Building the Pony Pee Pump Track
There was rain. And mud. And pony piss. But I’m proud to say Giant Bicycles’ temporary pump track at the Keystone Stables is ready to rock. A tale of logistics, precipitation and teamwork.
Step 1: Logistics
I spent a lot of time gathering resources, doing design and getting the plan together. Projects like this have very little to do with pump tracks and bike riding; they’re about business and process. But that’s no fun, so let’s move on.
But first, I must thank Zach Lewis for helping with the design, and for proving that any two bumps are jump-able.
Step 2: Place the dirt
Thursday was a crazy, rainy day. I of course rocked a t-shirt, shorts and running shoes. The only thing that kept me warm was constant action: spotting Bobcat driver Ernie, pulling out rocks, digging drainage trenches.
Step 3: Shape the dirt
We had an all-star crew of seven diggers. Everyone got paid, got fed and got to rip a sweet track.
We re-tarped the track and went to Good Times for burgers. |
Step 4: Ride, baby, ride!
Every new track starts off soft and slow. The more you ride it, the harder — and faster — it gets.
Andy works some clockwise action. |
This section has flow! |
Brandon claims this double. |
And the final touch. Super pro. |
The sun shines. Brandon rips. Life is good. |
Several spots were still gooey at the end of the day. Please, please, please be sunny and dry for the next few days.
We left the track tarped and, hopefully, hardening. A bunch of Giant dealers will rip it Monday evening.
Stay tuned.
— Lee
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