Having lived and worked in Pittsburgh in the development community for 8 years I can tell you you can in fact place an asphalt course on slopes greater than 25% witht he proper mix and techniques. Asphalt technology and refined mixes that tailor the aggregate size , binder mix and bitumen content of today's WMA (warm mix asphalt) are far superior from a composition and placement perspective compared to the HMA (hot mix asphalt) that was primarily used prior to 2002ish. I've managed asphalt placement on slopes as steep at 34% without issue.
Dan's a warrior ! I can remember my director sportif yelling encouragment at him out the team car window during the Thrift Drug Classics and West Virginia Mountain Classics.
Civil engineer and previous project manager for a Pittsburgh paving company who paves all the city streets including south side slopes. One of you hardest challenges is rolling the asphalt. The rollers will slide down the hill and won't be able to get back up. At times had to wench them up the hill, or ride around the block. Compaction is your difficulty on these steep streets.
1) thanks for giving Danny the respect he deserves. Those of us old enough remember when he was an absolute terror on the bike. 2) hill 12 Barry / Holt Elenor was cobbles at the top until around y2k. Imagine that.
I grew up a couple of blocks from Dan Chew, we are the same age. Back when we were 15 or so, I would ride my bike about 15-20 miles a day, and would hear about Dan riding 100 miles a couple of times a week. That blew my mind back then. All he did was ride, while everyone else was playing other sports during the summer. So sad when he crashed. I never did the dirty dozen, I left the Burg well before it was a thing, but riding cobblestone hills and streets was always a part of riding any distance in Pittsburgh. Looks like you had pretty good weather.
I rode up Canton Ave in the summer of 2021, I was glad I did it on a gravel bike with 38mm tires - all the extra traction helped a lot. It took me three tries to get up the hill - if you take the wrong line the cobbles really stop your momentum
Mitch, your cycling content is up in the top 5 of the world’s best cycling channels. Why? Because you tell stories. Sure, you produce training content, bike reviews, ect, but your overall arch leans toward story telling. The story of the dirty dozen ride founder was profound. It made the short film for me. If not for that story, it would have been a well produced story about steep climbs. Keep up the excellent work. Your humble, yet funny, authentic way reeks of truth. You are right up there with Tyler Pierce. You both tell beautiful stories. ❤
10 seconds of footage of each hill was a huge letdown. I could have done without all the other nonsense. It would have been great to see these hill climbs in their entirety!
@MitchBoyer It 100% shows my man. As impressed as I was with your efforts on the bike..., the video is really fantastic - well-edited, inclusive of those who deserve recognition, and engaging. How you relate your previous experiences with hills is also excellent. CHAPEAU my brother two-wheeled mad-man, chapeau.
Bravo Danny Chew! I remember racing with you in the RAAM Open East in 1989, I think (round and round the Great Sacandaga Lake). I still cherish that memory!!!!
6 time offical finisher. 1 time unoffical because I was on a single speed and the chain popped 2 times. Single speeds are a secret wepon on this ride if you can hack it.
If you're ever over in the UK, or more specifically, England - please give the Ronde van Calderdale or the Brontë monster a go. Lots of very, very steep and horrible cobbled climbs. Plus, it's in a beautiful location.
I moved away from Pittsburgh in 1978. Danny was a huge influence on me. He logged mega miles and was always looking for the steepest hills. I got to race with him at the ACA Thursday night crits at the zoo and ride club training rides with him. To this day I still announce “NEW ROAD”, even when riding alone. If you know, you know!
Hi, Mitch! Your video brought back a lot of old memories for me. DD was also my first bike race back in 2015. I remember starting near the back then passing a ton of riders on Welsh Way. I realized I could've scored points if I had been less cautious. I remember my disappointment at the end of the race when I finished with more in the tank. It's what got me into racing! I've disappointed myself other times since then. But I've had plenty of proud moments when I gave it my all and exceeded my expectations. Now I'm hooked. Thanks for the great video! I hope you crush it the next time!
this was amazing to watch so offer thanks from England, never seen your channel before nor heard of this race - wow to all and i truly hope that Danny makes his 800k - what a legend
Great video Mitch! Was surprised to see myself in the video cheering you on at the top of Christopher. If you are looking for another Pittsburgh ball buster there is the Dirty Onion the Saturday after Thanksgiving which replaced the Dirty Dozen's original post Thanksgiving spot. More casual but relentless hills 53 miles and 10,500 ft elevation gain. Just non stop pain and fun. Great job on finishing the Dirty Dozen. Suffolk and Kendall are the two hills that give me the most issues. Curious to find out your opinion.
Dude, this video makes me so happy. My handlebars make a split second appearance and I squealed. Respect for coming out to the burgh. Next year you have to try the Dirty Onion! 🌰;)
I was so looking forward to this video and did not disappoint! I attempted the DD in 2022and was unsuccessful. I would love try it again and having this amazing video to watch is very much appreciated. You did so well in the event and told such a great story. You have an amazing gift and talent at video storytelling. Thank you for sharing it!
I love your way of making content, when I started watching the video I thought it was just another generic cycling video, but man, I got nailed to the seat! Keep it up and stay making great videos for us!
I interviewed Danny at the finish line in Savannah the first time he won RAAM. If I remember correctly I believe he told me he used 39-23 as lowest gear. That was back when 23mm were considered wide tires - lots of people rode 20mm clinchers or 22mm Continental tubulars on 32- or 36-hole Mavic rims. The one thing I do remember is that I asked him what he thought about during the ride. Without hesitation he said he just concentrated on getting to the next state line.
That is NOT Cobberstone, but Belgium Block. Pittsburgh has even steeper streets than Canton, but since they ONLY have steps they do not as the steepest street. Please note Boustead, another street in the Dirty Dozen, is steeper in its middle section but since it has two sections that are flat so overall Bostead is less steep then Canton.
well done friend!! - I spent 9th grade in pittsburgh, and now reside on bernal hill, blocks from bradford - my street rutledge is about 18%, so sucks to leave and come home, but so it goes...this video commends the hill climbers for all of us!!
Awesome video. Canton was tough with the light rain; I can't believe you recovered from the left side. Lobster girl on Elenore was the highlight of the ride imo.
Great to see pedal masochists doing their thing. Excellent work on crash avoidance and overall great result. Thanks for the hard work putting this together too - great production. We have some very steep mtb trails around here - time to stop watching others bust themselves on YT and do it to myself. Cheers from Sydney - Dave
Love your content. Hill climbing is a favorite pastime of mine, and my friends and family don’t get the appeal of riding UP a hill rather than down. It’s been great to discover that there’s a community of other hill-climbing nuts out there.
AFA racecraft my $0.02 basically when you are climbing on any steepness particularly when it is narrow or wet road you always want to be out front. if you start to lose momentum you are blocking the riders behind you instead of being blocked yourself when the cyclist in front of you loses momentum or crashes. it is of course super satisfying being able to come out of the wheel and pass someone who loses momentum on a really steep bit and starts grinding but if they wobble it becomes really difficult to pass them out plus you have to up your wattage to pass. But dont beat yourself up either it's the first time for you doing the event and you didnt do serious recon Great vid. Putting this event on my bucket list
wow watching this makes my day as I live in North Yorkshire (UK) and my training rides comprise with around 20 steep climbs of 20% to around 40%.. time for a dirty dozen in my local area - but saying that its my daily ride. keep up the good riding...
Another Pittsburgher here. I'm a big promotor of lower gearing for riding around here. The 1x drivetrain movement threw us a curveball. I'm now running a 10-52 12 speed mountain cassette on my drop bar bikes. Finally, a wide and low enough gearing for hills.
Great video! I live in Bath in England and hills in Pittsburg remind me of Bath and punchy hills here. Even the asphalt is as rubbish though there are no cobbles!
GC! I love you content. I have done it 7 times...you will get eaten alive coming from the flatlands of Flordia. General training is doing hill repeats on +20% hills.
@@WheelcraftBicyclesI don’t doubt this one bit lol. I been to Morgan hill for specialized headquarters and rode in the valley over there. Legs exploded at the slightest bit of incline Hahhaha. Way different riding, but would love to try it 😂
This was my first "Mitch Boyer" episode...Like many of your fans say....You tell a great story! My heart rate went up just watching yours approach 200! But I'm a Mt Bike dude. Started racing XC in late 80's on a Rigid bike! Then suspension started showing up. Took a 20 year brake to Fly RC planes and just two years ago got back into Mt Bikes and got my first eBike! Anyway, really enjoy your channel and they way you build a story! I actually own a road bike that I use to use for training. Not anywhere close to what's available today although it is made of Carbon Fiber. It's an old Specialized Allez....made from Carbon Tubes and held together with Glue and Aluminum Lugs.....Cheers!
That’s a good video idea though! ‘How I took out an entire group ride with my camera jousting pole’ 😂😂😂 looking forward to watching the whole vid later this evening 💙
Great video with some awesome back stories. You are a better person than I am. I'm 68 and have only been riding for about 3 years on a regular basis. This of course after riding when I was a kid but you know how unserious that can be. LOL I do challenge myself on the hills around where I live but nothing like what you do. Great job and thanks for sharing.
Danny is a solid dude, I feel lucky to have met him. Yeah I couldn’t find a good angle to do Ferndale justice. It’s especially deceiving since there are no buildings or anything vertical next to it to give visual context. Definitely one to experience in person
I have no idea how UA-cam led me to your video but I loved it all! The challenge, the comradery, the fans, I wish a race like this would happen in my neighborhood. My family would cheer you all on!
That was amazing, you did really well, well done! I live in a town called Huddersfield in England. We are situated right next to the Pennine Hills. There are many 'really' steep hills around here; some tarmac, some cobbles. One in particular stands out though and that is Lockwood Scar. I can't find anything about how steep it is, but the local council have refused to put speed cameras or road humps there as the angle of the road is too severe. Maybe you could check it out.
As always, a joy to watch your videos. The others have already said it. You master all the things it takes to tell great stories… and hell, you’re even a beast on a bike. Hat’s of to you, sir 😊👍 On another note: Is Europe on the horizon?
OMG! In the mid-to-late1980s everyone who trained or raced in Pittsburgh knew Danny Chew. He & a few others dominated the Group A Criteriums lapping around the Pittsburgh Zoo Parking Lot. His year round riding mileage is the stuff of legends! Moved away from Pittsburgh in 1994. Sad to learn of his accident here.
Hi Mitch, there is this climb in Italy known as the “hardest climb in the world” it averages 18% for over 7 km and allegedly has a max gradient of 42%. If you are up for a challenge I would love to see you attempt it. The strava name is Scanuppia (full climb)
The easiest 27 minute video I’ve watched on UA-cam. Entertaining, informative, sprinkled with equal amounts of drama, sports science, self-deprecating humor, respectful homages to “celebrated” cyclists and event founders, and fun facts that coalesce into a witty, worthwhile autobiographical documentary of sorts. Thoroughly enjoyable! I’d watch it again (though not on a loop like with shorts). Nice work!
Amazing effort Mr. Boyer! Check out GCN - they did a segment on tire size and climbing. It looked like using a smaller front tire (normal rear) may help. It might be worth checking out and doing a little experimentation!
To the TOP presentation! Covers much more than just cycling. Humility, humbling, psych, history, science, physiology. Nothing boring here or fluffed up bikey show and tell. Keep up the great content and work!
Loved the video and love this challenge. Canton chewed me up and spit me out the last two years. I need better technical skills, but obviously I’m not alone! Impressive how you avoided that crash and still made it up!
Great job. Grew up south of Pittsburgh. Hills everywhere. Pittsburgh is one of the few if not alone in the fact that as you approach the city through the tunnels, you cannot see the skyline. When you bust thru the Fort Pitt tunnel, bam, there is the city. The Steelers usually bring all the rookies in that way because it is a very unique ride in as you cannot see the city at all due to Mount Washington. Secondly, Chew is really a legend and does not get enough props. If you really want an eye opener as to how possessed this guy was/is, check his website and look at his ride logs. 28k miles in a year? He was over 20k miles a year for a bunch of years. Do the math. At over 700k at the time of his accident, that is a lot of miles. That is more than 20k a year for 30 years. He was a machine pure and simple. I was heartbroken when I heard he crashed and became paralyzed.
Imagine driving a manual car and you only have your driving license for a few weeks. And you have to stop in the middle of the steep road- would be my biggest nightmare lmao
i'm not massively in to bikes, but that was VERY entertaining vid. i laughed when the final scene unfolded............ because we already knew you'd fallen off as soon as you turned across the concrete.........
I didn't know there is a hill race here in Pittsburgh. I drive past Canton ave all the time on the way to my buddy's house. One thing this video really showcased is the shit conditions of our roads lol. Cool vid though, I really enjoyed your editing.
Mitch, I THOROUGHLY enjoyed your climbs! Fantastic editing and voice. What I PARTICULARLY like is that you didn't over dramatize the experience. We as riders understand the pain and the somewhat perverse need to put ourselves into IMMEASURABLE PAIN! I'm gonna use my chest strap in the front (currently I wear it backwards) to get that floating look from my GoPro.
This Pittsburgh native reminds you that our streets may not be the world's steepest, but they are among the worst paved on the planet. Yinzers take pride in potholes and cobblestones and trolley tracks ....
Thanks for this video. I'm a Yinzer living in London. I've never done the full Dozen but have ridden most of the hills, and this was a nice nostalgic trip home.
It was authentic to see just cyclist at it with passion and effort. I always follow the classics and world tour elite racers. My ex wife is from Pittsburgh that brought me memories...Thank you Mitch!!
Thank you... having lived, raced and coached in Pittsburgh for several years it's truly an amazing cycling community. It is however truly disappointing that that there isn't a bigger pro race in and around Pittsburgh with all the amazing/challenging terrain along with a beautiful city.
The Danny Chew story reminded me of former F1 pilot Alex Zanardi. He lost 2 legs in a racing accident, of the more horrible variety. Then started training in a handbike to keep fit. Found he enjoyed it. Qualified for the 2012 paralympics and won the gold, twice too add a second gold in Rio. And competed in touring cars were he competed using hand gas and brakes till a traffic accident between a handbike and a truck, during a charity event, ended both his carreers, leaving him locked in. Some people are chaced by bad luck it seems.
Dude, I absolutely love your videos. You are one of the main reasons I got into cycling back in 2021 and you inspire me to get better everyday. I hope your channel completely explodes one day and you can use your videos as your main source of income to support you and your family. Never let the haters drag you down, keep spinning those cranks, and keep having fun doing it!!! Much love from NY
Pittsburgher here. Our many cobblestone streets are paved as such because it gave horses purchase as they climbed hills. Great video, you guys are nuts
Maintaining grip on wet cobbles at 800 watts is an achievement in itself! 🚀🚀 Thanks for the video, enjoyed your commentary, the riding and the scenery. Cheers!
I’m a former military GPS naval engineer. Altitude is GPS least accurate axis. Probably 50% of any other axis. So grade will be your least accurate axis on a bike ride. I used to live in mammoth lakes California. Riding is Mammoth is like Pittsburgh, everything is up hill
You should do a video on the Manyunk Hill Climb in Philly the day before the big race. It may not be the steepest hill in the world, but a lot of local amateurs put a lot of training into winning that event. You'd be able to capture some really nice local cycling culture.
It's interesting to look at some of the legendary European climbs used by La Vuelta and the TDF. As an amateur following La Vuelta, I've ridden Col d'Aubisque and Col d'Tourmalet and wanted to ride Altu de l'Angliru, all classified as 'beyond category' and are considered some of the 'hardest' climbs in the pro circuits. But the hard factor includes length and none of these are steeper than 10% average. I hear that l'Angliru may have some 25% sections. Well done man - some of the surfaces in the DD looked rather damp and slippery! I may have to pay a visit to Pittsburgh!
Sounds like you’ve done some pretty incredible rides! I’ve haven’t ridden in Europe (yet!), but I ride in Malibu pretty often and the climbs there are similarly long with the max average grade around 10%. Pittsburgh is just a different kind of riding. Very steep, but also very short. The longest climb of the day for me was about 6 minutes. You definitely feel it in the legs in three moments, but there is lots of time for recovery between hills. It’s definitely worth the trip of your like that kind of riding!
@@MitchBoyer (Shameless pitch here) Sign yourself up for a tour to follow La Vuelta with CyclingCountry out of southern Spain. Geoff and Maggie and team are awesome people and are official vendors to the race. You'll get VIP treatment, inside and finish line access to the race, get to see the pros first hand as they sign in for the days stage, or see them across the room at breakfast because you stay in the same hotels as the teams. You'll have a blast riding some awesome Spanish and possibly French or Andorran roads, all fully supported. You'll get to ride parts of the same stages that the pros ride including threading your way to the finish line with rowdy fans lining the roadsides and cheering you on as they wait for the race to show up behind you. It's awesome! I've done two Vuelta trips and one of their cultural/cycling trips. Top quality road bikes are available so you don't need to ship one.
Love the Ferndale shoutout. As a yinzer, I kinda appreciate it that most yinzers don't even know about Ferndale. Kind of a fun social conversation item. ~ No need to fight for it. It's our little secret. (and the hardest hill I've ever climbed, including all the DD hills.)
Having lived and worked in Pittsburgh in the development community for 8 years I can tell you you can in fact place an asphalt course on slopes greater than 25% witht he proper mix and techniques. Asphalt technology and refined mixes that tailor the aggregate size , binder mix and bitumen content of today's WMA (warm mix asphalt) are far superior from a composition and placement perspective compared to the HMA (hot mix asphalt) that was primarily used prior to 2002ish. I've managed asphalt placement on slopes as steep at 34% without issue.
This is fascinating. Thank you for taking time to explain a little bit 🙌
i used to walk up bigger hills in the snow to get to school when i was a kid!
Danny Chew is legend! Glad he is still out ripping despite his catastrophic crash
Dan's a warrior ! I can remember my director sportif yelling encouragment at him out the team car window during the Thrift Drug Classics and West Virginia Mountain Classics.
I didn't know about him and am so happy to hear he at least can do a million kms! Legend!
9@@jayblankenbiller5385
Civil engineer and previous project manager for a Pittsburgh paving company who paves all the city streets including south side slopes. One of you hardest challenges is rolling the asphalt. The rollers will slide down the hill and won't be able to get back up. At times had to wench them up the hill, or ride around the block. Compaction is your difficulty on these steep streets.
Thank you for the explanation! That makes sense rolling the asphalt is one of the hardest challenges. I barely have enough grip with my bike tires 😅
Have you considered winching them up, like the system that land rovers use to get them out of trouble on very rough and steep terrain?
I also noticed that street had a lot of over-hanging trees (and hence shade) - does that help prevent creep from summer conditions?
@@Tailspin80 "At times had to wench them up the hill"
"Have you considered winching them up"
Umm.
@@Tailspin80 He has said that they had to do that sometimes
1) thanks for giving Danny the respect he deserves. Those of us old enough remember when he was an absolute terror on the bike.
2) hill 12 Barry / Holt Elenor was cobbles at the top until around y2k. Imagine that.
Spoken like an 11 time DD winner and absolute legend.
Agree. Danny is a legend.
Danny is incredible. And you're a legend too! Cobbles on Elenor sounds absolutely miserable in the best possible way
@@MitchBoyer What kind of handlebars are you using?
@@travispyle2905😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
I grew up a couple of blocks from Dan Chew, we are the same age. Back when we were 15 or so, I would ride my bike about 15-20 miles a day, and would hear about Dan riding 100 miles a couple of times a week. That blew my mind back then. All he did was ride, while everyone else was playing other sports during the summer. So sad when he crashed. I never did the dirty dozen, I left the Burg well before it was a thing, but riding cobblestone hills and streets was always a part of riding any distance in Pittsburgh.
Looks like you had pretty good weather.
He's a legend. I can't believe the event used to be in November. I've seen pictures of ice and snow on the ride. Incredible
@@MitchBoyerGreat Vid ', I met Dan in 1981 in Milwaukee "Super Week" race, man he was a character back then, and still is.
I rode up Canton Ave in the summer of 2021, I was glad I did it on a gravel bike with 38mm tires - all the extra traction helped a lot. It took me three tries to get up the hill - if you take the wrong line the cobbles really stop your momentum
Mitch, your cycling content is up in the top 5 of the world’s best cycling channels. Why? Because you tell stories. Sure, you produce training content, bike reviews, ect, but your overall arch leans toward story telling. The story of the dirty dozen ride founder was profound. It made the short film for me. If not for that story, it would have been a well produced story about steep climbs. Keep up the excellent work. Your humble, yet funny, authentic way reeks of truth. You are right up there with Tyler Pierce. You both tell beautiful stories. ❤
Thank you, I really appreciate your comment. These videos are very time-intensive, and it’s nice to hear it’s been worth the extra effort!
10 seconds of footage of each hill was a huge letdown. I could have done without all the other nonsense. It would have been great to see these hill climbs in their entirety!
Absolutely, keep up the good work 🙌
Yep, when he said, "There's no coffee," I knew I had to watch the whole video (thanks!)
@MitchBoyer It 100% shows my man. As impressed as I was with your efforts on the bike..., the video is really fantastic - well-edited, inclusive of those who deserve recognition, and engaging. How you relate your previous experiences with hills is also excellent. CHAPEAU my brother two-wheeled mad-man, chapeau.
As a Pittsburgh native super cool to see you climb our streets!
Bravo! The hills aren't the only thing scary in Pittsburgh. Those streetcar tracks ...
Especially in the rain!
Bravo Danny Chew! I remember racing with you in the RAAM Open East in 1989, I think (round and round the Great Sacandaga Lake). I still cherish that memory!!!!
6 time offical finisher. 1 time unoffical because I was on a single speed and the chain popped 2 times. Single speeds are a secret wepon on this ride if you can hack it.
20t chainring? 🤣
@@beefkd I was training on 34x22 and chickened out at the last minute and changed it to 34x25. Spun a cadence of like 120 between hills.
If you're ever over in the UK, or more specifically, England - please give the Ronde van Calderdale or the Brontë monster a go. Lots of very, very steep and horrible cobbled climbs. Plus, it's in a beautiful location.
I moved away from Pittsburgh in 1978. Danny was a huge influence on me. He logged mega miles and was always looking for the steepest hills. I got to race with him at the ACA Thursday night crits at the zoo and ride club training rides with him. To this day I still announce “NEW ROAD”, even when riding alone. If you know, you know!
Dude, you look like Sebastian Vettel
Is that a compliment? 😂.
Hi, Mitch! Your video brought back a lot of old memories for me. DD was also my first bike race back in 2015. I remember starting near the back then passing a ton of riders on Welsh Way. I realized I could've scored points if I had been less cautious. I remember my disappointment at the end of the race when I finished with more in the tank. It's what got me into racing! I've disappointed myself other times since then. But I've had plenty of proud moments when I gave it my all and exceeded my expectations. Now I'm hooked. Thanks for the great video! I hope you crush it the next time!
Thanks Keith! It was chatting after the race. I’m afraid I’m in the same boat-hooked!
this was amazing to watch so offer thanks from England, never seen your channel before nor heard of this race - wow to all and i truly hope that Danny makes his 800k - what a legend
This is awesome Mitch! The best dirty dozen coverage by far!
Great video Mitch! Was surprised to see myself in the video cheering you on at the top of Christopher. If you are looking for another Pittsburgh ball buster there is the Dirty Onion the Saturday after Thanksgiving which replaced the Dirty Dozen's original post Thanksgiving spot. More casual but relentless hills 53 miles and 10,500 ft elevation gain. Just non stop pain and fun. Great job on finishing the Dirty Dozen. Suffolk and Kendall are the two hills that give me the most issues. Curious to find out your opinion.
Dude, this video makes me so happy. My handlebars make a split second appearance and I squealed. Respect for coming out to the burgh. Next year you have to try the Dirty Onion! 🌰;)
I was so looking forward to this video and did not disappoint! I attempted the DD in 2022and was unsuccessful. I would love try it again and having this amazing video to watch is very much appreciated. You did so well in the event and told such a great story. You have an amazing gift and talent at video storytelling. Thank you for sharing it!
Thank you! Let me know if you try it again--you got this!
I love your way of making content, when I started watching the video I thought it was just another generic cycling video, but man, I got nailed to the seat! Keep it up and stay making great videos for us!
Thank you 🙏
Just downloaded to watch on my flight to... of all places... Pittsburgh. Thanks for covering our great city!
Haha perfect!
I interviewed Danny at the finish line in Savannah the first time he won RAAM. If I remember correctly I believe he told me he used 39-23 as lowest gear. That was back when 23mm were considered wide tires - lots of people rode 20mm clinchers or 22mm Continental tubulars on 32- or 36-hole Mavic rims. The one thing I do remember is that I asked him what he thought about during the ride. Without hesitation he said he just concentrated on getting to the next state line.
That is NOT Cobberstone, but Belgium Block. Pittsburgh has even steeper streets than Canton, but since they ONLY have steps they do not as the steepest street.
Please note Boustead, another street in the Dirty Dozen, is steeper in its middle section but since it has two sections that are flat so overall Bostead is less steep then Canton.
I don't EVER want to do this race. But riding along with you was highly entertaining! Great video!
I sometimes miss living in Pittsburgh for the cycling, but then I see these hills on camera again and I don’t miss it as much
Such a fun video, definitely worth waiting for! Thanks Mitch!
Glad you enjoyed it!
well done friend!! - I spent 9th grade in pittsburgh, and now reside on bernal hill, blocks from bradford - my street rutledge is about 18%, so sucks to leave and come home, but so it goes...this video commends the hill climbers for all of us!!
Awesome video. Canton was tough with the light rain; I can't believe you recovered from the left side. Lobster girl on Elenore was the highlight of the ride imo.
haha totally!
Danny part brought a lump to my throat being an avid cyclist myself if my legs didnt work it would be devastating
As cyclists and Pittsburgh Steelers fan. This gives me more motivation to go Pittsburgh to watch favorite team play and to test out the hills 🖤💛
Great to see pedal masochists doing their thing. Excellent work on crash avoidance and overall great result. Thanks for the hard work putting this together too - great production.
We have some very steep mtb trails around here - time to stop watching others bust themselves on YT and do it to myself. Cheers from Sydney - Dave
Love your content. Hill climbing is a favorite pastime of mine, and my friends and family don’t get the appeal of riding UP a hill rather than down. It’s been great to discover that there’s a community of other hill-climbing nuts out there.
The great thing is that if you love the UP, you "get" to do the down, and who doesn't love that? (not that all downs are a great time)
A shout to Chris Helbling! So happy to unexpectedly see you in this video.
i like that this video is a lot more than just riding a race/ride. it's also about the people around it.
AFA racecraft my $0.02 basically when you are climbing on any steepness particularly when it is narrow or wet road you always want to be out front. if you start to lose momentum you are blocking the riders behind you instead of being blocked yourself when the cyclist in front of you loses momentum or crashes. it is of course super satisfying being able to come out of the wheel and pass someone who loses momentum on a really steep bit and starts grinding but if they wobble it becomes really difficult to pass them out plus you have to up your wattage to pass. But dont beat yourself up either it's the first time for you doing the event and you didnt do serious recon
Great vid. Putting this event on my bucket list
wow watching this makes my day as I live in North Yorkshire (UK) and my training rides comprise with around 20 steep climbs of 20% to around 40%.. time for a dirty dozen in my local area - but saying that its my daily ride. keep up the good riding...
Another Pittsburgher here. I'm a big promotor of lower gearing for riding around here. The 1x drivetrain movement threw us a curveball. I'm now running a 10-52 12 speed mountain cassette on my drop bar bikes. Finally, a wide and low enough gearing for hills.
Great video! I live in Bath in England and hills in Pittsburg remind me of Bath and punchy hills here. Even the asphalt is as rubbish though there are no cobbles!
Went there on vacation in febuari was great!!
This gave me goosebumps, I spotted some familiar faces and it brings back awesome memories! Great video!
Every mountain biker laughing at these attempts
love this content!!! those roads look insane and you do such a great job of narrating the whole story, makes me want to go travel with my bike lol
Thank's dude! hit me up if you decide to take your bike to LA sometime 🙌
GC! I love you content. I have done it 7 times...you will get eaten alive coming from the flatlands of Flordia. General training is doing hill repeats on +20% hills.
@@WheelcraftBicyclesI don’t doubt this one bit lol. I been to Morgan hill for specialized headquarters and rode in the valley over there. Legs exploded at the slightest bit of incline Hahhaha. Way different riding, but would love to try it 😂
This was my first "Mitch Boyer" episode...Like many of your fans say....You tell a great story! My heart rate went up just watching yours approach 200! But I'm a Mt Bike dude. Started racing XC in late 80's on a Rigid bike! Then suspension started showing up. Took a 20 year brake to Fly RC planes and just two years ago got back into Mt Bikes and got my first eBike! Anyway, really enjoy your channel and they way you build a story! I actually own a road bike that I use to use for training. Not anywhere close to what's available today although it is made of Carbon Fiber. It's an old Specialized Allez....made from Carbon Tubes and held together with Glue and Aluminum Lugs.....Cheers!
I defo would have busted out my mountain bike gears for this! Massive congrats to you and HUGE respect for Danny!
I would have put an gravel 48t-31 crank in there with an 11-42t 11 speed cassette.
That "I went left" moment was legit one of the funniest edits I've seen in a cycling vid. *chef's kiss
👨🍳
That’s a good video idea though! ‘How I took out an entire group ride with my camera jousting pole’ 😂😂😂 looking forward to watching the whole vid later this evening 💙
Haha maybe next time I’m in Australia we can both give it a go 😂😂 thanks Cam!
As always…. Incredible content! Fun to watch and “can’t put this down until I finish the video” type stuff. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks Zane!
Awesome vid Mitch! As someone from Buffalo, Pittsburg is now firmly on my cycling bucket list!
It’s a pretty cool place, especially if you like short steep climbs. Lives up to the hype!
Great video with some awesome back stories. You are a better person than I am. I'm 68 and have only been riding for about 3 years on a regular basis. This of course after riding when I was a kid but you know how unserious that can be. LOL
I do challenge myself on the hills around where I live but nothing like what you do. Great job and thanks for sharing.
Good vid. Especially the bit about Chew. That was sad. It's wild how the camera flattens out the road.
Danny is a solid dude, I feel lucky to have met him. Yeah I couldn’t find a good angle to do Ferndale justice. It’s especially deceiving since there are no buildings or anything vertical next to it to give visual context. Definitely one to experience in person
I have no idea how UA-cam led me to your video but I loved it all! The challenge, the comradery, the fans, I wish a race like this would happen in my neighborhood. My family would cheer you all on!
That was amazing, you did really well, well done! I live in a town called Huddersfield in England. We are situated right next to the Pennine Hills. There are many 'really' steep hills around here; some tarmac, some cobbles. One in particular stands out though and that is Lockwood Scar. I can't find anything about how steep it is, but the local council have refused to put speed cameras or road humps there as the angle of the road is too severe. Maybe you could check it out.
Greetings from Germany - your video made me smile! Great content and amazing performance, Mitch!
As always, a joy to watch your videos. The others have already said it. You master all the things it takes to tell great stories… and hell, you’re even a beast on a bike. Hat’s of to you, sir 😊👍 On another note: Is Europe on the horizon?
Thank you! and we'll see what 2024 brings... 😉
Great vid! I lived in PGH for 3 years and every street corner had a steep hill, it is simply a cyclists paradise when it comes to hill training!
Steep streets as far as the eye can see!
OMG! In the mid-to-late1980s everyone who trained or raced in Pittsburgh knew Danny Chew. He & a few others dominated the Group A Criteriums lapping around the Pittsburgh Zoo Parking Lot. His year round riding mileage is the stuff of legends! Moved away from Pittsburgh in 1994.
Sad to learn of his accident here.
Hi Mitch, there is this climb in Italy known as the “hardest climb in the world” it averages 18% for over 7 km and allegedly has a max gradient of 42%. If you are up for a challenge I would love to see you attempt it. The strava name is Scanuppia (full climb)
The easiest 27 minute video I’ve watched on UA-cam. Entertaining, informative, sprinkled with equal amounts of drama, sports science, self-deprecating humor, respectful homages to “celebrated” cyclists and event founders, and fun facts that coalesce into a witty, worthwhile autobiographical documentary of sorts. Thoroughly enjoyable! I’d watch it again (though not on a loop like with shorts). Nice work!
Thanks so much, this made my day!
Great ride sir! I love how you displayed the ride data, it make us apreciate your effort every climb. 👏
Good job on the hills dude.
Danny is an inspiration.
And the people giving out beer - brilliant.
Amazing effort Mr. Boyer! Check out GCN - they did a segment on tire size and climbing. It looked like using a smaller front tire (normal rear) may help. It might be worth checking out and doing a little experimentation!
Thanks! I saw that video with Conor, the bike looks interesting for sure. Might be worth looking into if I find something even steeper!
To the TOP presentation! Covers much more than just cycling. Humility, humbling, psych, history, science, physiology. Nothing boring here or fluffed up bikey show and tell.
Keep up the great content and work!
The uphill sections in this video are even steeper than those in Taiwan. Thanks for sharing, I can even feel your effort through this footage.
Your story telling and edition is awesome, hooked my 4yo into this video as well. Good job
Thanks for showing the world our weird race. Footage, editing, and story telling were on point!
Thanks Nick, it was great riding with you before and during the event!
Danny is an absolute Legend man. Thanks a lot for featuring him and his story. ❤
Loved the video and love this challenge. Canton chewed me up and spit me out the last two years. I need better technical skills, but obviously I’m not alone! Impressive how you avoided that crash and still made it up!
Great job. Grew up south of Pittsburgh. Hills everywhere. Pittsburgh is one of the few if not alone in the fact that as you approach the city through the tunnels, you cannot see the skyline. When you bust thru the Fort Pitt tunnel, bam, there is the city. The Steelers usually bring all the rookies in that way because it is a very unique ride in as you cannot see the city at all due to Mount Washington. Secondly, Chew is really a legend and does not get enough props. If you really want an eye opener as to how possessed this guy was/is, check his website and look at his ride logs. 28k miles in a year? He was over 20k miles a year for a bunch of years. Do the math. At over 700k at the time of his accident, that is a lot of miles. That is more than 20k a year for 30 years. He was a machine pure and simple. I was heartbroken when I heard he crashed and became paralyzed.
Imagine driving a manual car and you only have your driving license for a few weeks. And you have to stop in the middle of the steep road- would be my biggest nightmare lmao
Been there. 1972, Flowers Ave, after dark, in a full-size Ford station wagon w/three-on-the-tree, no less. Second gear. Did not end well.
i'm not massively in to bikes, but that was VERY entertaining vid. i laughed when the final scene unfolded............ because we already knew you'd fallen off as soon as you turned across the concrete.........
I didn't know there is a hill race here in Pittsburgh. I drive past Canton ave all the time on the way to my buddy's house. One thing this video really showcased is the shit conditions of our roads lol. Cool vid though, I really enjoyed your editing.
Mitch, I THOROUGHLY enjoyed your climbs! Fantastic editing and voice. What I PARTICULARLY like is that you didn't over dramatize the experience. We as riders understand the pain and the somewhat perverse need to put ourselves into IMMEASURABLE PAIN!
I'm gonna use my chest strap in the front (currently I wear it backwards) to get that floating look from my GoPro.
This Pittsburgh native reminds you that our streets may not be the world's steepest, but they are among the worst paved on the planet. Yinzers take pride in potholes and cobblestones and trolley tracks ....
6:19 is funny lol, he knew was he was about to say but didn’t truly understand until it was actually said. Haha
Thanks for this video. I'm a Yinzer living in London. I've never done the full Dozen but have ridden most of the hills, and this was a nice nostalgic trip home.
Also nice seeing old teammate Chris in the vid.
Chris is a great dude! He spent a full day showing me around Pittsburgh and previewing the hills
I've done it 5 times. All but once on a single speed. Great job!!
I just found your channel, but these videos are really top tier, man. Thanks for making these. Really enjoying them.
It was authentic to see just cyclist at it with passion and effort. I always follow the classics and world tour elite racers. My ex wife is from Pittsburgh that brought me memories...Thank you Mitch!!
Glad this came up in my suggested videos, great video. Beautiful shots and editing
Thanks!
Thank you... having lived, raced and coached in Pittsburgh for several years it's truly an amazing cycling community. It is however truly disappointing that that there isn't a bigger pro race in and around Pittsburgh with all the amazing/challenging terrain along with a beautiful city.
So proud of you dude, way to kill it and congrats on your first race!
I live in Pittsburgh and ride the frick park area and trails. YOU GUYS ARE CRAZY AND GET MY UTMOST RESPECT
The Danny Chew story reminded me of former F1 pilot Alex Zanardi. He lost 2 legs in a racing accident, of the more horrible variety. Then started training in a handbike to keep fit. Found he enjoyed it. Qualified for the 2012 paralympics and won the gold, twice too add a second gold in Rio. And competed in touring cars were he competed using hand gas and brakes till a traffic accident between a handbike and a truck, during a charity event, ended both his carreers, leaving him locked in. Some people are chaced by bad luck it seems.
Dude, I absolutely love your videos. You are one of the main reasons I got into cycling back in 2021 and you inspire me to get better everyday. I hope your channel completely explodes one day and you can use your videos as your main source of income to support you and your family. Never let the haters drag you down, keep spinning those cranks, and keep having fun doing it!!! Much love from NY
Thanks dude!
Mitch, you totally have to come ride up the auto road on Mount Washington in New Hampshire. You would absolutely love it
That's where old Ultegra 3x10 shines. Instead of hard 60rpm , 80-90rpm is in range. Nice Job :)
You and DC Rainmaker are the 👑 of camera content
There's a ton of roads in the UK, The Dale's, Yorkshire Moors, The Lakes, The Peak District that all have roads over 33% and all tarmac
not gonna lie. this channel is my favorite youtube channel for now ❤🚴🏼🚴🏼🚴🏼 AWESOME stuff !!🫡
Wow, excellent recap, and story. Thanks for the great work, on, and off the bike. Cheers.
Thanks Gary!
Love the Dirty Dozen, glad you got to come out East and check it out! This is also some of the best footage of the the DD to date, thanks for sharing!
Pittsburgher here. Our many cobblestone streets are paved as such because it gave horses purchase as they climbed hills. Great video, you guys are nuts
thanks for the tear-jerker section in the middle! you're a beast.. i couldnt even do the easiest hill with multiple rests!!!
Maintaining grip on wet cobbles at 800 watts is an achievement in itself! 🚀🚀 Thanks for the video, enjoyed your commentary, the riding and the scenery. Cheers!
Former Cat IV rider here - I am scared of hills. I give you guys credit. This is amazing.
I’m a former military GPS naval engineer. Altitude is GPS least accurate axis. Probably 50% of any other axis. So grade will be your least accurate axis on a bike ride.
I used to live in mammoth lakes California. Riding is Mammoth is like Pittsburgh, everything is up hill
You should do a video on the Manyunk Hill Climb in Philly the day before the big race. It may not be the steepest hill in the world, but a lot of local amateurs put a lot of training into winning that event. You'd be able to capture some really nice local cycling culture.
It's interesting to look at some of the legendary European climbs used by La Vuelta and the TDF. As an amateur following La Vuelta, I've ridden Col d'Aubisque and Col d'Tourmalet and wanted to ride Altu de l'Angliru, all classified as 'beyond category' and are considered some of the 'hardest' climbs in the pro circuits. But the hard factor includes length and none of these are steeper than 10% average. I hear that l'Angliru may have some 25% sections. Well done man - some of the surfaces in the DD looked rather damp and slippery! I may have to pay a visit to Pittsburgh!
Sounds like you’ve done some pretty incredible rides! I’ve haven’t ridden in Europe (yet!), but I ride in Malibu pretty often and the climbs there are similarly long with the max average grade around 10%. Pittsburgh is just a different kind of riding. Very steep, but also very short. The longest climb of the day for me was about 6 minutes. You definitely feel it in the legs in three moments, but there is lots of time for recovery between hills. It’s definitely worth the trip of your like that kind of riding!
@@MitchBoyer (Shameless pitch here) Sign yourself up for a tour to follow La Vuelta with CyclingCountry out of southern Spain. Geoff and Maggie and team are awesome people and are official vendors to the race. You'll get VIP treatment, inside and finish line access to the race, get to see the pros first hand as they sign in for the days stage, or see them across the room at breakfast because you stay in the same hotels as the teams. You'll have a blast riding some awesome Spanish and possibly French or Andorran roads, all fully supported. You'll get to ride parts of the same stages that the pros ride including threading your way to the finish line with rowdy fans lining the roadsides and cheering you on as they wait for the race to show up behind you. It's awesome! I've done two Vuelta trips and one of their cultural/cycling trips. Top quality road bikes are available so you don't need to ship one.
Love the Ferndale shoutout. As a yinzer, I kinda appreciate it that most yinzers don't even know about Ferndale. Kind of a fun social conversation item. ~ No need to fight for it. It's our little secret. (and the hardest hill I've ever climbed, including all the DD hills.)
Great video. Your editing is perfect and thank you for keeping the background music low.
In Sopó, a small town around 30km from Bogotá, Colombia, there is a street with a 46.6% climb with your name on it!