Canadian Cycling Magazine

Taking on Highwood Pass, Assisted

Early season road riding that’s actually really fun

- by Tom Babin

Early-season road riding that’s actually really fun

Fat finds the cracks in your fitness routine – a minor injury, work travel that keeps you sedentary, offseason, or even in-season procrastin­ation. Then it skulks its way around your midsection. When an invitation for the first big ride of the season lands in your inbox, those heretofore unnoticed 15 lb. are suddenly drawing attention to themselves like a Kardashian. For me, the email that highlighte­d that sneaking lard was an invitation for a spring ritual here in southern Alberta: riding the Highwood Pass. The highest paved road in Canada carves its way through the Rockies of Kananaskis Country. Come winter, gates on both ends close the pass to vehicle traffic, and don’t lift until midJune. That creates a tempestuou­s window of time for an achingly beautiful 130-km car-free dream ride for roadies, between the moment the snow melts and the gates open to motor-vehicle traffic. But the pass is a mercurial beast. Some years, plows need to open the summit in mid-june. Others, it’s free of snow right to the 2,200-m top. That may

sound annoying in its unpredicta­bility, but that’s what gives the ride a special mythology. Issuing a summit snow report to co-workers on Monday morning is one of the great humble-brags of the cycling season.

But the romance of the pass also means you’re branded a special kind of wuss if you beg off the ride. That short carfree window of time makes it a now-or-never decision that, if you decline, you’ll regret all season. This was the conundrum I faced. I knew I’d beat myself up all season if I missed that ride, but as an out-of-shape road-cycling dilettante, acceptance would be folly. If only someone would invent a way to get aging, out-of-shape paunchies up a mountain a little bit easier.

In late 2018, a type of bicycle was purchased in the Netherland­s that marked a milestone: for the first time, the Dutch had bought more ebikes in a year than traditiona­l city bikes. It was a symbolic change: the most bicycle-friendly country on Earth had gone electric.

It wasn’t a surprise because ebikes sales had been

climbing for years, but it was a symbolic change. Here in North America, sales of ebikes trailed far behind, but 2018 showed that unmistakab­le trend as well: ebike sales in the U.S. grew by 79 per cent. While that was still just a fraction of the total, that number had Trek ceo John Burke gushing about the near future in which 30 per cent of sales would be electric. “It is safe to say that ebikes could represent a greater growth opportunit­y than mountain bikes did in the late ’80s and early ’90s or carbon road bikes in the early 2000s,” he wrote on Bicycleret­ailer.

I’ve seen the creeping acceptance of ebikes in the flesh. As recently as three years ago, they were a novelty. Now I see them every day on my bike commute. Out on the singletrac­k, pedal-assist mountain bikes power past thigh-powered saps regularly. And when bike-sharing company Lime dropped a few hundred pedal assists into Calgary last year, ebikes were inescapabl­e. Along with ubiquity came acceptance. The early stigma around ebikes that labelled them as machines for cheaters also seemed to have faded. If ebikes get more people riding, what could be wrong with that?

Resistance might remain for that last bastion of bicycle masochism: road cyclists. The refuge of the sufferers. There had been whispers of electric road bikes for years, but they remained a rarity which, in the minds of many road cyclists, was a good thing. For a sport that’s built on a romance of self-flagellati­on, sniffing at power assists has, in most corners, remained the default attitude.

But after a visit to my local bike shop early this past spring, I saw a crack in that thinking in the form of the Cube Agree Hybrid, a gorgeous carbon-everything road bike with electronic shifters, a Knight Rider paint job and sexiness to burn. The only thing that marked this as a pedal-assist ebike was a wide downtube that housed the battery. This, I thought, was the answer to my conundrum. After a bit of grovelling at the shop for a weekend test ride, I replied to the Highwood Pass invitation: I’m in. You know when you complete a punishing fitness ride early in the season and your legs feel like cookie dough and why do you keep doing this to yourself because cycling is hard but then a few days go by and you forget the pain and go for another ride and you crush the first hill because you’re stronger and you feel the confidence returning and oh yeah this whole cycling thing is pretty great? That was my pre-ride with the Cube the day before the pass, only without the punishment beforehand. The bike crackled beneath me. It begged for hills. I felt like I was pedalling with someone else’s legs. The day came and I arrived at entrance to the Highwood. I tentativel­y gauged the fitness of my fellow riders. I’ve been on the indoor trainer all winter, said one, and I just spent a week riding in California. I gazed up at the road that ascended into the Rockies and my stomach dropped. But there I was on Monday morning at work, showing off photos on my phone and issuing my report to co-workers: there was snow at the summit.

“If only someone would invent a way to get aging, out-of-shape paunchies up a mountain a little bit easier.”

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