The Race to the Sky: Mount Washington Hill Climb
Itβs been a long, hot summer of fast road racing here in the city. So, last weekend, TBD racers, Dana, Matt and Ben slowed things down by racing to the summit of the countryβs toughest climb, Mount Washington. This is the race to the sky.
The road up Mount Washington is 7.5 miles. A short distance to ride on a bike, by any stretch of the imagination. Most people would comfortably cover that two or three times in an hour. In most park races youβll be eating up that distance almost four times over.
This year, Phil Gaimon set the KOM time up Mount Washington of 50 minutes and 3 seconds. Let that sink in for a second. For the best part of an hour, the fastest person ever to ascend the climb, did so at basically jogging pace.
Itβs not just that Mount Washington is steep (it is) or long, itβs completely unrelenting. You hit the bottom and think βthis cannot possibly be how itβs going to be for the next hourβ. And yet, it is. Itβs a breathtaking, punishing topographic freakβ¦ and the perfect place for a bike race.
Winner, Phil Gaimon, running into difficulty at the finish line. Image by Joe Viger.
We left New York (and sea-level) early to embark on our seven-hour journey north. I donβt think any of us had registered how far north Mount Washington is. In our heads, it was somewhere in the Ver-necticu-chussetts blob of New England a few hourβs drive up. It is not.
After many coffees and sour gummies, we arrived. A quick tune-spin among the beautiful New Hampshire hills and we were ready for the following day.
Thereβs not much to say about the race itself. It goes straight up and it hurts for an hourβ it involves zero strategy. But, in a way, that makes the event more enjoyable. There isnβt really any pressureβ with the caliber of rider in attendance, most of us arenβt competing to win. Everybody seems to be there to have fun and hit their target time. The whole thing might be the closest thing cycling has to a marathon.
Everyone rolls out in waves, starting with the most elite riders. After a rollout of 500 meters or so, you hit the climb and from there itβs 12% average for the next hour. My strategy was simply to hold a certain wattage with as little deviation as possible. I was aiming for βcomfortableβ at the start and βdrooling messβ by the finish.
The first half hour happens beneath the treeline, this was also the portion I struggled with the most. Partly because of the heat but also partly because of the chaotic Over The Chest (β’) number placement that prevents you from unzipping your jersey. Itβs hot and itβs hard going and by 20 minutes in, youβre ready to pack it in, but guess what? You still have like two thirds of the climb to go. Things got considerably easier above the trees. The breeze helped and so did the scenery. I was passing people from the previous wave consistently now.
Around the final corner you hit βThe Wallβ. This alone makes this event worthwhile. The Wall is the car park for the Mount Washington observatory, itβs 100 meters of road at 25%. For the race, itβs covered in chalk and lined with spectators ringing cowbells. Itβs the lift you need to get over the final kick and there isn't really anything else like it in amateur cycling.
I collapsed over the finish line in 65 minutes and was handed a medal and promptly swaddled in a blanket. I rejoined Matt and we waited for Dana together who came in shortly after.
Image by Joe Viger
Image by Joe Viger
This period after finishing is where Mount Washington Hillclimb comes into its own in my opinion. The single, steep, barrierless road up means that riders cannot ride down the mountain. Instead, each rider must organize their own ride down. This requires drivers to go up the mountain before the race. Then, once you finish, you must wait for the final rider to get up before everyone gets back into their cars and drives down together. It doesnβt matter if youβre Phil Gaimon or the guy who finished second-to-last, everyone is hanging out at the finish area. Which makes for a nice vibe in an egalitarian way.
Shout out to the race organizers who did a stellar job of managing what Iβm sure must be a logistical nightmare of road closures/reopenings and made sure everything ran on time.
Once the race was finished and the hubbub had died down, we piled back into the car and began the long drive down the mountain. Legs throbbing, ears popping, brake pads melting.
That night, we ate pizza courtesy of friend, driver, New England legend and owner of Hilltown Hot Pies, Rafi Bildner, and I was left wondering, would I recommend this event to someone? The trip up is long, the climb is, too. But, I can say quite confidently, that it has been one of the highlights of my season. So, hereβs my case: The Mt. Washington Auto Road Hillclimb brings you to the White Mountains, which are beautiful! (And maybe you havenβt been?) It challenges you in a way no race can, it beats you into submission with sheer, unyielding gradient and when you say, That was horrible, never again, it swaddles you in a warm blanket with 400 people on top of a mountain and makes you forget the pain.
Iβll end with this. During the race, I passed a guy who leaned over and confided in me, through deep breaths, βIβve been coming back for ten years. Youβd think Iβd learn.β And honestly, I canβt think of a better endorsement than that.