Slate is a great material for things like roofs, souvenir coasters, and gastro-pub plate alternatives. As a trail material, it’s not so appealing. So where better to build a trail with huge exposure, drops and gaps than a slate mine? Join Gee Atherton for his description of building and riding this new line, in what is surely Red Bull Rampage preparation.
Itโs such an intimidating spot to turn up to; as soon as you arrive and start hiking up you just feel like youโre going to slide off the edge or fall down a mine, there are cliffs everywhere 4,5,600 feet drops. Itโs like the mountain is never still, fragments of slate are constantly breaking free, every step starts a mini avalanche and itโs kind of eerie, super quiet except for the odd crow.
Thereโs a mortuary at the bottom of the track โ one of three small stone buildings, Iโm glad I didnโt know what it was till we were finished filming. The fear at the top of this line is incredible โ youโre balanced on the edge of this mountain and you feel like as soon as you start moving youโre just going to get carried to the bottom and smashed to pieces and thereโll be nothing you can do about it.
Gee Atherton

Building a line like this is very much a process. The initial reason Iโm drawn to a location is that itโs unique, spectacular but it seems thatโs likely to equal ridiculously difficult! Iโll always stand at the top and wait; piece by piece the line reveals itself, it shows itself in segments, gradually, you have to tease it out, very slowly a possible line crawls out of the mountain.
Gee Atherton

The step down at the bottom is one of the biggest gaps Iโve ever hit – 81 feet we measured, and itโs complicated by the fact that as soon as you start to move, the whole surface of the mountain starts to move with you. Itโs like an avalanche trying to drag you down and super-sharp shards of slate are flying up everywhere.
Itโs a huge mental challenge not to ride defensively, you drop in and itโs so tempting to lean off the back and skid slowly down but you havenโt enough control like that. I had to hit it hard, like it was a DH track, force myself to ride faster, to attack, pushing my front end into stuff.
Gee Atherton

When you look up from the bottom of the track you can see the whole mountain, top to bottom and it stares down at you. I look up, I look at my bike and there comes a point when I know that Iโm going to do it, Iโm going to conquer the mountain and it feels like the perfect progression from the Ridgeline, I remember how much I love needing to bring my A game and thatโs all I need.
Gee Atherton

After that introduction, are you ready to watch the video? Spare pants at the ready, here goes…
All the ingredients are there for Red Bull Rampage preparation: vertical drops, exposure, eking a trail out of the landscape, loose and unforgiving terrain…is this an audition to gain entry to Rampage, a proof of concept attempt to trial a Rampage-UK, or just Gee’s strange idea of fun?
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Lordy!
Balls of steel that bloke!!
Wow!!!!
That was evil. One slip and he’s in big trouble. This is what happens when racers can’t race. The slo-mo of the gap at the end result wasn’t necessary; it looked huge anyway. Top stuff.
Thatโs just….Whoa. Crikey