tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-23069462179955213622024-03-05T08:42:59.717-08:00VeloquentVelocopedian Information & InspirationKent Petersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01607372827627527450noreply@blogger.comBlogger74125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-78672460982642853732009-12-27T12:25:00.000-08:002009-12-27T12:32:09.178-08:00Book Review: Off to the RacesI'm lucky enough to have good friends of the non-bikey persuasion who know me as a bike geek. One of those friends found a blast from my past at a garage sale in the form of the book <span style="font-style: italic;">Off to the Races </span>(copyright 1968)<span style="font-style: italic;"> </span>written by Fred and Marjorie Phleger and illustrated by Leo Summers.<br /><br />I owned a copy of this book way back in my tricycle days, long before I graduated to two-wheelers, and -- now that I see it again and the memories come rushing back -- I think it's probably my favorite kids' bike book, even outstripping the famed primate on wheels Curious George. It's the story of a boy who's told that he's "too young" to make the two-day bike trip with older brother Bob to a bike rally. Undeterred, our hero sneaks a peek at Bob's maps, sees his brother off, then sets off himself in a solo pursuit. Thus begins a trip that cyclists of all ages can relate to -- hills, fatigue, rain, mud, darkness, and even an encounter with a bear. At the risk of minor spoilage, our hero does finally reach the rally -- which includes, among many other events, a "wiggly board race." Let's see Lance Armstrong do <span style="font-style: italic;">that!</span><br /><br />With simple full-page colored drawings and just a couple kid-friendly sentences per page, the Phlegers and Leo Summers still manage to convey an epic adventure on wheels. I remember worrying about that kid as he rode alone through the rainy night searching for Bob. I remember wondering if he would ever make it to that rally. Three decades later, I <span style="font-style: italic;">still</span> worry and wonder, even though I know the ending by heart. Best of all, even though the bikes and outfits look dated (it's like Dick and Jane meet <a href="http://www.rivbike.com/"><span style="font-style: italic;">The Rivendell Reader</span></a>) and I've never heard of a rally like the one described ("wiggly board race", remember?), the book rings true to me as a cyclist now that I've finally taken the training wheels off and set out on my own two-wheeled adventures.<br /><br />All in all, it's a book that bikers of all ages can appreciate. If you can find a copy (it seems to be long out of print, unfortunately, although there are usually used copies on Amazon), I highly recommend it.Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-22001761800492920632009-09-29T07:59:00.000-07:002009-09-29T08:00:19.964-07:00Bob's Bike ShopNote: the following is an award-losing bit of fiction I wrote for Dirt Rag's literature contest. If you want to read a better story than the one that follows, pick up a copy of Dirt Rag #145 and read the one written by Kevin MacGregor Scott. That fellow can really tell a good tale.<br /><br />Here, for free, you can read my effort. I'm releasing the story under Creative Commons (see the license at the end) so feel free to pass it around. The story is totally free but if you want to toss some money my way, I won't argue. Any money I get from the story goes into my 2010 Tour Divide Race Fund. The little button at the bottom will let you send any amount to my Paypal account at kentsbike@fastmail.fm<br /><br /><hr /> <br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Bob's Bike Shop</span><br /><br />by Kent Peterson<br /><br />Steve rolls up, five minutes before closing time with a seriously tweaked wheel and a sob story about a race tomorrow. I try to put him off, but when he offers to buy us all burritos, Tess and the boys out-vote me. Tess takes Steve's cash and the evening's bank deposit, promising to return with burritos for all. I pop Steve's wheel into the truing stand and the boys each keep working on the bikes in their respective stands.<br /><br />As I turn my attention to the wheel, Steve asks an innocent question, "So, how did you ever get into the bike business, anyway?"<br /><br />My younger son lets out a groan and his older brother turns to Steve and says "Oh man, why did you have to ask that?"<br /><br />"What?" Steve says.<br /><br />"Pay them no mind," I say, "they've heard this story a few times..."<br /><br />"More like a few dozen times," the one with the smart mouth interrupts.<br /><br />"Maybe a hundred times," the one with the even smarter mouth adds. "But now you've done it. Did you know Dad used to have a car?"<br /><br />"Strange, but true." I say to Steve, "I used to have a car. Back when I was your age," I add, addressing my son, "I wasn't that bright..."<br /><br />------------------<br /><br />It took all winter and the first part of the spring, but by April I'd saved up enough snow-shoveling and lawn-mowing money to buy Tex's brother's old MG. The car was my British racing green ticket to freedom and in my dreams I'd give Cathy rides home after school, her blond hair flowing in the wind, her laughter like music as she chuckled at my latest observation of the human condition.<br /><br />The car was great, with real dials and an honest-to-god rag-top but it had its quirks. The car had an unhealthy thirst for oil and it spewed smoke like Q had rigged a smoke screen that would let 007 leave any villains coughing in confusion. The electrical system would've been more at home in Dr. Frankenstein's lab than under a car hood. Excuse me, bonnet. When you own an MG, even if you've lived in Wisconsin your entire life, you start dropping British-isms into your speech and you wear one of those tweed driving hats. At least that's what I did.<br /><br />I drove the car back and forth to school and I got a job where I learned to smile as I asked "You want fries with that?" My paychecks all seemed to go into gas, oil, big checks to an insurance company and fixing the latest and most drastic of the MG's quirks. The only times I got to see Cathy outside of the couple of classes we shared would be when she and big dumb Todd would stop by at Gordy's and I'd ask if they wanted fries with their order. I'd hear her laughter like music as Todd made some obvious observation of the human condition. God, how I hated Todd.<br /><br />I was on my way to work when the MG broke down.<br /><br />Again.<br /><br />This time, some hose cracked and something leaked and a ton of smoke poured out of pretty much everywhere. I coasted to a stop in front of Bob's shop. Of course, I didn't know then that it was Bob's shop. I didn't know Bob and I'd never had any reason to go into his shop. Bob's place was a bike shop and what would I need a bike for? I had a car. Bikes were for kids.<br /><br />I was still swearing at the car when Bob came out to ask if I need any help or a fire extinguisher or anything.<br /><br />"A phone," I said. "Can I borrow your phone? I gotta call work and tell 'em I'll be late."<br /><br />"Sure, sure," said Bob, and I followed him into his store.<br /><br />The place was packed with bikes and smelled like old tires. There was stuff everywhere. Tires hung on pegs above the rows of bikes and there were baskets and bells and brightly colored shirts and a board with a bunch of gears hanging on it. Wrenches hung, each on their own hook, next to tools I didn't recognize above a workbench containing a vice and some gadget with a wheel clamped in its jaws. Posters advertising brands I didn't know flanked pictures of skinny guys I didn't recognize sprinting across some finish-line somewhere in Europe.<br /><br />"What's a Molteni?" I asked, pointing to the picture of some dark-haired guy with big legs. I'd read the word off the front of his shirt.<br /><br />"Molteni?!?" Bob paused, then followed my gaze to the poster. "Oh," he laughed, "some Italian company, I think they make sausage or something."<br /><br />"Who's the dude?" I asked.<br /><br />Bob shot me the look you get when you ask a really dumb question and then smiled broadly and said "Merckx. His name's Eddy Merckx. Don't you have to make a call?"<br /><br />"Oh yeah," I said, as Bob pointed me to the phone. "I'm not looking forward to this. Gordy was so pissed the last time I was late."<br /><br />"Gordy?" Bob asked. "You work at Gordy's? The burger joint?"<br /><br />"Yeah, " I said. "I know you... Double Cheeseburger, no mayo, right?"<br /><br />"Yep." Bob laughed. "I guess it's true, you are what you eat."<br /><br />"I'm supposed to be at work in twenty minutes. I betcha Gordy fires me this time."<br /><br />"Ride there," Bob said.<br /><br />"What?" I said.<br /><br />"Ride there," Bob repeated. "I'll loan you a bike."<br /><br />"But - but it's too far," I protest. "And it's up a big hill."<br /><br />"Geez!" Bob exploded, "Hand me the phone and I'll call Gordy myself and tell him to fire you! It's two miles at most!" Then he paused for a second and added, in a quieter tone, "Look, I ride there darn near every day and I'm an old man. You can certainly do it. You know, bikes have gears these days."<br /><br />"I dunno." I paused, still holding the phone.<br /><br />"Look," Bob said firmly. "You're burning time debating this. You can take my burger bike. It'll take you ten min..." he paused for a second, looked at me and quickly amended, "You can make it. At Fourth Avenue cut over to Maple and take it up the hill instead of Pine. It's a block out of your way, but it's not as steep."<br /><br />"OK," I said, kind of relieved not to have to make the call. "But I've got a dumb question. How do I work the gears on this thing?"<br /><br />Bob gave a half-roll of his eyes as if to say "Kids these days!" and then patiently explained the two levers that work the gears. "The lever on the left controls the front der... chain shifting thing. Moving the chain over to the smaller ring up front makes things easier. The right lever controls the rear derailleur, we call the shifting things derailleurs, and the back is the opposite of the front. In the back, the smaller gears are harder and the bigger one is easier. Oh, and you shift while pedaling."<br /><br />"Where's the clutch?" I asked.<br /><br />"No clutch," Bob replied. "Bikes don't have clutches. But they don't like to shift under load, so downshift before you need to. You'll catch on, it's easy. It's like riding a bike."<br /><br />We agreed that I'd bring the bike back after I'd finished my shift at Gordy's.<br /><br />"I'll leave my car as collateral," I said.<br /><br />"I'd rather have something of value," Bob grumbled in response. "Bring me a burger and we're square."<br /><br />I made it to work with three minutes to spare.<br /><br />Riding back to the shop was easier than riding to work. The wind blew through my hair and for a few minutes at least I out-rolled the smell of french fries that clung to my work clothes.<br /><br />The shop was closed by the time I get there, but I saw Bob inside. I knocked on the glass and held up the greasy burger bag. Bob opened the door and let me in.<br /><br />He went back to working on a wheel that was clamped in what I'd later learn is called a truing stand. "You're working late," I said.<br /><br />"I've got a lot to do," Bob said. "It's my busy time of year. So, how are you going to get that car out of my parking space?"<br /><br />"Oh - I, uhmm..." I hadn't really thought this through.<br /><br />"It's got a blown head gasket," Bob explained, "I checked it out after you left. You're not driving it anywhere for a while. You got money for a tow?"<br /><br />"Uhmm..."<br /><br />"That's what I thought. OK, I'll help you push it around back. I've got some space back there and you won't get ticketed. When is your next paycheck?"<br /><br />"Friday, no, a week from Friday. Crap."<br /><br />"You're burger-based career plan seems to have gone slightly awry, my friend. How are you getting to work between now and next Friday?"<br /><br />"Maybe I could bike there?" I ventured.<br /><br />"My generosity has its limits, kid," Bob grumbled, but then he went on. "Look, you need wheels and I can use some help, so here's what we do. You keep the burger bike for the next couple of weeks, but you come here before and after your shifts at Gordy's. You don't seem that bright but you can probably get the hang of sweeping up and putting away parts and things..."<br /><br />And so I rode for the next couple of weeks. I swept and shelved and Bob decided that maybe I could learn a few more things so he showed me the differences between brake and derailleur cables, how to adjust brakes so they don't squeal, how to lube chains and true wheels. I listened as he debated the merits of drilling out brake levers and derailleurs with various customers.<br /><br />"How much is Gordy paying you?" Bob asked one day and when I answered he followed up with "Heh, I guess the burger business is every bit as lucrative as the bicycle business. If you want, you can keep working here and I'll match what Gordy's paying you. Your hands will still get greasy, but at least you won't smell like fries."<br /><br />"But - but," I protested, "Cathy never comes here."<br /><br />"Cathy?" Bob asked and I told him all about the goddess with the golden hair and the lilting laughter and that someday she'd see that she would be much better off with me than with big dumb Todd.<br /><br />Bob nodded sagely and said "Let me see if I have this straight: you're working at a job you don't like, to pay for a car you can't afford, to impress a girl with an established track record of liking big, dumb guys. Right?"<br /><br />I admitted that it sounded kind of stupid when he put it that way.<br /><br />"Oh no," Bob countered. "The plan will work. You've got the dumb part down and you just have to shoot up another six inches and she'll fall for you like a ton of bricks." He dropped the sarcasm from his voice, shifted gears with just the slightest pause and went on, "Look, kid, I'm sure she's a looker and hell, maybe she's the one for you. And when I was your age I was probably twice as stupid as you are now. But there are lots of gals out there, some that are pretty and some that are smart and a lot that are both. I'm sure you don't believe me, but it's not worth settling for a woman who will settle for dumb. And you know," he added, "some cute gals come into bike shops, too."<br /><br />I gave notice at Gordy's the next day. When school got out for the summer, I started working full time at Bob's.<br /><br />I learned a lot that summer and some of it was about bikes. Bob helped me replace the head gasket in the MG and then I sold it to Todd's little brother. I used the money I got out of the car to buy an old Peugeot PX-10. "Oh God," Bob said, "going from a British car to a French bike. You must be one of those guys whose not happy unless he's got something to tinker with."<br /><br />Bob taught me how to tinker with a lot of stuff. Sometimes in the busy season we'd stay late, after we'd closed up the shop just to catch up on repairs. At night the skip off the ionosphere would let the shop radio pull in the blues station from Chicago and we'd listen to B.B. King and John Lee Hooker and Billie Holiday.<br /><br />One night after work Bob popped a tape in the VCR and we watched a documentary about Eddy Merckx. The guy came in second in some race and we watched as his shoulders dropped and he looked sadder than any blues song I'd ever heard. He wasn't pissed, he was just sad. And then he went and rode. In the rain and on rollers next to his washing machine. And he rode and he rode and he rode. And he won. "See that?" Bob said. "You keep going."<br /><br />And Bob kept going. He was twice my age and twice as fast on a bike. As I got to know Bob, I learned his story. He talked about his wife a lot, even though she'd died a few years before, a victim of a hit-and-run. I thought maybe that was why Bob hated cars, but that turned out to be one of those simple and wrong conclusions that kids jump to some times. Bob kept talking about Martha because he still loved her and he didn't stop loving her just because she was gone. He told me that she was pretty and smart and that she'd been worth waiting for. And he didn't work all those hours in the bike shop because he hated cars, he did it because he loved bicycles. You find someone or something to love and you stick with it. Bob didn't hate cars, he really seemed to enjoy himself when we were working on the MG, but he never loved cars the way he loved bikes. I think Bob was one of those guys who was happiest when he had something to tinker with.<br /><br />"You should go make something of yourself," he told me. "It's a big world, check it out." On Saturday mornings, before the shop would open, we'd go down to the long, flat Sawmill Road with bikes and a stopwatch and we'd time-trial. Thursday nights after work, we'd do laps out by the Airport. And at least a couple days a week, I'd do burger runs up to Gordy's. I no longer needed to go a block out of my way and go up Maple. I'd punch it straight up Pine, just like Eddy Merckx.<br /><br />-----------<br /><br />A knock at the window puts an end to my story. I slide the deadbolt and give my wife a big kiss as she rolls her bike through the door.<br /><br />"Finally!" says Eddy. "We're starving here."<br /><br />Tess shakes her short brown hair free of her helmet, her laughter filling the shop like music. "It's up a big hill!" she says, repeating one of our oldest family jokes. "Actually," she adds, "I've never seen the taco truck that busy. I guess the word has gotten out." She hands Steve's change to him along with the first burrito and passes a second one on to Eddy. Turning to grab his supper, Eddy notices for the first time that his older brother is getting red in the face while pushing on a big wrench.<br /><br />"Hey, College Boy," he says "you'll never get it out that way. It's Italian. Right-hand thread on both sides."<br /><br />My eldest son gets that "Doh!" look on his face and Tess and I exchange a half-roll of our eyes as if to say "Kids these days!"<br /><br />My lovely wife hands me a burrito. "Miss me?"<br /><br />"Every time you go," I say, "but you're worth waiting for." Turning to our son I add, "Take a break, Bob. It's burrito time."<br /><br /><hr /><br /><br /><form action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post"><br /><input name="cmd" value="_s-xclick" type="hidden"><br /><input name="hosted_button_id" value="8547768" type="hidden"><br /><input src="https://www.paypal.com/en_US/i/btn/btn_donateCC_LG.gif" name="submit" alt="PayPal - The safer, easier way to pay online!" type="image" border="0"><br /><img alt="" src="https://www.paypal.com/en_US/i/scr/pixel.gif" width="1" border="0" height="1" /><br /></form><br /><br /><br /><a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/"><img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width: 0pt;" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/88x31.png" /></a><br /><span dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" href="http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text" property="dc:title" rel="dc:type">Bob's Bike Shop</span> by <a cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#" href="http://kentsbike.blogspot.com/" property="cc:attributionName" rel="cc:attributionURL">Kent Peterson</a> is licensed under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/">Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License</a>.Kent Petersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01607372827627527450noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-90180126666441176652009-09-24T22:21:00.001-07:002009-09-24T22:30:46.440-07:00Lapsed Veloquentia Meet on Start LineFirst I was on the starting line at SSWC09 in Durango.<br /><br /> Then Jacquie coalesced next to me.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/targetsalad/3940115174/" title="Me and Jacquie by Target Salad, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2645/3940115174_b414f19f45.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Me and Jacquie" /></a><br /><br />Then I said, "you know, we both sort of blog on veloquent."<br /> And she said "whats veloquent?". <br />And I was all like "that blog that Kent set up." <br />And she said, "oh yeah, I should write more for that."<br />I said, "me too."<br /><br />Anyhow, it was a pleasure meeting Jacquie for real. I think we had met 13 years ago at the Marin Fat tire festival, but she was busy playing the Banjo and selling <a href=http://jacquiephelan.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/jp-rs.jpg>naked posters of herself</a> and I was busy saying, "holy shit that's Jacquie Phelan." But that was then. This time, she was busy being fabulous and I was busy saying, "holy shit that's Jacquie Phelan." <br /><br /><a href=http://tsaleh.blogspot.com/2009/09/single-speed-world-championship-2009.html>My SSWC09 race report</a><br /><a href=http://jacquiephelan.wordpress.com/2009/09/20/tactile-durango/>Jacquie's SSWC09 race report</a>Tarik Salehhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09664260510124463879noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-53614003267200595302009-08-11T19:16:00.000-07:002009-08-15T08:00:37.100-07:00Corn Country<span style="font-style: italic;">Aside to Christopher: I'm working on my assignment, honest! But in the meantime, this came to me on tonight's ride.</span><br /><br />I'd forgotten what an August ride in corn country really smells like until tonight, that thick humidity hanging over the fields, rich with pollen. Here on the flatlands, you'll never ride up out of it, so you just wade through, breathing in what the corn exhales. It takes me back to so many places... standing in the front yard shucking the sweet corn grandpa just picked, peeling back the thick husks to expose the delicate white-green silk over the plump yellow kernels. Or spinning down a country road on my dad's wheel, hypnotized by the drone of our breathing, our chains running over the cogs, and the cicadas.<br /><br />Out in the sunlight, the smell has a spicier edge to it, almost a garlicky overtone, but when you ride into a rare patch of shade, it mellows to something mildly sugary -- maybe it's just an illusion, the perception of sweetness that comes from that sudden cool respite from the sun. I can almost taste sweet corn right off the cob, even though I know that what I'm smelling is nearly-inedible field corn destined to become cattle feed or high-fructose corn syrup.<br /><br />In a week or so, the ragweed will overtake me, and my allergies will prevent me from smelling just about anything on these evening rides. But for a brief, blissful moment, I'll suffer through the heat and humidity just to enjoy this scent from my childhood.Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-52350670510285013612009-07-25T08:14:00.000-07:002009-07-25T08:15:59.054-07:00Through Tough Times<span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:'Times New Roman';"><div style="border-top-width: 0px; border-right-width: 0px; border-bottom-width: 0px; border-left-width: 0px; border-style: initial; border-color: initial; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px; width: auto; font: normal normal normal 100%/normal Georgia, serif; text-align: left; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><div>At the outset, Kent said this about Veloquent...</div><div><br /></div><i>"The idea behind Veloquent is good writing about good riding."</i></span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">This collaboration of authors has done just that. Still, it appears that the skilled writers who were invited to contribute to this blog have focused recently on their own individual, and wildly popular, blogs. As someone who is not a blog celebrity, I don't have an obligation to an adoring public, so I'll take this opportunity to challenge the other authors to share their skills here. Consider this post a creative writing assignment.</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">The topic is "How riding a bicycle helped me through a tough time". Most of us have been through some tough times. As cyclists, surely the bicycle, in some form, served as a coping mechanism. Write about it. Perhaps, you'll find you have something in common with others in this community. Maybe, you'll develop a new appreciation for your time on two wheels. Best of all, you might even help someone who is struggling at this moment. Wouldn't that be grand?</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">The following is my pump primer...</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">It wasn't the bicycle exclusively. It wasn't even the bicycle most of all. In all honesty it was God and people who helped the most. A network of family and friends were invaluable, and my wife was the greatest earthly comfort of all. That said, my time on the bicycle provided a key ingredient and helped me mentally, emotionally, and physically through my two plus years of hell.</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">I'll not go into details. That is a another story for another time. I'll simply say that it involved violence, checking a loved one into psychiatric hospitals in the middle of the night, ambulance rides, confusion, loss of sleep, worry, family strife, anxiety, relocating to a different part of the state, and struggling to find ways to love more than I had the capacity to love. Compared to anything before, or since, it is the only truly difficult thing I've ever faced. During this time, my use of the bicycle was transformed.</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">Before the great turmoil, the bicycle was an instrument of training. During my struggles, it was a coping strategy. When life was easy, I had cycling objectives and I trained my body to meet them. When I struggled to get through each day, cycling was a short reward for surviving a little bit longer. My longer rides were less about a higher average speed or another set of intervals, and more about clearing my head, making difficult decisions, and shedding stress...or tears. I began to grab short pockets of time, even 5 or 10 minutes, to go outside and ride circles in the cul-de-sac in front of my house. In those precious longer rides that came less often, I remember feeling my legs pumping endorphines into my system. When I returned, I figured I could somehow make it through the next real challenge.</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 20px; font-size:13px;">The worst of those 2 years is behind me now, but that time taught me something about what love is and the importance of people. I ride my bicycle more frequently now than ever, but it distracts from my obligations to people less than it once did. I'm not as fit and I'm not as fast, but in this more healthy balance I've found, I enjoy the bike more than ever. So when the minor frustrations (or even crisis moments) of life arise, I have learned first hand that the bicycle is good medicine.</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:7;color:#333333;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 20px;font-size:48px;"><br /></span></span></div></div></span>Ponderohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16042079750126434523noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-6027265601869431242009-07-23T17:52:00.000-07:002009-07-23T17:58:51.919-07:00Phantoms, Part 6By the time I started mountain biking, Dad couldn’t follow. He could remember his old Schwinn, but the feeling of that heavy bike under a ten-year old boy was lost. He could only recall the shame of dragging it home, axle snapped, to face a mother’s “wait-till-your-father-gets-home” and the long, punishing wait until that father got off his late shift at the power plant. What he didn’t remember was the instant of silence when sixty pounds of Schwinn steel lifted off from the curb. Who could blame him? On that much bike, time in the air didn’t last. Landings were what stuck in the mind, the splay of the front fork, the crunch, the consequences.<br /><br />But I remembered. I grew up mountain biking before I knew such a thing existed, cruising my parents’ farm. A downhill chute, four feet wide, ran between the east cornfield and the machine shed, opening in the gap between the shed and the barn, closing down to a green tunnel between barn and field which would spit me out near grandpa’s garden at top speed. I’d veer out of the chute at the corner of the barn, cross the broken concrete of the empty cattle lot, pedal frantically to the two-foot drop at lot’s edge, and lift off, a frenzy of sound meeting the anticipatory silence of flight. Landings in the garden meant flat tires, bloodied elbows, a mouth full of dirt, ringing ears, but who cared about consequences when you were in the air? Were the astronauts, my childhood heroes, worrying about the landing when they saw sky give way to space?<br /><br />My father doesn’t mountain bike because it’s marketed as an “extreme” sport. He doesn’t understand or want to understand all this “extreme” nonsense. As if on schedule, exactly thirty years after leaving Kent State as an idealistic liberal, he has become a grumpy old bastard. “What’s this Mountain Dew commercial about? All these mountain bikers screaming at me... what’s the point of that? Stop screaming. Go get another piercing.” He puts on a good show, but I can see the fear and bewilderment. In a span of time that must seem sudden to him, the counterculture has gone from peace signs and pot to nose rings and heroin. The new teachers he hires at his school are younger than his own children. A stomach which once tolerated morning pizza heated over a dorm desk lamp has become delicate. On his forehead, the hair has gradually crept away at the corners leaving only a narrow peninsula in the center. After fifty-three years and two heart attacks, he is just starting to accept the possibility that he might be getting old.<br /><br />Schwinn first reissued the Black Phantom in 1995 to celebrate both their centennial and their return from the ashes of bankruptcy. The company had gradually cashed in on the growing rush for “retro” bikes with some less-expensive replica cruisers, but the ‘95 Phantom aspired to much more than these novelties could ever hope for. It was to be an exact copy of the original, top to bottom. The project was to create pure anachronism, bicycles designed from crumbling original blueprints, constructed with tools that had not been used in almost half a century. Where original tools could not be found, they were built, created from history and memory to fabricate one small production run at an astronomical cost. The 1995 Phantoms were born of human touch in an industry dominated by computer-controlled robot welders. The project cost a fortune, well beyond what the company could recoup from the sale of the bikes, even at almost three-thousand dollars each. It made no sense. It was beyond business. It was irrational. And it was beautiful, all the way down to the tiny ridge across the bottom bracket replicating a flaw in the original casting process. I imagine the idea taking root not in conference rooms, but during a ride. A group of true bicycle nuts pause after a long, hard climb to catch their breath, and in the dizziness of oxygen debt, someone jokingly says, “why don’t we build a Phantom?” After the ride, over coffee and donuts, someone else starts drawing on a napkin, tracing the chromed curve of a springer fork, a design Schwinn hasn’t built in decades, and something in that curve sticks in the imagination.<br /><br />However the concept was planted, it slowly grew from silly idea to fully-realized rubber and steel, history rendered in metal. The company had faced death, become an industry joke, and come screaming back to legitimacy. What better way to announce its return than with a piece of the past, a bike that, like its parent, would surprise the industry simply by existing, enduring? So Schwinn created the 1995 Black Phantom reissue, a small pocket of 1950s America, a testament to durability, to timelessness. At work, when I walk past the reissue, I cannot help but pause, awestruck. The bike is 1955 made tangible, a blend of deco design and car culture lifted into another era. It is graceful. It is brash. Ridable examples of the original Phantoms still exist today, and I don’t doubt that this reissue will still be begging to be pedaled forty years from now. The bike laughs at time, dares aging to touch it.<br /><br />Those original Schwinns would eventually become the first mountain bikes. In the early 1970s (while I was busy navigating sidewalk cracks on a green tricycle) a group of riders were resurrecting big Schwinn cruisers from California junk piles, driving them to the top of mountain roads, and riding down at top speed. Each run burned most of the grease out of their antique coaster brakes, forcing the riders to repack their hubs with fresh lubrication. To most of the 1970s cycling world, this new kind of riding made no sense. In a bike culture enamored with slender European road racing machines, the very idea of riding down mountains was laughable. Yet, each weekend, a group of accomplished road racers donned jeans and flannel shirts and did just that, sliding through switchback corners on their sixty pound relics. They fell. They drew blood. They broke bikes. They broke bodies. Then, they laughed, went back to the top, rode again, fell again, bled again, laughed again. And those bikes, those abandoned, rusted relics raised from the dead refused to act their age, taking flight just as they had under exuberant ten-year-olds in 1955.Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-8785542467759438872009-06-06T08:29:00.000-07:002009-06-06T08:30:51.156-07:00unsteady states<span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); font-family: verdana; font-size: 11px; "><div class="entry-content" style="position: static; margin-top: 5px; margin-right: 15px; margin-bottom: 5px; margin-left: 15px; clear: none; "><div class="entry-body" style="clear: none; "><div style="border-top-width: 0px; border-right-width: 0px; border-bottom-width: 0px; border-left-width: 0px; border-style: initial; border-color: initial; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px; width: auto; font: normal normal normal 100%/normal Georgia, serif; text-align: left; "><span style="font-size: larger; ">As the weather finally warms up in the Pacific Northwest, I am finally past the worst of my allergy onslaught and am able to ride my bike more. And as my distances and the number of bike trips increase, I find myself wavering back and forth between two very distinct cycling states. </span><div><span style="font-size: larger; "><br />State One: I wear padded bike shorts, a jersey with rear pockets and stiff-soled bike shoes, and take the drop-bar road bike out for a longer ride. This ride is often done alone, though occasionally with faster friends who need a "rest day" ride and are therefore more willing and able to match my pace. We average speeds of 13 to 14 mph, which is on the speedy side of things for me. The reason I know how fast we're going is because my drop-bar bike has a computer on it, something I added when I started riding populaires a couple of years ago and needed a computer that was accurate enough to sync up with the cue sheets. On days when I feel limber and fluid, my pedaling is effortless and smooth and I enjoy the feeling of fleetness, even as I struggle to keep up with my faster friends. On the days when I'm wrestling with my perennially bad knees and my breath is wheezy from allergies, or I'm beset by too many bathroom stops, my pedaling slows and I feel frustrated. In this state, trying to be an athlete reminds me precisely that I am NOT one. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">State Two: I wear street clothes, occasionally with special, padded cycling underwear but more often not, and I am more inclined to ride my city bike with its upright bars, racks and heavy U-lock. Although there is an old-school mechanical cyclometer on my front wheel, I usually have no idea how fast I'm going, and most of the time don't care. My flat-soled sneakers push BMX platform pedals with toe-cages bolted on, the toe-cage a holdover from my teenage years that I cannot let go of even in street clothes. I still wear a helmet -- I like my brain too much to take chances without it -- but the rest of my ensemble seems to give me permission to putter along, spinning in low gears and not worrying in the least when I am passed by every other rider on the road. I make many stops, at yard sales and gardens and friends' homes, and don't pay much attention to the clock. In this state I don't mind looking -- or riding -- like a non-athlete, a "<em>schlub</em>", a regular person with no pretensions to athletic greatness, and no concern about it either. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">The odd thing is that I am unwilling to give up on either kind of riding. And so I waver back and forth, seeking out a new "athletic" cycling goal each year and trying it on for size. For the last two years it's been long-distance riding, hanging out with the Rando crowd. The rides, mostly on the west side of town, have been beautiful, and I've enjoyed -- or suffered -- my way through each. With distance rather than time being the primary goal, I've surprised myself and achieved things I didn't think possible. Now I know I'm capable of metric centuries (100k/62.5 miles) and have completed several of them. Will I try going for a 200k brevet? It's not clear, and lately it doesn't seem to matter so much. The fact that I've ridden SIX metric centuries in the last two years is amazing enough for someone like me, and knowing that I can go out and do it again feels good. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">I have observed many lovely days in which I ride my bike just to ride it, and wonder if ultimately I can give up the desire for athletic "greatness" and just settle into a steady diet of State Two and stop worrying about being a jock already. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">But in truth, I can't just let things go. This year, in what feels like another grasp at athletic greatness, I've decided to try my hand at cyclocross, that crazy sport where people buy fancy, knobby-tired bikes and run through the mud while carrying them over their shoulders. Why on earth would I even attempt this? </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">The awful truth: I grew up in an extended family of <em>schlubs</em>, super-ordinary people who did not engage in anything athletic and who in fact were so sedentary that most of them grew fat and slow and horribly unhealthy. I came from people who were known for mental calisthenics, not physical feats of strength and agility. While I was certainly smart, I was also the odd child with the short attention span, the one who could not sit still long enough to read a chapter in a novel -- or even sit all the way through a hourlong TV show -- before I got itchy feet, "<em>shpilkes</em>", and had to get outside and just move around, climbing trees, wading through creeks and riding my bike all over town. Short and skinny and plagued by the recurring fatigue of a disorder -- Crohn's -- that would not be diagnosed until I was in my thirties, I sometimes nearly killed myself trying to do crazy stuff that perhaps I shouldn't have done, and never stopped dreaming of being a real athlete. I marched in drum and bugle corps, wilting in the heat and staggering under the weight of an enormous drum my wiry frame had no business carrying. I went out for track, ran the middle distances and sometimes collapsed from fatigue while trying to keep up with bigger, stronger kids. A running injury diverted my path towards bicycling, with twenty-mile rides in the country and <em>Breaking Away</em> and still more dreaming. And that dreaming is what has kept me coming back for more; more of State One and the lycra and the helmet that makes me look like an angry insect, more of the 60-mile rides and now this venture into the insanity that is cyclocross. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">I come from a people with virtually NO history of athletic prowess; Hank Greenberg and a few other stars aside, Ashkenazic Jews are generally known for their brains rather than their brawn. My father was a child prodigy who studied piano at a conservatory; my mother was a writer, singer and would-be fashion designer. P.E. class was something to be suffered through, the only class in which a "C" would be a perfectly acceptable grade, and nothing more. When my physicality expressed itself my parents looked on in confusion, not really knowing what to do with their active younger child except to let her be. They never came to my drum corps or marching band contests, or to my track meets, but they did let me go for those long rides in the country and gave me money to bring back treats from the farmers' stalls. I grew still more wiry and tan and became a weird object of both admiration and envy for my parents, both of whom smoked, ate badly and were sedentary; and neither of whom lived to see 70. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">When I look back on my beginnings, it is sometimes amazing that I have made the choices I've made -- to ride my bike as much as possible, to try my hand at unlikely things that make no sense and to see what I can do with this body before it gets too old to find out. </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; "> </span></div><div><span style="font-size: larger; ">So this summer it will be short-track mountain biking; and in the fall, look for me out on the cyclocross course. I'll likely be in last place, schlepping through the dirt and mud and dragging a cheap mountain bike behind me, stutter-stepping and hoping that, if I don't finish before getting lapped, I'll at least get filthy and have a grand time breathing hard and being among people who understand my need to get out and move.<br /><br /></span><br /><em>(graphic designed by J. Edgar; t-shirts available at <u>http://www.cyclofiend.com</u>.)</em><br /><br /><br /><a href="http://pics.livejournal.com/bikelovejones/pic/000f33s3/" style="text-decoration: underline; color: rgb(89, 138, 146); "><img width="320" height="186" border="0" alt="" src="http://pics.livejournal.com/bikelovejones/pic/000f33s3/s320x240" style="border-top-width: 0px; border-right-width: 0px; border-bottom-width: 0px; border-left-width: 0px; border-style: initial; border-color: initial; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; border-top-style: none; border-right-style: none; border-bottom-style: none; border-left-style: none; border-width: initial; border-color: initial; float: none; background-image: none; background-repeat: initial; background-attachment: initial; -webkit-background-clip: initial; -webkit-background-origin: initial; background-color: initial; background-position: initial initial; " /></a></div></div></div></div></span>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-23428577358378770142009-05-08T19:51:00.000-07:002009-05-09T05:15:15.012-07:00The Answer<p class="MsoNormal">A friend, who happens to not be a cyclist, once asked me what I enjoy about cycling.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I think he was mainly making polite conversation.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Even so, he might have been mildly curious about what aspect holds particular attraction for me.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>He might have been trying to get at what specifically is the reward to spinning pedals, round and round, for hours without end, in weather he thinks is best endured indoors.</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>I had not answered this question before and I did not have a prepared reply.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>The usual questions are how I deal with traffic, or how can I stand to sit on such a hard, tiny saddle, or what kind of unique athletic power do I have that enables me to ride to a location more than 5 miles away.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> T</span>his question was new, and I liked it.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>So I paused for maybe 1 or 2 seconds to ponder.</o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>During that brief pause, something surprising happened.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I couldn’t answer.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>It wasn’t because I couldn’t come up with anything.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Instead, it was as if I had been slammed with a wave.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>A flood of information came to mind.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>My brain raced with various aspects of cycling.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>It created a checklist of a thousand items and put a “check” by each one.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I was inundated with answers and had so many things running through my head that I was paralyzed.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Like my old computer when I ask it to do too many things at once.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Thinking of all these things I really, really love prompted excitement and my heart rate increased.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>A friend asks a simple question, and I freak.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I know how much I enjoy cycling, but my emotional response shocked even me.</o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>I finally gave an answer.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>It probably only took 3 or 4 seconds to work myself into this hyper-alert state, and then I said, “Everything.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I like everything about cycling.”<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Being all pumped up with all these ideas, that answer was the opening of a flood gate.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>It all gushed out.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I talked about flying down hills, suffering during a race, rambling through the countryside with friends, buying new gear, fitness benefits, washing the bike…on and on it went. He's a pretty big guy and a former football player, so I left out the part about shaving my legs.</o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>What I haven’t mentioned yet is that he and I were on a multi-hour car trip and he was my prisoner.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>After we arrived, the pressure within had be released and I was feeling great.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I was looking forward to my next ride.</o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>It was a very quiet drive home.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>I must have given a great and complete answer because I don’t think he ever asked me about cycling again.</o:p></p>Ponderohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16042079750126434523noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-12833458931066816992009-02-22T17:53:00.000-08:002009-02-22T18:34:56.106-08:00Tour of California devilsh details<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVfEhbMl-UfN7IunZ8NOAo5K_mkTz3IqWdWkLYww1HWVLvOTIMPJRUNHM5xtODXPEzEjDs1O9Ek-u8sW2P6LgY_pqgPpdMz389iXauYBAquydYIFZi4lo4wHjlwqPVGHvo6x-K8U91SOo/s1600-h/yellowdeviljpg.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 213px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVfEhbMl-UfN7IunZ8NOAo5K_mkTz3IqWdWkLYww1HWVLvOTIMPJRUNHM5xtODXPEzEjDs1O9Ek-u8sW2P6LgY_pqgPpdMz389iXauYBAquydYIFZi4lo4wHjlwqPVGHvo6x-K8U91SOo/s320/yellowdeviljpg.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5305815159460439858" /></a><br />Chas keeps an eye on the Amgen Tour from the telly.<br /><br />I prefer le plein air.<br /><br />I went up to Santa Rosa (with Peter Rich, future inductee of U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame)and down to Sausalito, both quite rainy days, in order to witness the goings-on.<br /><br />Crowds like in Europe. Maybe this will be the beginning of something like the Tour de France.<br /><br />Not surprisingly, there were old friends like artist Taliah Lempert and Dave Perry in the crowd. Bumping into them seemed miraculous. Dave’s a champ racer from the early 1970’s, and he blethered with P.R. while I blagued with Taliah, and somehow we got talking with Connie Carpenter (my old racing colleague as well as boss at 1989 CarpenterPhinney bicycle greatness camp).<br /><br />It was all very cool. About 48 degrees, and wettttttt.<br /><br />I went home and scribbled a bit for the Pacific Sun, and am happy to see that people like the story.<br /><br />Charlie told me about what I missed on TV…something the announcers refused to comment on: a yellow and black caped devil brandishing a HUGE twin-speared syringe pitchfork, jogging along one of the snow-edged roads, jabbing at the riders until Lance shoves him into the snow. I found a decent sequence onlline…but doubt the mainstream media will show what a gadfly with the words Live Clean on his cape has to say about pro racing (several of the riders are back from 2 yr drug suspensions).<br /><br />Phelan peckish? Check our <a href="http://phelanfood.wordpress.com/">hoard oeuvre</a>…alice b. toeclipshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09871347904226901210noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-234356668698181602009-01-28T16:46:00.000-08:002009-01-28T17:51:00.072-08:00meant to be used<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguOIYlKcu9MSgl6hetO5lA-Q3gBf1zTFAcF36WDiIkFaYeYT48qoxFtAbkobrtF4mXTQuS0ETyPlzn8bzGxYnvrWMyXEAlFhmUFuGh-P9GFvVVzRBfueWvhtOoogvyPCe-LmqTBLbaReE/s1600-h/simple1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 216px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguOIYlKcu9MSgl6hetO5lA-Q3gBf1zTFAcF36WDiIkFaYeYT48qoxFtAbkobrtF4mXTQuS0ETyPlzn8bzGxYnvrWMyXEAlFhmUFuGh-P9GFvVVzRBfueWvhtOoogvyPCe-LmqTBLbaReE/s320/simple1.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5296511068371505186" border="0" /></a><br />Last week I noticed that my Simplex B & B front derailleur, after ten years on my bike, had cracked at the clamp. Not sure how long it had been that way, but knowing I needed to replace it, I began scrounging around in my stash of bike parts until I found its replacement.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRVw_ytzzpxiGKJpxhzMEdAMl_UN3sySd0H6EafclcDuEcYiaMAmY1x8VMrKArOumflxJ3nf9jzJnHa0IOX24NzEBqkPTLPn3TJHmvaP1IqoEMMB-5kxh4dyL_Rcnr9vpAcahVOIEMwDQ/s1600-h/simple2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 216px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRVw_ytzzpxiGKJpxhzMEdAMl_UN3sySd0H6EafclcDuEcYiaMAmY1x8VMrKArOumflxJ3nf9jzJnHa0IOX24NzEBqkPTLPn3TJHmvaP1IqoEMMB-5kxh4dyL_Rcnr9vpAcahVOIEMwDQ/s320/simple2.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5296511653104430242" border="0" /></a>I'd obtained an even older Simplex Super LJ derailleur about a year and a half ago and stored it away in anticipation of this event. Last night I made the swap, and rode home with the new dearilleur secured to my bike. It worked fine and I was happy.<br /><br />(Side Note One: All bike mechanics have a private stash of parts. The variety and generation depends largely on the generation of that mechanic and the beginning of his/her serious technical interest in bicycles. Most of my parts, for example, reflect a mid- to late-1970's sensibility; while a younger mechanic might have a collection of early-generation mountain bike parts. Most of us keep a small supply on hand with which to repair our own bikes, and perhaps family members' bikes as well. We also tend to hoard parts if we know it will be difficult to replace a part we particularly like. For example, I have this wacky thing for Suntour Power-Ratchet stem shifters, and I have five sets in my parts box. Since there's not much call for this component I don't feel especially guilty for hoarding five sets. If it were something rarer and more in demand -- like 1970's-era Campy Record derailleurs -- my level of guilt <span style="font-style: italic;">might </span>increase, at least a little.)<br /><br />Because Simplex is a company that no longer exists and whose components are of historical interest to bike tech freaks, I posted photos of the repair on my Flickr page.<br /><br />Within hours of posting the photos, I received an email to my Flickr box from a fellow who scolded me for using such a rare and valuable component on my bike. "You should remove that part immediately and either store it, or put it on ebay. In fact, if you want I'd make you an offer for it that I suspect would be far more than you paid for it."<br /><br />Well, he was right. I'd paid only ten bucks for the derailleur, because it came into the shop as part of a large lot of used parts, and I'd bought it with my worker discount. As for storing it, well, I'd already DONE that for a year and a half; now that I needed it, it was there for me. I figured my mission had been accomplished.<br /><br />(Side Note Two: when I first started working in the bike shop where I remain employed today, we kept a large case of vintage bike parts on display. We mostly kept the nice stuff in there, like early Dura-Ace and Campy. A couple of times a year, a Japanese businssman would come through town, and he'd call ahead to see if our case was full. It usually was. He'd swing by an hour or so later, and proceed to virtually clean us out. We'd be several hundred dollars richer and he'd walk out with a box of fancy old bike parts. This had gone on for a few years by the time I was hired.<br /><br />One day we asked him where all those bike parts were going. He replied, "I take them back to Tokyo, have my doctor friend clean them in a sonic cleaner, and then I put them on display in one of the glass showcases in my office lobby."<br /><br />We were dumbfounded. The guy was buying up all these parts and then just <span style="font-style: italic;">sitting </span>on them? "Don't you ever use any of them on a bike?" I asked politely.<br /><br />The businessman shook his head emphatically. "Oh, no," he said. "These are special parts that are no longer being made. They are status symbols in Japan. To use them on a bike would be to destroy them." Seeing that we were still confused, he added, "I and my friends are great lovers of bicycles, and we collect and trade these parts with each other to complete full component sets."<br />I imagined twenty such offices in high-rise towers throughout Tokyo, filled with gleaming, restored Campagnolo parts that would never go outside again.<br /><br />We thanked the man for his business. He loaded the box of vintage parts into his rental car and drove away. We decided then and there that we would never again allow him to clean out our case. We'd rather sell at least <span style="font-style: italic;">some </span>of those old parts to people whose old bikes actually needed them to keep going. When he called us the following year, we lied and told him there hadn't been much to come in lately. He was surprised but accepted our story. Seven months later, he called and one of my co-workers did the same thing. He must have gotten the message because I'm told he never called or came by again. But by then, Ebay had begun to siphon off the supply of good, older bike parts from the shops.<br /><br />Within a year of that man's last phone call to us, we'd noticed a real falling-off of higher-quality used parts and frames coming into the shop. The genie had been let out of the lamp and could never go back; people began to perceive that their stuff was worth far more than shops had traditionally paid out, the parts began appearing on Ebay and Craigslist more frequently. That was pretty much the end of the "innocent" age. Unfortunately, it was also the end of being able to easily find old parts that fit older bikes, and our vintage parts case has never been quite as full since then.)<br /><br />I wrote back to the fellow who'd emailed about my derailleur swap. I thanked him for his advice and his interest, but explained that I bought that derailleur with the intention of <span style="font-style: italic;">using </span>it, as I feel that bike parts were meant to be used on bikes. I planned to ride with that derailleur until it crapped out, and would not feel a shred of guilt at the idea.<br /><br />I haven't heard back from him and I suspect he thinks I'm nuts. That's okay by me.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-31605924490654535552009-01-10T18:37:00.000-08:002009-01-13T17:34:40.070-08:00Too Many Options?Sometimes. Maybe. There are too many options. There is, perhaps, something to be said for doing a thing well rather than adding complexity to make it easier.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjkbN4k_jLpkigECWbe1e4nq02FEI4G3_5OdCeno7rxCwHNhx-Eml3ngN2v1K0eeyGRYdNxVcaGGsk0P-iK6Jhgba5QaVgZo1F-d7LgvcDYG7D3_DklK1IEVABwMkMDm-FQtJWds4WygZeQ/s1600-h/3sepia.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 286px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjkbN4k_jLpkigECWbe1e4nq02FEI4G3_5OdCeno7rxCwHNhx-Eml3ngN2v1K0eeyGRYdNxVcaGGsk0P-iK6Jhgba5QaVgZo1F-d7LgvcDYG7D3_DklK1IEVABwMkMDm-FQtJWds4WygZeQ/s400/3sepia.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5289859922605156338" /></a><br />On the bicycle, the simple, fixed-wheel doesn't give many options. One either develops a certain skill and rides well, or he probably doesn't ride. The rider of the simple machine learns efficient cycling experientially. He masters the preservation of momentum by doing. He works with the terrain and circumstances given. Like a craftsman, he applies practiced skills to make something of beauty of his resources.<br /><br />Might this be true in living? Perhaps we reach a point at which we have too many options. We come to a place where we spend too much time evaluating choices. Or we devote too much of our resources developing, maintaining, repairing, rehabilitating, and upgrading complexity...so life might be more convenient. Or faster. Or more entertaining.<br /><br />Recently, I removed the complexity of coasting and the option of shifting gears from my bicycle. I returned to the simple, fixed-wheel configuration of last summer. Riding the bicycle is a little more work. It is arguably slower in some conditions. But I believe it makes me a stronger, more skillful rider.<br /><br />I wonder if the same disciplined approach to remove options in other areas of life would build in me a stronger character and make me a more skillful friend.Ponderohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16042079750126434523noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-16246130599685504502008-12-25T16:44:00.000-08:002008-12-25T17:02:35.267-08:00Phantoms, Part 5<span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Author's Note:</span><br />It's funny, I'd walked away from this piece for a while, picked today to look it over again, and realized just how appropriate it would be to put up the excerpt where I'd left off.<br /><br />This is dedicated to my late-Grandmother Nunemaker, who sent me on the wild-goose gift chases described below every Christmas (the most memorable led to my first computer, appropriately enough), and to my late-Dad, the first person out of bed on Christmas morning his entire life, even after he had kids of his own.<br /></span><br /><hr /><br />In the bike shop where I work, I hear it almost every day: “Oh, I had one just like that.” The customer is usually male, mid-fifties, responding to the Schwinn Black Phantom reissue cruiser that hangs from our ceiling. I would guess that eighty percent of these glassy-eyed nostalgia sufferers never owned a Phantom. Most probably owned another model in the Schwinn line, or perhaps a bicycle built by Schwinn to be rebadged as a department-store model. After all, in 1950s America, the Schwinn Black Phantom was, without question, the best - and most expensive - bike a kid could have. Granted, from a strictly utilitarian perspective, the original Phantom was nothing new, borrowing from balloon-tire technologies Schwinn perfected two decades earlier. However, unlike its prewar ancestors - the Motorbike, the Autocycle, the DX, the Excelsior - Phantoms had all the toys. Deep black and red enamel, blinding chrome on just about everything, tubing junctures smooth as poured liquid, flowing curves, long antique white pinstripes, real leather saddle, drum brakes, fenders, built-in wheel lock, rear rack with working taillight, working headlight growing organically from the line of the front fender, and a small button on the side of the imitation gas tank controlling the battery-powered horn inside. Everything about the bike was big and overbuilt, from the wide balloon tires on rolled steel rims to the long cowhorn handlebars. In one bicycle, Schwinn blended all the fantasies of postwar Americans, adult and child alike. Style, polish, power, and features - if they sell cars, Schwinn reasoned, why not bikes? The Phantom brought ten-year-old boys to tears of desire, a machine-as-identity lust that would eventually be transferred to four-wheeled vehicles like Mustangs, Corvettes, and Camaros. In its time, it was simply the ultimate bicycle. Even fifty years later, the Phantom still stands as a defining moment in bicycle history, pursued by collectors like a two-wheeled Holy Grail. So I can’t blame these glassy-eyed men in my shop for the blur in their memories, the hardening of want into remembered ownership. My own father, now fifty-four, suffers the same illness.<br /><br />On March 3, 1954, for his ninth birthday, my father received what he remembers as a Schwinn Black Phantom. That morning, my grandparents probably gave him something small, pretending that the gift-giving was over. Then, just as disappointment set in, they handed him a small note: “Look in the hall closet.” In the hall closet, another note: “Look under your pillow.” I see my grandparents exchanging smiles over coffee as their son scurries around the house. Under the pillow: “Look on Mom’s dresser.” On the dresser: “Look in the garage.” Since it was March in Illinois, I’m certain my grandmother stopped him on his way out the door, insisting on a coat and hat, adding one more delay just as the suspense reached its zenith.<br /><br />Finally, a warm coat wrapped over his pajamas, he burst into the garage, and there it was: his Schwinn. Black, with cream trim. Black-painted fenders with matching cream pinstripes. A rear rack. Chrome springer fork. Big. Gleaming. Most birthday presents would require a bow, but the Schwinn had enough style simply propped on its kickstand. They rolled it outside into the bitter Illinois winter, stood boy and bike in front of the garage door, and snapped a picture in the snow.<br /><br />In the next four years, my father would shear off the coaster brake fixing strap (as well as several of grandpa’s replacement straps) and shatter the front axle jumping the bike off what he calls “a small wall.” The social mores of preteens would shift, decreeing that bikes were no longer “cool,” and the bike would be abandoned in the garage, then sold. But forty-four years later, if I could just find that photograph, my father would still be a pudgy, grinning nine-year old in his winter coat and hat, the piles of snow would never melt, and his Schwinn would remain unridden, unbroken, and unquestionably cool. Would I have the heart to tell him his bike was the less-expensive, less-coveted Panther, not the Phantom it has become in his mind? Would it matter?Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-78988091326458475532008-12-09T15:22:00.000-08:002008-12-09T15:23:03.816-08:00Cool New Bike PornThe Competition Bicycle<br />A photographic history <br />By Jan Heine and Jean-Pierre Praderes<br /><br />There is almost no bicycle book I don’t love, and this latest coffee-table book, weighing in at three and a half pounds, is a velo-bibliophile’s dream tome. It could be the coffee table itself, so long as you wrapped it in two layers of plexiglass to keep it pristine.<br /><br />The well-reproduced color photographs by renowned French photographer (himself a devout randonneur) Jean-Pierre Praderes show every gritty inch, er..millimeter of the legendary frames that propelled the greats from Coppi to Merckx to Lemond (with a couple of feminine detours thank goddess) across destiny’s finish line. <br /><br />Jan Heine, the author and publisher (www.vintagebicyclepress.com) is a rabid Paris-Brest-Paris competitor. When he called me a year ago about photographing my bicycle Otto, I was astonished to learn mine would be the only mountain bike in the book. <br />It’s an honor<br />Said Heine: What other mountain bike was twenty years ahead of its time?<br />Eat yr heart out, Tom (name withheld to protect ego). Sometimes steel IS real…real heavy!<br />Settle down, girl. This is a magazine. Not a gossip sheet. (Feel free to hurl, o editor mine)<br />The fast majority of the bicycles shown are indeed steel, custom machines that reveal over 150 years of improvement the leapfrogging improvements that allow us to enjoy multiple gear choices, modern materials and sometimes even evolutionary cul-de sacs (psst: “Dursley Pedersen”)<br /><br />Many of the original machines (flown in for the photo shoot) reveal details of workmanship that cannot be found anywhere else, unless specified to a custom builder today.<br /><br /> Artsy touches appear in the mass-produced chainrings of British Short Arms bikes (BSA spelt out in the chainring) and ALCYON cast into the pedal cages).<br /><br />The reader will at first page through this book slowly, savoring the pictures—most of which have never been seen before—bicycles seemingly track-standing mid-air…and action shots of the great racers. Later, the reader will return feverish for more intimate details of bicycles hard-ridden and put away, but not forgotten. <br />The book costs sixty (swiftly deflating) dollars, plus about thirty dollars post (THAT is not gonna go down, with fuel costs rising)… it’s the perfect stocking stuffer if you have a sock the size of Santa’s size fourteen platters tacked to the mantel with a grade twelve alloy steel 10-32 socket-head cap screw with cold-rolled threads. Ahem. <br />Santa? Got that?alice b. toeclipshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09871347904226901210noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-71156604924805263982008-12-04T17:18:00.000-08:002008-12-04T17:45:41.863-08:00The Stubborn SeasonCommuting on a bike.<br /><br />In Iowa.<br /><br />In December.<br /><br />Sometimes it's a mirror I'd rather not see.<br /><br />Think about it. There's the gear collecting and bundling: heavy tights, thick wool socks, wool sweater, windproof jacket, two pairs of gloves, hat, and facemask. Then there's the routine of firing up a cluster of front and rear LEDs that could distract low-flying air traffic. Then there's the ride: two miles at about 10 miles per hour, picking through slush stalagmites, plow droppings, and black ice.<br /><br />Twenty-five minutes of preparation for fifteen minutes of misery.<br /><br />Then I have to peel all those layers off again so I can change into work clothes and sit in a cube for eight hours.<br /><br />Then, I do it all over again in reverse.<br /><br />Without special studded tires -- at about $50 a pop for the heaviest, most sluggish-feeling rubber you'll ever turn over -- it probably wouldn't even be possible. And let's not even talk about gunked up bearings. Crusty chains. Frames eaten out from the inside by salt and rust. Frozen cables. Brakes that barely qualify as a cruel joke thanks to ice-glazed rims.<br /><br />People ask me why I do it, and I honestly don't have an answer. I just shrug.Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-770601916023570912008-12-03T21:22:00.001-08:002008-12-04T08:47:32.380-08:00Is the bike industry sustainable? Can it be?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVPIptDeyIP9uP8FBduoKgB8qLUOlXX1QyadJbbp6GIhuhuJ5lTYDYMLJ0i9hP34cQ_fAL4EkOR3Aa-DGIXLv-9IZ11sjaYtw0PgbzGJfCU9zjYzU5Bqtwkh6O-fDn95buxqZN2p1xRFg/s1600-h/bikeinsnow.jpeg"><br /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgr3YR4r5DBw3L4dOoabJFt8yDqvDtDo4Or-il2YBOoRtH8iZCLiCn8asLpe4zjome1V-Eu21ro0azejV5-WCcMPzYJgHnvcKOsHcmzrBOR2t4H8YWGh7PXhit_42lpiXTj148DjaStQ-c/s1600-h/antichristderailleur.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 302px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgr3YR4r5DBw3L4dOoabJFt8yDqvDtDo4Or-il2YBOoRtH8iZCLiCn8asLpe4zjome1V-Eu21ro0azejV5-WCcMPzYJgHnvcKOsHcmzrBOR2t4H8YWGh7PXhit_42lpiXTj148DjaStQ-c/s320/antichristderailleur.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275801255810729570" /></a>Every day at my job, I have to sort through new and used bike parts and decide what's worth keeping in stock and what's not. If it's a used part, it's easy; the stuff that's worth keeping we put back in the bin, perhaps updating the price if we think the last person to sort through the box underpriced an item, or cleaning a part more to justify the price they put on it. We don't always pay money for the used parts we sort and save. Sometimes they come in as trades, sometimes they're pulled from a bike with a dead frame.<div><br /></div><div>If it's a new part, it's a bit harder. We <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">always </span>pay money for the new stuff, and sometimes we make mistakes. We order something thinking it will serve a specific purpose, or because it's what a customer insists they want; and the part comes and suddenly it's not what anyone expects or wants. Sometimes we can send it back, but not without more expense at our end (it costs money to ship things back and forth). Most of the time, we keep it, knowing that the cost of correcting our mistake is more than the cost of keeping the now-unwanted part. Thankfully, through a combination of care and luck we manage to avoid making too many such mistakes. For a small business like an independent bike shop, those mistakes can add up quickly.</div><div><br /></div><div>But sometimes the shops don't make the mistakes, the manufacturers do. They bet on what they think will be a great idea, they manufacture it in the hundreds of thousands, and hope to God it sells. And most of the time, it sells well enough. But sometimes the idea isn't so great, or the public has a hard time understanding it, or the public just flat decides that they don't need it, even if it <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">is </span>so great. When that happens, you see the Next Big Thing end up on ebay and craigslist very quickly. (Remember Samson's clipless pedals? Mavic's foray into electronic shifting? The first year that Shimano's "Coaster" came out? Initial sales of these items were not promising, and many of these things wound up in the want ads months after being released on the market. Shimano is still struggling to gain market share with folks who aren't quite sure about Coaster, and not only on the public side of the retail counter.)</div><div><br /></div><div>The big thing these days, if you've been paying attention, is carbon fiber. For the last several years, more and more bicycle parts are being made from the stuff. It's "space age" material, light as a feather compared to the same components made of any kind of metal, and it looks cool with all that fancy lattice-work weaving going on there (see derailleur, above). I went to my first trade show this year, Interbike, and nearly got lost in a sea of carbon fiber: forks, derailleurs, shift levers, stems, even rims are now made of the stuff. </div><div><br /></div><div>If you look more closely, you'll notice that most of those really cool-looking carbon-fiber bits are being installed on bikes meant for racing or for what's often called "sport" riding (where you look like a racer but don't pedal your bike quite as fast as the pros do). I think racing's cool, by the way; some of my best friends race, and do it quite well on the amateur level. But what bothers me is how temporary all of it is.</div><div><br /></div><div>Think about it: bikes that are made mostly of carbon-fiber work well for a time, and then they begin to wear out. When they wear out, those parts cannot be serviced and made to work good as new again, or even close to new. Those parts are removed from the bike and replaced with brand-new parts. The bike runs like clockwork again and the rider is happy. But -- and this is the question I kept asking folks at the trade show -- <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">what happens to the old parts?</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><br /></span></div><div>The answers ranged from shrugging (<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">lots </span>of shrugging, actually) to shaking of the head to "I don't really know". Only one person out of the dozens I asked told me his company sends factory seconds (the stuff not quite ready for prime-time, so it doesn't leave the factory) to another site to be dismantled so the metal hinges and pivot pieces can be retrieved for recycling. But the carbon-fiber itself is apparently quite difficult and costly to recycle, so no one's doing it on an industrial level, at least not among the folks I spoke to at Interbike. No one was willing to come out and say that the stuff was going to a dump, but no one would flat-out deny it, either.</div><div><br /></div><div>Add this little tidbit of reality to the scenes from big races like Le Tour, with its caravan of dozens and dozens of "official" motor vehicles following the racers all over France, and the thousands of cables, housing pieces, nuts and bolts and handlebar tape and tires that get removed from these bikes every night and replaced before the next day's stage, and you've got a sport that is among the most wasteful I've ever seen. </div><div><br /></div><div>If that was where it stopped perhaps I wouldn't worry so much. But the problem with this reality is that racing drives innovation among bicycle and component makers. Without innovation, sales slump and profits go down. So to promote innovation, you have to promote racing. The issue with that is that the big sell in typical bike shops now is that you need a new bike every couple of years or so (because, well, the pros get a new bike every time they sneeze or the sponsors change, right?). If you ride in lycra -- and for heaven's sake you ought to, you know -- it has to be the lightest, most space-age stuff money can buy (which means it falls apart after a season and has to be replaced). And if you want to ride the lightest bike possible -- because, well, that's what you ought to want, seriously -- then , well, that bike is simply going to have to be replaced every few years because -- and here's the ugly little secret, as far as I'm concerned -- </div><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">it's not supposed to last that long.</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><br /></span></div><div>That's right. It only makes sense. For a bike and all its parts and accessories to be very, very light in weight (meaning that you're supposed to be able to go faster, because, well, the pros can, after all), that stuff has to be built with thinner walls, tight tolerances, ceramic bearings (they weigh less than steel ones) and tires made with silk or some space-age (there we go again) micro-fiber in the belt. For all of this lightness, something has to give and that something is durability. What's criminal to my thinking is that bike riders spend <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">so much </span>money on stuff that wears out so fast, and stuff that can't be refurbished or fixed up to run again at that. The more stuff wears out, the more stuff shops can sell, the more stuff companies can make, and all the right people are rolling in dough. That's the way it works. Now, racing is not about planned obsolescence, it's about winning -- but the obsolescence is a side effect of all that time spent on getting lighter and faster. So it happens anyway. And lots of people who love bicycles are starting to grow tired of it.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVPIptDeyIP9uP8FBduoKgB8qLUOlXX1QyadJbbp6GIhuhuJ5lTYDYMLJ0i9hP34cQ_fAL4EkOR3Aa-DGIXLv-9IZ11sjaYtw0PgbzGJfCU9zjYzU5Bqtwkh6O-fDn95buxqZN2p1xRFg/s1600-h/bikeinsnow.jpeg"><img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVPIptDeyIP9uP8FBduoKgB8qLUOlXX1QyadJbbp6GIhuhuJ5lTYDYMLJ0i9hP34cQ_fAL4EkOR3Aa-DGIXLv-9IZ11sjaYtw0PgbzGJfCU9zjYzU5Bqtwkh6O-fDn95buxqZN2p1xRFg/s320/bikeinsnow.jpeg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275811346913753074" style="float: right; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 246px; " /></a></div><div>Thankfully, we are seeing a move back towards things that are built to last. Steel bikes are coming back. All-metal components aren't, not yet, not any that are of decent quality anyway; but you can find old ones in decent condition on ebay and in slightly lesser condition in the bargain bins at a shop that carries used parts. People are beginning to ride for transportation again, just like they did the last time gas was expensive in the 1970's. Racks and baskets and bags are making a comeback as more folks discover (again) that bikes are useful vehicles and not just sporting equipment. I only hope that the bike industry wakes up and pays attention, and starts not only making but really <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">promoting</span> the kinds of things that will really last again. Let's make durability and thrift cool again. Let's teach people how to do the simple stuff at home so we who work in shops have more time for the big jobs, and to refurbish more old bikes and get them out on the road again. I want the bike magazines to focus on real-world bikes, new <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">and </span>used, and just forget about the trickle-down from racing for awhile. Let's leave off the bikes that are here today, broke tomorrow and off to a landfill next week. I'm tired of that stuff, and grateful my shop doesn't sell a lot of it. I want the bike manufacturing industry to really wake up and start making affordable, durable, decent-quality bikes for the rest of us, for the majority of us, for the folks who don't race or even fantasize about it, who just want to ride our bike to get from one place to another and enjoy the ride -- today, tomorrow and for years to come. </div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-20200452804761168332008-10-22T18:30:00.000-07:002008-10-22T18:54:33.604-07:00I Am the Wind<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWAmhkK3v3mDTQkka5FawAuCx2l8mdpQDX7jNAhhQGndJ7lx9UKqr6ZEF2n7czgsU-Z3xxiWA312l7abxAMQf3tMr6n8_KpoO-p4jO3MuaSvv3xohY7vBi6-IVn_Q5uluCKx0Ljqu20VCK/s1600-h/side+bw.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWAmhkK3v3mDTQkka5FawAuCx2l8mdpQDX7jNAhhQGndJ7lx9UKqr6ZEF2n7czgsU-Z3xxiWA312l7abxAMQf3tMr6n8_KpoO-p4jO3MuaSvv3xohY7vBi6-IVn_Q5uluCKx0Ljqu20VCK/s400/side+bw.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5260156044453131314" /></a><br />A bicycle is an instrument of transcendence. It carries its rider from the common to the special. Those smitten with the bicycle sometimes describe the sensation as flying. Gliding downhill effortlessly, carving large arcs with wind in my face is how I imagine flying. Each swerve I make is a banked turn on outstretched wings. The only sound is rushing air moving past me as I soar through it. Bicyclists tell of this feeling, but there is another. <br /> <br />Sometimes I am more than a bird in flight. I become a force of nature. When the wind blows steadily and directly down the road, we synchronize pace. At once, the air is still and silent. Tires quietly hum. I and my bicycle move, but with no effort. With a rolling gold-orange-brown wave of fallen leaves, we surf across the earth. We glide in startling stillness, a massive train of air. I've been carried to a special place. I am the wind.Ponderohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16042079750126434523noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-17173810949062313912008-10-20T09:12:00.001-07:002008-10-20T09:35:34.493-07:00My Six-Fingered ManI just finished reading <span style="font-style: italic;">The Princess Bride</span> by William Goldman. I've seen the movie about a dozen times -- though not as many times as my wife, who can proudly quote just about anything in the film: Cliffs of Insanity, Miracle Max, Battle of Wits, you name it. I'd meant to actually see the words on paper for years, but never quite got around to it until now -- which, as Vizzini (played in the film by the incomparable Wallace Shawn) would say, is "inconceivable!"<br /><br />After I finished up, I went for a bike ride, Goldman's wonderful characters and hilarious asides still fresh in my mind. As I got warmed up and felt my legs settle into a rhythm, I kept hearing the voice of Mandy Patinkin as the vengeance-seeking Inigo Montoya, facing down the six-fingered man who took his father's life. "Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die. HELLO, my name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die. HELLO! My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die."<br /><br />I ride my bike for a lot of reasons. It's fun. It gives me an excuse to take things apart and put them back together. It gets me to work or to the store. It lets me live out fantasies of being faster or stronger than I really am. It reminds me of being a kid. But the one I don't face up to often is my very own six-fingered man. My father had his first heart attack at age 44 when I was a teenager. He survived. His second came at age 50, when I was in college. He survived again, though not by much. And his final heart attack struck at age 54, when I was just 28 years old. That one ended his life.<br /><br />You don't get to duel with heart disease. You don't get a climactic battle scene in a castle, your sword flashing, blood pouring from your wounds, your enemy vanquished. All you get is another day marked off the calendar, another day healthy, another day survived, an endless series of scratches tick-marked in the enemy's flesh. But when I'm out riding, feeling the strength of my own heart banging against my ribs, I feel like I'm winning. I can look my enemy in the face and see the fear in his eyes.<br /><br />Hello. My name is Jason Nunemaker. You killed my father. Prepare to die.Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-90679433346701859412008-10-07T07:24:00.000-07:002008-10-07T07:26:56.235-07:00Proper bike usage when confronted with shovelsThings seem to have been a bit slow here at Veloquent of late. Hopefully this will get the creative sparks a flying.<br /><br /><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/qve-THEDTs0&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/qve-THEDTs0&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br /><a href=http://search.bikelist.org/query.asp?SearchString=%22%22Bike+Fight%22+-+sweet+youtube%22&SearchPrefix=%40msgsubject&SortBy=MsgDate[a]>Via Chris C on the boblist</a>Tarik Salehhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09664260510124463879noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-83591853492220731852008-09-28T14:14:00.000-07:002008-09-28T14:46:25.672-07:00Oh no, it's me!<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0joaAocXuq8h-T45fAFTXU7EvuaXVYI8F4I7xPdzZs4qUuM83WtBXWKiV3jPpn0BHfKlmJ5qmLaagp7OzpHgj7Yb2B9npGKA21Bd8UqPQGqk0T1NQBhS39wpdWTC97No6glzqq36EOm1v/s1600-h/paved+road.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0joaAocXuq8h-T45fAFTXU7EvuaXVYI8F4I7xPdzZs4qUuM83WtBXWKiV3jPpn0BHfKlmJ5qmLaagp7OzpHgj7Yb2B9npGKA21Bd8UqPQGqk0T1NQBhS39wpdWTC97No6glzqq36EOm1v/s400/paved+road.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5251190079654265362" /></a><br /><br />I submit that most of us who think ourselves to be serious cyclists have goals. Perhaps “dreams” is a better word. It might be a transcontinental tour, to go carless, or notch that first century. Some might be pursuing Kent Peterson’s, “ride 12,000 miles a year and eat what you want” concept, a complete brevet series, or simply to commute to work for the very first time. I think most of us are chasing something.<br /><br />As time flows steadily by, dreams change. Regardless of the dream, however, riding more has consistently been a path to my destination. I have continually sought to overcome obstacles that would stand between me and my bike.<br /><br />Now that years have passed, I have systematically confronted and defeated darkness, cold, and road conditions. My children have grown and my fatherly duties have diminished. I have moved to a rural area with abundant low-traffic roads. So you might be surprised to learn that, with no decrease in passion, I ride less now than a few years ago. I seem to be losing the battle and struggle to find ways to ride more.<br /><br />Just recently I was slapped silly by the realization, “Oh no…it’s me!” I am the obstacle and a formidable one. There are numerous sobering examples of people that overcome so much more to achieve their dreams with so much less. How do they do it?<br /><br />Maybe I’ve been focusing on my constraints while they’ve focused on the possibilities. While I’ve been making excuses to hide my own laziness and fear, they dream and do. Yes, friends, I think I’ve found the true obstacle. It is not methods, training, traffic, or gear. Oh no, to be sure, it’s me.<br /><br />I’ve read your stories and they inspire me. For those who overcame themselves, tell me please, how was it done?Ponderohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16042079750126434523noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-22329239243251596072008-09-07T17:16:00.001-07:002008-09-07T17:48:04.066-07:00bikes as trucksI began this year hoping to ride a 200km brevet, which would be a new distance record for me. I figured that after riding four metric centuries (62.5 mi/100km) last year this was the next logical goal. Life and other stuff got in the way, and my longest ride to date has been 55 miles of the 70-mile Livestrong course which I rode in late June.<br /><br />Meanwhile, I've been discovering another approach to riding: one where not distance, but cargo capacity, is the measuring rod.<br /><br />I had a Burley kid trailer. In the four years I owned it I used it perhaps a dozen times. When not in use it hung folded on the wall of the shed and sometimes got in the way when I needed to get at other things. I wanted to find a better way to carry stuff, and lots of it; but the trailer just wasn't working for me.<br /><br />Enter the longbike.<br /><br />I had an opportunity to buy an Xtracycle kit and add it on to the rear end of an old-school 1980's ATB, thus turning it into some kind of human-powered pickup truck. The longbike solution would take up more floor space than the trailer, but if I used it more then that tradeoff would be justified. It turned out to be a marvelous idea.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgI1_y21W1REIWGAbQE4lPNblDgxp9A5VszjnRp8U4PMQsyQJMkr4cyb-BbQSHwqPAweJo5CGHWZ4vpRjZsWeWfbuenl63uqxIEgG6nfADCcQ1phNSF809RQ4HlISqIymLePteIorGdasw/s1600-h/long.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgI1_y21W1REIWGAbQE4lPNblDgxp9A5VszjnRp8U4PMQsyQJMkr4cyb-BbQSHwqPAweJo5CGHWZ4vpRjZsWeWfbuenl63uqxIEgG6nfADCcQ1phNSF809RQ4HlISqIymLePteIorGdasw/s320/long.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5243441009390917442" /></a><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjLpK0U5zN45TydMUsJoEfBDgEn3Jr5nVSeSczsXgOxwC0y9ZguIhRPwPfi94pqSBlDvD7XSq53s2T4UpXJc_qKWsa43OR3vaknWesboTFRs1JoOn3m7eNrMwdIQtlVr1db5zl5ivA0tp0/s1600-h/longload.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjLpK0U5zN45TydMUsJoEfBDgEn3Jr5nVSeSczsXgOxwC0y9ZguIhRPwPfi94pqSBlDvD7XSq53s2T4UpXJc_qKWsa43OR3vaknWesboTFRs1JoOn3m7eNrMwdIQtlVr1db5zl5ivA0tp0/s320/longload.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5243441776465702994" /></a><br /><br /><br />I started out doing basic things: going to the farmer's market or the grocery store; bringing home the occasional frameset or wheel from the shop. Riding was easy because I'd selected a wide range of gears and also because I had readjusted my definition of "fast" to accommodate travel on this longer, heavier bike.<br /><br />Then, I got ambitious. I started bringing home larger loads, more unwieldy, oddly-shaped objects -- not on a regular basis, but just to see if I could. The ladder was free, a leftover from work that was no longer needed, and if I wanted it I had to get it home. No problem with the longbike:<br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirMS3iSVImee6GN3-nOZX_pF7vsxbshj5Y66VW8hPXKdZEjwBLPmUV3cX0O4dgMBwkHHJx7-dhXvdSJuJ1kN3LnQDkwvteS61ZvmHXMcptEME1hjuJHSUgBE-1hV7KlPvX5yHDEF7ykHs/s1600-h/ladder.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirMS3iSVImee6GN3-nOZX_pF7vsxbshj5Y66VW8hPXKdZEjwBLPmUV3cX0O4dgMBwkHHJx7-dhXvdSJuJ1kN3LnQDkwvteS61ZvmHXMcptEME1hjuJHSUgBE-1hV7KlPvX5yHDEF7ykHs/s320/ladder.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5243442783424375826" /></a><br /><br /><br />What has happened is that I find I have less time and energy for "training" rides per se -- I simply haven't been able to make regular, consistent time for many long weekends rides this summer -- but instead I have made time for shorter rides with heavier, bigger loads around town. Not sure what this will do for my "fitness", and the more I ride my longbike the less I worry about that.<br /><br />My best ride of all so far happened the Thursday before Labor Day, when I loaded up the longbike with lawn chairs and a picnic basket. My partner and I rode our bikes downtown for the Oregon Symphony's annual Waterfront Concert, a free event that attracts thousands of people and ends with the playing Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture and a glorious fireworks show. <br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjh8mwniGYBbqWG5yiOcanY9Z0QXogVptg2aqoGFgsf0Nw7pRip7W1YsPeu0QmRuQ6mdKOeHuIfaK32RoIZ9HeliL6hW3GH0QjESxhlijGXkRw_3HN3ZLs92GnTqp2AaGuIknu1qhNQCuw/s1600-h/pic-a-nic.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjh8mwniGYBbqWG5yiOcanY9Z0QXogVptg2aqoGFgsf0Nw7pRip7W1YsPeu0QmRuQ6mdKOeHuIfaK32RoIZ9HeliL6hW3GH0QjESxhlijGXkRw_3HN3ZLs92GnTqp2AaGuIknu1qhNQCuw/s320/pic-a-nic.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5243443873451436178" /></a><br /><br /><br />After the concert, we rode home again, attracting stares and some good-natured smiles along the way. <br /><br />My bike isn't unusual anymore; there are hundreds of these Xtracycles and other versions of longbikes (like Bakfietsen, Brox [recumbent] longbikes and Mondo-bikes and such) around town now. My hope is that more people who see this kind of bike will come to accept it as yet another form of serious, real-world transportation. I'd like drivers to give me a little slack at intersections because it takes a little longer to get a longbike going from a standstill. I'd like traffic engineers to think big-picture and longer term when they plan future streets, to make a little bit more room for these bikes because they could really ease congestion in cities. And I'd like to think that this kind of utilitarian riding will help me ride stronger, even if it doesn't help me ride longer. Mostly, I have to say that although I didn't really go for my original riding goal, I've had a marvelous bicycling summer anyway discovering another kind of riding.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-63743405017557230212008-08-05T17:50:00.001-07:002008-08-05T17:57:42.767-07:00Down in TexasDown in Texas, the north grass land grows thirsty and stalks of kindling wave in the wind. Since morning, a mockingbird has been working the fenceline, and the cattle have congregated at precious trees. They follow the shade from long to short to long again as it crawls silently from one side of the tree to the other. Pick-up driving ranchers motor by with regularity, but to pasture dwellers it is routine background noise.<br /><br />First one head, and then a few, lift and look for an odd new sound. Barely audible, is it danger? What is that continuous peeling of asphalt moving steady toward us? That’s no rancher. It’s stealthier. Be ready to flee.<br /><br />Two wheels roll on hot pavement. Their tires adhere to the hot, sticky black. Then the sound of stainless steel spokes, so many useless fan blades, spinning and beating the air. Finally, rhythmic breathing grows louder...and then fainter as the cyclist glides on by. A few wary heads turn and follow, but the spoke sounds disappear. The peeling fades to nothing but the same hot breeze through brittle grass from only moments ago.<br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1EQCf4d5Ym3GDTXQH8vfCpRedr1IYhb6Khw5Oy4rCn98Z1_QGXMOzuAlpQF9Z0NgayPi0nIOIoAZq9APgbky9eOHzDjytodgNELCW5ZJTCCigY8JYk6iGAxwbe2Kg_gAPc3IbgRsRy6O7/s1600-h/3.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1EQCf4d5Ym3GDTXQH8vfCpRedr1IYhb6Khw5Oy4rCn98Z1_QGXMOzuAlpQF9Z0NgayPi0nIOIoAZq9APgbky9eOHzDjytodgNELCW5ZJTCCigY8JYk6iGAxwbe2Kg_gAPc3IbgRsRy6O7/s400/3.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5231200900182814338" /></a><br />One by one, heads drop back down, tails flick flies, and the hot work of summer sustenance continues in the pasture.Ponderohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16042079750126434523noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-2894176273797037602008-07-27T17:51:00.000-07:002008-07-27T17:53:40.410-07:00Phantoms, Part 4My grey Trek 830 went from first love to rusted beater in the span of four years: accessorized, stripped, cared for, neglected, covered in stickers, abandoned in Dad’s garage, abused, left in the rain, and taken to college because it was finally too ugly to steal. In 1991, when my affections were finally stolen away by a big, tennis-ball yellow Trek 6000 with its six extra gears, ultralight aluminum tubing, stop-right-now brakes, and (finally) quick-release wheels, I stripped my first love bare, painted it black, swapped out the teal stem because it didn’t match the new paint, reassembled it with some help from the shop, and sold it cheap to my then-girlfriend’s father. He rode it a few times and hung it in his garage, too polite to admit it didn’t connect for him like his old Schwinn three-speed. I don’t doubt it’s still there, hanging from the rafters. I’ve considered calling, perhaps offering to buy back his piece of my cycling past, but I can’t figure out a polite way to say, “This is your former future-son-in-law... I know I’m no longer in love with your daughter, but that bike...”<br /><br />A true bike nut remembers them all fondly. Each bike sticks in the mind like an old friendship I’ve grudgingly outgrown. The orange-and-red banana-seat Murray. The chrome Huffy BMX bike. The royal blue Murray mountain bike knockoff. Dad’s brown Free Spirit ten speed. The sky-blue hand-me-down Schwinn Continental from my cousin Dale. My blue Schwinn World Sport. The grey 830. The yellow 6000. Schwinn 974 racing bike. Cannondale M400 mountain bike. Cannondale T700 touring bike. Specialized Epic racing bike. Schwinn DeLuxe Twinn Tandem. Nishiki Citysport cruiser. GT Slipstream hybrid cruiser. And finally, my current friends, the Specialized Rockhopper mountain bike and Schwinn Paramount road bike. I learned to ride a bike twenty years ago. Seventeen bikes in twenty years. And I remember them all, because every one helped me live out a fantasy of who I wanted to be. At seven, I carried the absolute conviction that my banana-seat Murray looked just like a California Highway Patrol motorcycle. As I cruised the long gravel driveway of my parents’ farm, twisting the plastic grip like a throttle, I was Jon from my favorite TV show, “CHiPs.” I chased down the car thieves, rescued children from burning buses, wrote out speeding tickets. On my bike, I was the hero. It sounds funny to me now, but even today, when I shift into the big chainring on my road bike, somewhere in my mind I see Greg LeMond tucked low, methodically reeling in Laurent Fignon to take the 1989 Tour de France. Different bike, different fantasy, but I’m still trying on identities, wanting to be more than simply me.Jason T. Nunemakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14140597732588714945noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-31831385681029651522008-07-20T20:43:00.000-07:002008-07-20T20:57:16.296-07:00Do You Respond?Good Morning! Hey There!<br />Good Morning! (quietly) hello<br />Good Morning! Mornin'<br /><br />It was a great Wednesday. Friendly cyclists responded to my <span style="font-style:italic;">Good Morning!</span> with their own greetings. Every single one had some sort of reply. <br /><br />That was a rare day. Friday was typical. Two of nine riders encountered on my way to work responded to my hellos. It's a shtick I have, greeting bicycle riders. <br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />Good Morning<br />Mornin'<br />Hello<br />Howdy<br />Hey There<br /></span><br />It's not like there are so many of us. My commute doesn't cross one of the bridges into downtown Portland. Those routes have hundreds of cyclists passing through each hour. Just a few miles east of the cycling crowd a reverse commute rider like me will encounter only a handful of cyclists each day. To almost all of them I call out a greeting. A few reply. <br /><br />Would you? Do you?Michael Rhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168660717763128506noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-29998888145888354922008-07-17T07:31:00.000-07:002008-07-20T10:55:42.870-07:00Its the little thingsI just returned from a short trip to france and the streetside bike scoping is outrageously fun. The nice part is the sheer volume of 50's-70's era production city bikes with nice details that make looking at the bikes more fun than looking at, say, thousands of schwinn varsities. <br /><br />I can't get over the number of stamped dropout seventies city bikes that had details like these headlight reliefs in the front rack:<br /><br /><a href=http://www.flickr.com/photos/targetsalad/2683813309/><img src=http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3216/2683813309_e913ed4340.jpg?v=0></a><br /><a href=http://www.flickr.com/photos/targetsalad/2679055640/in/set-72157606174324875/><img src=http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3168/2679055640_c7faffeb0f.jpg?v=1216350385></a><br /><a href=http://www.flickr.com/photos/targetsalad/2681640270/in/set-72157606241351423/><img src=http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3168/2681640270_7f54a20f9b.jpg?v=0></a><br /><br /><br />So so so so good. <br />Lots more french street bike pics:<br /><a href=http://flickr.com/photos/targetsalad/sets/72157606241351423/>in dijon</a><br /><a href=http://flickr.com/photos/targetsalad/sets/72157606174324875/>in paris</a>Tarik Salehhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09664260510124463879noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2306946217995521362.post-60431003649088367622008-07-11T23:06:00.000-07:002008-07-11T23:59:28.045-07:00what is 'bike culture"? (part two in an occasional series)While I was out of town on vacation this week, there was an incident between a bicycle rider and a car driver in southeast Portland. It got ugly and nasty. Alcohol was involved. So, apparently, was a lack of good judgment on the part of several individuals at the scene. Since I don't know the full story, I suggest you check out the details at the Oregonian newspaper:<br /><br />http://blog.oregonlive.com/breakingnews/2008/07/angry_bicyclists_gang_up_on_th.html<br /><br />and perhaps also at the website Bike Portland:<br /><br />http://bikeportland.org/2008/07/10/road-rage-incident-sparks-media-frenzy-spurs-us-them-mentality/<br /><br />I have taken some time to read these articles and a host of comments that were typed in response to each, and I am struck by one thing. Many of the comments made by folks who identified themselves as being staunchly "pro-bike" referred to the "bicycle community". Until tonight I used to think along those lines myself, without question or deeper thought. But tonight, I remembered a comment my friend made a couple of weeks ago. In a brilliant flash of serious forward thinking, my friend Ian said that he looked forward to a time when Portland -- and other US cities -- would be so bike-friendly that the very idea of a bicycle culture would be redundant. "It'd be like Amsterdam", he said, and they don't really have a 'bike culture'. All they have is a town that was designed so that a whole bunch of people could ride bicycles as transportation. And that's it. That's all."<br /><br />What great event, what momentous agent of change will be required for enough bicycle riders and pedestrians to rise up in anger at the sheer stupidity, wastefulness and unfairness of our present oil-fueled, freeway-ribboned, car-centric landscape and say, enough is enough? What will be the tipping point that leads us to an age where we no longer identify ourselves as a "bicycle community", where lots of people just ride bikes because it's the easiest and cheapest way to get somewhere?<br /><br />The thing is, there are times and places in the here and now where many bicycle riders feel a need to identify themselves as being part of a "bicycle community". There are lots of places where it is simply scary to ride a bike for transportation, and simply moving to another, supposedly safer city is not an option. So people naturally band together. Portland is an insane, ridiculous example of a town with so much Bicycle Culture (capitalized and on display in bright neon in every bike shop and bike planning bureau office window!) that it's crazy. People move to Portland and tell me that they did it "for the bike culture, for the bike community". And that's great. Welcome to Portland! (I hope you can afford the rent here.) Go and enjoy the bike polo, the Sprockettes bike-ballet shows and the bike-art installations, the Multnomah County Bike Fair and everything else. I know that lots of people -- especially older adults -- don't feel welcome at those events, which are staffed and organized primarily by the under-thirty set and take place on city streets where most inexperienced riders don't feel safe riding a bicycle. Then whose bicycle community is it?<br /><br />Or what happens if the most extreme car drivers, already angry at having to share the road with anyone else (<span style="font-style:italic;">whatever</span> vehicle they're operating, frankly) and getting frustrated with the rising cost of gasm see an adult pass them on a bike looking calm, mellow, even happy? Might we see some road rage incidents based simply on drivers' growing anger at The Way Things Might Become? How might a "bicycle community" respond?<br /><br />Finally, what about the very poor, who have ridden cheap bikes for years because that is all they can afford? What about the homeless man who is dirty, who smells bad and acts worse and tows a shopping cart behind a cobbled-together Magna mountain bike that's five sizes too small for him? Would the hip, self-proclaimed "bicycle community", the <span style="font-style:italic;">raison d'etre</span> for many in Portland, accept him? Would they accept him as warmly as they accept me on my nice bike, with my helmet and the whole aura of One Who Is Employed And Housed And Otherwise Normal? Would they? Honestly? REALLY? <br /><br />Where's the place in our highly-touted "bike culture" for those who don't see themselves as being part of one?<br /><br />And what about those in the landscape who cannot ride, either because they are infirm or too old, or because they simply prefer to walk or take the bus? Almost everybody walks somewhere, sometime. And the busses are packed with folks of many different stripes now that gas is over four bucks a gallon. Is there a self-proclaimed "bus community"? Is there a self-proclaimed "pedestrian community?" Do we see "bus culture" or "pedestrian culture"? Not really. The very idea seems almost silly. <br /><br />Lately I find that the very term "bicycle community" has as much potential to divide as it does to unite, and I find myself wondering about whether it's a label I would like to continue to use. I have no easy answers as yet, but perhaps my friend was onto something.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3