Jul 31

Sanborn County Park Trails Master Plan 8/2 at 6:30

The Preferred Trail Alternatives Report for the Sanborn County Park Trails Master Plan will be presented to the Parks & Recreation Commission at the Isaac Newton Senter Auditorium at 70 W. Hedding St. in San Jose at 6:30pm on Wednesday August 2nd. The Report Summary and Map are attached to this email for your review. The same information can also be found on the Parks Website at www.parkhere.org (click on the Sanborn Trails Master Plan link on the Homepage or follow the links below).

The Preferred Trail Alternatives Report is a product of the comments received from the public, the Technical Advisory Committee, and the Project Team during the last seven months of work on the Sanborn Trails Master Plan. At this stage in the process, planned routes are 99% firm, but the designated use for each route hasn’t been set in stone. The report will touch upon the plan as it stands to date and apprise the Commission of our progress and next steps.

If you would like to comment on the Report Summary or Map, but can’t attend the Parks & Recreation Commission Meeting, please contact me via phone, email or by letter and I’ll be sure to include your comments in the public record.

Report
http://www.romp.org/docs/STMPPRCReport.pdf

Maps
http://www.romp.org/docs/STMPPreferredTrailAltMap.pdf

Regards,

John Falkowski
GIS Technician
Parks & Recreation Department
Santa Clara County
408-355-2232 wk 408-355-2290 fax
email: john.falkowski@prk.sccgov.org

Jul 19

Woorld Mountain Bike Conference / IMBA Summit Report Part 2

Well, it has been a little while since the IMBA Summit, and I put talking about it on the agenda for the next ROMP meeting, so here I am trying to focus my thoughts. Basically the rest of the conference was about future trends in mountain biking, Grant Writing, and Grassroots organizing and motivating.
THE FUTURE OF MOUNTAIN BIKING?
On June 21, Joey Klein, the Original Trail Care Crew guy for IMBA, and now the trail solutions manager talked about where he’d been and what he’d seen building and consulting on trails around the globe. In many ways what he presented suggested the future of mountain biking much better than I have in an upcoming newsletter article.

He showed a lot of special bike parks full of jumps and berms. You see “volunteer” jump parks crop up all over the place. I know of ones in Mountain View, Palo Alto and Belmont. Because people are building these on marginal lands, it is clear there is a lot of pent up demand for them.

He showed trails with easier and harder lines, developing a progression for riders to develop skills over time. This reminds me of the trail structure in Soquel Demo Forest, where there is always an ATV line around the log overs, teeter toters, skinnies and other technical trail features. It reminds me of the lines that are developing on the high side along the Canyon trail in Monte Bello. People are seeking out and creating more technical places to ride.

GRANT WRITING
This was presented by Elizabeth Train from Bikes Belong which gives money to “get more people on more bikes more often” and Justin Vander Pol of BackCountry Bicycle Club who turned his volunteer President position into a full time paid staff position through fundraising and grant writing.

Justin talked about getting access to a grants database. Once you have that you can:
1) identify the money
– big grants as easy to get as small grants
– How competitive is the grant?
2) Choose project based on available money
– Get approval for the project before you apply for the grant
3) Involve youth
4) Mention health benefits
5) Involve other groups
6) Include environmental restoration in the project if possible
7) Show taking club to next level
8) Use volunteers to include user groups and cut project expenses

There was a guy there who mentioned federal highway money is available through a recreational trails program, but in CA this must be done with a county or the state. Organizations like the Youth Corps, Boy Scouts and v-o-cal.org can provide muscle.

If you need to provide matching funds, sometimes you can use volunteer hours at $18.50 / hour

Where’s the money?
– Paid Service database
– Hardware Stores
– Bikes belong (need to involve bike shop)
– Service clubs (Rotary, Lions)
– Local Businesses – contact community affairs

Grant Scoring
– Call, develop relationship, and ask the sponsor what they are looking for, detail
– Make it easy to score – skimmable – not too long
– Help sell the corporate image
– be memorable
– Follow up after project. Prgress reports, ribbon cutting
– Show guarantee for success

Potential ROMP Project (Got any Ideas?)
– Stevens Canyon Bridges
– Gunn HS Bike Park
– Windy Hill Spring Trail Re-route
– Lost Trail widening, opening to bikes
– Sierra Azul Single track
– Stevens Creek Trail Bike Park

PARTNERS FOR CONSERVATION
Was a panel consiting of Jim Hassenauer of IMBA, somebody from Canada parks and Jenn Dice of IMBA. The idea was how can we build relationships with land managers? What can we accomplish? Our relationships should address super-ordinate goals – goals that we can only acheive by working together.

GRASSROOTS ORGANIZING
Part of this was presented by WORCA, Whistler’s local club. They have a paid secretary and put on some awesome events. He thought that stagnant membership could be addressed by involving youth and families, having courses or clinics, getting leadership to rotate, but make sure the new leadership is qualified. These people need to be actively recruited.

One of the new trail care crew people talked about throwing events as a way to revitalize your club. Here is a list of things she suggested as events
– Organized rides
– Post-ride food and fun
– Niche rides – chick rides, hick rides, ick rides
– Bike Derby (No Dabbing, last track standing wins)
– chopper / cruiser ride
– Bar Night (AKA what you really look like)
– Informal race, time trial
– trail maintenance – treat it like an event

– Skills clinics & Maintenance clinics
– Movie Premier & shop parties
– Photo Scavenger hunt – Get yourself in a picture with the following . . .
– Weekend Trips

– Formalized races and festivals
triple events (dirt crit + Technical time trial + XC)
slip and slide finish (remember the eighties?)
– Make a kid smile program (at risk kids out on trails)
– Fat tire festival

Steps to throw a successful eventevent
1) you can do it
2) determine goals – financial, volunteers etc
3) Make it fun
4) Spread the word – web, forum, email, bike shops, trail heads
5) Organize event volunteers –
– job discriptions
– treat vols well
– Don’t micromanage
6) Execute – stay positive, learn from mistakes, run event from the back
7) Recap afterwards
8) Make it fun – prizes – crappier the better
9) donations are different than membership – what will the money do?

Jul 19

The regular monthly meeting 7/24

The regular monthly meeting will happen this Monday at Roundatable
Pizza in Sunnyvale Town and Country at 7PM. Come a little early to
socialize so we can start near 7PM.

Below is the agenda. If there is something you would like to add,
reply to this message or email president@romp.org

Agenda
———–

Socks and Bells for ROMP volunteers
– Distribution, storage

Tour de Peninsula awareness raising
– Flyer? – Riders?
– SM County Parks – What can we do now?

Newsletter Deadline 8/1
– Writers wanted.
– Would someone else be willin to oversee the process?

REI
– Mtn View Opening
– Store warming
– SDF bridge grant progress

IMBA Summit / World Mountain Bike Conference Review
– Where do we go from here?

BART Cruz-a-thon / Take a kid Mountain Biking Day 10/7
– volunteers needed
– planning

Pumpkin Ride 10/28
– planning

Jul 19

Report on 1st Ride of New 3rd Sat Ride

Hi,
Four of us braved the sun at Russian Ridge on Saturday for the new 3rd Sat ride. One rider even biked up Page Mill to participate. The parking lot was very full, but the rest of us were able to squeeze in. We took a very moderate pace with lots of rest stops.
The views were magnificence, with a little fog hanging over the edge of the Pacific. We played on the roots on the Ancient Oaks trail. One long stretch has a string of very moderate roots, where you can practice root descending and ascending. We noshed at the secluded, shaded wooden deck at the top, and then sailed down the Hawk trail. We got in our 1000 feet of climbing, but it took longer than expected (i.e., those rest stops).

Historical note: I believe this was the start site of the original ROMP Sunday ride. Or more correctly, since the Russian Ridge parking lot did not exist at the time, it started at the intersection of Page Mill and Skyline.

Next ride on Aug 19 for experienced beginners and intermediate riders who want to go slower.

Rodney.

Jul 17

Donner Trail Riding and Building Event – More Info

More information about BONC and FATRAC’s exciting weekend of riding, camping and traibuilding near Tahoe Donner! But first… FREE BEER! Yes, New Belgium will provide particpants tasty Fat Tire Ale.
The event includes:

Saturday, July 22nd, 10AM – BONC/FATRAC-led ride on Hole-in-the-Ground Trail.
Saturday Evening – Free camping, swimming and general campground fun at the Donner Memorial State Park.
Sunday, July 23rd, 10AM – Trail building on the new Donner Lake Rim Trail near Castle Valley. Perhaps another ride afterwards. Please bring long pants, gloves, snacks and water.

NOTE: We have a LIMITED number of free campground slots available. If you know you are camping, please let me know how many will be joining you.

ABOUT THE WEEKEND: We will help complete the latest higher elevation trail near Tahoe. We will help build a section of the forthcoming DLRT, which will be a great local riding option with gorgeous views and some fun technical granite sections. Adventuresome riders could connect this trail to Hole-in-the-Ground for an uber Sierra epic.

ABOUT THE TRAIL: The Donner Lake Rim Trail, a project of the Truckee Donner Land Trust, is almost entirely an all-volunteer effort to build a trail encircling the peaks around Donner Lake. Hikers, mountain bikers and equestrians can enjoy the stunning views of the Lake, Mount Rose and the Pacific Crest from the trail, which will be 23-miles when complete. The Land Trust has planned a special section of the trail that bypasses the PCT and will remain open to mountain bikes. Learn more here. View a map here:
tinyurl.com/nyfd5

MAP/DIRECTIONS: You can view a map of meeting locations and the ride using the link below:

tinyurl.com/kwgwl

Click the red balloons or the links to the right to view more information about each meeting place.

Or see below:

Ride – Meet on Saturday @ 10AM on Sherriff Lane on the north side of I80 just off the Soda Springs exit.
Camping – Meet at Donner Memorial State Park. Take the Donner Pass Road Exit off I80 and follow signs to the park and campground.
Trailwork – Meet Sunday @ 10AM off the Castle Peak/Boreal Exit on I80 on the north/Castle Peak side along Boreal Ridge Road road before the green gate.


John J. Gardiner
Documentation * Online Help * Web Design
(650) 279-3809 * johngardiner.com

IMBA California State Representative
“What would we do without trails?” * imba.com

Jul 17

ECDM Trail work report, July 15

About 8 people showed up for trail work today in ECDM. 3 were mountain bikers. We set out with an Open Sapce Technician (OST) to brush Resolution, while another group drove to Purissima to brush Soda Springs, and clear some slides.
We brushed the manzanita on the up hill side back a few feet, and the trail is much more like I remembered it when I first started riding at ECDM some 5 years ago. The lines of site are longer, and I am sure that there will be a few complaints about trail widening. On the other hand, there are some nice features on the uphill side that you can hit again, now that the brush is out of the way. Hopefully, the downhill Manzanita will continue to grow and in a decade or so the trail will be more shaded.

While we were working, one of MROSD’s newest rangers hiked by. It is always good to see the rangers mixing it up with visitors. This is great PR for MROSD if you ask me.

After we finished, We rode down Resolution, and up ECDM trail, and looped around back to our cars along Serra Morena.

In late breaking hearsay, San Mateo county has yet to grant the permits for the retaining walls MROSD staff have planned for the extreme makeovers of Giant Salamander and the Creek Trail, It is highly unlikely that these trails will be closed this year for these upgrades.

As promised, everyone who brushed Resolution got a shiny new Brass Solo Incredibell with a ROMP logo on top.. Boy those have a nice tone. If you would like one, if you are regular volunteer or club officer, you can pick one up at the next ROMP meeting, July 24 at ROundtable Pizza in downtown Sunnyvale. Or you can volunteer at the next ROMP event. Not so sure when that would be. . . .

Thanks to everyone who showed up.

Josh
President

Jun 23

Woorld Mountain Bike Conference / IMBA Summit Report

Julie and I drove up to the IMBA summit. Along the way we stopped at Redding’s Whiskeytown Recreational Area, McKenzie River in Oregon, and Squamish Forest in BC.The riding has been terrific all the way, though confusing where rogues have built undesignated trails, which obviously are not signed and do not appear on the maps. Rogue trails are not tourism friendly.

We arrived Tuesday afternoon, and I did a pre-event hike along the A-line trail, the most ridden trail in the world. They send out maintenance crews twice a week. The trail is too popular to close, so they do it early in the morning. They are building new trails up on the mountain, and some of those trails get $400,000 CA budgets, for a few miles of trail. Trails are expensive.

The keynote speaker was from Vancouver’s Olympic Committee, and had started an organization called 2010 Legacies Now. The idea is to get the 2010 winter olympic games to have positive, lasting, social, environmental and political legacices even before the games begin. It was insightful to see how she applied this mission to IMBA’s Build, Respect, Speak, Ride motto. She most emphasized the importance of building social networks, and retaining knowledge as the moutanin bike community goes forward. Things like MTBR’s forums, ROMP’s archived email list, and IMBAs book series are examples of that.

After that,we had a session on risk management. There are four tests of a liability case: duty of care, breach of duty, injury of loss, proximate cause. The good news is for a liability case to win they have to prove all four points – that the club or land manager should be taking safety measures (or perhaps there is inherent risk), that the club or agency did not does what a reasonable person would have done (your peers), that an injury was really sustained, and that the injury was caused by the breach of duty, The bad news is that even a well written waiver cannot protect you all the time. The speakers showed an example where a criminal injury lawyer hit a small gopher hole, got injured and is suing everybody. Seems like the universal health care system in Canada mellows all that out a bit, because if you break your neck mountain biking, you will be taken care of.

After that I went to a session by Jenn Dice, Government Affiars DIrector for IMBA, on getting political. Her 15 points were:
1) Get Organized
2) Get a feel for the political landscape
3) Cultivate your local area
4) Make a simple message
5) Schedule meetings with land managers
6) Get to know decsion makers
7) Invite officials to address your group
8) Follow up – thank you notes
9) Trail community
10) Be visible
11) Build coallitions
12) Change club status to engage in political work
13) volunteer for political campaigns
14) Run For office
15) Use your voice for the greater good – Write!
I will try and follow up some more on these points at another time.

After that we did the Loonie race. 340 people rode up the Easy Does It Trail, and down B-Line and Heart Of Darkness trails, and through the lost lake network to a barbecue hosted by a local restaurant. It was a Darwinian event where late arrivals were left with just scraps of food. All I can say is the beginner trails around here are intermediate back home. I ama not sure if I will see a double black diamond on this trip. Julie and I road the tandem. The table top jumps and 4 foot berms with break bumps on them were pretty challenging, but really fun. People were impressed to see us out there.

I can’t wait to get the single bike out.

We’ll it is off to another day of sessions and riding.

Take Care,

Josh

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