Category: Uncategorized

Hump Day

Happy Hump Day, all!

Eurobike 2009 photos, with an interesting bodice ripper ad from Lazer Helmets.

US Pro photos.

Carlos Leon riding his bicycle in NYC

On a custom-made bicycle built for five, the Harrison family of Mount Vernon, Ky., pedaled on the edge of Folly Road on Tuesday, trailed by heavy slow-lane traffic that steered around them.

They’re on their way to Alaska.

More –> Kentucky family on a bicycle built for five pedals through Lowcountry on way to Fairbanks. Skip the comments that follow that article, though. They’re pretty vicious. H/T Michael.

Kinda silly, but I get the point: The Gates belt drive on the bike holds up to pulling a car.

Copenhagen Bike Share Design competition.

SF: Pushbike Ladie’s Ride.

Osloh has a blog: The Velorialist.

How to lighten your cyclocross bike.

The Shack to debut at the Tour Down Under 2010.

How much can Morgan haul?

Velo Vogue: Rouge et noir et blanc.

A very very very very long stretch limo bicycle. And then there’s the somewhat more practical Bullit Bike.

Guerrilla Bike Band.

Outlier digs

Outlier started releasing their Fall ’09 articles with this sharp looking Nailhead Cap made in collaboration with master milliner Victor Osborne and produced in New York City.

This cap is made with Nailhead worsted wool, which is normally used for suits. The subtle pinprick pattern gives it an incredible depth of texture, and as a fine suiting fabric it’s made from the softest and longest wool fibers available. That makes it one of the best performance fabrics around because the finer wools breathe better than cotton, and wick moisture into the inner core of their actual fibers.

Buy from Outlier.cc.

Later on this month, Outlier will introduce some pants, hoodie and sweater for casual cool weather cycling. They’ll have them for the Urban Legend fashion show during Interbike.

Road ragers and cyclists

Is there a full moon or something?

Colorado Springs, Colorado:

Police said Timothy Hombs was driving his Dodge Caravan near the intersection of Palmer Park Boulevard and Wooten Road at about 2 p.m. Monday, when he spotted a bicycle that he thought belonged to his son.
“He believed the bike had been stolen and he intentionally struck the victim who was riding the bike,” a police report stated.

Police said the bicycle didn’t belong to Hombs’ son.

More –> Cyclist Mistaken For Thief Rammed By Van.


Portland, Oregon:A driver who argued with a bicyclist Friday afternoon in Northeast Portland put his car into reverse and backed into the bicyclist at an estimated 40 mph. After impact, the victim appeared to be stuck to the back of the SUV.” More –> Bike Portland.


And finally, this tragic story resulting in a fatality from Toronto, Ontario: Former Attorney General Michael Bryant collided with bicycle courier Darcy Sheppard. When Bryant tried to flee the accident, Sheppard grabbed on to Bryant’s Saab. Bryant then drove at high speed along lampposts and alongside oncoming traffic in an apparent attempt to brush Sheppard off. Sheppard was finally thrown off after hitting a mailbox. More at the New York Times –> Canadian Politician Charged in Bike-Rage Death. See also:

* CBC Toronto Mayor refuses commment on Bryant.

* Bloomberg: Ex Ontario Attorney General held after fatal accident. Accident???!

* Toronto Post: Michael Bryant charged in cyclist’s death.

Local cyclists will hold a memorial gathering for Darcy Sheppard on Wednesday, September 2. Sheppard was 33 years old and leaves behind an infant son.

Ride all of the City’s bike paths

Comfortable in the shock-absorbing seat of his $120 Huffy mountain bike, Paul Kronenberg ascended the Brooklyn side of the Manhattan Bridge last Wednesday at a leisurely pace.

Two months and half a dozen crumbling bike maps later, he bagged his last bit of path: sixth-tenths of a mile along Chrystie Street in Manhattan.

He saw an advertisement for Bike Month that promoted 620-plus miles of paths crisscrossing the city, and he thought about riding them all. “That clicked in my head that it’d be something to do,” said Mr. Kronenberg, a “semiretired” calculus tutor. “I’ve always kind of kept track of mileage.”

Read more in the New York Times: Summer Quest Covers All of the City’s Bike Paths.