afternoon, but managed to get in some good riding, meet some great people and ride with some of my old buds.

Bratt and GETMETOCA were arriving just as I was. We took a short ride to get acquainted with the area and found one of the MX tracks a few miles from camp.

Returned to camp and met some of the DRN legends, including Big Lou & Kiwi. After watching the Canadian's motorcycle powered blender in action, I spotted a group ready to ride. It was Farmer John, Dirtjunkie, Fast Eddie, TTR Guy and Motohead. After leaving camp, another rider (sorry, can't remember the name) on a WR426 joined up with us.

Conditions were good - dark moist dirt and sand just below the dry surface. We found some good trails including a roller coaster wash and some fairly tight single track, as well as high speed whoops. Got far enough from camp to where the whoops weren't ever present.

We kept a medium pace for a nice medium length loop. I managed to go over the bars on one of the single track steep downhills and had to make a few adjustments before being ready to roll. In the tumble, I took a peg in my backside, which is now beautiful technicolor purple. Farmer John was riding sweep and helped me get ship shape in no time. We finished up strong with some good single track heading back into camp from the west.

After clean up, it was time for dinner. I thought the Mexican buffet was excellent, especially after working up an appetite. Met a few other DRN'ers and swapped past and present war stories. Thanks again Strick for pulling this together!

Got back to Moonrocks about 9:00 am on Sunday. Angry Jim, his brother Tom (aka 'Angry Brother' per Firelily's name tags at Friday's dinner), Angry's friend Kelly were preparing to ride. They had lined up an excellent tour guide, a local A rider named Tim. Ret Senior joined us and we started an excellent loop. Unfortunately, Ret Senior's knee was acting up, and he had to bail out. Tim was setting a strong pace, and took us to some outstanding trails! Loads of fun. Thanks a lot, Tim, this was the best ride of the weekend for me.

We returned around 11:30 or so, had a bite, and Mr. WR joined us for our second loop. Tim was again keeping a brisk pace. After a 1/2 hour or so, Mr. WR struck misfortune and bailed hard. I didn't see it, but Angry Jim had a front row seat and it sounds like he's going to have nightmares about it. The carnage was wide spread, with bits of fender, Mr. WR's rolling body and his bike spread out over a very long distance. Rick (Mr. WR) is one tough marine, but his knee was tweaked too bad to continue, and we all headed back to camp via the best roads we could find.

Our bad luck continued, as after a few miles of sustained WFO in top gear on the road, I let off the gas and my CR locked up. As a woods rider, I had never needed to hit the kill button at WFO to fill the bike with cooling oil and fuel. It was a dumb mistake on my part, and my riding was done.

Angry Jim was nice enough to go get my truck, but within minutes after he left, Motohead and Christine - all the way from Lousiana- were driving back to Moon rocks and offered me a lift! We tossed my dead steed into the back, and headed back to camp. Thanks alot for the lift Randy and Christine - you two are awesome!

Mr. WR was packed in ice, and seemed to be doing good enough that a trip to the hospital was not an immediate need. Rick, please let us know how you are doing.

After some socializing and goodbyes, I departed to spend time with some non-riding friends in Reno. Woke up Sunday morning to find about 2" - 3" of fresh snow. Not sure how that effected the riders - so it will be fun to hear the stories from Sunday.

Thanks again to Strick and to local tour guide Tim. It was a great pleasure meeting some of the DRN'ers, though I know I missed many.
 
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D36-108A

~SPONSOR~
Dec 3, 2002
367
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bscottr, go home, nothing to see here.

gospeedracer, you mean we started with more than 16? I know people in the group were a little unclear on the whole stop-at-junction, responsible-for-the-rider-behind-you thing.

Unkle Moose, how could I forget? Here comes the Sunday ride report...
 

D36-108A

~SPONSOR~
Dec 3, 2002
367
0
Sunday, February 16, 2003

It was difficult to fall asleep Saturday night with the howling wind making the third floor of the Peppermill annex sway. I didn't hear any rain, so I feared it would come in the morning for our ride. When I peeked through the curtains in the morning, it was a beautiful sight to behold. The sky was gloriously blue, the parking lot was wet, and there was snow atop the cars. My nipples got hard at the thought of the great riding conditions awaiting me at Moonrocks.

The Moonrocks staging area was a preview of things to come. The soft, sandy soil had become wet and firm. There was a buzz about camp; you could feel it in the air, we were in for a classic day of riding. The temperature was but a few degrees above freezing, with a biting wind. I wore two jerseys as before, but changed to a grey goggle lens for Sunday's clear sky.

I joined NVR FNSH (WRfour-hundred-something), Unkle Moose (Husaberg 501), RetSenior (KTM 525), Chris (XR400), Buddy (KTM four-hundred-something), and Fremontguy (KTM four-hundred-something). It's a telling commentary on the sad state of affairs in the world when I'm the only one on a ring-dinger. Fremontguy lead the way.

We retraced our steps over the whoops, just in case we hadn't yet got enough of them. It seemed Fremontguy was trying to take a shortcut over a hill, which turned out to be one of those nasty soft hillclimbs. I wish I would have realized how bad it was when I was at the bottom, not in the middle, where I soon stalled. Chris was a hillclimbing fool and made it up higher than anybody, but we all went back down and took another route.

Soon we were in the snow. It was beautiful. I'm pretty sure we were on the hillside singletrack that was dark, firm soil the previous afternoon. I really got into a groove on the singletrack, snow or not. One thing I figured out was it helped to steer with your rear tire, not neccessarily gassing it, but brake sliding into the downhill turns. We also re-rode a very soft downhill that was now fluffy white soft on top with brown soft underneath. Another, steeper downhill, covered in virgin snow brought about some fear and trepidation from the Magnificent Seven. It turned out to to be a piece of cake. After all, with no turn to make at the bottom, and no trees or rocks there, what's the worst that could happen?

We crested a hill and stopped for a breather and to take in the view. Chris snapped a couple pictures I hope he will share on DRN. Once again, I wished I had a sidestand, or a tree to lean the bike against. A tree, a tree, my kingdom for a tree!

Unkle Moose was snaking down a snowy hillside singletrack ahead of me when, for no good reason, he went straight through a right-hand turn, plowed some snow with his front tire, and flopped over just off the trail. I couldn't help but laugh at him and tell him how pathetic that maneuver looked. He must have fixated on something off the trail.

At another hilltop resting point, it was so cold and windy we just turned around and got back down into the trails, sheltered from the wind.

One uphill trail, more of a jeep road, was wide and bermed enough for some serious throttle-twisting. It was a gamble coming in to each turn; was there soil under that snow, could you pound into it, or would you plow through it and crash? I was slowly reeling in Unkle Moose when RetSenior went by me like a man possessed. You can take the man out of motocross, but you can't take motocross out of the man.

At one point we lost the trail in a relatively flat valley, but some of us thought we saw it up where the base of a few hills joined. Fremontguy, RetSenior, and I all tried different paths through the scrub. We could see Fremontguy having a hard time trying to climb the hill where the trail exited the valley. He reported it was impassable, so we turned around and found an alternate route, which dumped us onto a road.

I get pretty bored putting along roads, and the snow had lost its novelty. When I'm bored I tend to find wheelie bumps and fool around getting sideways and similar shenanigans. What to do on a flat, wide, snow-covered road? Get on the gas and turn the bars for full-lock slides, of course. Braaaap went the Honda and I got all crossed up. Wheeee! Next, the other way... Braaap-BANG! I smacked my head against the ground just that fast. I don't know if the front tucked or the rear came around, probably the former, it was so fast. Two inches of snow did nothing to cushion the impact to my left side helmet, bicep, torso, and hip. I generally don't crash hard and almost never hit my head, so that was kind of scary. I felt pretty stupid after that stunt and rode with a bit of a headache for a while. NVR FNSH kept calling me a showoff, but there were no witnesses; I was goofing off for my own amusement.

The road/trail ended at a creek, where Fremontguy stopped. It was rocky and there looked to be a drop-off at least a couple feet high. Fear and trepidation again took hold of the Magnificent Seven. There was a bunch of I-don't-knows and hemming and hawing. I think it was RetSenior who said we don't want to do anything that's gonna break somebody's leg. I said nonsense, the three or four locals who passed us at a rest stop came through here. I put down my bike and hiked over for a look down the creekbed trail. It was nothing. I got on my bike and rode down the creek before anybody decided against it. They followed when they didn't hear any bones snap, and Fremontguy took over point.

We got onto a wide, graded road well north of Moonrocks, below the snow level. We putted along until NVR FNSH decided to have an acceleration test with RetSenior. Of course I felt compelled to carry the two-stroke banner, so I gassed it behind them. I actually caught up to them shockingly fast, but RetSenior's 525 soon got on the cam and left us. He was some thirty yards ahead of me when he hit some loose dirt and threw up a roost that got through the area left unprotected by my body armor. Ouch, that smarts.

We left the graded road and got onto a jeep road, then turned onto a ribboned singletrack race course. Things got really fun again quickly. There were plenty of opportunities to pull quick little power wheelies on the trail that paralled a fence. The course took us to a wide hillside covered in boulders. We could see the ribbon but we couldn't figure out how we were supposed to go over the boulders. I walked up them and decided it was passable only by trials riders and super-human trail riders. NVR FNSH suggested the race course came down the boulders from the other direction. That seemed possible, but it sure would have sucked! Meanwhile, the Katooms and 'berg had gone to the far side of the hill where the boulders ended and attempted to climb the soft, snow-dusted soil. It wasn't pretty, but they made it up. I rode off into the scrub for a good run at it while NVR FNSH had the same idea. He must have found some traction near the top because he was soon standing on the hill behind his bike, holding the bars as it pointed straight up. He came back down and Chris attacked the hill. I thought no way, as he came at it sideways from the bottom, and turned up it with not enough momentum. But he tractored right on up it, to my amazement. I built up a head of steam, dodging scrub on the way, and powered up it on the main jet with enough momentum to spare I turned and traversed the final few yards, feeling good about it. I must have looked like I knew what I was doing, because Unkle Moose gave me a thumb up.

After following the race course for a while, I saw a steep hillclimb trail that went to the top of a mountain. Fremontguy was stopped, looking at it, too. I pointed out the side trail branching out half-way up and motioned an up-and-down loop. He nodded and we attacked the hill. It was extremely difficult, very deep, very soft soil, very steep. I bailed before I ever found the side trail. Who else but Mr. Hillclimb, Chris, motored on by aboard the XR400. Humbling me once again, he went farther up the hill than anybody. We went back down but I couldn't find the side trail. At the bottom, we could see Fremontguy failing in his attempt to go up the side trail. Buddy was nowhere to be found, but we were pretty sure he was on the trail back to camp.

After that it was just some more whoops. I knew we were close to camp, so I burned some energy riding them aggressively, just kissing the tops with the front tire, hard on the gas. It seems as if the bike was made to do that, not roll over them like a spode. Whodathunkit?

We pulled back into the Moonrocks staging area with about thirty miles. The riding conditions were epic, the trails were fun and challenging, and it was a great group to ride with. We were all smiles for a good long time after the motors cooled down.
 

Dirty Dave

Sponsoring Member
Jul 31, 1999
216
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95336
We (wife and I) arrived too late to ride on Friday but managed to make the Mexican nite dinner. Got to see old friends from last year and put DRN names to faces of a bunch of new ones. Due to some bad planning on my part I needed my rides out of the warehouse storage a couple of hours earlier than everyone else(7 vs 9am). Thanks Strick for getting out of bed so early and saving my bacon. We arrived at the warehouse at '0'dark-thirty to find Fremont guy following us into the parking lot. He said he couldn't sleep and wanted to get out to Moon Rocks and get the day started :silly: The man truly loves to ride. My infamous bikeless B-I-L (brother-in-law) drove in around 8:30 and we got dressed and went for a short loop. After about a mile or so of trail we both remembered the Reno weatherman saying it was 36deg. BacK to the truck for jackets. We didn't ride with any of the groups because Strick didn't set one up for "outa' shape old farts" :p Just kidding...the B-I-L is shy around new people, so rode the trails I remembered from last year and found several new ones. It was a little scary watching MR WR ride in and hearing him ask to be assisted from his tattered GasGas. Nurse Pam(my wife)checked for the obvious things(blood and bones) and then got a bag of ice and numerous Ibuprophen(?) for the tweeked knee and little finger. By the end of the day the B-I-L was very impressed with our little(100+/- riders) group and can't wait for next year and to get on line at his new digs later this spring. Thanks Strick for another great event OOPS! I mean gathering.
 
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firecracker22

Sponsoring Member
Oct 23, 2000
3,217
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Here's my ride report from the women's forum:
http://www.dirtrider.net/forums3/showthread.php?s=&threadid=72225

D36-108A, thank you for the push. I was a little frustrated with myself for making such a stupid mistake there, in full view of everyone else. :| I wasn't swinging at you, I was waving you all on. I hate it when people wait for me while I get re-situated. Thank you all for your patience though.

Originally posted by D36-108A
The group sorted itself out with a couple Canucks, dave186, 380EXCman (on a deafening Husaberg), and Firecracker22 in the lead pack, all candidates for upgrades to the advanced group.

Wow, thank you, I can't believe you included my name in that statement.
 

fremontguy

LIFETIME SPONSOR
Jul 1, 2000
580
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Had a great time on 3rd annual Moonrocks ride. Thanks Strick for the hospitality, tour guides, dinner arrangements, etc. Clocked in about 180 miles between both bikes, Fri-Sun. I found the 450exc to be my bike of choice out there as it would soak up whoops, rocks and never tire on straights and hill climbs. On 1 fast straight down Winnemucca Ranch road speedo showed 71 mph in 6th gear tuck :eek: Did many fun rides with many different folks. Last ride of the weekend, Sunday with the angry bros was way cool. Up, around, over and down goat trails on mountains near Moonrocks. Good seeing DRN folks both familiar and new. Rick, hope the knee is feeling better.
 

CJ Rider

~SPONSOR~
Apr 3, 2000
699
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If the US had such excellent ambassadors of our country as these Canadians are of their country, then the whole world would be a better place!
:thumb: :thumb:
 

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E-Ticket

~SPONSOR~
Dec 16, 2000
735
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Cool pic, CJ! Do you have one of the actual "Margarita Maker" when it is being powered by the KTM 525?? That was just too utterly cool.... <grin>
 

dirtjunkie

~SPONSOR~
Mar 1, 2001
117
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We had a great time. Thanks to everyone who helped with this ride, especially Strick & Mimi.
Fast Eddy & I drove up Wednesday night so we could see the Pro-truck we rolled in Dec. but thats a whole another story. We mainly wanted to get in on the secret ride with Strick over near Nixon on Thursday. We arrived late morning on thursday to find one local guy left with a 426 that wouldn't start (wow imagine that)
Got him started and he took us on the race course at race pace too. Great sand dunes & a wash like the pods only much longer & 30ft walls for carving. Arriving at the moonrocks Friday I was impressed as this was my first time. I read the stories and saw the pic's from last year but missed the big picture, this place has everything!!! Strick took about 15 to 20 of us on the first loop at a nice pace. Within an hour or so we had it paired down to a managable 5 or 6 I think. Meeting new people & puting names with faces was just as much fun too. I wish I would have mingled more but it's hard to do when the riding is that good. Saturday Fast Eddy & I went around the entire mountain west of the moonrocks past the ranch where the owner will shoot ya, nice strick I don't remember seeing that in the brochure, dude!
Hope everybody made it home okay, see ya at Jawbone for Thank N Spank!
Chris & his faithful sidekick Fast Eddy
 

dave186

Sponsoring Member
Nov 19, 2001
904
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Originally posted by D36-108A
The group sorted itself out with a couple Canucks, dave186, 380EXCman (on a deafening Husaberg), and Firecracker22 in the lead pack, all candidates for upgrades to the advanced group. Bobby led a good intermediate pace.
I feel like somebody now!

Dave186 lost a rear brake part somewhere along the way and didn't have a functional pedal. More waiting for repairs.
Hey, it still worked (a little) but Kiwi and the Canadians pack an entire spare bike in there fanny packs, so we fixed it.

Dave186 looked a little out of his element in the snaking wash trail but I couldn't find a place to make a friendly pass.
Turns bad! Whoops good!

I had a great time and cant wait till next year. Hopefully I will be with the advanced group, and maybe on a bigger bike too.
 

dave186

Sponsoring Member
Nov 19, 2001
904
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bbbom- rocks dont bother me much, but my clutch wasnt liking some of those hills!

SirThumper is right, those whoops at moonrocks are NOTHING! You can flat out haul across those things, its awesome!

Yah, I probably was sandbaging, but i wasnt sure what group to go with at first. I had planned on going with Strick on sunday, but 380EXCman was being slow getting his gear on and by the time we were ready, well I was stuck with the same group.
 

Strick

LIFETIME SPONSOR
Nov 8, 1999
1,782
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Dave - I reeeaaaalllly want to thank you making the drag gate. Sooo many people had so much fun with that thing. Could you tell I have never MX'd? That gate killed me - twice!
 

dave186

Sponsoring Member
Nov 19, 2001
904
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well, dont give me credit for the whole thing. It was 380EXCman's idea, and he made me do it. I literally finished most of it the wednesday before. I had a date thursday night and we were leaving friday morning, so i pushed it to the wire. The first time a bike ever went over the thing was at moonrocks! Im gonna set it up in my neighbors field tomorrow and we are going to practice starts!
 


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