Reportage

Riding the Rally Aysén Patagonia with Santa Cruz Bicycles: Day 01 and 02

You can’t throw a press launch in Patagonia without a solid plan and you can’t throw a race in Patagonia without experienced organization. The Rally of Aysén began as an idea, born in the offices of Santa Cruz Bicycles, some 10,446km away from Coyhaique, where the event would take place.

The idea was simple: in a time where enduro is hyped up, bring a rally format, multi-day event to the Aysén region of Chile, where mountain biking is in its infancy. The event would include timed climbs, timed cross-country, timed descents and downhill segments. It’d be a true battle of the most well-rounded riders and was not for anyone afraid of a bit of navigation or pushwacking…

The end of day 02 was met with a ripping descent down into a valley with a lake where we'd camp for the night.

The scene in Coyhaique is growing, slowly but the local trails are few and far between. In fact, most of the mountain bikers here take to the national parks to ride, an activity that might not be illegal, but is far from suitable for a race with hundreds of people.

Rolling hills on the way to camp.

In order for the Rally of Aysén to take place, Santa Cruz reached out to Andes-Pacifio organizer Matias Del Solar Goldsmith of Montenbaik.com. Matias would work with Coyhaique’s locals to reach out to local farmers and landowners, as well as the local government to cut new trails in order to link together farm, fire and forest roads.

Pew pew pew

For months, Montenbaik, along with the locals got together and began planning out a four-day trek through the forests and farmland surrounding Coyhaique. We were the first people to ride many of these trails and for anyone who’s ridden virgin singletrack, you know what that means: rough and rugged terrain.

Up here, it was other-worldly.

Day one and day two let us get our feet wet with a few ripping descents, a lot of hike-a-biking and some meandering cattle tracks. In short: it was unlike anything I’ve ever ridden before… See more in the Gallery!