Saturday, November 23, 2013

Happy Cranksgiving!

Early Saturday morning 6 friends set out to endure freezing temperatures and pedaling turkeys to help end community hunger.  Cranksgiving was a fun and active event where participants biked to several locations around the city collecting food which would then be donated to hunger relief programs.  It was cold and also fun!

Courtney, Kayla, Scott, Dan, Paul, and Tom with kale bouquets. 


Sunday, July 21, 2013

Bicycle Brewery Tour

35 miles, 9 hours, 5 breweries, 4 friends
A:  Home
Sun King Osiris growler

B: Black Acre Brewing Co.
burrito by Dyke, Citra Pale Ale

C: Fountain Square Brewery
Soul Ride IPA

D: Indiana City Brewing Co.
Yacht Rock Wheat Ale

E: Flat 12 Bierworks
Kiwi Kiwi Crystal Weis

F: Triton Brewing Co.
Railsplitter IPA

G: Home
Paul, Scott, Jake, and Courtney enjoying stadium seating at Indiana City

Our whips resting at Fountain Square Brewery.
"You're taking that pretty aggressively." CT





Sunday, July 7, 2013

Mile High 4th of July


Celebrating the 4th with a road trip to Denver was amazing!  Here's what we learned:

-The weirder the name, the cooler the brewery.
-BIGS Sunflower Seeds are made in  and distrubuted out of Denver.  For $2 outside the stadium, sea salt and black pepper is the baseball treat of choice.
-Cyclists do NOT wear helmets.  At all.  The only rational I could come up with is that the perpetual light headedness people experience from living at 5,280 feet above sea level causes the head to fall slower than the rest of the body.  Therefore, like a cat landing on its feet, the head floats gracefully to the ground following a bicycle fall.
-Pot is not 'legal' in the sense of being able to buy it in stores or smoke it on the street. 
-Things being more expensive for out-of-towners is not exclusive to Asia.  (First time fee of $16 dollars for 2 bikes for 1/2 hour.  At least next time it's free)
-Parents can take their kids to do cool things like watch the Avett Brothers at Red Rocks.  Treat them like adults but play with them like children.
-Good friends are hard to find.  Best friends, damn near impossible.

LB and me watching the Rockies stomp the Dodgers
Coors Field 4th of July fireworks!
Avett Brothers sharing the stage with Elvis and The Beatles

Love on the rocks... ain't no big surprise.











Friday, May 24, 2013

I like my bikes like my chaps...

Fast Boy Assless

Prototype Assless: rattle can spray painted.
Mid fab and interestingly staged.
Tuck position makes for expedient trips downhill.
 Ezra Caldwell, a NY bike builder, was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in 2008.  To make matters worse (as if things could get worse) doctors forbade him from riding in a saddle at all.  The following is an except from Ezra's blod, teaching cancer to cry, highlighting the realization that he would be unable to ride as he knew for the foreseeable future.

"...I was hoping that I would say to the doc, “Hey doc, Alberto [the radiation oncologist] says I can’t ride a bike..  it that true?  Is he just being over cautious?” and that he would say “Oh that’s just silly..  Go ahead and ride your bike.  Your happiness and sanity are of the utmost importance..  I’ll call Alberto and tell him myself”
This is not what happened, of course.  Instead, he said “no..  He’s right.  You really can’t.  And in fact, when the treatments start, it will be quite uncomfortable for you to even sit on a chair, let alone a bike saddle”
..."

Realizing his physical and mental need to ride, Ezra designed and built the Fast Boy Assless Bike.  This sans-saddle frame allows Ezra to cruise across Manhattan to treatments, appointments, and errands.  The bike is undoubtedly unpractical but it serves it's distinct purpose.  The white finish with red cross is certainly easier on the eyes than the spray painted prototype (which should be noted Ezra built in the midst of chemo and radiation treatments.

If insterested, check out his blog.  It is sad and inspiring and will make you want to ride long and hard (or whatever your passion) incase tomorrow you can't

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

All the Dingle Ladies

Fast Boy Dingle Speed
 This is a Fast Boy build from 2009 and I'm loving all the function Ezra puts into such an attaractive package.   This Fast Boy utilizes a White Industries DOS Freewheel mechanism, which allows two cogs on a SS freewheel which is why it's called a Dingle Speed. Not only that but the chain ring also has two sets of teeth so it’s a dual dingle-speed. Lastly, the rear Phil Wood hub is a fixed/free flip-flop hub. So it is, in fact, a double-dual-dingle-speed.
All nonsense aside Ezra Caldwell has been documenting his battle with cancer in one of the most sincere and real bogs I've read.  I recommend it.



Monday, May 20, 2013

Back on Track

Hillbrick Track by Pony Bikes
 The famous cobblestone alleyways of Melbourne is the perfect backdrop for this Aussie made bike.  Sasha Strickland established Pony Bikes nearly 6 years ago and conintues to gain popularity among Melbourne's cycling community.  This beautifully lugged Hillbrick frame features custom paint, Paul royal flush crank, Brooks saddle, and rounded out by Phil Wood components.







Thursday, May 16, 2013

Track Meet

Factory 5 Low Pro Track


Sunday, May 12, 2013

Two for tea

Bilenky Cycle Works


This gorgeous tandem can join you anywhere in the world.  Six couplers allows the bike to be broken down into a single suitcase without sacrificing the frame's integrity.  Typically I trust collapsible frames as much as I do carbon fiber which is not much.  However, the ability to travel a bike overseas is a benefit that far outweighs (literally) the benefit of an ultralight bike that will only last 20,000 miles.  Bilenky has mastered fillet-brazing bike joints to add stability especially to weight bearing tandems.  The video below introduces Bilenky as well as the technique.


Art In The Age Presents... Fillet-Brazing with Steve Bilenky from Art In The Age on Vimeo.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

L'Eroica

I can't add anything about this amazing event that the video and pictures don't convey.  All I can say is this is bucket-list priority one.  Now accepting donations.


L'EROICA (english version) from Edouard Sepulchre on Vimeo.






Friday, May 10, 2013

Not for a hundred million, trillion, billion dollars!

Wolfies Cycles
Wine, cheese, ballparks, and bikes all get better with age.   It’s the weather worn bikes with a few battle scar, greasy chain, and timeless style that have the most personality.  During the 50s, everything looked like it could blast off into orbit.  Kitchen appliances became more streamlined, cars grew fins and even bicycles began to look like they would roar like a jet and exceed the speed of light.   Australian Mark Austin, with a background in architecture concentrated on this era and amassed an inventory of some of the most impeccable examples of bicycles from this era.  He sold this collection in 2011 and I'm sure he's regretted it ever since.
The collection includes bikes from Roadmaster, Western Flyer, Elgin, J.C. Higgins, Schwinn, Monark and a shaft-drive Columbia from 1895.

"I wouldn't sell my bike for all the money in the world. Not for a hundred million, trillion, billion dollars!"