Thanks for the link. That is rugged and pretty country. On Apr 3, 8:36 pm, manueljohnacosta <manueljohnaco...@hotmail.com> wrote: > Funny that you were thinking about doing a mini tour through Henry > Coe. I just recently got back from a overnight trip there, I agree > with Anne it's good place to have knobbies, there are some hard climbs > but the decents are amazing. Bring a water filter as there is no clean > water source there. Plenty of streams and rivers. Here's some pictures > of what you cam look forward too. > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/mannyacosta/sets/72157623752985192/ > > -Manny " Hey, I've been there!" Acosta > > On Apr 3, 2:54 pm, Anne Paulson <anne.paul...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > Thinking about accessing it from either San Jose amtrak or more > > > excitingly from Pleasanton Bart on 88 miles of country rode including > > > 30 on fire road. > > > San Jose Amtrak to Henry Coe is straightforward. How were you thinking > > about riding from Pleasanton, if you did it that way? > > > Expect the riding in Henry Coe to be beautiful and difficult. I > > recommend knobbies and good brakes. While I like riding my Atlantis > > off-road on smooth tires, Henry Coe is the kind of place where I'd > > want knobbies (and a suspension, if I had a suspension bike). > > > -- > > -- Anne Paulson > > > My hovercraft is full of eels
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