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Archive for December, 2009

2010 DORBA Frozen Endurance Series

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

2010 DORBA Frozen Endurance SeriesThe DORBA Endurance Series presented by the Dallas Off-Road Bicycling Association (DORBA) will offer up 4 and 6 hour races, slated for the Saturdays of January 9th, February 13th, and March 6th, 2010. The promoters expect a record number of riders with 250 amateur and professional riders from across Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Arkansas heading to Dallas for the biggest endurance series in the region.

A Le Mans start will be used to spread the racers before entering the single track trails designed by DORBA trail stewards. The DORBA trails include technically challenging roots, logs, and boulders, in the heart of Dallas and other North Texas locations. The finish line comes 6 hours later, with the average lap times of less than one hour.

The series offers a variety of classes: 2 man team, co-ed 2 person team, men’s and women’s solo class, and a single speed solo class—with 4 hour options for the solo classes.

For more information on the 4th Annual DORBA Frozen Endurance Series and to register, click here.

Bike Trailer Shop is Hiring

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

The folks at BikeTrailerShop.com are looking for a highly motivated, self-starting individual to join their team and work on, manage and develop a variety of tasks and projects involving their internet marketing strategies, blog and webstore content. Their business is focused on marketing bicycling products through the BikeTrailerShop.com webstores. Strong writing skills and an advanced background in bicycling are requirements for the position.

For more details on the job requirements and to contact BikeTrailerShop.com visit their online job posting.

About: The folks BikeTrailerShop.com share a collective interest and passion for using bike cargo trailers for fun and utility. As They began to appreciate the range of possibility for using bike trailers, they noticed a lack of consistent offering for replacement parts and accessories for bike cargo trailers. BikeTrailerShop.com was created to grab this market by the horns (Yak & Ibex) and create a complete web-based solution.

Bicycle Industry News Roundup

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Santa Cruz Bicycles 2010 Demo Tour
Santa Cruz has hired Ariel Lindsley and Abby Hippely to rock their 2010 demo tour (you may recognize Ariel and Abby from past demo gigs with Yeti and Maverick). They will be hauling around a couple dozen SC bikes at any given time, alternating between dealer visits, festivals, races, and public hands-on demos. The bikes are going to be outfitted with the finest of goodies from SRAM, RockShox, Truvativ, Avid, Easton and Crank Brothers, with WTB supplying saddles and tires, and there will also be a whole mess of Giro helmets and sunglasses on hand at ride events. Keep and eyeball on the Santa Cruz website and blog for details as they become available.

Ariel Lindsley and Abby Hippely

Trek Announces Sponsorship Of Radioshack Pro Cycling Team
Trek Bicycle announced that it will be the official bike sponsor of the 2010 RadioShack Pro Cycling Team, continuing its relationship with Team Director Johan Bruyneel, 7-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, and 11 other notable riders of the 2009 Astana Team.

“We are excited to fuel the success of our friends at Team RadioShack by providing the most technologically advanced bicycles and components in the world,” noted Trek’s Director of Marketing, Dean Gore. “Our sponsorship of professional athletes has consistently pushed Trek to innovate and produce products which perform at the absolute highest level, and we look forward to continuing these fruitful relationships.”

For their training and race rigs, riders received custom-fitted 2010 Trek Madone bicycles. As the latest in a line of bikes that have won 9 of the last 10 Tours de France. The newly-formed Team RadioShack Pro Cycling Team will also be riding Bontrager components and accessories throughout the 2010 season, including Bontrager wheels, handlebars, stems, bar tape, bottles, cages, and computers.

Stay informed on the team by following Trek on Twitter and Facebook, as well as signing up for Trek’s monthly eNewsetter.

Basagoitia’s Epic Kona Ride Continues
The most decorated slopestyle rider in the history of the sport will ride towards further world domination on a Kona for 2010 and 2011. This past year saw Paul continue his reign by winning both the slopestyle and the speed trials at the 2009 Teva games, earning a hard fought 4th place at Crankworx Whistler and 3rd at Crankwork Colorado. He also threw his first invitational event, All in or Nothing, showing big promise to blossom in 2010. One of Paul’s backflips was later picked up as one of Sportcentre’s top 10 plays of the week.

For 2010, Paul is going to concentrate on a few more events. He’ll be hitting the regulars like Crankworx Colorado and Crankworx Whistler, the 23-year-old from Minden, Nevada will also be participating in the Claymore Challenge, Teva Games as well as the Red Bull Rampage. Filming and photo opportunities will also be at the top of his list. “We’re confident here at Kona that Paul will continue pushing his style, abilities and all around cojones over the next two years,” says Shawn Nesbitt, Kona’s Team Manager. “It should be quite the ride.”

Basagoitia’s Epic Kona Ride Continues

Introducing “PEDALING”: A Gastronomic Adventure On Two Wheels
2010 will bring cyclists a new web video series about two subjects close to every cyclist’s heart: food and drink. PEDALING is a spirited culinary and cycling series created by producers Iri Greco of Panforte Productions and Jim Fryer of BrakeThrough Media.

“We’re excited to introduce the first episodes in the PEDALING series,” stated series creator, Iri Greco, of Panforte Productions. “PEDALING was borne out of both of our life-long passions and careers in the food & hospitality and cycling sectors—it’s the ultimate union between the pedal and the plate!” Series co-creator, Jim Fryer of BrakeThrough Media added: “ Cyclists will find the PEDALING Series to be engaging, entertaining, informative, and relevant to how they live and ride in their everyday lives.”

Presented in partnership with Specialized Bicycle Components, Whole Foods Market, Capo Cycling Apparel, and with the promotional support of Bike New York, this Urban PEDALING mini-series will launch to the public on January 5, 2010. Visit pedaling.tv to tune in.

Episodes contain practical tips for urban cycling, including an inside peek at a professional bike fitting, traffic etiquette, and notes on where cyclists in the area ride, eat, and spend time.  Take a look here for a sneak peek.

SCPS Series Finale

The Southern California Prestige Series (SCPS) presented by Shimano recently wrapped up another season of racing and crowned its champions. Those who would like to keep hammering through January may want to check the schedule on www.socalcross.com for the Cross Fever Series brought to you by Shimano—a three-race grassrootsseries with a shorter race day and fewer categories.

Southern California Prestige Series

Congratulations to all the 2010 Series Champions:

  • Elite Men 1/2/3: Brent Prenzlow (Celo Pacific / B+L)
  • Elite Women 1/2/3/4: Kendall Ryan (Socalcross-Cicle)
  • Men 3/4: James Walsh (Celo Pacific)
  • Women 3/4: Sarah Brodsky (Bicycle Johns)
  • Unofficial Men 4: Jesus Ortega (Celo Pacific)
  • Junior Men 10-14: Drew Campaigne (Celo Pacific)
  • Junior Men 15-18: Casey Williams (Bear Valley Bikes)
  • Junior Women 10-14: Hannah Eckvahl (Velo Bella)
  • Junior Women 15-18: Hannah Rae
  • Finchamp (Team Socalcross-Cicle)
  • Master Men 35+ 1/2/3: Garnet Vertican (Giant)
  • Master Men 35+ 3/4: David Turner (Paa-Remaxx)
  • Master Men 45+: Charles Morris (Bike Religion)
  • Master Men 55+: Jon Miller (Sho-Air)
  • Master Men 65+: Bob Llamas (Team Montrose Bike Shop)
  • Master Women 35+: Maria Fahie (Switchback Cyclery)
  • Master Women 50+: Robin Macdonald Foley (Judgement Velo-Trek Bikes Of Ventura)
  • Single Speed 1/2/3: Noah Holcomb (Cannondale)
  • Single Speed 3/4: Mark Campaigne (Celo Pacific)

Dirt Rag Staff Recommendo 2009

Monday, December 28th, 2009

As 2009 draws to a close, the Dirt Rag staff shares some of their favorite things. Places to go; things to read, listen to, eat, drink and see.

Inspiration by Amanda Zimmerman
I’m always a little torn between the beauty of well-executed graphic design and the visual viscosity and drama of pictorial art. I try my best to balance the two. Here are a few sites that I turn to for inspiration:

Image credit: “Death Horse” by Min Yum from cgunit.com:

death horse

Chile Spiced Mangos by Matt Kasprzyk
Before getting this job as art bitch at Dirt Rag/Bicycle Times and moving to a new city over a year ago I was unaware of the greatness that is Trader Joe’s. It’s true that there are stores all across this large union of ours, but were I’m from it was another deprival like losing Super Bowls and taxes. This Recommendo comes straight from my desk, literally. Well, Trader Joe’s first. Before that, perhaps some farm.

The Chile Spiced Mangos from Trader Joe’s is a crowd favorite here at the office. Among the myriad of dried fruit and trail mix found along side this unlikely favorite one can find several healthy and delicious snacks. But the dried mango slices lightly covered in chile powder is a fantastic sweet and spicy combo that is hard to put down once you pick it up. There are 110 calories a serving and some other things like sugars and carbs and sodium, which make the re-sealable chile spiced mangos a wise choice for a trail-side snack on your next ride. These chewy spicy sweet slices of dried mango I admit seemed a bit odd at first, but once you try one you’ll surely be a believer. Great for the office or your next ride.

chile mango

What Problem? by Karl Rosengarth
It started innocently enough. An album here, and an album there. Just the gotta-haves at first.

Record shopping was good clean fun! With price wars between the campus record shops, a ten-spot in the pocket was the price of admission for an afternoon-killing album hunting excursion. Half the fun was digging through the crates, hoping to be at the right place, at the right time. I didn’t plan to accumulate 700+ albums—nor go on to amass a comparable collection of CDs after that. And, when the music world was rocked by the mp3 revolution, well, the floodgates went full-open.

I’d rather not discuss all the impulses that motivates a guy with 105.31GB of music on his hard drive to while away countless hours browsing the iTunes store, adding to his collection. I will, however, share my most recent motivation—I decided to track down some music from my youth. Songs that I grew to love, before I started collecting albums. Wanted to fill in the gaps in my collection, so to speak.

The following playlist, which will conveniently burn onto one CD (for your old-school friends), is my humble recommendation for an hour’s worth of catchy tunes from the ’70s. If so inclined, log onto your favorite music shopping site, and treat yourself to some holiday shopping:

  • Brand New Key – Melanie
  • Little Willy – The Sweet
  • Brother Louie – The Stories
  • Garden Party – Ricky Nelson
  • Come and Get Your Love – Redbone
  • Spirit in the Sky – Norman Greenbaum
  • O-O-H Child – The Five Stairsteps
  • Will It Go Round In Circles – Billy Preston
  • One Toke Over The Line – Brewer & Shipley
  • Jim Dandy – Black Oak Arkansas
  • 96 Tears – ? & The Mysterians
  • Liar – Three Dog Night
  • Sweet City Woman – Stampeders
  • Funk #49 James Gang
  • Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress – Hollies
  • Jackie Blue – Ozark Mountain Daredevils
  • Any Major Dude Will Tell You – Steely Dan
  • Rock On – David Essex
  • Midnight At the Oasis – Maria Muldar

karls 70s faves

Recommendo Roundup by Eric Mckeegan

What I’m Listening to Right Now by Andy Bruno

  • My Morning Jacket – Evil Urges – MMJ’s most recent studio album from 2008
  • My Morning Jacket – Okonokos – Awesome Live album and DVD from 2006 recorded during the band’s fall 2005 Z Tour, over two nights at The Fillmore in San Francisco, CA.
  • Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest, 2009
  • Sesame Street – Songs From The Street – 35 Years of Music (3 disc set) – My son loves this and I do too. Some great musicians appeared on Sesame Street, like Johnny Cash, B.B. King, Steven Tyler, Los Lobos, Ziggy Marley, and Bobby McFerrin, Stevie Wonder, Keb’ Mo’, and Tony Bennett.

Funk-a-mendo by Frank “Le Freak” Wuerthele

  • Parliament Funkadelic
  • Cameo
  • Bootsy’s Rubber Band
  • Tower of Power
  • Isley Bros.

2010 Jamaica Fat Tyre Festival

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

2010 Jamaica Fat Tyre FestivalThe 12th annual Jamaica Fat Tyre Festival, which combines fantastic riding with Jamaica’s unique culture, is set for February 6-12th, 2010. That sounds like great way to jump-start the spring riding season, at time when many cyclists in North America will be more than happy to say goodbye to another winter. The Festival is organized by SMORBA, a non-profit organization affiliated to IMBA that is actively engaged in locating, building and maintaining bicycling opportunities on Jamaica’s famed North Coast.

On February 7th the locals will show off their riding skills. Dubbed “A celebration of Jamaican Bicycling Culture” the Jamaica Bicycle Bash is designed to provide a unique, fun-filled atmosphere centered around all things bicycle. Highlights will include a 5-mile race looping through Oracabessa, a “Gas Done” gas cylinder carrying race, a “Big Man, Small Bicycle” race, and many other games and contests that are sure to provide great entertainment!

On February 8th riders will shuttle up to Murphy Hill, high above Ocho Rios. After taking in the view it will be time to let ‘r rip on the blistering descent to world-renown Dunn’s River Falls. After regrouping at John Crow’s, the crew will romp through SMORBA’s trails in western St. Mary. The evening’s festivities will take place at the “Conscious Corner” bar in Rio Nuevo.

The next day riders will head to Pimento Hill, St. Mary, deep in rural Jamaica, to shred some technical singletrack. The after-party will take place at Charlie’s Beach, where SMORBA Trail Guru Natty Grant will have a meal fit for Rastas ready and waiting. Accommodation for the evening will be at River Lodge in nearby Robin’s Bay.

The morning ride on the 10th will take participants along the rugged coast line featuring mellow singletrack and breathtaking views. Ancient Spanish ruins signal the end of the track, and the beginning of a 1/4 mile hike to hidden Kwaaman Falls. The rider’s next leg will take them to a top secret location in the Blue Mountains.

The action on the 11th should prove Irie, mon. For the first time ever, the Fat Tyre Festival has been given an exclusive invitation to ride (and party) at one of the most unique mountain biking locations on the planet. The promoters have agreed not to disclose the exact location, but imagine dropping 2500 feet over 6km of professionally designed singletrack.

After recovering from the post-ride party, participants will head back to Ocho Rios on February 12th, but not before hitting the Red Light downhill trail.

Spaces for this year’s event are limited. If you are interested in attending or need more information, visit www.smorba.com

The Day I Kicked Santa’s Ass, and Other Christmas Tales

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

The Day I Kicked Santa’s Ass, and Other Christmas TalesI’ve got to stop watching television. It just gets me into trouble.

Not that I didn’t have an excellent excuse to be watching it the other day. Yes, an excellent excuse indeed.

All I wanted to do was get in an hour’s worth of spinning on my stationary trainer. That’s all. Just a little workout, tone up my fitness, loosen up my legs, shake off the cobwebs from what has been a pretty rough patch of winter weather. The last few weeks of snow, ice, and cold temperatures have meant one thing: no riding.

But, as anybody knows who has spent more than thirty minutes on a stationary bike, the time just crawls by as you pedal to nowhere. You really need a distraction if you want to remain sane, so it was perfectly rational for me to troop down to the family room and set up my bike and trainer in front of the television. Any one of you out there has probably done the exact same thing hundreds of times.

There weren’t any ball games on, and I didn’t want to spin through some boring cooking show so, being the Christmas season and all, I settled on a bit of light holiday fare: “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer.” It looked pretty harmless, so I hopped on the trainer, clicked in, and started to spin.

Being stuck indoors for a long time can do funny things to a person, so it’s hardly a surprise that I just couldn’t shake the feeling that I had seen this show before. Something about it seemed awfully familiar. First of all, there were no flashy visual effects or snappy Japanese-style animation. This was too old and too low budget for that.

No, what we had here were puppets.

Elf puppets and reindeer puppets, and a jocular singing snowman puppet with the voice of Burl Ives, a famous, rather rotund, folk singer from the early 1960’s.

Then it hit me. Reindeer. Burl Ives. Oh good lord, I remember this show.

It all came back in an instant, like a Bad Cartoon Flashback. Suddenly it’s 1967, and I’m six years old, curled up in my pajamas in front of the family television at Christmas-time, watching Rudolph and Santa and the singing snowman and…and…

And I found that, after more than 30 years, I was still really pissed-off at the way that the other puppets wouldn’t let poor Rudolph join in any reindeer games.

I should probably backtrack a bit here for those of you who weren’t exposed to “Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer” as a small and impressionable child. Let me explain. On the surface, “Rudolph” looks like any one of a number of treacle-sweet Christmas Spectaculars that the three major television networks used to pump out every year like so much stool softener. Legions of singing elves? Check. Dancing snowflakes? Check. Toys for all of the good little girls and boys? Check.

A mutant glowing reindeer with low self-esteem? Check.

Yes, a mutant glowing reindeer. You can forget the happy banality of a show like “Sesame Street” or the serene trippiness of “Teletubbies;” what we have here is children’s television that relies upon a more “traditional” formula to entertain: good old-fashioned Grimm Fairy-tale-style psychosocial cruelty. The result is a story that is just so off-kilter, just so dysfunctional, just so weird for a happy Christmas Special that even back in 1964, when the show first aired, the reviewers at “TV Guide” were scratching their heads trying to figure out just what the hell was going on:

“Fantasy Hour – Children: Burl Ives dons the suit of Sam the Snowman to narrate this animated fantasy of the reindeer born with a glowing red nose. Rudolph, not to be outdone by humans, develops a complex about his incongruity, and this is heightened when the other reindeer ban him for their social gatherings – until a blizzard threatens to cancel Christmas.”

Ho, ho, ho. A “complex about his incongruity”? Let’s not beat around the bush here: I suspect that even a stuffed reindeer puppet with a poorly-wired light bulb for a nose would quickly recognize that life is not turning out according to plan when Santa Claus – yes, Santa Claus, the one guy on the planet who is supposed to love everybody – decides to have your furry butt run out of town on a rail for being a freak.

Let the kids spend a magical television hour with Rudolph and you’d better have the child psychologist on speed-dial.

You might also want to have an EMT on call as well, because at this point all thoughts of me just sitting in front of the television and just spinning easily went out the window. Okay, I know that I’m really not supposed to watch too much television because, well, I tend to get a little, um, excited. A little too wrapped up in the story, if you catch my meaning. I’m watching that fat Santa asshole and his arctic elf freak show treat poor Rudolph like…like….well, like a stuffed reindeer puppet with a red nose. I hardly got past the opening credits before I really started spinning the cranks, working hard, sweating like a pig on crack, pushing a huge gear and jacking my cardio up waaay past my target heart rate, triggering the alarm on my heart rate monitor.

(Puff…puff)

Damn…you…Santa…you…candy…cane…eating…. (*wheeze*)… BASTARD.

Oh, you know the story. Shunned by his family and neighbors, ostracized by Santa, Rudolph is banished from the North Pole and left to wander the frozen tundra, a sad and broken reindeer with a glowing red nose. Yes, banished by Dear Santa, not the generous and caring Chris Kringle beloved by all, but the Fuhrer of the North Pole. An irritable control freak who rules the workshop at the North Pole with an iron fist. An evil, kinky, twisted Santa shacked up in the frozen wilderness with a heavy-set woman who indulges his fetish for dressing in red velvet and black leather boots while he enslaves a race of small toy craftsmen in his sweatshop above the Arctic Circle.

That Santa. The dude who just couldn’t tolerate a flying reindeer who was different.

Towards the end of this truly magical hour of family television it looks like Rudolph’s best chance retrieve a small shred of his dignity and strike a blow for glowing reindeer everywhere presents itself on Christmas Eve when Santa needs his help. An impenetrable blizzard has rolled in, and Santa really, really needs his little buddy with the antlers and the glowing nose – you know, the one that he has just sentenced to a lonely, nomadic life wandering a godforsaken arctic wasteland and dodging packs of reindeer-eating yetis – to come back and pull his sleigh full of toys through the murk.

Ho, ho, ho right back at you Santa.

As I pedaled along, eyes glued to the screen, I could almost see the thought balloons float by in the evil Santa puppet’s sawdust brain as he pondered his predicament: “Hmmm…. No Rudolph means no Santa delivering toys. No Santa delivering toys means unhappy children. Unhappy children mean…”

Unhappy children mean a big problem for Santa.

Indeed, Santa knows all too well what would happen if he ever failed to come through with the goods on Christmas Eve. By daybreak most of the world’s major capitals would be in flames, put to the torch by roving mobs of surly, disappointed youngsters. The United Nations would be forced to call an emergency session. Rome, London, Stockholm, and Moscow would all be reduced to smoking rubble for the want of a few toys. And then, having done their worst, the evil Santa puppet knows what would happen next. Having had its fill of destroying most of western civilization, the angry, torch-wielding mob of disappointed children would then come for him.

Which in my book would be freakin’ cool, except that it doesn’t happen that way in the story.

No, what happens next is supposed to be a beautiful example of the Magic of Christmas. Rudolph returns to the North Pole, happy elves sing and dance while the Fat Guy slithers up and makes nice, hoping that Rudolph will forget all about that whole Santa-sponsored social outcast thing in exchange for the “privilege” of hauling an overloaded sleigh around the globe. The climax comes when Santa asks that immortal question: “Rudolph, with your nose so bright, won’t you guide my sleigh tonight?”

What an asshole.

Having let this holiday injustice fester for over thirty years, I sure wasn’t about stand by now and let Rudolph – noble, guileless, brainless, Rudolph – be manipulated by the evil Santa puppet any longer.

No, I was determined that it would be different this time.

I was really working the bike now, sprinting like a madman, heart rate pegged, smoke coming off of the rear tire, bike and trainer bouncing across the basement floor as I thundered to Rudolph’s rescue like the Eighth Cavalry. The Evil Santa’s question hung in the air, waiting for a response. Before Rudolph could once again prove to all reindeer-kind that he has zero self-esteem, I lunged out of the saddle, shoved the bike forward across an imaginary finish line and shouted at the top of my lungs, “NOOOO RUDOLPH! DON’T DO IT! DON’T PULL HIS SLED! HE’S JUST USING YOU FOR YOUR NOSE! HE JUST WANTS YOUR NOSE! KICK HIS ASS, RUDOLPH! KICK HIS FAT LITTLE ELF ASS!”

And then I collapsed in a sweaty heap on the carpet, victorious. Finally, reindeer puppet justice had been served.

Cue Burl and the elves. Roll the credits.

After regaining consciousness, I untangled myself from the wreckage that once was my bicycle and toweled off. I spent the rest of the afternoon tisking and tutting to myself about the dangers of too much television and once again getting drawn into the whole Rudolph Saga. I vowed to stay away from any electronic devices for the rest of the holiday season.

But, you know, my heart rate data for that session was pretty spectacular, and I could use another interval work out. Hey, I see right here in the TV Guide that one of my favorites, Dr. Seuss’s “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” is on Channel 5 this Thursday. And, boy, that Grinch sure does piss me off…

[Ed Notes: Thanks to Dirt Rag reader Gregory F. Taylor for sending us this heartwarming story. We welcome submission from our readers. If you'd like to submit a story for our website, send an email with the goods, and we'll have a look.]



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