A few of the Don Valley gentlemen and I took a ride out in Pickering last Saturday. Here is the photographic evidence. The first hill and all subsequent ones were quite the Downhills of Death:
As the fall winds down and winter grips southern Ontario, I hope I can find it in me to take a few more rides.
Friday, October 29, 2010
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
2010 U-Cup Season Re-cap
Well, the final cranks have been pedaled in the 2010 U-Cup race series, and I must say, my first season on the U of T mountain bike team was unreal fun! Everyone I met was extremely supportive of their fellow racers and I was happy to have a chance to interact with people from different schools. Despite missing 2 races due to other obligations and unfortunate alarm-clock-related distractions, I thought I had a pretty good taste of the race series.
The two race courses and time trial course that I did have a chance to do showcased an awesome variety of terrain. They helped many people reveal their strengths as bikers in an atmosphere that wasn't too competitive to stifle the fun. I thought the U of T team all did a fantastic job in the races. However, I'd also like to congratulate Guelph and Queens on being co-champions for the season. The full individual results are available here and I will post the team results when I they go up.
Personally, I obviously have a lot of room for improvement next year, which I hope to gain by training more over winter, riding harder next summer, and not missing any race buses next season. I feel that I now have a decent benchmark set for my future amateur racing, and I intend to reach a point where I can regularly find myself in the front of race packs. I also saw some incredible talent on the U of T team this year that I hope will turn into a more top-10 biased season for 2011.
With that, I leave you with a couple photos from the last race, from Brian Liu:
The two race courses and time trial course that I did have a chance to do showcased an awesome variety of terrain. They helped many people reveal their strengths as bikers in an atmosphere that wasn't too competitive to stifle the fun. I thought the U of T team all did a fantastic job in the races. However, I'd also like to congratulate Guelph and Queens on being co-champions for the season. The full individual results are available here and I will post the team results when I they go up.
Personally, I obviously have a lot of room for improvement next year, which I hope to gain by training more over winter, riding harder next summer, and not missing any race buses next season. I feel that I now have a decent benchmark set for my future amateur racing, and I intend to reach a point where I can regularly find myself in the front of race packs. I also saw some incredible talent on the U of T team this year that I hope will turn into a more top-10 biased season for 2011.
With that, I leave you with a couple photos from the last race, from Brian Liu:
Team photo. Maybe I'll photoshop myself in later |
U of T's Theo Theobessiou tearing it up at Ganaraska. 2nd overall in men's B, congrats Theo! |
The Battery is Dead (Long Live the Battery)
About 2 minutes into the Tuesday night ride yesterday, my 2-month-old Magicshine's battery decided to die after about 20 minutes of total use. This also happened on the last ride I did, when I borrowed someone else's second battery. This time, there was no spare battery to be found, so I turned for home with a dour mood and dark thoughts.
However, before you all cancel your Magicshine orders: upon reaching home, I emailed Geoman about the battery. This morning I already had a response from them in my inbox, and they're sending a new one!
Verdict: F for battery life, A+ for service. Thanks to Geoman for rectifying the situation so quickly and Tim Charles for lending me a spare battery until the new one arrives.
However, before you all cancel your Magicshine orders: upon reaching home, I emailed Geoman about the battery. This morning I already had a response from them in my inbox, and they're sending a new one!
Verdict: F for battery life, A+ for service. Thanks to Geoman for rectifying the situation so quickly and Tim Charles for lending me a spare battery until the new one arrives.
Monday, October 18, 2010
How to remove a bottom bracket, realize it's pooched, and replace it with a new one
So, when I brought my camera to Bike Sauce a couple weeks ago, I fully intended to write a tutorial on how to overhaul a bottom bracket. However, I realized that it was pointless to overhaul this one, because I would just be postponing the inevitable. So, I leave you with the revised tutorial:
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Fixed Gear Mountain Biking part 2
My friend Swoo and I decided to hit the fall bike show which turned out to be a crowded mass of people practically shoving each other for a chance at the best deals. I managed to pick up a pair of cycling shoes to replace my over-sized old ones for $50. Then I managed to get the hell out.
Since the day was so beautiful, we decided to make up for that horrible episode with a trail ride in the Don Valley. I have to say, riding with Swoo is totally different from riding with the Don Rats. Firstly, his fixed gear free-style bike provides some...limitations to the ride speed. The upshot of that is that we spent more time enjoying some of the features in the valley that I usually skip in a mad attempt to catch my riders. We also had time to take some pictures:
The second difference is Swoo rides with a video camera and loves to make edits of his rides. Thus, we came out with a souvenir:
Don Valley Trails from swoo on Vimeo.
Except for a stupid mechanical where the horseshoe spring on my brakes somehow caught the rotor and made my front brake unusable and one flat, this was a perfect ride. Not too fast, beautiful day in the beautiful Don that reminds me why I love fall on the east coast.
Thanks for the edit, Swoo!
Since the day was so beautiful, we decided to make up for that horrible episode with a trail ride in the Don Valley. I have to say, riding with Swoo is totally different from riding with the Don Rats. Firstly, his fixed gear free-style bike provides some...limitations to the ride speed. The upshot of that is that we spent more time enjoying some of the features in the valley that I usually skip in a mad attempt to catch my riders. We also had time to take some pictures:
The second difference is Swoo rides with a video camera and loves to make edits of his rides. Thus, we came out with a souvenir:
Don Valley Trails from swoo on Vimeo.
Except for a stupid mechanical where the horseshoe spring on my brakes somehow caught the rotor and made my front brake unusable and one flat, this was a perfect ride. Not too fast, beautiful day in the beautiful Don that reminds me why I love fall on the east coast.
Thanks for the edit, Swoo!
Friday, October 15, 2010
Yeah, Life's Good
I've never had a chance to ride trails in the autumn before:
Thanks to Harrison Dahme for the photos.
It's too bad so much of our ride ended up looking more like this |
Thanks to Harrison Dahme for the photos.
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Bike Sauce Fall Alleycat
Next Friday, October 22, Bike Sauce is putting on a fall alleycat race! If you happen to be in Toronto, come out and play.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Race recap: 2010 U-Cup race #3: Hardwood ski and bike
Hardwood ski and bikes offered the most awesome trails of the race series this year. Plenty of log-overs, steep and root-strewn descents, and gnarly short climbs kept the race interesting lap after lap. There was even a wicked little technical rock scrub patch (you know, smaller than a garden) that kept us on our toes during the race. The first hill was a fairly steep bastard of a climb that leveled out just in time for you to hit an even steeper section. It definitely separated the gentlemen from the ruffians (and I fear that I was in the latter category.) I actually managed to stay pretty near the front of the main pack for the rest of the first lap, though the second round of that climb drove me somewhat further back. The course definitely suited the avid mountain bikers over the hard-core roadies who smoked everyone in the second race. I ended up 15th again, though I was only 2 minutes off a top-10 finish this time. Hopefully, I'll find that extra bit of push to get a top-10 finish before the end of the season.
May I just point out that race-tight bibshorts are quite fetching...
Thank you to Brian and Louis from the team for the pictures!
Alec W of the U of T team making that section look suitably gnarly |
That was supposed to be bullhorns in my right hand |
I can't wait to have the U of T jersey |
Ahem...I may have put my foot down here about .5 seconds after this |
May I just point out that race-tight bibshorts are quite fetching...
Thank you to Brian and Louis from the team for the pictures!
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Danny MacAskill's coming out with a new video!
Race Recap: 2010 Boler Mountain U-Cup race
So, two weeks have passed since the second race of the U-Cup series at Boler Mountain. Unfortunately, I didn't write about it when it was all fresh in my mind, so here's the skinny:
The course was fast, they say that it's the favorite of the roadies on the team. Lots of ups and downs, and practically no technical features on the trail (I think there might have been one mini log-over). Of course, despite that, I still managed to crash: while leaning for a bermed turn, I rode over a small stick which slipped right out from under my wheel and I went right down. Luckily, nothing was damaged on my body, and the bike came out of it with a bent brake lever and a slightly bent bar. I jumped back on my bike and managed to hold on to 15th place for the race. It was a ton of fun, and a late start to the biking season. I'm sure that next year, I'll be much more on form and I'll kill it.
Here are some pictures from the race:
I wish my race face was more interesting than the "fish-out-of-water" look I sport at the moment, but alas, it's the only one I have.
Thank you to Mike Levesque for the pictures
The course was fast, they say that it's the favorite of the roadies on the team. Lots of ups and downs, and practically no technical features on the trail (I think there might have been one mini log-over). Of course, despite that, I still managed to crash: while leaning for a bermed turn, I rode over a small stick which slipped right out from under my wheel and I went right down. Luckily, nothing was damaged on my body, and the bike came out of it with a bent brake lever and a slightly bent bar. I jumped back on my bike and managed to hold on to 15th place for the race. It was a ton of fun, and a late start to the biking season. I'm sure that next year, I'll be much more on form and I'll kill it.
Here are some pictures from the race:
Mugging for the camera |
Thank you to Mike Levesque for the pictures
Pizza Tool
Parktools is now making a pizza tool:
Damn those blue-handled bastards for making a tool I both covet and mock simultaneously.
More information on the Park Tool website
Thanks to Matt Levy from Pinkbike |
More information on the Park Tool website
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