Pinkbike Poll: What's the Longest Ride You've Been On?

Sep 24, 2021
by Matt Beer  
photo
Tiago Ferreira went all out, climbing 17,753 meters over 247.5 km in less than 24-hours. Bonkers.

Summer is the time to get after it, ticking off races on the calendar, hitting snow-free alpine trails, or just lapping the bike park all day long. It's also a time when the biggest rides of the year typically happen, mind-boggling feats of endurance that can leave other riders scratching their heads.

Pinkbike's own Tom Bradshaw took on his "Everest" challenge last year, climbing more vertical than the world's tallest mountain in a single ride. The most insane part about his chamois-less accomplishment was that he rode the same descent on North Vancouver's Mt. Fromme seventeen times.

photo

Not all heinously long rides require climbing, though. Another mind boggling 24-hour endeavour was Reg Mullet and Mark Haimes' twenty-seven laps of Mount 7 in Golden, B.C., which set a Guinness World Record for the most vertical distance descended on a bicycle, back in 2014. Through the rain and darkness, the pair were mentally focused enough to endure the steeps of Mount 7 for a staggering 32,797 m of downhill.

World Record Descent on Mt 7 images by Robb Thompson

Recently, I caught wind of a friend who set out to complete not one, not two, but three North Shore Triple Crowns in a single go - pure lunacy. Any adventure that starts or finishes in the dark takes extra gumption, but this route required both. The physical and mental journey took over forty hours to gain 10,052m of vert over 260km.

For readers not familiar with the area, North Vancouver has three infamous mountains, each with its own unique set of trails and terrain. A regular Triple Crown involves getting to the top of each mountain under your own power in a single ride, roughly totally a distance of 90km and 4,000m of climbing. Keep an eye out for a further look into this story.

Even some enduro races these days are considerably long days for the average mountain biker. Maybe you have been on a ride that carried on much longer than expected or you added 24-hour race to your achievements. So, what is the most time you've spent in the saddle?

What is the longest ride you have been on?

This ride is considered a single outing - naps in the gondola are ok, but doesn't include overnight camping. We're talking moving time, which may be more than 24 hours.



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170 Comments
  • 125 3
 I got really drunk and passed out beside my bike in the garage for 12 hours once... Does that count?
  • 24 1
 I used to ride my bike home drunk from the pub, it felt like 12 hours
  • 1 0
 If you had tools in hand,....... yes.
  • 3 0
 jaznomore, I too have done exactly this.
  • 5 0
 I can confirm @jaznomore ‘s story.
  • 4 1
 @pedaldragger: he himself was the tool
  • 3 0
 Ive been Outside since like july
  • 45 3
 I just ride until by battery is out of juice.
  • 8 0
 this will be an offered response on the next survey. thank you for your write-in.
  • 5 0
 Which one?
  • 8 0
 @fracasnoxteam: The one in his vibrator.
  • 28 5
 Mountain bike: 48ish km, @5 hours, have done twice. After drive time and stuff makes for a good day. Solo both times as either most of my friends wouldn't/couldn't do it, and the riding friends I do have are all in better shape and are better riders and they'd be done in half or 2/3 the time. Did it for me, would do it again. I consider off-road miles as twice the road miles, so happy with this distance.

Road bike: did my first 100km ride this year. Cracked hard at 65km mark but put my head down to get it finished in under 4 hours. Would like to prep better for another attempt.

I like reading of the endeavours of mega-rides but never going to happen for me. I lack the fitness but more importantly I think I lack the drive and mental fortitude.
  • 19 2
 It's all about that base
  • 32 1
 Lacking the drive and mental fortitude, but smashing out 5hr rides that none of your friends want to go on?

I'd say you're doing just fine, in fact, I'd say you're more than fine, inspirational stuff to finish a week. Cheers!
  • 23 1
 @phalley: no treble
  • 6 0
 @HankHank: I guess the view on mediocrity is subjective. I read articles and blogs and all the comments here and generally think everyone is younger/fitter/faster. And all my friends are in the two camps...casual rider or several rungs above me on the ladder.

I suppose I will grant myself a few points for occupying the space in between. :-)
  • 6 0
 For the road bike I follow the simple regime of building up my weekly mileage so that it totals the distance I want to ride in a day then I taper over 10 days and just go for it. I've got up to 220km rides on hilly terrain using this, and I'm no athlete. If you're not going for a time then a lot of it is just being used to getting tired, eating properly, and learning to recover a bit on the bike. I love doing long rides, both on and off road, it's a great way to zone out and escape real life. Sounds like you're doing fine
  • 3 0
 @iammarkstewart: sounds like we are on the same step of the ladder
  • 1 0
 yeh i wouldn't mind if they had categories on this one. MTB, my longest is about 35 miles. Gravel, recently did 75 miles, about 20 miles of which would count as XC MTB.
  • 16 0
 I did a 24h race 10 years ago. I was racing in the single rider category because I did not want to share that 24h with a team member Big Grin . Google "Semmering 24 DH" for more details Smile .
  • 5 1
 Have you done the 24h race in finale ligure? Thats the real deal! \../
  • 10 60
flag scott-townes (Sep 24, 2021 at 12:47) (Below Threshold)
 LOL competing in a 24 hour race doesn't mean you were riding the whole 24 hours even doing solo. This poll is dumb. It should be mileage on a continuous ride. If that's the case, 100k and that's the longest I'll ever go on a MTB. Worst time of my life.
  • 39 0
 @scott-townes: well, I was riding 24 hours. I did 130+ runs, which translated into more than 300 km going down the hill.
  • 4 0
 I want to know what that's like in the dark especially after your legs and everything have taken a beating all day! And how many sets of brake pads do you burn through?
  • 2 0
 @scott-townes: I don't think you read his post correctly, you would have noticed he was in the single rider category.
  • 2 41
flag scott-townes (Sep 24, 2021 at 15:58) (Below Threshold)
 @headz: Wait... so it was a 24 hour race in which you rode a lift?


Imagine doing a real 24 hour race solo where you had to pedal uphill. Bragging about how much km's you did downhill is like the skiers who brag about how much vert they bag in a day riding at a ski resort.

My point stands. I guarantee you didn't ride 24 hours straight and even if you did, well over half that time was sitting on a lift.
  • 19 0
 @scott-townes: You must wear lyrca when you are off the bike.
  • 6 0
 @IeatRocks: ha! One of those fun at parties types…
  • 9 0
 @scott-townes: Yea foreal... cause racers at the bottom of a run in WCs never look tired or out of breath or talk about their arms turning to jello in 3 minutes...

What a dipshit.
  • 13 1
 @scott-townes: @headz: 130 DH runs in 24 hours is massive @scott-townes: much harder than your 100km ride.
  • 1 28
flag scott-townes (Sep 24, 2021 at 17:11) (Below Threshold)
 @Sweatypants: Comparing a WC run to someone cruising down a bike park.


LOL.
  • 1 27
flag scott-townes (Sep 24, 2021 at 17:12) (Below Threshold)
 @Bomadics: Nice to know you based that opinion on nothing at all. You guys are so absurd, haha.
  • 5 0
 @scott-townes: opinion is based on 40 plus years of riding off road, Raced Dh, cross country and enduro, and I know what 25 DH runs does to a body 10 hours, so suck on that opinion!
  • 13 0
 @scott-townes: look man, I know that hurt people hurt people and all that, but just believe me that this is a really stupid and unnecessary pissing contest you’ve started here. Your insecurities are showing, so you might want to zip that up.
  • 1 3
 I really have to side with @scott-townes on this one. A DH race may be superphysical and hard on your body for short periods of time, there is no doubt about that. But as the poll suggests, this should be about moving time, and lifting up in a gondola is certainly not considered as part of your moving time, since not self-powered. So, I believe it generally doesn't make much sense to mention a DH race in an endurance poll about your longest ride as it is not one continues ride but continuously interrupted mini-rides. I would rather think of enduro races, or alpine tours or simply longer XC rides, certainly not to exclude any road riding. Again, I am not belittling your performance in any way, 130+ runs are mega-impressive!
  • 1 15
flag scott-townes (Sep 25, 2021 at 6:03) (Below Threshold)
 @Bomadics: You've got some insecurity feeling the need to promote your "career" of amatuer racing/riding and thinking that's what I was referring to. Shall I list my resume as well? LOL, point zooming right over your sensitive heads.
  • 5 0
 @scott-townes: Yes I am here to promote my career you saw through my facade, actually when I grow up I want to be just like you!
  • 9 0
 @scott-townes: Nah bro. He was simply citing a few credentials to establish credibility. You on the other hand are basically vomiting insecurity by mockingly attacking someone simply for doing something you wouldn’t personally do. It’s a bad look, and doubling down makes it worse.
  • 1 5
flag scott-townes (Sep 25, 2021 at 18:29) (Below Threshold)
 @Blackhat: "attacking someone simply for doing something you wouldn’t personally do" hahahaha oh my god. yeah, nice interpretation.
  • 15 0
 Outside trying to see who should get served 'endurance' sports news.
  • 7 6
 This is getting tiresome. Pinkbike is doing exactly what they did before Outside bought them, but somehow there has to be a sinister plan to explain it all now? Save it for when they actually do something shady.
  • 10 1
 I'm a reformed endurance rider. Started out XC racing in the 90s early 2000s, got bit by the singlespeed bug and spent the next decade or so XC racing on singlespeeds with some longer endurance races scattered in. Longest of these was the unsupported Kokopelli Trail Race somewhere in the neighborhood of 140 mi. (don't remember how much vert. Plenty.). Finished that one around the 17 - 18hr mark, so that would probably be my longest single-day ride. Never did do Leadville, and never did a solo 24hr, but Cascade Creampuff was pretty epic. 100 mi. and something like 12k ft. vert.

If multi-modal outings count, did a couple combined hike-bike epics from home to peaks of nearby mountains in SoCal (San Gorgonio, San Jacinto). Both of those turned out to be around 17 - 18 hours as well. We started off at night, rode from town to the wilderness boundary/trailhead, stashed the bikes, and hiked to the peak and back before riding back home to consume copious amounts of pizza before passing out for 12 hours. Wink Good times.

These days a "long" ride is anything over the 2-hour mark, and I've traded in the singlespeed hardtail and lycra for 150mm trailbike with baggies, pads and a full-face helmet. Also, good times.
  • 2 0
 Ha, before I read your entire comment I saw San Gorgonio & Jacinto and thought you carried a bike to the top of those peaks! That would be epic but insanely hard (and illegal).
  • 2 0
 @skyroach: Actually, as long as you carried it, it'd probably be legal. Stupid, but legal. I'm sure a ranger would probably cite you anyway if you were pushing it, 'cause how would you prove you didn't ride it? Maybe take both wheels off and strap the frame and wheels to your pack?
  • 2 0
 @SoCalTrev: Gorgonio is a long hike after a bike ride too man geezus. I had to turn back on that one the one time I tried because we under estimated the time and started late for some dumb reason. Baldy and Jacinto not so bad. When I hiked Baldy we saw DH dudes ripping under the chairlift part, and I swore I saw tread marks further up the mountain... that musta been like 15 years ago now though.
  • 1 0
 I’m a reformed endurance “racer” too! I’ve never ridden the full Kokopelli—I hear it’s amazing—but I did ride the Cascade Cream Puff. That was a fun ride—probably my favorite of the endurance rides I’ve done with all the entertaining singletrack there.

I’ve done Leadville too, and you’re not missing much. As you probably know, it’s not *really* a mountain bike ride like CCP is—you’re riding on dirt and paved roads for almost all of it. And unless you’re really fast—I wasn’t—you end up walking at the top of Columbine since everyone around you is walking singlefile, as there’s nowhere to pass. I found some of the riders at Leadville were quite unpleasantly aggro too, which was a bit of a bummer. Maybe all the roadies there plus the forced infatuation with time caps led to that.

The ambiance is the coolest thing about Leadville—it’s like the Super Bowl of endurance races. I saw *way* more spectators there than anywhere else. It’s also neat that it’s an out-and-back, so you get to see the leaders on the course. (Lance won the year I rode, and it’s was quite a sight to see him with such intensity hauling tail home at the bottom of Columbine. Seeing Dave Wiens was awesome too—he was cheering us slowpokes on.)

I’m not sure how Leadville is now since Lifetime took over, but I don’t feel like I need to do it again. The only PRs I set now are downhill ones, and I’m *not* fast down hill. Having said that, I see something like the BC Bike Race, and I think hmmmmm…
  • 2 0
 @Sweatypants: Turns out San Jacinto is actually the hardest day hike I've done, but there were extenuating circumstances. My wife and I hiked it this past summer, from the Marion Mtn. trailhead, with our 3 (~30 lbs) and 5 (~50 lbs) yo boys, who we carried most of the way. We also ran out of water about a third of the way back down. I decided to take my chances with unfiltered (Yeah, I know, 10-essentials fail.) stream water, which turned out ok. My wife wasn't willing to risk it and had some pretty unpleasant cramping the last couple miles.The boys, having been carried most of the way, thought it was the greatest thing ever. The youngest one did get kinda cranky towards the end after having been in the pack for so long.
  • 1 0
 @SoCalTrev: You are insane!!! I just do not understand, lol. I have 4 year old and would not even fathom carrying him to the top of San Jacinto. Well, maybe, just maybe via the tram but that would still be 11 miles roundtrip.

We camped in Idyllwild 2 years ago and attempted Suicide Rock with my son but had to bail about a mile in due to the heat.
  • 8 0
 1999 did 24 hrs of Moab solo singlespeed hardtail 26 inch wheels Now i ride 170mm front and rear
  • 1 0
 Whoa… I did that on a relay team in 2000. I was on my 3x9 hardtail GT and it was brutal. Getting passed by you solo guys on laps was humbling.
  • 5 2
 6.5 hour XC MTB race. (Salty Dog). Something you have to try once...my case twice. Never again...lol. Takes a month to recover. Used to ride massive rides. 6-7 road days to train for these XC races and to see what I could do. Now I typically I keep the volume lower. Dont think all that cardio is really good for you.
  • 3 0
 I read that Tour De France riders live longer than the rest of the population. But, maybe if tested against those who exercised moderately, the outcome would be different.
  • 3 0
 @njcbps: this study backs up your claim, 17% increase in longevity on average. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21618162
  • 3 0
 @tbmaddux: That was one I was citing.

Interesting stat, but still an abusive race. lol
  • 4 2
 Also very unhealthy to race it natural. I can't remember the Docs name but he looks like Tom Morello, but he was on JRE talking about fitness, athletes etc etc. He said the TDF is so physically taxing that taking PED's is actually healthier.
  • 1 0
 @njcbps: Maybe all that over training and long days in the saddle added to my lifespan...lol . Think alot of it has to do with their genetic gifts to begin with. Most natural athletes with average genetics probably shouldnt overtrain consistently.
  • 1 0
 @Tmackstab: Id take PEDS so I could ride more than my 2-3 hours a day...lol. Too bad theyll f you up in the long run. I'll have to stick to the good old sleep, make sure I take a rest day or two and moderate alcahol.
  • 3 0
 16h Epic Enduro (Olargues, France) 2017 124km +4800m, 14h Cami des Cavalls (Menorca, Spain) 182km +3500m, 13.5h TransTramuntana NonStop (Mallorca, Spain) 131km +3400m and 12h05m Mallorca312 (Mallorca, Spain) 312km +3200m this last one on road bike
  • 3 0
 Longest MTB ride for happened last spring during lockdown. We were not allowed to leave the city in a car but there was no restriction for bikes! 109km, 2690m elevation, 10:44 moving time, 3 mountains, plenty of trails. Suffered some serious cramping around km 70 though. The truth is at that point I wasn't riding as much as I should and I wasn't really prepared for such a ride. Then about a month later we did an easier, 96km, 1900m elevation ride, around 8hrs. These things are fun to do with friends and look on the map later.
  • 3 0
 200 miles Seattle to Portland. Next day 200 miles Portland to Seattle back. Next day 300 miles Seattle to Spokane. That ride was called the Cannonball and Bill Nye used to own that ride. 700 miles - 3 days - wonderful and ouch. Did it six years straight.
  • 2 0
 ive gone out for a 6.5hr bike ride... but ill spend full days at the bike park and enduro racing is a totally different story. start at 7am and don't finish til 3:30-4:30pm.

so id say longest MTB "ride" is 6-8 hours. but i have definitely spent more time on my bike.
  • 2 0
 I’ve doing a few 100mile mtb races, also have done few double centuries (200 miles). Not sure I would do either now as the training for those events is rather difficult. Although racing in Leadville is a very memorable experience.
  • 2 0
 Solo full suspension mountain bike ride covered 100K, >2700m vert (9,081 ft), Completed at elevations between 1450 - 2880 meters (4779 - 9459 ft). Took me 9 hours 41 minutes of moving time.

I've ridden well over 12 hours on the road, but I don't think it counts here.
  • 2 0
 The "Melburn Roobaix", where you dont know the path until you get a map on the day, end up riding down a bunch of cobblestone laneways and many on homemade bikes or in outfits. Last few were around 40-50kms and took us around 5 to 6 hours.
  • 2 0
 Some crazy numbers in here! Can you guys/gals who do big 4+ hr rides give me some tips? Ive done a few 40km+ rides and find my legs start cramping up everytime. I like to think im drinking enough water but thats probably not enough
  • 4 0
 I find it’s not really lack of water but of salt, sugar, potassium and all the other stuff that causes my cramping. I used to down a full 3L of water and still cramp on 2 hr rides. All that water just made me cramp more. For me it’s making sure you eat and get actual electrolytes into your ride to help with not cramping. And working out of course.
  • 2 0
 @jahoang3: indeed. It’s all about fuel.
  • 2 0
 Good meal and hydration the night before. Electrolytes in morning. Eat and drink way more than you think. Pace yourself. Stretch and warm up.
  • 1 0
 Drink before you're thirsty, eat before you're hungry. Slow your roll a bit and focus of feeling good.

When I go out for big rides I'm usually not trying any harder than I would on a good hike. Consider this: when I run for 4+ hours I cramp up, but I can hike for 12+ hours no problem.
  • 1 0
 100% fuelling and modulating your effort. My 100km road ride was a poor morning-of decision and I did not have enough food. I test some of the drink mix we sell at our shop during my weekly hockey game (controlled circumstance, controlled time, near a bathroom if needed) and for me that's the ticket. More energy longer, and less cramping.

I also over-carry supplies, especially if you're back- or pseudo-back country. Have a jacket, extra snacks/water, tools/parts and anything else appropriate for your area. If you're not racing it's not worth an avoidable long hike or worse, getting caught out after the sun goes down. And make sure someone knows where you're riding, when you depart the trail head, and where you parked your car.
  • 3 0
 It helps me to set a timer on my garmin or phone to remind me to drink & eat regularly. You get into the zone & forget or don’t do it till it’s too late. For any ride over 4hrs, I’ll have a route planned with food breaks & drinking lots.
  • 3 0
 Alot of cramping comes from fatigue. I've done a few XC races, where you're hammering and going long. If you don't train right youll cramp too. No matter how many salt tabs, eload botttles you drink. Plus its trial and error to see what works for you. Not everyone needs as much salt. Get alot of road miles in. If you want to make a 4 hour ride easy. Do some low heart rate long rides.
  • 3 0
 If you are riding more than 4-5 hrs then you need to start eating almost as soon as you start pedalling as you need to be creating the energy you are going to need in a hour's time when your system has competing needs of physical exertion and digestion.

I guide multi-day back country mountain bike trips and this is the aspect that most guests (who don't have the luxury of riding 4-6 hour days for 3-12 days in a row) struggle with, especially after we have just fed them a large breakfast.

Regular water and some kind of electrolyte. Again all should be tried as everyone is an individual - what works for me might not work for you.

I run water in a hydration pack (only when I am guiding), Nuun in my water bottle (caffeine for the first two, regular after that - ideally citrus flavour as it triggers the 'thirst centre' encouraging one to drink) and keep Extra Sodium shot bloks for when the days get longer than planned (slow guests or mechanicals/ minor injuries).

I recently upgrade to a Garmin 530 and have been experimenting with the Smart Nutrition and I find that the annoying alert actually does remind me to eat and drink more regularly.
  • 3 0
 More long rides Big Grin

I had this XC race I did several years in a row, it's in august (riding time usually 3-4 hours). One year nearly all my training was riding to and from my in-laws cabin, took me roughly 1 hour at max effort (which I always did). I felt super strong, mega fast, more training than ever, I was gonna kick butt.

When the race came, I was haulin' the first 1.5 hours, then full stop. Cramps and whatever no matter how much yukky stuff and liquids I had swallowed since the start.

The year after training was all about more intervals (trail brrrapp!), and semi-hard 2-3 hour rides. I PR'ed the race by a lot, and did pretty well on that one. It was hot, and I didn't really drink or eat much at all.
  • 2 0
 Just did a 4 hour mtb ride on 2 bottles of water and a Cliff Bar. It was chill pace but alot of climbing and freeride type downs. I'm tired today. But was having fun yesterday, no cramping and marginal muscle fatigue. This was due to riding those long slow days in the spring. Putting the time in.
  • 3 0
 Just over 8 hours for unsupported solo rides. That was the day I truly realized why there are still dedicated 2x and 3x riders out there, my 1x11 just wasn’t cutting it at both ends of the cassette.
  • 3 0
 yep, going longer is sure to show you the limitations of your cassette / legs
  • 2 0
 Not sure if it's the longest, most likely, but definitely the most grueling; 7 hour ride in Pisgah. www.trailforks.com/ridelog/view/979996

Long story short, we drank too much the night before and started way too late. 30+(!) river crossings. Finished Pilot Rock at sunset and had to bail. Rode down the highway by braille; no lights. Got pulled over by the sheriff on our bikes. Declined a free ride because we're IDIOTS.

Good time though. At least we picked lots of beer and sandwiches. Smile

Would do again.
  • 2 0
 Our local 100 mile fatbike race was cancelled this spring, so I did it on my own accord in ~19 hours, with a temperature range of +30 to -30. I've had a few longer efforts but those included nearly as much (or more) hiking as biking.
  • 2 0
 Once I went on a ride about 30 km from home, crashed hard and was taken to the local hospital together with my bike. After a maxillofacial OP, the doctors kept my in hospital for 12 days, me and my bike! We both returned home after 13 days. Does that count?
  • 3 1
 Currently the highest vote is 269 for 8-12hrs. Damn. We didn't do rides of that duration when we were younger, and maybe because 2-4hrs was long enough on a solid frame bike before hands would go numb.
  • 1 0
 A few years ago i did 100miles on a Commencal meta 4x that i had set up as holigans trail bike. It was pretty much all on paved cycle track but it was fun challenge that i set myself out of curiosity purely to see if i could do it Big Grin
  • 1 0
 Lol that sounds mentally grueling!!
  • 2 0
 @glennyeltee: It really wasnt to bad i just switched off and listened to a bunch of podcasts as i cycled. the bigger issue for me was dealing with the heat and possible dehydration, being scottish im not designed for temps over 20c and it was 29c that day lol
  • 1 0
 Longest ride for me, 60 mile 6 hour road ride on some rural islands in Japan. Riding on super beat down rental, got a flat at mile 50, rode on the rim for 5 miles to swap out bike, finished ride, got on wrong bus, nobody spoke english on bus, nobody even understood the translation app, got off bus at extremely lucky spot, able to jump on very last bus to location, nearly had to sleep overnight on a bench at a rural bus stop. Despite that it was a rad ride and quite easy ride. Easier than my 1-3 hour mountain bike rides. Yes, stupid for not bringing tools and tube, but I rarely get flats. So, I thought what are the chances on one measly road ride. Doh!!
  • 2 0
 The good ol' Test of Metal in Squamish. 67km of fun and Type 2 fun! Did it twice for good measure. It is good for the mind to realize that our limitations are so much higher than we think.
  • 3 1
 point to point shuttle rides are my favorite. i've done the lemmon drop, the whole enchilada and guardsman pass to mill creek canyon. and i'm almost 60. putting together a bucket list in my mind...
  • 2 0
 Used to go out with the boys on the best we could get our hands on, ride all day. Dig crap, ride crap, ride dh bikes everywhere all day and backer the bollox out of our selves. Good times
  • 1 0
 Epics are cool, but quality > quantity for me. There's just so much that breaks down after 3 or 4 hours of real riding, on top of the diminishing returns on training. And when I stop before I'm wiped and struggling I can still spend quality time with the family or get something done during the rest of the day. If I need to take a long day to get to the trails I want so be it, but in general a fast 3 hours is always more enjoyable.
  • 1 0
 I did about 106 off-road miles in Terlingua one long day, kind of by accident. I left the Ghosttown, rode around Pinks Peak, turned north up 3-Bar ranch to take a Gate road over the Christmas Mountains to the lodge for a burger. Decided to return via the Solitario, found myself on the Top of the World, took a wrong turn by the Hunt Camp and went via Black Peak to Buenos Suerto Mine, crossed the highway near Lajitas to take the trails back to Well Creek, went up to the Villa de la Mina, crossed Long Draw, up to the Rainbow Mine and entered Terlingua from the old mine road to the west. Couldn't do that these days. Too many gun-toting city fools have move out there and blocked these old wagon trails.
  • 2 0
 thats really a big-sky ride
  • 1 0
 @shedsidechuck: And I did it on a fully-rigid Kona (Cascade at the time).
  • 3 0
 8:30-4:30 bikepark; 4:30 -8:00 enduro;

Not bad when you ride in the group, and have water supply
  • 2 0
 13 hours solo, 4700m vert. Tried to ride all the trails on a local mtn. Dud all the legal ones and a few not trailforks ones.
  • 2 0
 My biggest ride is a north shore triple crown that I did last year. I met Anthony last week and his triple triple blew my mind, what a maniac!
  • 1 0
 Aha cheers for the compliment Big Grin !
One single triple crown is a huge ride on those trails we have... I'm sure now you'll have a next challenge?
  • 1 0
 @akamera:
Haha, I definitely have some bigger rides planned for next year. We'll see Wink
  • 4 0
 Colorado Trail - Durango to Silverton, 85 miles, 14K vert, 17 hours.
  • 4 0
 Her name was Heather and... oh, I misread the question.
  • 1 0
 Mines was Ellie. Boy what a ride!!!!!
  • 3 1
 I did the 24 hours of bend on my ransom this year! I dont identify as an endurance rider but had a great time. 170 miles, about 13k climbing, no sleep, lots of food.
  • 1 0
 I was preparing for an everesting and made it to around 9 h and something around 4.5 k vertical meters. Before I continued the training, I tore my ACL and broke the knee cap ... while doing SUP.
  • 1 0
 Once cycled to GT factory from San Diego 20years ago , but got hassled by police for sleeping on the beach
Was like a pilgrimage, got there at 6am & could not think straight about why I was there, so just cycle back!
  • 2 0
 3 hours is about my usual max. Stops being much fun after that. Longest ever is 15 hours non stop as a fundraiser. I would do it again.
  • 1 0
 I've raced 24 hour solos, but lately my long rides always include bikepacking gear. I still do long gravel rides, but I try to keep them under 12 hours these days, it's better for the marriage that way.
  • 1 0
 The older I get, the less desire I have to pedal for any sustained distance.
At 56, I will ALWAYS take a lift/shuttle (when possible) to increase the enjoyment of the trail.

Smiles > miles
  • 1 0
 The Alps Epic Trail Davos was the longest trail I’ve ridden, but pretty much every day we rode in Switzerland were all the longest days we’ve ever had on a saddle.
  • 2 0
 Follow up question: on your 6-8 hour ride, how long did you PLAN to be out?
  • 2 0
 Endurance runner/biker owner of bike shop friend after meeting at destination and changing planson a hour and a half ride: "Let's go ride up XXX mountain. It's only like a 3 hour ride."
Other endurance rider friend show's up: "What's the plan? WHAT!!??!?!?! THATS AN EASY 5-8 HOUR RIDE EASY!!!!"
Me, a slow poke but I'll get there rider: "f*ck. Got shanghaied again."
Went and did it as there was no backing out now else I never stop hearing about it.
6 of us riding. 3 core endurance athletes. 3 like me "Oh SHit What Did I get myself into" riders.
5 hours total of just climbing, with a section of 27 switchbacks, lots of Ah Shit if you Stop Can't restart steep cinder, lots of portaging, lots of false tops (Ah there's the top. Nope, just cresting over to see more climbing), etc. About 5'000 feet elevation climb. We did it. We survived. Downhill was just a crazy on baby head sized marble rocks. I've done a marathon and 60 miles cross country rides, but this was something else. For kicks, I def would do it again. LOL! Names and places not revealed to save the guilty.
  • 1 0
 41km 1763m of elevation. yesterday.

north shore double crown the hard"er" way on mtb. no prep and a chubby dude in rough shape.
  • 1 0
 That's more like it, my knee gives up after 50km on the road, less in the mountains so my longest ride on my MTB is 43km +1000m in 4.5h or so and I had a hard time walking after...
  • 1 0
 I am taking a position that a forced bivouac does not count as 'overnight camping'...24hr+ on several occasions, not on a road bike.
  • 1 0
 longest in the flats.. 117 kms with around 1000ft of elevation; in the hills/mountains, almost 90 kms with almost 6000ft of elevation.
  • 2 0
 Rode 100km the backroad from Penticton to Kelowna and back on the kettle valley trail with my xc bike.
  • 3 0
 Longer than any my ebike donkey buddies cause there damn battery runs out
  • 1 0
 24 Hours in the Old Pueblo, 2019 Single Speed - 17 laps, 280 miles of dirt in 25 hours. This year going for a Duo, which honestly I think will feel harder.
  • 1 0
 Wait, I thought it was a 24hr race…
  • 1 0
 Done a couple of 12hr solo races, wife banned me from solos because being my support team was “boring” and she missed me.
  • 1 0
 I used to race 24hour races and I’d get 130-160 miles done, but would take a few 1-2 hour naps in a campsite during the night.
  • 1 0
 TransRockies 2008 - during the race had several days of 7+ hrs and greater than 100km on the bike. Overall was 550 km, and 17,000+ meters of elevation for the 7 day race.
  • 2 0
 Did the White Rim in a day on Acid in 1997. Pretty sure I'm still out there. It's been a long strange trip mannn.
  • 2 0
 I did a 24 hour solo MTB race before. It was about 6-8 hours of racing and about 16-18 hours of wishing it was over.
  • 1 0
 14hrs 103km and 5000m of elevation of climbing. Did a half Everest with a friend, decided the week before was gonna do it with a buddy. Ah my teenage years were stupid.
  • 1 0
 completed one of my longest rides this weekend, where I towed a keg for 60 km behind my coil sprung high single pivot bike to some hot spring.
  • 3 1
 There needs to be a 12-16 and also 17-20
  • 11 0
 How many of us had the experience "this was supposed to be a 4-6 hour ride but turned into 12+"? haha
  • 1 0
 @sngltrkmnd: every afternoon ride is a torn sidewall away from being an all-day hike
  • 2 0
 @sngltrkmnd: Haha..following that one friend who for sure knows where they are going!?
  • 2 0
 @sngltrkmnd:

It's colloquially known as a 'three hour tour' but nobody under 40 would get the reference anymore.
  • 3 1
 Are we talking inside or Outside?
  • 2 0
 TWE is my longest distance wise ~50km
  • 1 0
 Do you guys want the Garmin numbers or the numbers that I think I remember that it lasted
  • 2 0
 Does the time include long walk outs???
  • 3 0
 OP’s mum.
  • 1 0
 Rode Point 2 Point Park City this year. 77 miles 12k feet vert. 8 hours 35 minutes
  • 1 0
 Did the LA Wheelman Grand Tour (200mi) a number of times. Generally took less than 12 but did a little longer at times.
  • 2 0
 Does bikepacking count? In that case 3 months
  • 1 0
 according to the above rules you can't camp over night but you can sleep in a gondola
  • 1 0
 70.56km, 3237m, all mtn bike trails.
8:18 hrs riding, 11:30 elapsed.
It was fun, but I was blasted at the end…
  • 2 0
 I rode yer Mom...30 seconds...
  • 1 0
 After 6-8 hours of climbing and descending along baby-head littered trails, I told myself, never again.
  • 1 0
 11:47 - the Merritt Crown - 120km, 3,000m elevation. Here's hoping we can race in person again next year!
  • 1 0
 14 hours of race time in one sitting this summer, by far the toughest thing I've done on a bike.
  • 1 1
 North Shore "Sextuple" mountain bike ride last year. 19 hours, 147km distance, 5,700m climb.
www.trailforks.com/ridelog/view/14595081
  • 2 0
 A tandem.
  • 1 0
 Brooklyn to Lake Ontario, about 2 weeks
  • 2 1
 I rode for 12 hrs once, my cock was like streaky bacon.
  • 1 0
 I road an Xtra Longest Nicolai for about 1 hour.
  • 2 0
 I cant work out if you mean you rode the bike for that duration or it took that long to walk from the rear to front on the bicycle.
  • 1 1
 89 miles on a 20 inch bmx bike. 180mm cranks 46x16 gearing. I was really tired afterwards
  • 2 0
 Lies
  • 1 0
 The Redbull Dusk Til' Dawn Race. Over 40 laps at C.O.P. in the dark.
  • 1 0
 South Downs Way in a day. 100 miles, 10,000' climbing. Never ever again...
  • 2 1
 I’ve done 18
  • 1 1
 15h on the trainer, I was vEveresting.
  • 4 0
 Is Everest not uphill?
  • 1 1
 @Almostredbike: it’s climbing the hight of Everest
  • 2 0
 @dualcrownscottspark: but how do you go uphill on a trainer?
  • 2 1
 @Almostredbike: It will be a smart trainer which can simulate climbing via resistance changes. There are also accessories available you can mount the front fork to which can move the bike up and down to simulate the gradient.
Practically no need to go out is there! Just need the accessory which simulates motorists almost wiping you out on roads and the experience is complete.
  • 1 1
 @Almostredbike: stick a couple of books under the front
  • 2 1
 @chris-brown225: You cant come in here throwing around sensible money saving ideas like that.
  • 2 0
 @losidan: guess you just ride a bike up an actual hill a few times too
  • 1 0
 62 days
  • 1 0
 5 day bender
  • 1 0
 15hrs, 152kms!!
  • 1 0
 Dam I gotta step it up







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