Ummmm…

A random link showed up in the BnC inbox today, which looked a little dubious. Pretty Boy promptly sent through a message re-stating the link, which could either be a seal of approval or a suggestion towards a healthy dose of BnC-style cynicism and heckling. Either way, I went and visited this website and saw what looks like a bunch of Alien and Leader frames built up with custom colours, fancy spoke patterns, painful saddle angles, dubious brake set up and odd rim drillings. There’s a lot of talk about lifestyle and aesthetic and paradigm shifts and other such stuff. It’s difficult to avoid getting a little BSNYC about it all, so instead I think I’ll just open it up to the discerning readers of this fine website and allow you to start flinging the stinky stuff around. Have at it!

Man Overboard!

I found out tonight that Wade, who owns the blue fixed conversion I spotted rocking a DIY BnC spoke card yesterday, got collected with a car door later in the day. He’s down and out with a broken collarbone, which sucks a big one! Getting doored is one of the constant risks when you’re riding in the city, and it’s shit to hear of someone getting done in by it. So best of luck to ya Wade, hope the recovery is a quick one and you’re  back on the bike soon!

Also, cheers to Jono for hooking up a sweet full moon ride tonight. Small turnout, but it was perfect weather and good fun. Ended up with a fair amount of mud on the bike after a backstreet detour went a little stray, but the moon was shining and the breeze was minimal, making it a ripper night for a ride.

Saturday

Sun came out today. Life ain’t all bad. Still want a ‘cross bike. Still gotta get the MTB dirty again before I can justify any new wheels.

This is happening around the place, but not Hobart. If it’s near you, I’m sure you know about it already, but maybe not. If you go, I’m sure there’ll be something good.

And here’s an interesting blog post about laser cut dropouts, if you’re into that kind of thing. Forwarded on by my old man, aka the Man In Black, aka BP, aka Bruce Pringsteen. Respect.

And from the same site, here’s an amusing video. Should be replicated around the world for worthy chuckles and good times.

Also, spotting custom BnC spoke cards on bikes in the city makes my day. Rep it and roll it.

Don’t forget daylight savings starts tonight (clocks forward 2am). That means more light, and that summer is going to drag its sorry arse out of the shed eventually. Which means more riding time, more drinking time, and hopefully plenty of hot weather (yeah right!). A PSA from BNC. That’s how we do it.

Rapha Can Kiss My Arse

There is no glory in suffering, it just hurts. Sure, you can look back on it with some kind of rose-tinted photo-chromatic lenses in your Rudi Projects and make it seem like a noble pursuit to make yourself hurt on a bicycle, but when your spindly jelly legs are about to collapse beneath you and your lungs feel like limp pieces of cheese in your chest, glory is well out of sight. In fact, glory is probably hanging out at the local footy oval with a bunch of sporting ‘heroes’, undoubtably enjoying a beer and a snag.

I live at the bottom of a small hill. There’s a road that goes up in, and I’ve never turned my pedals along its length, mainly because it’s really steep and seems like way too much effort. However, with my newly completed Rapha-inspired bicycle, I figured I should try do something that hurt. Apparently it makes you a better person and a better cyclist. To be honest, I felt less bettered and more battered.

I set out from my comfortable couch and promptly ran into Clint at the bottom (figuratively speaking of course. Actually running into him would have made the whole thing even worse). Clint proceeded to tell me I was a bit mad and silly and a little daft, and how he hadn’t even got around to riding the damn thing on his road bike with all its gears and light weight bits and what-not, never mind trying it on a fixed gear bike. Great, after spending the last hour talking up my glory and triumph in my head, I was now directly at the bottom of it all, and feeling like it was where I should stay.

Regardless, I soldiered on. It was about 20m later that I realised I actually had no idea what the climb looked like or what I was actually in for. I had a good feeling that I’d make it 100m up and then turn into a withered mess. I wasn’t far off. In fact, in less than 50m I was out of my seat and hauling on the pedals, trying in vain to get further over my front wheel, despite the 80mm stem and flat bars on my ‘tricked-out’ bike. I swore and cursed and tried not to veer into oncoming traffic as my head began to swell with effort and my mind splintered and finally cracked, leaving me yearning to sell my soul in exchange for some bar ends. I passed the quarry, which is pretty much at the base of the hill. I’d never even realised it was there, that was how deep I had ventured into my unknown backyard. After that I shut out anything that wasn’t the ragged piece of tarmac under my front wheel. Road markers became my only world. Every five metres clawed from the road ahead of me was almost a respite, and the fulfilling of some lofty goal that should have seen me ushered into the cycling hall of fame, complete with champagne, cocaine and beautiful women. No such luck.

Finally things levelled out. Awareness pried its way back into my brain and things got a little more human. The road mellowed and I reacquainted myself with my long-forgotten saddle. The sun emerged from behind a cloud (probably) and the day was bathed in glorious afternoon light (maybe). I felt like I was in familiar territory, and I could see oft-ridden mountain bike trails in the bush, reminding me that I’d climbed this low before, albeit on a bike with an oft-used 22-34 gear ratio. I sat up and took a swig out of my water bottle (stashed in my jersey, none of those useful cage mounts on my ridiculous frame), then took a deep breathe of fresh air into my egg-sized lungs. Surely this was it, the peak of my ambition, the crest of the proverbial wave? Once again, no such luck.

On I stumbled, weaving my way from one side of the road to the other, mentally cursing my recent past-self that had somehow managed to override that safe, comfortable well of laziness that gently rules my life at all other times. There’s always a final battle in all the movies, a courageous last stand in all the stories. Our heroes take one final stab, give on last kick, and surge on to triumph. Not me. I whimpered my way up that final stretch of lonely road. I groped my sunglasses off my face in a desperate attempt to somehow pull more oxygen through my pores. I spent what felt like an eternity unleashing hatred upon the initial thoughts towards style that left me with a cotton cap on my head and the word ‘suicidal’ emblazoned above my eyes. This wasn’t the easy exit of suicide, it was a sadistic self mutilation that I just didn’t have the balls to take on. It bloody sucked.

Finally the holy intersection that ended my suffering pulled itself into view. It teased me from afar, and slowly road markers crept their way past as I hauled myself onto the sacrosanct surface of my salvation. Sweet, sweet mediocrity. Oh holy flat. The road that signalled ‘all downhill from here’ eased its way under my tyres and I slumped into my saddle. So much for glory. I’d climbed 2.5km along a stretch of back road and ended up in the middle of the bush somewhere, with nothing to show for it but a semi-retarded expression on my face and a slightly better view than when I started. Rapha can kiss my arse.

I think the ride to Ouse is going to hurt a lot. I’m hoping it’ll be a little more enjoyable. I dunno about epic, and I’m not sure about glory, but I do know it’ll be a damn good time with a bunch of good heads. You should come along.

Not Safe For Work (Seriously)

Just spotted this over on Trackosaurus. It’s too funny not to pass on, but be warned! If you lack a sense of humour, are easily offended by er…sexual content, or if for some reason you’re under the mistaken impression that BnC is a wholesome family blog, don’t follow this link. If you want a chuckle, or if you’re getting on in years and want to reminisce about being 16 again, then go wild. I’m still chuckling. I wonder if Lotto were onto the whole viral marketing thing a few years ahead of the pack?

Mutitjulu Bike Kitchen – A beginning

Paul Kelly’s line, ‘from little things, big things grow’ is well applied to our Community Bicycle Workshops, our small-scale wrenching sessions have begun to sprout into something much bigger..

Three bike repair workshops have been run, the result being kids from Mutitjulu with the sufficient skill to repair their own bicycles given the opportunity and tools. Long term Rangers are saying they can’t ever remember seeing soooo many kids on bikes.

Help has come in (un-sought) from various quarters.. Mission Australia has provided the venue and spare parts, NT Police kicked in some bikes and labour, Phil and Yvonne from Penny Farthing Avanti Plus gave us a few bikes and offered to save us a box of tires and tubes, MacDonell Shire have cleaned up the BMX track, and the Bicycle Institute of South Australia have offered assistance..  All awesome.

This weekend I was in Alice Springs hoping to pick up a few BMX’s from the Recycling Centre when I ran into Mark Swindells.. Mark had heard what we’d been doing out at Mutitjulu, so when Deadly Treadlies keeled over this week he rushed in a grabbed us what ever he could. Mark handed me a big box of pedals, a box of seatposts and another of saddels before inviting me around to his house to help myself to his collecting of bicycles… and what a collection of bicycles (my vote for best backyard ever).

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Continue reading “Mutitjulu Bike Kitchen – A beginning”

Love/Hate

It’s well known that we here at BnC HQ have a deep seated (pun!) dislike of the vehicles known as ‘recumbents’. For some reason the two-wheels-and-pedals nature of these abhorrent vehicles sees them associated with bicycles all too frequently. We’re open minded to a fault, but sometimes you just have to draw the line, and recumbents fall far, far beyond that drunken scrawl. And so it is that I find myself somewhat torn about posting this up. Technically it is a recumbent. But then, technically it’s not a bicycle, so maybe that excuses it? Either way, it’s mutated enough that it appeals to my ‘weird shit’ sensibilities and I think it fits in somewhat with Ben’s recent touring efforts. So, thanks to a heads-up from Carl, I present…the Quike.

Yep, that’s one messed up machine. But I can’t help but be fascinated and drawn into its bizarre set of components. Look closely…Fox Vanillas (coil, makes sense for touring), two gearing systems featuring a Rohloff and a Schlumpf, corrected steering, and a load hauling ability that’s probably hard to top. Not only that, but it’s Australian made and designed, which is always a winner. I still don’t know if I like it, and I think it’s a morbid fascination as much as anything else. But the fact is, it exists, and that’s probably enough reason to post it here. Make up your own mind.

Link: Steppe By Steppe – The Quike