This Sunday I had my first chance to ride Bike Park Wales, so I thought I'd pass on my thoughts and experience.
There has been a lot of buzz over this development, from rumours of ski lifts, a European Style Bike Park within the UK, to stories of the Old Dragon DH days, one thing was obvious a lot of people were waiting for this new centre to open.
As Darrel and I drove to Cardiff we could look up on the hill and see the tracks start to weave their way down. As I've just made the change to DH having a facility like Bike Park Wales only 1 hour from home was really exciting, it would be somewhere I could go and practice after work. As although based slap bang in the middle of Wales, there aren't many open DH tracks near us.
My impression from the internet hype was that Bike Park Wales was going to be a DH centre, and yes all the tracks do go Downhill and there is an uplift. But that's were the similarities end. I'm gutted I'd never read this article prior to going.
http://www.chopmtb.com/2013/01/14/check-out-the-plans-for-bikepark-wales-its-like-a-whistler-for-trail-riders/
It's basically a trail Centre were the emphasis is on going down, not up.
Not having read this information prior to going, we packed the DH bikes, Full face lids and body armour (mistake 1). I was hoping for trails that would test my nerve, with tricky sections I could practice technique on and really push myself to my limits. So as we loaded the bikes on to the uplift we decided to start on the Red and warm up before hitting the Expert level Blacks. The red we choose was Wibbly Wobbly, a lovely track which in the open had some great rock steps to practice dropping off and, the section in the woods was pretty much straight forward surfaced trail. Fun but not the heart stopping red I had been expecting. We hit the first forestry road crossing decided to push up for another run down one of the blacks.
This is were we hit mistake 2, Bike Park Wales is really not designed for pushing up, it was a killer for me. My shoulder is still not fully healed so pushing on steep slippery ground was hard work at best, with no push up trail it was a case of up the edge of the live tracks.
Once up top I was keen to try the Black trail called Dai Hard, again I set off slowly to scope the track out, with each pedal stroke I looked for where the track was going to start to plummet down only to see it gently glide down the hill, then the hard-core surface stopped and so did most of the riders up ahead, the track was slippy mud and many of the people on XC bikes seemed to lose direction. Now the track wasn't difficult just slippy and on my run I ended up stopping and finding it hard to get going but nothing a second run wouldn't have sorted out, but that was my problem. At no point did I feel the stomach clenching fear, my heart didn't jump into my mouth and my body didn't go ridged with fear. I just slipped my way down, even missing the chicken line around the 'road gap' and rolling this feature instead. This was not my idea of a DH black and this is were I wish I had read the above article. We followed the red 'rim dinger' back down to the uplift stop, and yet again a fun but XC/trail centre trail, I felt very much over biked on the old Super 8.
After a stop for lunch it was back to the uplift, as we were just paying by run, we had to wait 30mins for an available bus, and luckily got one just be for the rain hit, and the shower had pretty much passed for our run down the other black graded 'Enter the Dragon' this had to be my favourite trail of the day, we even pushed back up for a 2nd run, big berms and a nice gradient down, my only concern was a wall drop, definitely not roll able but with no warning, a poor trail rider had met his demise there, this was obvious from the abandoned trail bikes at the feature and the ambulance at the end of the trail. After our second run, I couldn't cope with any more pushing so we took one of the other blacks back down, yet again a nice trail but definitely overkill on a DH bike. Back at the van we changed and loaded up our bikes feeling disappointed.
Here is why.
My only experience of Bike Parks is the likes of Les Gets and Chatel, these are designed for DH bikes, I'd assumed Bike Park Wales was as well. I'd selectively and subconsciously read articles that re-enforced this assumption, quotes like ' in 2018 we'll have a facility that can run a world cup event', and the fact that the Welsh National DH Championships are running there to me gave me the impression that it would be DH orientated, especially as the BDS is running there next year and their other tracks scare me. Bike Park Wales isn't a DH centre, it's a trail centre, designed to give trail riders the DH experience.
It's a great centre and an amazing facility, but it's not the DH centre I had wished for. I will definitely be going back, I'm sure at some point the pure DH tracks will appear, and the trails there are fun but not the heart stopping fear inducing trails I'm starting to love. BPW will be a great venue for fitness training, as 8min DH tracks with uplift are rare in Wales, and for improving my speed I think the place will rock. But for improving my technical ability I will be returning to Hopton, it's free and the roots scare the hell out of me.
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