THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Cycling Builds Temporary Slalom Course on Chapman Hill

Cycling Builds Temporary Slalom Course on Chapman Hill

By: Lea Leggitt Indy Staff Writer

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, September 25, 2019/Categories: Home, Campus, Sports

Rate this article:
No rating

 

The Fort Lewis College Cycling team started building a temporary dual slalom course on Chapman Hill on Wednesday, Sept. 18.

It was built in preparation for the USA Cycling Collegiate Mountain Bike National Championships on Oct. 10-13 in Big Bear Lake, California.

Chapman Hill is located below the FLC campus featuring the Flow Trail and a small ski operation in the winter. With the help of the cycling team, Honnan Equipment and AJ Construction construction of the track was completed Sept. 19. 

“We need to practice for mountain bike nationals,”  Dave Hagen, Director of FLC Cycling said. “We are fortunate enough to have the city of Durango to this whole thing we have going on here.”

A dual slalom course consists of two people racing at one time on two tracks with berms (banked turns), jumps and other features all lasting under a minute, Hagen said.

“I’m super stoked to have this five minutes from my house,” Cole Fiene, a sophomore and FLC gravity racer team member, said. “It’s pretty special.”

The cycling team competes in five different disciplines: track, mountain bike, cyclocross, BMX and road, according to the FLC Cycling Team website. The team has been ranked USA Cycling’s number one Division I team in the nation four times and has also won the National Championships over 20 times in mountain biking, cyclocross and road racing.

The City of Durango approved the project and will be reusing the dirt once snow falls to return the hill to a skiable condition, Hagen said.

This dirt is already reused from an old construction project on campus and will be enough to complete the course, Hagen said.  Along with reusing dirt, the team recycled old hoses and siphoned water from a natural spring, located just up the Flow Trail on Chapman Hill, to shape jumps and other obstacles.

Although this course is temporary, Hagen has high hopes of one returning next year, he said. 

“They plan to incorporate the skiing operations into it,” Hagen said, referring to the City of Durango and Chapman Hill. “It would really be good for the community.”

The team plans to host a local competition on the new track at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday. All FLC cycling athletes and all local cyclists are welcome to attend and participate.

Print

Number of views (13388)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Three Decades on Two Wheels

Zara Tucker

The past, present, and future of FLC Cycling

  Fort Lewis College Cycling celebrates its 30th anniversary this fall, and along each season comes new challenges and opportunities. The team is looking forward to another year of racing, getting people on bikes, and building a fleet of happy and healthy cyclists, Chad Cheeney, the endurance coach of FLC cycling said.  The history of cycling in Durango runs deep, Cheeney...

ASFLC Meeting 9/18

Kiiyahno Edgewater

During the Sept. 18 meeting of the fall semester, the Associated Students of Fort Lewis College passed two resolutions and detailed their plans for upcoming events.  Resolution 25-02 was unanimously approved, appointing Sen. Kyle Hornbuckle to the administrative parliamentarian position.  Sen. Thomas Bearden amended resolution 24-02 from the previous meeting to 25-03, which was...

ASFLC Meeting 10/16

Aleyna Kleinhaus

What’s On The Agenda

The Associated Students of Fort Lewis College commenced its weekly meeting on Oct. 16 at 7:07, where Senator Childers moved to approve the Taekwando Club from an RSO Ⅰ to an RSO Ⅱ for the club to receive a budget and fundraising abilities. ASFLC also moved to approve the Bee Club to receive support from the Financial Allocation Board. Bee club aims to get hands-on research for...

A Community Builds a Bookstore

Tiana Padilla

Maria’s Bookshop celebrates 40 years in Durango

 

People forming a line at the front entrance of Maria’s Bookshop for their 40th anniversary celebration Sept. 19.   Kealey Meyer, a Fort Lewis College student, and a bookseller at Maria’s reading off numbers for one of many book raffles happening throughout the night. Meyer has been going to Maria’s since childhood, she said. “As a college student,...

Vibrant Voices

Kiiyahno Edgewater

The past, present and future of representing diversity on campus.

Nearly half of Fort Lewis Colleges’s student population is Native American and Alaska Native, and students of color make up 59%. With such a large percentage of students with diverse voices from all corners of the world, how does FLC manage to represent every unique voice while maintaining all else?  Vice president of Diversity Affairs, Heather Shotton, came to FLC because of the...

First45679111213Last