Be Brave, Be Strong Review

Be Brave, Be StrongWhen Jill Homer recently give a shout-out to her twitter followers asking if anyone would like to borrow her latest book, Be Brave, Be Strong in Kindle format, I jumped at the chance. I’d been wanting to read it but having recently lost my job, couldn’t justify even the few dollars for the ebook.

But before I get into the book, let me just say that I’m a closet Tour Divide hopeful. It’s been an obsession from the first time I heard about the race several years ago. Every ride—long or short—ignites some small fantasy that I’m cresting a pass in Montana or rocketing down into a New Mexican valley. I’ve listened to virtually every MTBCast for the last five years and have watched the movement of many a blue dot. Clearly, I need professional help.

But when Jill announced she was writing a book on her experience riding the Divide, I knew I wanted to read it. Maybe to live vicariously, maybe to fuel the obsession.

Be Brave, Be Strong starts with Jill’s Iditarod trail invitational race and her recounting, with striking and beautiful detail, her experience there and what lead her scratch. That race sets the stage for the rest of the book and reminds the reader that ultra endurance bike races aren’t for the faint of heart; they’re for the fit, the prepared, and the lucky. And maybe the crazy.

The book also recounts other lead-ins to her decision to race the Divide: her work-a-day life and her relationship (and ultimate break-up) with her long-time boyfriend Geoff. Some have said that this part of the book was wholly unnecessary, but I disagree. While some of the story made me squirm for Geoff and Misty (I’m glad I never dated any authors…awkward), this glimpse into Jill’s mind helped later to understand where some of the fire and drive to finish came from. (Dang right she’s not dropping at Kremmling!)

I did have mixed feelings about how much detail needed to be shared about the other relationship showcased in the book—that of Jill and John Nobile. The pair toured together for a good portion of the route and it was an important part of the overall story. But, again, there were many a part that made me thank my stars I never dated an author; I couldn’t help but feel for the guy.

The rest of the book give the reader all fodder he or she needs to breathe life to that stunningly crazy notion to ride the route themselves. Jill describes—almost poetically—the beauty, the exhilaration, the loneliness, the slog, and the fear she experienced while on route. I especially enjoyed the telling of how she managed to cross the Great Divide Basin despite a crippling mechanical and almost cheered as she later rolled into Pie Town New Mexico and enjoyed a meal at the almost never open Pie-O-Neer Cafe.

The ups were equally balanced with the downs, however. The endless slogging through mud, the accident involving Pete Basinger, and the hippy convention in the woods served as a reminder that the Divide can be brutal, unforgiving, and just plain weird.

All-in-all it was a great read for anyone interested in the race, the route, or bikepacking in general. Nice work, Jill.

The World’s Toughest Bike Race Is Not in France

The rules are simple: Start pedaling at the Canadian border, and the first fat tire to hit Mexico wins. JON BILLMAN saddles up for the Great Divide Race, 2,500 miles of blowouts, goatheads, UFOs, and misery—for the lucky ones who finish, that is.

High Noon is when a proper western should start, but we’re still waiting for Floyd Landis, Lance Armstrong, and George W. Bush. The 2007 Great Divide Race kicks off in 18 minutes here on June 15 at the First and Last Chance Bar, in Roosville, Montana, and the border crossing is buzzing with the carnival vibe of a gumball rally: 24 mountain bikers in clean, bright kits, tinkering with gear straps and barrel adjusters as they wait to begin the 2,490-mile self-supported race from the Canadian border to Antelope Wells, New Mexico, on the Mexican line.

Everyone’s nerves are showing. MYSTERY RACER is listed on the Website roster, and various forums are speculating wildly about which celebrity will show. Mike Curiak, 39, is the GDR’s official race director and the course record holder—16 days, 57 minutes, in 2004. Curiak’s rivals, now the 2007 favorites, are trading greetings: Anchorage bike wrench Pete Basinger, 27, who holds the Iditasport record, and North Carolina maître d’ Matthew Lee, 37, the winner of the last two GDRs—best time, 17 days, 22 hours, 30 minutes, in 2006. The wild card, balding and goateed Jackson Hole drywall contractor and Iditasport runner-up Jay Petervary, 34, is fiddling with his XM satellite receiver, which is wired to a mini solar recharger and preset to perpetual reggae and NPR: “I’m gonna get the weather.”

The rest of the field consists of two dozen underemployed dreamers who may have gotten ourselves in over our heads. I haven’t felt anything like this since the day I got married; I haven’t eaten since last night, but Matt McFee, a thirty-something computer geek and mountain-bike guide from Durango, is putting down his second or third hot dog as if he might not see another before the Fourth of July. Rick Hunter, a lanky California frame builder, tries to relax, surfer cool, on a picnic table next to his custom rigid ride, a cyclocross/cross-country hybrid with a couple of extra bottle cages for when this stunt hits the desert. Three middle-aged British endurance riders are keenly filling their camera’s memory card. And long-haired San Diego bike messenger Noah Dimit, 23, has waved goodbye to his grandparents and is heating soup on his backpacker’s stove: Jesus on a Stumpjumper.

It’s no small feat to get your rig to this border—like marriage, the GDR is a tough race to start and a tougher one to quit. Ask Nathan Bay. Bay is a 37-year-old baker, elk hunter, and recovering alcoholic from Bozeman sporting Ted Nugent camo on a green GT single-speed. Bay will tell you that mountain biking helped save his life—but be careful, because fat-tire rehab is a slippery slope, and you could find yourself in Roosville pointed south.

Read the rest of the story at OutsideOnline.

Ride The Divide Teaser

A feature length documentary about a small group of adventurous mountain bikers who set out to race the longest established mountain bike route in the world.
Traversing over 2700 miles through the Rocky Mountains from Banff, Canada to the Mexican Border.

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Epic Wannabe

I just finished reading Jill’s announcement that she’s planning on riding the Great Divide in June.

There’s just something wildly *romantic about the idea of riding 2780 self-supported miles through the mountains, climbing +200,000 feet, seeing everything from Canada to New Mexico. *Not that sort of “romantic.” I’m married, thanks.

Then the reality sets in:

It’s easy to be attracted to the romance of a cross-country MTB adventure. The rugged Divide backcountry is not the place to learn grand tour racing is not your speed or style. Are you a seasoned multi-day bikepacker? Have you ridden back-to-back off-road centuries? Are you an expert level mountain biker? Are you a veteran of Primal Quest-scale multi-day adventure races? Are you a proficient bike mechanic; skilled navigator; competent at self-rescue? If you can’t confidently answer yes to most of the above, it would be wise to consider simply touring the route or taking more time to prepare for a true blitz.

Uh, yeah.

Maybe I’d better get a few dirty centuries under my belt before I dream any more.