Don't Stereotype My Ride!
Via my ride out to a local dam on this day of way too many degrees on the Centrigrade scale, I managed an epiphany. Something occurred to me that never occurred to me before. It’s a simple observation, probably overly apparent to every one else but me. But that’s what epiphany’s are for. They power the old light bulb moments that linger in the memory and inject our world views with added layers of peripheral vision. I think I now know why car drivers try far too hard to run us cyclists over... To discover my epiphany, read this latest post to Bicyclism Blog: I am a Citizen of Cyling
Last Updated (Friday, 12 February 2010 01:02)
Living in the Cloud
Last Updated (Tuesday, 26 January 2010 01:31) How a Chorus of Ultegra Can Save the World
Last Updated (Monday, 04 January 2010 05:34) |
There's this hill where I live... It's a world class Hors Categorie hill that ascends 900 metres over 11.5km. It's a beauty. Beautiful surface, stunning sharp corners and a stunning ride through a World Heritage Area rain forest. It's a road that connects the humid-nectar drenched coast with the green Lost World of New England's spectacular escarpment country.
Can Campagnolo or Shimano's second-tier type choices save the world? What's the game plan for these opening days of our new post failed-Copenhagen, post-Global Financial Crisis, post consumerist era? I make a plea for the uncoupling of that ugly orgy of ego and marketing as the new cornerstone of improved choices and genuine progress. There's two sides to the equation that has led us to this point in time where ecology and economics are now in a state of all-out war. There's two sides to the equation that produced the Global Financial Crisis and all those bailouts of banker bilge who, really, should have been left as ballast in a much needed new ship of statehood and progress. To find out if Ultegra really can save the world, and how to prove such an assertion mathematically, tune in to this latest rampaging post on Bicyclism Blog: