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Cape Epic stages 2010 are:
Stage 1:
Date: 21 March 2010
Start/Finish: Diemersfontein to Ceres
Distance: 117km
Climbing: 2190m
Stage 1 will see riders leave the charming
Diemersfontein
Wine Estate in the heart of the
Wellington wine
region. Riders will face a rude awakening of their legs with some immediate
steep climbs, leading them to forest single track and more steep climbing on
dirt tracks taking the race up to the tarred road of Bainskloof pass. The smooth
tar descent is well-known for its tight turns and riders need to stay alert
heading down into the windswept farmlands. Next up is a 5km climb on smooth dirt
tracks through Kluytjieskraal. Over the other side, they will find themselves
surrounded by mountains, with no sign of civilization, followed by a short rocky
climb taking them back over the mountain ridge. The descent offers fantastic
vistas over the Tulbagh and Wolsley valley which riders will soon traverse to
reach the final stretch, the gruelling sting in the tail – a 12km long railway
line section over iron sleepers and sharp stones into Ceres.
Stage 2:
Date: 22 March 2010
Start/Finish: Ceres
Distance: 90km
Climbing: 1625m
For 3 nights, the race settles in Ceres – a paradise for mountain bikers! Today
will see a staggered start, and the short but steep and rocky climbs early in
the race will split the field further apart before reaching
Eselfontein, an
area renowned for its abundance of singletrack. The 3 loops on this stage all
have their own characteristics, beginning with a relatively gentle warm up climb
on single track followed by a sweeping descent to the first water point. What
follows is a tough climb, much of it on single track, but the long descend on
flowing single track interspersed with sharp rocks and tight turns is fair
payment for the climbing effort. After water point 2 riders hit some smooth
forest single track followed by some gentle climbing up to the dams, which will
be inviting on a hot summer day. But don’t be fooled, although the final
kilometres look flat, following farm paths, they are not fast.
Stage 3:
Date: 23 March 2010
Start/Finish: Ceres
Distance: 115km
Climbing: 2280m
Riders get to warm up on undulating terrain before facing the major obstacle of
the day and perhaps of the whole race, this high mountain and the radical
descent will determine Stage 3. It appears in two parts of which the first
follows a wagon trail at a 12% gradient, built over a hundred years ago and
becoming continuously more rugged as the climb goes on. A short flat section
follows allowing for some recovery, and giving riders a view of the peak high
above which will soon be referred to as Mount Evilrest. The surface to the
summit is smooth but the gradients reach 25%.
Up on top riders will get rewarded with 360 degree views before plunging into
the long and technical descend over big boulders and washouts deep enough to
swallow both rider and bike! This is truly rugged but fun mountain biking
terrain and slower riders will take a good hour before some temporary relief
awaits them on the flat, gravel roads to the last water point and before the
Gouda Pass descent. Although from here one can see Ceres at the bottom of the
valley – the flat stretch back into town seems to go on forever. This could be
the epic day of all epic days.
Stage 4:
Date: 24 March 2010
Start/Finish: Ceres to Worcester
Distance: 86km
Climbing: 1640m
The first 35km will be relatively flat, easy-going farm roads, but then comes a
long zig-zagging of rustic dual and singletrack up and down the foothills of the
mountains, before finally climbing up into the saddle only to see another
descent and saddle ahead. From there riders are rewarded with views into the
Breede River Valley – their home for the next two nights. But even with home in
their sights, riders still have the rough 2km Boesmanberg climb to scale, before
a fast descent into Worcester.
This is a relatively easy stage, even though it might not feel like it after the
combination punches of stages 1, 2 and 3.

Stage 5 (Time Trial):
Date: 25 March 2010
Start/Finish: Worcester
Distance: 27km
Climbing: 860m
Stage 5 takes the form of a time trial. Teams will set off in 30 second
intervals, in reverse order to their ranking in the GC. The route forms a figure
of 8 through the foothills of Brandwacht, taking the race along the western side
of Worcester through semi-desert vegetation. Eight hundred and sixty meters of
climbing is a great deal on any day out on a mountain bike, but over only 27km
it will be extremely demanding. However, the relatively short time spend in the
saddle today, will give riders a chance to recover and prepare for what is yet
to come.
Profile coming soon
Stage 6:
Date: 26 March 2010
Start/Finish: Worcester to Oak Valley
Distance: 123km
Climbing: 2240m
Riders will leave Worcester in a neutral convoy. Soon they will be hugging the
shores of the Brandvlei Dam before retracing some of the 2009 route in reverse.
But what riders will have remembered as a primarily uphill section, somehow
still feels like an uphill, even if ridden in reverse. The climbs are short but
the gradients reach 26%. In the distance, riders will head towards the radio
mast far away on top of a hill to be reached via a bumpy cow field. A
dead-straight chute takes the field down to the canals, through the orchards,
into some singletrack and then over the wall of the vast Theewaterskloof Dam.
The race then takes a short cut through a hidden valley to Porcupine Hills
before reaching the foot of another monument of the Absa Cape Epic - the
Cape Nature Conservation
area
Groenlandberg. Route designer Leon Evans (aka Dr
Evil) has found a new way for riders to conquer this beautiful beast. Part 1
follows a steep dirt road, but at the end of it the elusive crest still lies on
the horizon. The second part takes riders into virgin Epic mountain biking
territory and deep into nature. The going is tough and slow on rugged, washed
out and in parts sandy, lumpy tracks. The gradient may flatten out but the
effort is intensified. From the saddle the views open onto
Elgin Valley –
renowned for its superb mountain biking trails. Riders face a fast descent and
will be rewarded for a tough day in the saddle with fun smooth flowing
singletrack in Thandi
and Oak Valley,
but it’s not all downhill to the finish of what is probably the hardest day in
this year’s Absa Cape Epic.

Stage 7:
Date: 27 March 2010
Start/Finish: Oak Valley to Oak Valley
Distance: 99km
Climbing: 2160m
The short sharp hills early on in the stage will burn the legs with five minutes
up and 15 seconds down making riders work hard before the long descend past
Houwhoek Inn
into Botriver, followed by some fast gravel roads through the farmland. The main
obstacle of the day is the climb up to the
Lebanon Highlands
Plantation. It kicks off with a very loose and steep section which has
earned itself the name "The Beeatch" - think sand, heat and suffering…But
soon the surface becomes rideable and riders will settle into the steady climb.
Even though it is not long in kilometers, it will take even the front pack more
than half an hour to master. After having reached the top the track contours
along the side of the mountain over to Houteq, looking onto the apple
plantations far below with the majestic
Hottentots Holland mountains as the backdrop, which
riders will head towards on the following day. From Houteq it is singletrack
time, heading into Lebanon for some of the most coveted trails in the Cape. More
short, steep climbs stand in the way of a final stretch of swooping paths taking
riders to their final night on tour.

Stage 8:
Date: 28 March 2010
Start/Finish: Oak Valley to Lourensford
Distance: 65km
Climbing: 1640m
As is tradition, the last stage is always the shortest, but never easy. When
riders see vineyards, they will know it is all about short, sharp climbs before
some longer and even steeper ones though
Nuweberg up to see the superb vistas of
Elgin/Grabouw and back onto
Theewaterskloof Dam. In 2010 the Absa Cape Epic takes a new route into
the
Hottentots Holland Nature Reserve, on Buysepad,
skirting Gamtoe Pass. There’s no portage this year, but Dr Evil has something
else in mind before riders descent towards
Lourensford for
a traditional finish to the 2010 Absa Cape Epic.

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