Monday, December 29, 2008

Ultimate Pro-elite clamp

My wonderful wife got me this upgrade for the repair stand she had given me a few years ago. Here is how I mount my Bacchetta Giro on the stand:





Stand the bike on its rear wheel, close clamp around frame












raise bike a few inches
















pivot to desired position to perform repair and/or adjustments












notice the clamp is over the top of the tube, avoiding the chain and idler wheel

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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Iditarod Invitational

Something for us to contemplate as we sit in our comfy chairs, waiting for conditions to improve enough that we can get outside and ride again.
The New York Times offers some coverage (here) of a training camp for a few hardy souls for whom conditions don't seem to matter as much.

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Blogger raresparky said...

What is it about these types of extreme endeavors that so fascinates us?

I'm reminded of the Race Across America rider whose neck was so strained from holding a craned position hours and days on end, that he could no longer hold his head up. A brace was fashioned to support his head and allow him to continue.

Or the mountain climber who amputated his own arm after a fall entrapped him in a rocky crevasse.

Are we drawn to witness these feats like we're drawn to view a car wreck we pass on a highway with morbid fascination?

Or do we hope to witness something noble in the human spirit straining to overcome seemingly impossible challenges?

I appreciated the married couple who engineered their own equipment with which to attempt to meet the challenge. But with five children in their family, surely their decision to compete would involve their considerations of their responsibilities to nurture and guide those children through to adulthood.

Sure, I've heard the argument about the role that being a parental model of courage and endurance plays in a child's development and those of setting goals and accepting great challenges, regardless the outcome.

But what greater courage and challenge is there than limiting one's desires to provide the space in one's life to help a child with THEIR daily challenges, struggles and triumphs?

I appreciated the sensibility, and yes, courage that the couple displayed in bailing out of the event after experiencing extreme difficulties with the cold, prior to the event's start. This, after all of the, no doubt considerable expense and effort involved in even organizing for an attempt.

Now THERE'S a triumph of the human spirit!

December 25, 2008 at 10:07 AM  

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Monday, December 22, 2008

Yay, Bike stuff!

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Saturday, December 13, 2008

Mikey Wants It!

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Monday, December 1, 2008

Hell 'bent freezes over


It was in the mid-twenty degree range when Cliff and Dave showed up just minutes after 6 a.m. this Sunday. I had threatened to wear "everything I own" but opted instead for a generous heaping of wool and a couple of heat paks in my lobsters.

About one mile after rolling out though, I felt uncharacteristically chilled in the mid-section and wondered why before glancing down to see that my windbreaker zipper had protested over containing my heavy wool sweater. Happily, the quick repair held for the remainder of the ride.

I rode without glasses to avoid the fogging blindness that comes with the territory and did my impersonation of Mr. Magoo while dodging frightened rabbits fleeing before blazing bike lights.

After fifteen minutes, my apprehensions about surviving the frigid morning had melted away and I eased back into the ride. I won't say I could have gone on forever. When we arrived at the restaurant in Fairport, the cold was seeping in at the edges, but I was happy and invigorated. My gear was right for the conditions and I had gotten to ride yet another Hell 'bent with my pals.

Life is good.

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Blogger Cliff said...

For the un-enlighten that’s Mark standing behind us, holding up Hank’s tandem recumbent which he rode by himself to breakfast. We where thinking he was going to pick up someone but he was actually going to ride it to Hank’s house and return on his Haluzak

December 2, 2008 at 10:32 AM  

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