Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Ever Upward: The Importance of Being "Epic"

Last week or month or year or whenever it was, I got in big, big trouble with the Canadians because I joked that Giro d'Italia winner Ryder Hegemony was from the United States.  Obviously I wasn't too worried about incurring bodily harm because Canadians are gentle and passive people who are coddled by their progressive society and their free health care, but it still took me by surprise.  (By the way, if you're Canadian, I should explain that a "surprise" is when something unexpected happens, since I understand nothing unexpected ever happens in Canada.)  Anyway, I was still feeling bad about the whole thing--that is, until Starbucks Ireland outdid me by Tweeting about how Ireland is British:

I'm going to have to go ahead and assume that this Tweet came from Starbucks corporate headquarters in Seattle, because a Venti-sized mistake like this feels uniquely American.  I mean, anybody who's seen "Braveheart" knows that Ireland has been independent since Daniel Day-Lewis led Irish forces to victory at the Battle of Stonehenge during the War of 1812.  At least that's the way I learned it in social studies class, although at my school our textbooks and learning materials were all provided to us by the General Mills food company:


(Excerpt from the chapter in "The World According to General Mills" that covers the Great Famine.)

See, in America, tax breaks for giant corporations really do encourage philanthropy and benefit everybody in the long run.  Also, nothing helps kids learn how to identify a country on a map better than invading that country, which is why we do it so often.  Incidentally, did you know that there's such a thing as Canadian Lucky Charms?

The difference between this and what we get in the United States is that the Canadian version contains 75% less controversy.

Speaking of government and Twitter, that putz who wants to force us all wear helmets continues to exist--and to Tweet, for as Randy Descartes once said, "I Tweet, therefore I am (a putz)."  Here's one of his recent missives:


I was glad to see that the driver hit him without apologizing, because now he knows how it feels to be a New York City cyclist.  Fortunately, Greenfield was unharmed in the incident, because of course he was wearing his city-mandated driving helmet.  Anyway, between that and the friend who can eat a pie himself, David G. Greenfield's world is nothing short of meshuggeneh, and he really should quit politics and head out to LA where he can pitch a sitcom based on his life.  He's sure to become the next Jerry Seinfeld.

By the way, in case you were wondering where cyclists rank in New York City, we come in just under debris, according to this caption which was just forwarded to me by a reader:

Wolfe's Pond Beach on Staten Island. The lowest rated New York City beach for the third report in a row is seen here, littered with debris and cyclists. Flickr/emilydickinsonridesabmx

The photo above was taken during SICX, and while cyclocross may be taking the rest of the country by storm, in New York it's just more crap that washes up on the beach along with driftwood, styrofoam cups, and ancient tampon applicators.  (Also, just to underscore the point, the above is from the website of the local PBS station, so even the smuggies hate us.)

This could be why so many New York City cyclists attempt to escape, and another reader has forwarded me this article about some guy from New York who tried to ride his singlespeed up Mt. Everest:



Apparently, this is the sort of moronic project you undertake after you've already done the whole "artisanally homeless" thing:

According to Irmak, his homelessness was by choice—"a four-month street retreat"—during which period he slept in a large cardboard box under the Queensborough Bridge and in Long Island City. Sometime in 2009, he started fixing discarded bikes he found around the city and selling them on Craigslist.

Now, I'm no outdoorsman, but I'm pretty sure you should work your way up to something like climbing Mt. Everest.  I'm also pretty sure you're not ready to be climbing Mt. Everest if you can't even remember your jacket:

Before coming here, Irmak had never worn crampons. During his first acclimatizing rotation up to Camp I, he forgot his jacket and had to return to Base Camp. 

Also, as I understand it, crampons are the hiking equivalent of clipless pedals.

Anyway, unsurprisingly the local authorities told him that he couldn't make his stupid climb, which led him to believe he was the victim of a fraud:

Irmak is convinced he's the target of government fraud. I told him it seemed more like garden variety incompetence. 

I really, really hope that when the writer says "garden variety incompetence" that he's referring to Irmak.

Anyway, you may think you've "portaged" a bicycle, but this guy is officially the Sir Edmund Hillary of "epic" nonplussed bike portaging:


Aydin Irmak carried his bicycle all the way to Base Camp, and meant to carry it all the way to the summit. But bicycling is illegal on Everest.

Still, I'm not impressed, as I'm no stranger to being trapped in the wild with my bicycle.  This one time, I got on a peak Long Island Railroad train in Southampton with my bike and they kicked me off at Hampton Bays.  And that's the uncool Hamptons, a forbidding landscape without an acceptable brunch spot for miles.  I had to take the Jitney all the way back to the city!

In any case, after all that mishigas, the expedition resulted in medals and accolades--not for Aydin Irmak, but for the guy who had to rescue him, since Irmak ultimately had to be schlepped off of Everest by an Israeli:

No word about the status of the singlespeed, so I'm going to assume that Irmak was forced to eat it to stay alive.

Lastly, in the more mundane world of bicycle retail, a Twitterer alerted me to a savage screed about the state of the industry, written by a "consultant" who knows the secret of turning the cycling industry from a six billion dollar a year concern into like a bazillion dollar a year concern:


But she's not going to tell you unless you pay her:


There are so many untapped markets out there for the bike industry. I’m not going to list them because, frankly, as a consultant that’s what I get paid to do. If you’re interested in hearing my strategies, hire me to create one for you. It’s so frustrating, though, because when I point out a lucrative market for cycling companies that NO ONE is marketing to, it’s a golden opportunity: fresh meat, free money, no competition – but the bike industry says “no, no, that might set us APART!” And the LAST thing anyone in the bike industry wants to do is to set oneself apart from the norm. Sigh. Backwards.

She's like the Don Draper of bicycle retail, and I only hope her big idea isn't "more belt drives."  I was also surprised that it took dozens of comments before a reader finally blamed the sorry state of the cycling industry on an anti-recumbent conspiracy:

I have now been the proud owner of a recumbent for the last year. Not that a recumbent is a panacea - they have their own challenges. No, the question is, why do so few people even evaluate recumbents as solutions to the pain of the diamond frame configuration? (We call them "wedgies" for obvious reasons.)



The answer to that and many other of the questions above is the poisonous influence of bicycle racing. Over a hundred years ago, racing banned recumbents and since no one ever saw their "heroes" riding recumbents, those people who did were considered outré.


I continue to experience this poisonous influence, because whenever I get advice from a racer, it turns out to be wrong for real, useful, everyday bicycling. Roadies are the worst - mountain bikers are more in touch with the real world and much less arrogant.


I just completed my first Metric Century on my Bacchetta Giro 20. I still had to solve seat problems, even on the recumbent, because Bacchetta suffers from the same racing poison as most other bicycle companies.


This will not be solved until the bicycle racer wimps get over their fear of other configurations. Yes, those p*ssies are afraid of us. Get over it and the industry may be able to grow. Stay stuck in the hundred-year rut and you will stay stuck fighting for the same size pie every year.

Right.  Come back to us when you schlep one up Everest.


138 comments:

  1. Tuff wheel 2 podiumszzz

    ReplyDelete
  2. Serial RetrogrouchJune 5, 2012 at 12:08 PM

    alto diez

    ReplyDelete
  3. I think it is time we revoke Mr. Greenfield's twittering right.

    ReplyDelete
  4. ant 2nd! Finally.
    Everest?
    Too crowded.
    Try k2.

    ReplyDelete
  5. AND THAT'S HOW A BILL BECOMES A LAW!

    ReplyDelete
  6. I've always had a "live and let live" policy with recumbents, maybe I need to reconsider.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Recumbites sure are dicks

    ReplyDelete
  8. Funny. Debris and Cyclists.

    Silly. Hungarian NYer on Everest.

    There's no there there unless you're rescued.

    Outside Magazine still sucks balls, massively.

    ReplyDelete
  9. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Recumbents but no babe, WTF is up with that?

    ReplyDelete
  11. "I am fighting for a smaller pantie-shaped slice of pie, now just leave me here to die already"

    ReplyDelete
  12. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  13. single speeds are magically delicious! But a belt drive would have had more fiber.

    ReplyDelete
  14. At least Irmak's being near death was apparently-like his homelessness- by choice.
    I wonder if he slept in a cardboard box at base camp?

    ReplyDelete
  15. Concern troll bicycling biz consultant can just suck my balls.

    Wait, I think that's what the bike industry said too.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Hedgedog tested positive for Moosehead Lager and back bacon and has been stripped of glory.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Wow, a Recumbent Conspiracy Theorist? Those people exist?

    ReplyDelete
  18. Yes, multiple Recumbabe.
    I've never had to eat my bike to survive. More bacon please.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Recumbent Riders could organized their own races, get sponsors, TV deals etc. #Occupy Recumbent! How bout the RRAAM. recumbent race across america.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Pants obligatory, down here in the peloton. Feck!

    ReplyDelete
  21. Recumbent riders are angry.

    If their bikes were more affordable people'd ride them.

    ReplyDelete
  22. PEAK BIKE

    the highway to Everest is littered with a litany of literary litterers who ride litters and blog from basecamp.

    ReplyDelete
  23. At my lake, we have to contend with ancient crampon applicators which wash up on the shore.

    Gross...

    ReplyDelete
  24. While we're at it. There is another cycling group long maligned, oft ignored.

    I'm talking about pedicabs.

    Does not their brows sweat from labor.
    they cycle for work, earning pennies

    They are an institution elsewhere
    In India pedicabs are common

    Yet, no cool, alt status like the messenger
    Nor are they gaining the attention of the sturdy cargo bike or bakefiet.

    ReplyDelete
  25. True story:

    Yesterday, I had fast food for lunch. I told the pencil-necked teenager who served me my curly fries that he bore an uncanny resemblance to David Byrne. I asked him if anyone ever said that to him before. He looked at me like I was from another planet, and said "Who's David Byrne?" I said "You know, the Talking Heads?" He said "Who are the Talking Heads?"

    Jeeze, the kids these days...

    ReplyDelete
  26. Jitney driver to Bamboo town...

    ReplyDelete
  27. The King of Park SlopeJune 5, 2012 at 1:07 PM

    What kind of rent are we talking for a large cardboard box under the Queensborough Bridge?

    ReplyDelete
  28. BSNYC,
    I do not know if you are aware but basically most all Canadians own guns which is why cooler heads must prevail and also why they leave their doors unlocked because they would not mind using them.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Aydin Irmak single speed bike has a rear derailer. What other facts did outside get wrong?

    ReplyDelete
  30. wishiwasmerckx - Did the kid own a car?

    ReplyDelete
  31. basecamp frozen pants yabbies

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  32. Anon 12:43, considering some RAAM riders have to duct tape their heads up when their neck muscles give out after days of racing a RRAAM sounds way too logical to ever happen before the singularity. Wait, I have to put on my tinfoil hat before I post this ... Okay, ready.

    ReplyDelete
  33. To paraphrase the mobster in the Godfather - Keep the debris, discard the cyclists.

    cycle

    ReplyDelete
  34. But bicycling is illegal on Everest.


    That's like saying bobsleding is illegal in the Sahara.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Make mine a low-fat panacea, venti, sprinkled with lucky charms.

    ReplyDelete
  36. 1) Ha, "Randy Descartes."

    2) Go easy on America's tuque. I wouldn't want to be identified with us either. AND I'M AMERICAN. (But not a real, AMERICAN American, you know like Sarah Palin defines it.)

    2a) But yeah, at least you're not in danger of stirring up "the Troubles."

    3) Hmm, the story starts with "forgot his jacket" and ends with "had to be rescued off the mountain." Talk about a surprise plot twist! That story has more twists and turns than a Madonna's husband movie!

    luv,
    Anonymous

    ReplyDelete
  37. Mishugenuh?? Or however the hell U spl it. What, Larry David’s consulting on this blog now?
    These pretzels are making me thirsty!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    ReplyDelete
  38. Smugness alert!: 8.8 miles this morning. Road all to myself. Met three cars and a farm tractor.

    The thing the recumbent conspiracists forget is that early racing also banned the use of gears-–until their virtue was proven undeniably. Early TDFers actually pushed their bikes up hills or switched to lower-geared single speeds for the Tourmalet. So if ‘bents were really so superior (and even slightly less awkward-looking), somebody would bribe the UCI to make everybody ride ‘em.

    ReplyDelete
  39. @Maynewoods
    He has a derailleur, but he probably left the shifters in his jacket, the jacket he forgot.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Does anyone else sometimes feel a little randy after studying Cartesian Dualism?

    ReplyDelete
  41. Recumbabe's nipple (finally exposed).

    Nipple Podium.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Penn State Coaching StaffJune 5, 2012 at 1:59 PM

    Little Randy? Sure, I'll feel a little Randy.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Get recumbent, Randy.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Ride Your Bike Into Thin Air. Gimme some money and screw what that Russian climber guy said.

    ReplyDelete
  45. The bike was placed ON HOUSE ARREST:
    "...Irmak said he must remain in Nepal until he can get his bicycle out of house arrest. After biking for two years around the world through 19 countries, beginning in Amsterdam, Irmak had a desire to literally “take this bicycle from New York City to the top of the world.” From Kathmandu to base camp, he carried the bicycle “Sherpa style on [his] head.”

    While the authorities initially granted him a permit to take the bike up to 7,900 m., once he arrived at base camp they changed their minds and “arrested” his bike. This was around the time he met Ben- Yehuda, who was the first person to arrive at the base camp after the Turkish cyclist."

    http://www.jpost.com/Features/InThespotlight/Article.aspx?id=271063

    ReplyDelete
  46. Avoid shortcuts down on the bike.

    ReplyDelete
  47. I forgot my coat too, so lighten up.

    ReplyDelete
  48. All The Black People In Portland SayJune 5, 2012 at 2:05 PM

    Cat 1 Smugness: I'm going to start a BICYCLE POWERED bicycle manufacturer...

    Fuck "fair trade" and "carbon credits" which are bullshit anyway, fuck wind, solar, nuclear etc...

    I'm going to draw, cut and weld steel with PEDAL POWER, lay up crabon with PEDAL POWER, weld fat aluminum with PEDAL POWER.

    Did you know every mile of bike riding saves the economy EIGHT JILLION DOLLARS compared to the costs of a mile of car travel?

    IT'S TRUE!

    ReplyDelete
  49. I hope that that recumbent conspiracy guy doesn't kill and mutilate his boyfriends bike only to mail parts to UCI officials later.

    Just saying...

    ReplyDelete
  50. I scrotilate therefore I scranus

    ReplyDelete
  51. WAIT!

    I scranus therefore I scrotilate

    ReplyDelete
  52. Inspector Douche' RCMPJune 5, 2012 at 2:21 PM

    serial back bacon pantie abuse leads directly to Swine Erysipelas

    you have been warned!

    ReplyDelete
  53. I see NSFW nipples. NICE!

    ReplyDelete
  54. PEZ outlaw?! The Canadian Lucky Charms guy is selling the rights. Weird.

    http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pez-Outlaw-Diary-The-Pez-Monkey-Traveling-Circus-TV-Rights-Offer-/270930240218?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3f14b362da

    ReplyDelete
  55. Tibetan Portage facilitators are really tough and stringy and as a rule posses a strong yak cheese flavoured after taste. Exotic but in a parochial regionalized sense of the word.

    ReplyDelete
  56. Dead Donna SummerJune 5, 2012 at 2:49 PM

    On the radio...

    ReplyDelete
  57. Starbucks India and Original 13 Colonies Starbucks are closely watching that Irish experiment to see whether they should copy it.

    ReplyDelete
  58. Eric "The Chamferererer" MurrayJune 5, 2012 at 3:13 PM

    Dear Liz Hatch,
    I just want you to know I would slice up your chamois after a 100 mile training ride and digest it coated with a fine red wine vinegrette if it meant I got to taste your delicious (the one with 100 miles on it) taint if only for a minute.

    ReplyDelete
  59. What, no mention of Aydin's exquisite cockpit.

    ReplyDelete
  60. WCRM,

    A question: I agree that David Greenfield is a putz, but doesn't he almost qualify as a schmuck? As a nonmember of the tribe, I'm not that knowledgable about proper usage of these terms.

    BTW, when I was a kid growing up in Connecticut (a.k.a. New York City's comb over), our mailman's nickname was Schmuck, or sometimes affectionately, 'Schmuckie'. True story.

    ReplyDelete
  61. Esteemed Commenter DaddoOneJune 5, 2012 at 3:31 PM

    why do so few people even evaluate recumbents as solutions to the pain of the diamond frame configuration?

    Because they look really really stupid.

    ReplyDelete
  62. There is no water polo games allowed on Everest. True story.

    ReplyDelete
  63. "I just completed my first Metric Century on my Bacchetta Giro 20. I still had to solve seat problems, even on the recumbent, because Bacchetta suffers from the same racing poison as most other bicycle companies."

    Maybe when recumbant drivers realise completing a 66 mile ride isn't all that impressive they'll gain more respect from snobby roadies.

    ReplyDelete
  64. "I just completed my first Metric Century on my Bacchetta Giro 20. I still had to solve seat problems, even on the recumbent, because Bacchetta suffers from the same racing poison as most other bicycle companies."

    Maybe when recumbant drivers realise completing a 66 mile ride isn't all that impressive they'll gain more respect from snobby roadies.

    ReplyDelete
  65. I laughed so hard at the "debris/cyclist caption that my IPA slipped from my grasp and impacted the screen of my IPad.
    We're both shattered AND I dropped my beer!

    So to whom do I send the $700 bill for my new IPad, WCRM or the other guys?

    ReplyDelete
  66. ...well, i must say...'our' recumbent conspiracy theorist is certainly much nicer & better mannered than 'their' recumbent conspiracy theorist...

    ReplyDelete
  67. I agree with anon 3:51 (and 3:53).

    I've completed a couple of 'metric double centuries', and I'm not even that impressed with myself. Though I just refer to them as '130-ish mile rides'. I do wonder what they call a metric century in nations that use the metric system? An imperial two thirds century?

    Anyway, I plan to do my next 'metric double' on one of these. I'm not yet sure how many liters will be involved.

    ReplyDelete
  68. ...quick !!!...who else is from connecticut & becoming famous ???...

    ReplyDelete
  69. ...i'd sign up to ride shotgun on your beer wagon for your next 'metric double', mikeweb but beer during the day just makes me sleepy...

    ReplyDelete
  70. It's incumbent

    upon the recumbent

    to be redundant

    ReplyDelete
  71. Apparently the Northern Irish aren't as protective of and uptight about their British ties as Canadians are of Ryder. Or, more likely, they can't be bothered to read this blog.

    ReplyDelete
  72. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  73. MikeWeb,
    When you say "nations that use the metric system" you mean every single nation on the face of the earth except us and Liberia, right?

    ReplyDelete
  74. Fooken A we can't be bothered to read this blog.

    ReplyDelete
  75. The SI Police (a division of Interpol)June 5, 2012 at 5:14 PM

    100 km = 62.1ish miles
    200 km = 124.2ish miles

    Personally, I'm looking for a unit system that will make a 62 km ride sound impressive.

    ReplyDelete
  76. I did a 5-year-old's century on Saturday.

    "like 100 miles!" = 5.6 miles

    ReplyDelete
  77. Mikeweb,
    I did a double metric century a couple of years ago. I'd signed up for a century that started 18 miles from my house, and instead of taking the train to it (which I'd done once before), I thought "why not just ride there?" So I did, and rode back, and I could barely walk up the steps when I got home. I think I'll call it a double metric fool's errand.

    ReplyDelete
  78. crosspalms,

    Pretty much the story of my 'doubles' too, though the second one was a lot less painful. Both during and after.

    bgw,

    I wish a certain 'nutmeg stater' wasn't gaining renoun quite so quickly...

    McFly,

    Amurka does have thing going for it. Three words: deep. fried. turducken. I rest my case.

    ReplyDelete
  79. His Everest bike had gears! Can't tell the difference between 1 gear and multiple with a derailleur?

    ReplyDelete
  80. I'm pretty certain that anyone that wears cammo pants isn't qualified to climb Everest.

    ReplyDelete
  81. ...mikeweb...sometimes one has to bow to the inevitable, it seems & this is looking like one of those times...

    ...late last night, with a certain amount of deliberation, i turned a corner & just decided i was witness to a phenomena & to role with it but then again, i don't have a vested interest in this situation...

    ...i only hope the ramifications ultimately have a positive effect in my neck of the woods...

    ReplyDelete
  82. Goran Kropp rode his bike TO Everest from Sweden to, then climbed the mountain (no oxygen tanks) and rode home again.

    Recumbents are nice but pricy. That has more to do with the market than anything else.

    ReplyDelete
  83. Personally, I'm looking for a unit system that will make a 62 km ride sound impressive.

    June 5, 2012 5:14 PM




    1 Kilometer = 1,000,000,000 Micrometers

    ReplyDelete
  84. So, if Canada is indeed metric, how come the dollar is "par" with the Loonie, Canada's wetter dollar? Shouldn't we get 1 Yankee buck for 62 Canuck pennies?

    Just knowing those hosers are a mere fraction of a metric parsec away is really scary.

    ReplyDelete
  85. not as scary as (most) american beer...

    ReplyDelete
  86. Everest bum has a cassette and derailleur but no shifters, hence ss. Not a fixie, though, so def lowers his street cred.

    The title is "Riding Everest" but is he ever seen, or even able to, RIDE at all? He is described (and pictured) as "carrying it." I'm all about a good hike-a-bike, but that's so I can to get to or piece together some sweet singletrack, not just carry an odd-shaped weight up the hill. Maybe he could hop up it trials style like Hans Rey, and an official can count his dabs (separate numbers for uphill and downhill?).

    Or maybe he should look into a loophole, the rule probably says nothing about taking a unicycle to the peak. Easier to portage, and then a great one-handed rodeo-style descent.

    ReplyDelete
  87. MORE AIR BAG HEALMENT PORN ORIMAFUCKINKILLAYA....I am patiently awaiting the "CAR BACK RADIO EDIT REMIX."

    ReplyDelete
  88. lol! new york cowards don't seem to be able to admit to making mistakes.

    ReplyDelete
  89. One of my FB "friends" posts:


    David and I went up Mnt Le Conte today but had to go back to base camp 1 after we realized we left our food and water there.


    True Story.

    ReplyDelete
  90. Vegas said... a cassette and derailleur but no shifters, hence ss.

    A little self restraint would make any bike ss.

    ReplyDelete
  91. Elephant Trunk Skidding Down K2 coming soon to Vimeo.

    ReplyDelete
  92. Bike racing in itself doesn't set a poor example for all cyclists; it is the insistance on the US bike industry to set racing as the standard for bicycling. Joe Couch potato watches five minutes of the Tour de France, gets inspired, buys "Bicycling Magazine;" reads all those ads and articles for the perfect bike, purchases a racing bike with full kit, rides once, feels the pain, hangs the bike in the garage, and returns to the couch. That's the dumb one. The smarter one says "f*#k it I don't want to do that" and just stays on the couch. The smartest one buys a comfort bike and begins by riding a few miles a few times a week with his family and or friends and it grows on him. Bike racing has no baby steps; Lance was born wearing spandex.

    ReplyDelete
  93. The smartest one buys Couch Potato #1's year-old, unused race bike on craigslist for 50%.

    ReplyDelete
  94. I totally did that. Got an 09 crabon Synapse for 900 in '11.

    ReplyDelete
  95. Douche' Simon & FarOutFarFarkleJune 6, 2012 at 10:33 AM

    Where have you gone Re-cem-babe ...

    Our Douche' cult turns it's horny thoughts to you ...

    Woo-Woo-Woo

    ReplyDelete
  96. Like a Bridge over skanky water

    ReplyDelete
  97. Simondouche' & GarFUNKdouche'June 6, 2012 at 11:27 AM

    Hello recumbabe, my old friend
    I've come to finger-bang with you again
    Because a vision softly creeping
    Left its seeds while I was sleeping
    And the vision that was planted in my scranus
    Still remains
    Within the sound of douche' bagging ...

    ReplyDelete
  98. Anon 3:20 AM(?) - you are so right. Since I gave up my Fred-ness and started riding an old raleigh, I started to ENJOY cycling. I don't have to go fast. My times doesn't have to be better than the time before. The Mags teach us to be good little consumers and buy the most expensive bikes, shoes, clothes, helmets, accessories. Screw em - tkae your son or daughter out for a bike ride in the park. Do it again. Find a few nice safe trails. Repeat. Enjoy.

    cycle

    ReplyDelete
  99. My grammers doesn't have to be better than grammers before....

    ReplyDelete
  100. 3rd Son from the StonedJune 6, 2012 at 1:08 PM

    so, ya gotta tell me ...

    is it 4:20 yet?

    ReplyDelete
  101. Thank you. I sense a kindred spirit. The guy you see with the pro, say football jersey, with the name of his favorite player on it doesn' believe for one second that he will be playing in the NFL the next season. He sits on the couch, tosses the football around with his kid, and maybe gets the guys together for a touch football game. The "Fred" who buys the crabon bike with all the fashion accessories actually believes he be a star. he abandons and alienates his family and friends, rides to the point of pain and injury, all for that "personal best." But as Bike Snob says, he is only deluding himself; he simply sucks.

    ReplyDelete
  102. What is the deal with the breast in the Dockers ad?

    ReplyDelete
  103. I found this great new place to store my bike. I can leave my bike there for days and weeks when I'm on vacation, or just nights when I just don't want my bike damaged or stolen. They even have storage for for the extra stuff that I don't have room for anymore.http://parkcirclestorage.com/

    ReplyDelete
  104. I laughed at "mandatory driving helmet"

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