I was wondering if you would mind sharing any replys you get. My girl friend and I are interested in doing this ride, and we were also wondering how it would go riding recumbents. We have done a little Michigan hill riding but no mountains. We also did a Florida trip and they were great there.
We have had lots of recumbent cycling the CNC Mountains to the Sea ride in the past. I live in Eastern North Carolina (flat land, real flat land) and will be riding a recumbent for the first time this year. I ride over the bridges and overpasses at New Bern 3 to 4 times a week getting in shape for the CNC fall ride. As we get closer to the event I will do more. I have several friends who rode their recumbent bikes on CNC last year. They did not do anything special to get ready for the mountains except ride hard for 15 + mile as often as they could. Both were slow up mountains, but it is not a race and if you leave early each morning you will have plenty of time to finish that day’s ride.
I rode my Vision 44 on CNC 2001 and had no problem. Living and riding in Florida, you really do not have an understanding of hills, not to mention mountains. I can say that smiling since my residence is now in Florida. Two suggestions please. First off, bike as many causways as possible. Those are usually the biggest "hills" in the area. Bike them not for conditioning but for balance. Learn how to stay up right on your bent while riding at a slower rate. Very important. Secondly, and this is for conditioning, bike into head winds as much as possible. Living in Florida where winds are something to deal with daily, biking into the wind will give you as good of a work out as biking up the side of a mountain. Do both of these suggestions and I feel you will not have a problem and will enjoy a wonderful CNC. To make it even better, PAMPER yourself. www.BubbasPamperedPedalers.com
I rode CNC in 2001 on a Gold Rush Replica, and 2003 on my Bacchetta Aero (while I still lived in Michigan). Having played a large part in laying out the day one route for 2005, I can assure you that this year will NOT have hills anywhere near like previous years. Day one will be the 'hilliest' and it won't be anything that a seasoned 'bent rider can't handle. If fact, those looking to ride truly BIG climbs will have to ride the optional route (Bearwaller Mtn. -Can you say sicko?) to get them. This route will be flat in comparison to previous years, as big, beautiful hills will be all around you, but you'll ride thru the passes and gaps, staying in the valleys between them.
After moving here in the spring of '03, the first thing I did was put a smaller granny gear on my Aero. That was all I really needed to keep from being wore out on the numerous climbs. If you do like Bubba says and ride into the wind on the windiest days, you won't have any problem at all.
Yes, trike riders are numerous on CNC. You'll enjoy it.
Have ridden BRAG for a couple years and last year was in NE Ga. mountains. I have a vision r42 with underseat steering and I did fine on the entire ride including a century ride midweek. I am not a fast rider (avg. 10-14 mph) but steady and had a great time although was down to 4mph on some of the uphills but what the heck I am not a psring chicken either so it was all good!!
You shouldn't have any problem with your Bent...I've ridden every CNC on my TourEasy or Greenspeed trike...no problem...that's why the make gears...and believe me... you'll be comfortable in the eve why you arrive...
The knock on recumbents doing hills is kinda bogus..it's the rider that does the hill...and when you get to the rolling hills in NC and the flats towards the coast...you will be grinnin' from ear to ear...
See you there...I'm the old, bald, fat man on the 15 year old TourEasy (that looks better than new), with the silly grin on his face, and the rag on his head to keep from getting sun burned racing stripes on his nogin'