Tag: contest

Twitter Contest

I’m running a contest on Twitter right now. The prize is a $20 gift card from online bike retailer Jenson USA.

To enter: Tweet a 5-7-5 haiku about bicycling. You *must* use the hashtag #baiku and you must get my attention by appending your tweet with @cyclelicious. The Deadline is at noon US Pacific Time (about two hours after I post this). I’ll judge among entries and select a winner. ONE ENTRY PER PERSON. If you submit a haiku then come up with what you think is a better one later, delete the earlier tweet.

What I’ll look for:

  • 5-7-5 syllables in the language your haiku is written in. In other words, five syllables on the first line, seven on the second, five on the third.
  • Ideally, each line can stand somewhat on its own, with the full haiku encompassing a theme. There’s flexibility here, but clumsily splitting a sentence at a 5-7-5 boundary just to meet a technical requirement of haiku is lame.
  • Ideally, some kind of season, nature, or weather thought traditionally is a part of haiku; but don’t force it just because you think I might like it better.
  • English is my primary language, but I can muddle through a little Japanese, French and Spanish as well. You’re taking a risk combining languages, but it may win you some creativity points, and I’m a sucker for multilanguage puns. Maybe a lolcat bike haiku?

Good luck! I always see excellent bike haikus, and I anticipate I’ll probably pick three or four I like best and then pick randomly from that. I’ll also collect the best and post them for the world to see.

2010 Virtual Alleycat start

The 2010 Kickstand Cyclery Virtual Alleycat begins at 7 AM US Pacific time. Keep these things in mind as you race:

  • There’s a secret password for the final race checkpoint — this password is given at one of the checkpoints, so pay attention!
  • For the final checkpoint, you must submit a list of all checkpoints in the order you visited them. This can either be the domain name (e.g. cyclelicio.us) or a complete URL (e.g. http://www.example.com/2010/12/alleycat.html) — either is valid.
  • Some checkpoints are easier to find than others. You may need to hunt through comments or use a site search to find the alleycat checkpoint. I know one of the European checkpoints has a riddle in place.
  • If you get stuck or lost or can’t find a checkpoint, don’t despair! We’ll start posting clues later in the day to ensure everybody can make it through.

Read the rules at the alleycat start page and good luck! You can begin here at 7 AM US Pacific Time / 10 AM US Eastern Time.