From Deseret News archives:

Logan to Jackson — Cyclists eager to tackle grueling LOTOJA Classic

Published: Thursday, Sept. 6, 2007 12:06 a.m. MDT
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Kaysha Gurrell, then a first-time LOTOJA cyclist, required more than 18 hours to complete the race with a friend.

"Eighteen hours later (at) 1:30 a.m. I pulled into Teton Village. Cold and wet, but still with a big smile across our faces, we had finished LOTOJA," Gurrell wrote in a recap of the race. "Our crew was there with sparkling soda to congratulate us on something that was not so physically demanding but sheer mental diligence. What can I say? (We) were determined to put a LOTOJA sticker on our cars."

Category 1 racers leave Logan at about 6:30 a.m. and will finish the race roughly 10 hours later. Less experienced racers leave in waves after that and hope to cross the line at various times depending on personal goals, fitness levels and the amount of time spent refueling at any of the feed zones.

Aside from the training, which takes weeks and covers several hundred miles, the first real test comes almost 40 miles into the journey. Shortly after leaving Preston, Idaho, cyclists begin a 21-mile climb that will take participants from 4,700 feet to 7,424 feet at the summit of Idaho's Emigration Canyon.

Story continues below
Twenty miles later, and after loading up with fresh water bottles and as many calories as they can consume at the feed zone, cyclists begin climb No. 2. Though not as long or steep, the 1,000-foot climb to Geneva Summit (6,923 feet) in Montpelier Canyon tells everyone they are almost halfway into their 206-mile march.

A fast descent to the Wyoming state line is only a prelude to the toughest portion of the race.

At 7,630 feet, the Salt River Pass south of Afton is the highest point on the course and the place where the LOTOJA King of the Mountain will be crowned. It is also the 110-mile marker.

From that point, LOTOJA gets "easy."

A third fast descent into Star Valley gives athletes a chance to stretch, rest and lower the heart rate in preparation for the final stretch through the Snake River Canyon.

The final 90 miles is relatively flat with rolling hills but ends with a long, slow incline lulling cyclists into a potentially false sense of security as they approach the finish line.

"No matter how many times you have seen the Teton Mountains before," John Hernandez, a decadelong LOTOJA finisher, says on the race's Web site, "they will never look as majestic as they do when you finally see them coming down the home stretch riding into Teton Village to finish LOTOJA."

And with the race entering its second 25 years, that view will undoubtedly be a reward for thousands of cyclists in years to come.


E-mail: jeborn@desnews.com

Recent comments

Nate Pack is #1

Anonymous | Sept. 7, 2007 at 5:48 p.m.

Good luck to all LOTOJA racers. I'll be there next year.

Oh, and...

Anonymous | Sept. 7, 2007 at 8:50 a.m.

Unfortunately I won't be able to ride LOTOJA this year. I live on the...

Kaysha Gurell | Sept. 7, 2007 at 6:49 a.m.

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