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Entries from June 1, 2011 - June 30, 2011

Thule - Not just for porting your bikes any more! The 25 liter MacBook Backpack

Building a startup is…well let’s just say it forces you and your family to be lean. And I mean bone-skinny lean. Ha! And that means saving pennies anywhere you can like driving less/riding more….which I’d probably do anyways….but it is great motivation to keep the car in the garage and ride downtown on one of the 300 sunny days on average Boulder offers.

I had one of these massive laptop backpacks for years. Probably given to me by a previous employer. Way too big, falling apart and definitely not ergo enough. That’s when I saw this guy riding his commuter downtown and had a double-take as to what was on his back: Thule?? Wait. Don’t they just make car racks?? Apparently not!

Sure enough I’d see more and more of them popping up over town. Slimmer, better profiled packs that look like they ‘molded’ to the back better and were smaller in size than my monster pack I’d been using for so long. My impulsivity took over and I scored one to be one of the cool kids. The pack I kept seeing I came to find is the Thule “TCBP-117 25 Liter MacBook Backpack”. Ya, a mouthful! The pack is jammed with features though….and as you’ll see…great ones for those of us with bad eyesight.

First, their spec list is this which I robbed from their website:

  • Padded, integrated laptop compartment holds up to a 17” MacBook Pro or PC.
  • Heat-molded, crush proof SafeZone™ compartment protects your sunglasses, iPhone, portable electronics and other fragile gear.
  • Die-cut EVA shoulder straps with mesh covering provide ventilation and breathability.
  • Compression straps customize the bag to the size of your load
  • Organization compartment keeps cords and other accessories at hand but out of the way.
  • Multiple grab-and-go handles allow for easy transport.
  • Side pocket keeps a water bottle close at hand
  • Lightweight, durable fabric is also water-resistant.

Here’s my sort of detailed breakdown of the pack…

DSC_0130

Smaller profile and compression straps keep the pack better positioned on the back.

Click to read more ...

Ben Berden commits to racing a full US schedule.

Ben Berden, (c) Ken ConleyI guess you can consider this a scoop…but the reality is ‘cross is such a small world that even the Atlantic Ocean itself isn’t big enough for crossers like me in the US to understand what our friends in Za Motherland are up to these days. And what one of them is up to is ground breaking as far as I am concerned for our sport.

Ben Berden will be coming to race in the United States exclusively this fall. Ben has made some sorties in the U.S. in the past (Cross Vegas as an example) but now he’ll be coming to pin on numbers in the USGP and other UCI races from coast to coast for a full fall schedule.

Ben has an interesting past. His palmares is a long and storied one. A true child of Belgium from Limburg where they drop the n’s off the end of words (say: Erwin Verveck-e and Ben Berd-e) just as fast as their riders drop the rest of the international peloton in ‘cross races. I have nearly 300 bootlegged ‘cross DVD’s from way back in the day and I studied Ben, almost fanatically. He is a classic diesel with hands on hoods, butt in saddle, powering incessantly…except when he takes his hands are off the bar to clear North American riders who are getting lapped. Ahem…

In one of my favorite books,Van Thys Tot Nys (see picture left), you can get an expose of how Ben grew through the ranks, stoemper cyclocross bikeswith victories in the Beloften (‘Beloft-e’) or U23 class in 1996. He sky-rocketed from there with an onslaught of victories that was truly remarkable.

Ben also has a past that involved PED’s which may have attributed to some of that sky-rocketing success. He was busted for EPO use in 2005 and served his suspension. He returned to racing two years later with a new attitude…and a boat load of new tattoos.

Ben will be riding for a Oregon-based bike manufacture Stoemper Bicycles this fall, a company we all know little about, the stealth company that they are! The more I learn, I’ll report. Maybe we can get Ben out for a Wednesday Worlds on his trip through Boulder…

Stoemper Photo by Chris Milliman

Summer breeze

As I hit publish on this post, it’s June 20th and a snow squall is ripping through the high country. Unbelievable. I don’t think we’ll be doing mad altitude rides for some time. But alas, as they say here in Colorado: “Don’t like the weather? Just wait five minutes…” True dat.

Summer is here and I’m exploring in so many ways. The longer hours in the saddle give me the opportunity to think about where I am on so many levels. Family, career, fitness, racing…it all gets explored. But none as much as the exploring being done on our back roads here. There’s a lot of contention these days going on between cyclists and cars. I’ve written about it before and the tragic death last week of a cyclist near my home, on a road I use 3 x per week (UPDATE: and now investigation of the driver’s prior road rage vs cyclist incident) has me trying to stay clear of pavement, put on bigger slick tires and cruise the insanely beautiful back roads here within 3 minutes of my house. 3 minutes to the dirt worm hole transporting me safely away in the mountains. Maybe a car seen every hour or so. And so I load up the Garmin 500 to record the goodness I’ll post to Strava and I roll. And roll. And roll.

ridley at altitude

My rule for time ad infinitum has been to put the cross bikes away in January so I re-fall in love with them come August to re-amp me for cross season. But this year…maybe because I’m getting old and crusty…I said “what the heck for?” I love  riding my Ridleys why would I want to sacrifice that? I love the way I am positioned on them, the way my hands and arms fit like puzzle pieces into the Ritchey bars and SRAM hoods. You ALL know that zen when you are in perfect syncopation with your ride. Bottle cages get thrown on and I am on my way. I should say, bottle cages and some sensible wheels and rubber for the longer distances and then I’m on my way. I have this EPIC 10 year old pair of hand built wheels: Chris King hubs, Mavic Open Pro Ceramics and 14/15g double butted spokes. Probably one of the favorite things I own to be frank. Finally after a decade and 10’s of 1000’s of miles, the King rear hub said ‘enough!’. To my fault, I NEVER serviced it. To King’s credit, it lasted that long. My good friends at Chris King components sent me an entirely new set of internals which Katie at Boulder Cycle Sport installed and it’s now a completely new hub again. Another 10,000 miles on it please!

Strapped on these hoops is new rubber. A good friend to the Boulder Cycle Sport ‘cross team is Donn Kellogg who is reviving the Clement brand (more goodness later this summer). He has us dialed in on some great training rubber. I’veClement Strada been putting copious miles on the Strada LGG road tire (both 28c and 25c) and they feel fantastic. Confidence in the corners and compliant in terms of the tpi being used by Clement (will source the exact tolerances of this road tire soon). I’m running them nice and low…way lower than my normal road rubber. It helps when on these dirt road slogs for sure.

And so I ride. I ride the open, endless and epic dirt roads that call my name and keep me safe. Unbelievable vistas of the Rocky Mountains you literally gasp of the insanity of how beautiful it is. You can not help but be constantly motivated to crest the next hill so you can check out the next valley and its view. I do these rides often alone, or when I can with my team mate Pete Webber, who has been training on these back roads for 20 years. The stories are priceless: Epic bonks, torrential thunder and snow storms in the middle of summer, getting lost with no food, bears, mountain lions, farmers and shotguns…it’s why we live here. Here’s a phenomenal example of what I am talking about. Shorter one but epic nonetheless:

 

Also, you think with 20+ years of serious cycling and racing under your belt and you think can handle your bike. Not true. Nothing compares to training on dirt roads at speed when trying to corner on skinny tires over kitty litter-like dirt. It’ll teach you tolerances of what you can and can not (or maybe should not) do. I consider it the equivalent of warming up with two baseball bats if you understand the analogy. Come ‘cross season when the sew-ups are back on the bike, I’ll hopefully rail better than normal given what I put myself through to stay smooth and clean during these training rides. Pushing the limits but finding the balance point. It’s also helping chase the demons of last year when not having enough experience on dirt with skinny tires led to ‘that sound’ of my clavicle breaking. Always learning…

Stay safe. Ride the less trafficked stuff near you if you can. You’ll thank me later.

Opening up…

It’s been a while to say the least. A long while since words meaningful enough to be shared out in the wild have swirled around in my brain but alas my experience this weekend was impactful enough to blow out the mental cobwebs and assemble something worthwhile to say out loud. And what it all relates to is….kids.

This past weekend something amazing happened. The Valmont Bike Park opened and was flooded with countless kids…and adults who want to be kids again. All were flowing through this multi-million dollar park on its amazingly designed single-track, technical features, jumps and of course the unique and insane vistas only Boulder can provide. It’s real. It rad. It’s free. My son literally kept asking: “Dad, do we have to pay to be in here???” I simply said: “It’s covered.” And that is thanks to the absolute tireless efforts of Bobby Noyes, Pete Webber, Chris Grealish, Jason Vogel and all the Boulder Mountain Bike Alliance folks and the City of Boulder itself for working so cohesively with all the volunteers and committee members.

There are a TON of videos of the young guns hucking themselves but I thought I’d take the approach of showing what the little kids can experience when out there with this little brief ditty. Sorry about the sound of my Chris King hubs…

 

Carrying on the kid theme…Knowing how unbelievable it was last season to see my eldest son Aiden enjoy himself so thoroughly in his first cross season inspired me deeply…I’m happy to announce that I’ll be working on the Boulder Junior Cycling Team’s committee. I’ll be helping to get kids stoked on our sport and hopefully creating a new generation of cross nerds like you and I.

Short post…but I am climbing back on the blogging horse. Giddy up.