Tagged with cycling

new fave route

Hmmm, I have only just recently started riding right from my front door. Fear of standard redneckery such as being hollered at from a passing truck window or having things thrown at me while riding had prevented me from doing so til now. But so far it hasn’t  been too bad, and this morning it got even better.

The route I have been doing takes me up through old downton Buford which runs along some train tracks for a while, then spills out onto Peachtree Industrial Parkway before heading back to the hut. I have now done this route twice but today is the first time I have done it so early in the morning.

Doing it early netted two bonus levels:

Bonus #1 — It wasn’t so ungodly hot and humid that you practically suffocate as you pedal through the quicksand like air…

Bonus #2 — I was on Ye Olde Talera, my old school tro-moly framed mountain bike with the insane fork rake, yet still managed to do the entire ride in the big ring ANNNND, caught up with 2 different totally kitted out road bike tour de france wannabe’s who were out for their morning spin. It was pretty rad to be able to use them as a rabbit to keep my pace up. Totally caught them both by suprise.

I saw at least 6 different road bikers out and about over the course of the route today, which makes me want a road bike even more. Now that I know they are out in the mornings I will start to integrate early A.M. rides into the weekly routine.

Tagged , , , ,

1000 miles so far this year!

Yes! I have rode just over a thousand miles this year so far. I know that for a lot of super fit people that isn’t so big a benchmark but for me it is pretty rad. It is over three time the mileage I did last year and certainly the most I have ever rode in my life.

There is no way to ignore the fact that at this point logging miles is no longer a factor in my long term goal of doing a ride from Georgia to Baltimore MD. I can make the miles, now I need to learn how to camp and be self sufficient on the road.

It is hilarious to me that I have three of pretty much the same computer for each of the three bikes I regularly ride…

When you find something that works, stick with it I always say. These no frills CatEye comps have ben totally rad, reliable, and inexpensive. I know I can use each one on more than one bike but buying just the mounting bracket kit is more of a pain in the ass than just buying the whole shebang, so I went the “keep it simple stupid” route. On the upside, now that there is a mount on each bike, if I ever lose one of the units I can do the whole multi bike thing with one of them.

The only downside to passing 1000 is that I got there in fairly little chunks. I’d love to do longer rides but time constraints make that unrealistic. Lately I have ben on a program of actually making my rides shorter but more intense. It has been pretty easy to do that since I have ben back on the mountain bike so much lately.

Overall, I am pretty happy with things as we approach the half year mark.

EAVB_VBKGSQYISJ

EAVB_DQBAPBRIGU

EAVB_NCIADHPYUO

Tagged , , , , , ,

Track Cycling Girl

Love this pic:

pretty sure I grabbed this one from Fixed Gear Girl Taiwan

Tagged , , , , ,

The Keiran @ Dick Lane Velodrome 5/8/2010

Saturday evening Graham said “come to DLV and get yourself in a better mood”, so I packed up a cooler full of cold ones and headed that way. The final rounds of their first pro racing series were due to start about 6ish. Waaaay rad poster for the events this year:

The weather was fairly cool which made it a great evening to take in some racing. Bonus level:  hottie NPR interview babe-tron Graham was recorded by last time was spacing around again with her headphones on. I love her so much.

The racing was great! We got there in time to catch some of the young riders from Bicycle Little League doing their thing. Those kids really have the spirit and it is great to see people that young already into the racing scene. My only other experience seeing young riders like that was BMX racing at Oregon Ridge Park in Baltimore circa like 1983 or something.

The adult riders were caning it proper. I took my camera but for some reason the only shots I got of any racing were on the iPhone:

Speeds were HIGH and there were a few spills. Track racing is just freakin sick when you are there in person to witness it. My favorite rider of the day was this dude Spiderman, who was all kitted out as the web slinger.  He might have gotten discounted for the novelty gear and considered an also-ran if he would have just brought up the rear every race, but he was riding fairly aggressively which made the wacky kit seem all the more wicked.

The whole evening (and I suppose a bunch of qualifying earlier in the day but I could be wrong) lead up to a really kick ass final. Here is a little vid of the final laps:

Please excuse my vertically oriented iPhone vid quality, I did the best I could. What I really want you to see if the energy of the crowd. People were hanging over the rail banging on the boards cheering on the riders…the whole mess coming to a huge crescendo with the that song from ROCKY running in the background.

While I was spacing around I grabbed a couple of snaps of this really interesting vehicle, which is used to motor pace the starts of the Kieran races.

Can’t help but wonder if it came with the Rock Shox or if someone did a little -upgrade-. I noticed that the driver was pedaling the entire time even though the motor seemed to be delivering the power. You think you can push a gear this tall?

One other thing I noticed was that the speed this thing would travel at seemed remarkable consistent. It may be diferent when you are actually on the thing, but from the bleachers it looked like there was almost no variation in speed once it got going, which is probably important when leading out a pace line of bikes that cannot stop or slow down quickly.

All in all it was huge fun, and Graham was right…it did get me into a better mood.

add me on twitter @RobertAshton :)

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , ,

Roadtrip 2010 Bicycle Rides #3 & #4

Ride # 3 actually happened the day before ride #2, but I forgot to post about it, so now things are out of order. Not much to report on ride #3 anyway…just did a nice loop from the hut down to Watersedge neighborhood, then back up Dundalk Avenue through the old Dundalk Shopping Center then sort of doubled back to the hut. It was an early morning ride just to get the blood going before heading out to a wedding later that day.

Ride #4 actually happened on monday. It had rained that morning but the news said i the rain was over, so I decided to brave it and headed out on Ye Olde Talera into the crazy wind. My route took me down Peninsula Expressway towards the Sparrows Point industrial area. This area used to be one of the largest employers in Baltimore due to Bethlehem Steel and Bethlehem Steel Shipyard. Pretty much all of the males in my family have worked at the steel mill in one capacity or another at one time, and I after I was born, my first home was in “The Bungalows” right across from the plant, which were basically the company town.

Just before I got to the steel plant though, I took a left down a side road to visit the plant that my dad actually worked at for about 20 years before it closed and they gave him his retirement.

When he worked there it was called National Can. They made cans for soda companies like Shasta, etc. My dad drove a forklift. I used to love going inside that place…there were these huge ovens that baked lithographed printing onto sheetmetal, which would eventually be punched into the shape of a can. The lacquer smelled so good to me.

They also made the “ends” of the cans. When I was very young they were still making the 3 piece cans, with actual removable pull tab. Those pull tabs were all over the ground everywhere around town and pretty sharp, so you had to be careful not to step on them. I remember one day he came home with a “new kind of end for the cans”, which is the pull tab that does not disconnect from the can, …the kind that is still the industry standard today.

The old plant isn’t much to look at now. It has ben bought up by some other company and I think they use it for a cross docking operation or something. The lacquer smell is gone. So is the wonderful rhythm of the machinery. The parking lot used to be filled over capacity with employee cars and those three bay doors would be stuffed with trucks that my dad was unloading or loading. Seeing the whole thing now and what it has become made me kind of sad. That plant pretty much paid for my entire childhood.

Moving onward, I headed back out to Peninsula Expressway to head towards the steel plant. After making a left I came upon one of my favorite signs ever:

I just love the patina, and how the woods has grown up around it. I am sure this sign has been there for at least 30 years. I can only imagine how many steelworkers passed by this thing every day on their way to the mills.

Finally I came down the hill and the steel plant came into view:

The place is huge! These pics are only of a small part of the plant that you can see from the road I was on. There is also a huge furnace which I am pretty sure was the largest in the western hemisphere for a while, or at least in the top three. When they would pour a load of steel at night the entire sky would light up orange which I found to be absolutely amazing. Here is what the blast furnace looks like:

You used to be able to drive right up next to it but now there is all kinds of security, and you can’t really be hanging around taking photos of the place. I’ve always wanted to go in there and watch the steel making process. Did you know that they take all the confiscated guns and such from crimes and toss them into the molten steel once they are done being used as evidence? Also, there have been many deaths where people have fallen into huge vats of molten steel…one of which my dad witnessed first hand when he was working there. He said that after he saw it happen, he took of his hard hat, punched out, and never went back.

I have a real emotional connection to these places. I guess thats why it used to piss me of when hipsterdom was going through that phase where all the trust fund arty farty types with 60k or up design/office/non-manual labor jobs were trying to dress down and look all blue collar with the trucker hats and shit. I mean, I grew up around REAL workaday guys who made money working  abusive amounts of hours so they could log overtime pay, busting their asses in hot, dirty, stinky, badly lit warehouses so that they could make sure their kids could have a better life than they did. Those guys didn’t do that so some fucking asymetrical $120 haircut toting “artist” could ironically mimic the look, and I definitely know of at least one case where a real truck driver got pissed at some -high fashion type- for wearing a Cat diesel hat. The trucker guy asked the kid if he drove or worked on Cat equipment, and the kid said “no” and kind of sneered at the guy. The guy responded by saying “well you better damn site take that hat off or I will knock your fucking head in”, which I absolutely LOVED. This happened in line at some carry out restaurant back in the 90′s when I still lived in Baltimore, so it wasn’t your late 2000′s brand hipster, it was a post goth “when Ministry went all metal on us” type. The kid promptly removed the hat. It was the same principle though.

The rest of the ride was fun…up North Point Blvd to Wise Ave. I stopped for a sec on the Bear Creek bridge to see how far of a drop it was to the water, and wondered what I was thinking the day I jumped off it with my cousin. I never dove off it, but those crazy asses were doing flips and shit. It isn’t too terribly high, but it is high enough.

Wise Avenue turns into Holabird Avenue once you pass Merritt Blvd, and about a mile up Holabird I turned into the neighborhood to wrap up a great nostalgia filled ride. It was a route I had been looking forward to taking ever since I knew I was bringing bikes on the trip.

Tagged , , , , , ,

roadtrip.2010 pre-launch

About to head up to Baltimore for my annual roadtrip. I couldn’t decide which bike to take so I decided to take bothe Ye Olde Talera and the Pooj.

The Talera will be super practical with the road tires, plus I am taking some knobbies because there is a potential ride at Lake Redman in PA that might happen with a buddy I haven’t seen in a zillion years. I just find it funny that I will even take the Talera off roading at all…that thing is a freakin chopper it has so much fork rake. Of course I am taking the fixed gear because I just freakin love it, and I am thinking that I may do a good bit of random cruising around my old neighborhoods and such.

I may hit a trail in Baltimore called Gwynn Falls Trail, although it appears that it starts in kind of a sketch zone.

Check out the crank arms on this 1889 Singer Tandem…you can adjust the length of the crank arm by adjusting where the pedal shaft connects.

Old school heads will recognize that a similar function was availabale on the elusive Shimano DX BMX crankset (see pic below, courtesy of Singapore BMX)

Tagged , , , , , , ,

Bexting?

Should Texting while Bicycling be Banned?

read this

Tagged , , , ,

flat stages

So far this book has been pretty good. Suprisingly, it isn’t all about Fancy Pants. There have been large detailed chunks devoted to other heavy hitters like Jan Ulrich and Tyler Hamilton. The author is following the race as part of the press caravan, while tuned into the official race radio broadcast, and the coverage is very detailed. As the race plods along, there are severeal jumping off points for the author to examine more than just the racers. A slew of punctures in the team time trial allows him to take a look at the mechanical end of things, while being a press insider allows him to describe the immensity of the tour as a mobile production from a perspective most never see. There are some parts where the writing seems dumbed down a bit, particularly his description of the time trial bikes. I am assuming this was an editorial choice made in hopes of the book being read by people who wanted to know more about the personalities of the Tour contenders than the endless technical jargon that bike geeks jack off to.

I’m almost at the halfway point of the book.

Tagged ,

The Big Landowski

I guess this is supposed to be some sort of tongue in cheek Big Lebowski spoof, starring ol Floyd Landis. The picture is great:

mka42

You can read the article/ad/spoof or whatever it is here

So far, the book I’m reading by Floyd is pretty good.

Tagged , ,

Beijing Olympic Cycling + BMX full schedule (link to broadcast schedule at bottom)

2008 Olympic Games competition and television schedule

Beijing, China (Aug. 3, 2008)—The Opening Ceremonies of the 2008 Olympic Games are less than a week away with the festivities set to begin at 8:08 p.m. local time on 8/8/08. The following day, cycling action kicks into gear as the men’s road race will showcase several of Beijing’s historic landmarks throughout the 245-kilometer race. With track cycling, BMX and mountain biking set to follow the men’s and women’s road race and time trial events, one discipline of cycling or another will be featured almost daily.
The following is the schedule of cycling events for the 2008 Olympic Games. (All times local to Beijing):
*Medal Events in Bold
Saturday, Aug. 9
Sunday, Aug. 10
2:00 p.m. – Women’s Road Race (Kristin Armstrong, Amber Neben, Christine Thorburn)
Wednesday, Aug. 13
11:30 a.m. – Women’s Time Trial (Kristin Armstrong, Christine Thorburn)
1:30 p.m. – Men’s Time Trial Levi Leipheimer, David Zabriskie)
Friday, Aug. 15
4:30 p.m. – Men’s Team Sprint Qualifying (Michael Blatchford, Adam Duvendeck, Giddeon Massie)
4:55 p.m. – Men’s Individual Pursuit Qualifying (Taylor Phinney)
5:45 p.m. – Men’s Team Sprint Round 1
6:00 p.m. – Women’s Individual Pursuit Qualifying (Sarah Hammer)
6:40 p.m. – Men’s Team Sprint Finals
Saturday, Aug. 16
4:30 p.m. – Men’s Individual Pursuit Round 1
4:50 p.m. – Men’s Keirin Round 1 (Athlete TBD)
5:05 p.m. – Women’s Individual Pursuit Round 1
5:25 p.m. – Men’s Keirin Repechage
5:40 pm. – Men’s Points Race (Bobby Lea)
6:30 p.m. – Men’s Keirin Round 2
6:50 p.m. – Men’s Individual Pursuit Finals
7:15 p.m. – Men’s Keirin Finals
Sunday, Aug. 17
11:05 a.m. – Women’s Sprint Qualifying (Jennie Reed)
11:20 a.m. – Men’s Sprint Qualifying (Michael Blatchford)
4:30 p.m. – Men’s Sprint 1/16 Finals
5:05 p.m. – Women’s Individual Pursuit Finals
5:15 p.m. – Women’s Sprint 1/8 Finals
5:35 p.m. – Women’s Sprint 1/8 Finals
6:15 p.m. – Men’s Team Pursuit Round 1
Monday, Aug. 18
4:30 p.m. – Women’s Points Race (Sarah Hammer)
5:05 p.m. – Women’s Sprint Quarterfinals
5:20 p.m. – Men’s Sprint Quarterfinals
6:15 p.m. – Men’s Team Pursuit Finals
Tuesday, Aug. 19
4:30 p.m. – Women’s Sprint Semifinals
4:40 p.m. – Men’s Sprint Semifinals
5:30 p.m. – Men’s Madison (Bobby Lea, Michael Friedman)
6:25 p.m. – Women’s Sprint Finals
6:35 p.m. – Men’s Sprint Finals
Wednesday, Aug. 20
9:00 a.m. – Men’s BMX Time Trial Seeding 1 (Kyle Bennett, Mike Day, Donny Robinson)
9:45 a.m. – Women’s BMX Time Trial Seeding 1 (Jill Kintner)
10:15 a.m. – Men’s BMX Time Trial Seeding 2 (Kyle Bennett, Mike Day, Donny Robinson)
11:00 a.m. – Women’s BMX Time Trial Seeding 2 (Jill Kintner)
11:40 a.m. – Men’s BMX Quarterfinal 1 (Kyle Bennett, Mike Day, Donny Robinson)
12:05 p.m. – Men’s BMX Quarterfinal 2 (Kyle Bennett, Mike Day, Donny Robinson)
12:32 p.m. – Men’s BMX Quarterfinal 3 (Kyle Bennett, Mike Day, Donny Robinson)
Thursday, Aug. 21
9:00 a.m. – Women’s BMX Semifinal 1 (Jill Kintner)
9:08 a.m. – Men’s BMX Semifinal 1
9:30 a.m. – Women’s BMX Semifinal 2 (Jill Kintner)
9:38 a.m. – Men’s BMX Semifinal 2
10:00 a.m. – Women’s BMX Semifinal 3 (Jill Kintner)
10:08 a.m. – Men’s BMX Semifinal 3
10:30 a.m. – Women’s BMX Finals
10:40 a.m. – Men’s BMX finals
Friday, Aug. 22
3:00 p.m. – Women’s Cross Country Mountain Bike (Georgia Gould, Mary McConneloug)
Saturday, Aug. 23
3:00 p.m. – Men’s Cross Country Mountain Bike (Adam Craig, Todd Wells)
TELEVISION SCHEDULE
USA Cycling members and cycling fans can follow all the cycling action via live streaming video online at www.nbcolympics.com or either live or via tape delay on several NBC networks.
To download a complete broadcast schedule of cycling events, click here, or visit: http://www.nbcolympics.com/tv_and_online_listings/index.html

Tagged , , ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.