COMOtion Sports Takes # 10

COMOtion Sports Takes  # 10
The Team Organization Paid Off With An Easy Cruise To The Finish Line

Monday, August 29, 2011

USA Pro Tour Challenge Completed

Just don't dress like a cycling groupie!
Teresa and I were able to be a part of 4 of the 6 stages of the inaugural USA Pro Tour Challenge and enjoyed every minute of it. 
  • We saw the start of Stage1 in Salida and intercepted the breakaway on Hwy 50 on their way to Monarch Pass..
  • I crawled up Cottonwood Pass from the east to witness the first Stage 2 KOM race while Teresa instructed the uneducated  RV Resort crowd as they flew by on Hwy 24 in Buena Vista.
  • We welcomed the Stage 5 winner into Breckenridge then climber Hoosier Pass to stay over in Fairplay.
  • Stage 6 was witnessed from the Civic Center in Denver where we cheered on the racers 12 times as they completed the final downtown Denver laps. Video below.
Colorado did an outstanding job of bringing the highest level of cycling talent in the world to its roadways.  The event will no doubt be recorded as a success in every category.  Crowds were phenomenal, accidents and interruptions were few and interest in Colorado two-wheeling received a huge boost. 


Teresa and Rwanda National Cycling Team members.
 In Breckenridge, we shared a gondola ride with two of the visiting Rwanda National Cycling Team riders.  The team will be in the US promoting cycling as a way to change the country's image and bring better times to Rwanda through cycling. See their story here.
RACING ACTION IN DOWNTOWN DENVER

The end results for us who already live the Colorado cycling life will be a greater awareness from vehicle drivers, added funding support for off road trails and bike lanes. More folks will accept cycling as a source of fun, fitness, economical transportation and a way of reducing fuel burning alternatives.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

PRO TOUR CHALLENGE--COTTONWOOD PASS -STAGE TWO

We've lived in Colorado 14 years now and everybody knows you start above treeline adventures before 6:00am and finish by 1:00pm to avoid afternoon lightning and thunderstorms.


Everything I own atop Cottonwood  Pass trying to stay dry.

TV coverage of the Pro Tour Cycling Challenge did not consider this in the planning.   The ride up Cottonwood Pass from Buena Vista was 21 miles of predictive grunt work and 4,000 plus feet climbing but provided a challenge the road legs have not seen this year.
Two and a half hours later I was on top. In the first 20 minutes of the 1 hour long wait for the leaders, we were soaking wet, cold and eye level with thunderbolts.

The sky broke, the rain stopped and the breakaway group and -5 minute peleton flew by.  The sun only teased us with a 10 minute warm up.  The following descent was slick, cold and the least of my favorite cycling activities.  High speed road descent in rain with uncountable switchbacks.  Glad to report I am alive and will quit bitch'n soon.

Back at camp, we finished watching the race on the computer and was happy to see Big George land his 33rd pro win.   Break time after another slacker day in Buena Vista and we'll pick up the Pro Challenge later.
Teresa got this photograph of BMC racer Cadel Evans, 2011 Tour de France winner ,  just outside of Buena Vista. 

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Can Frank and Andy Come Out and Play?

Frank was glad to see me in Salida.
Good time today following the Pro Tour Challenge Stage #1.  So much to see in such a short time, you have to plan carefully and hope for a little luck.  The pro team buses were almost an hour late arriving in Salida from Colorado Springs.

One by one they rolled in to the staging area and fans started following their favorite team's logo plastered Ubber $$$ motor coaches.  After an uneventful time hanging outside of the Garmin bus, we decided to go back and follow some of the latest arrivers.  That's when we spotted the Leopard Trek bikes piled on several team cars. Then there was an unmarked modest motor home sandwiched between a couple of  the Trek laden vehicles.  We suspected it carried precious cargo so we followed and took residence outside the bus door.  The hunch paid off.  Both Frank and Andy Schleck, Jens Voigt and the entire team slowly exited the bus one at a time after about a 30 minutes wait.  Teresa and I were 6 feet from the door.  We shot a few pictures through the bus windows and know Andy was bare chested and peaking out the front side window to build the crowd excitement. That would be the highlight we were looking for.

Andy Schleck emerged from the team bus and grabbed every pen and Sharpie offered.

The start was ceremonial but fast with 3 full laps through the streets of Salida a bike crazy town on any day.  We intercepted the breakaway and then the peleton on Hwy 50 on the way back to our RV camp.  Organization and participation by staff, volunteers and the Colorado Highway Patrol was phenomenal.

The stage was won by American Levy Leiphmer.  Frank podiumed 3rd and Andy finished 45th for the day.

Tomorrow I ride up Cottonwod Pass from Buena Vista to meet the racers under the King of the Mountain banner and then descend back to BV for a little more relaxation.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Mountain Biking An International Experience

Great thing about cycling is that it knows no geographical boundaries.  We've had many opportunities to ride with enthusiasts from all around the globe. We've travel to foreign countries and all across the US to share our passion.

David was amused at the possibility of being eaten by a mountain lion.
 Another short but great chapter took place this morning with a visitor from Australia.  David Collins planned a cross America holiday that included stops in Los Angeles, Palm Springs, Las Vegas, New York and Boulder, Colorado.   The 31 year old website designer was accompanied by his wife, 2 year old son, brother and brother's girlfriend.   Boulder made the list based on his professional road cycling brother-in-law's recommendation and web searches of cycling in Colorado.

David contacted the COMotion Sports website asking if any group rides were available that he could join.  Word made it to me and I e-mailed David offering local guide service.  We hooked up in Boulder early morning and headed for one of my favorite trails, Heil Ranch. See our route and stats at http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=209701417094267827170.0004ab04b4d83a344ba27

The Aussie rider performed flawlessly on a rented Specialized 29er hardtail despite the extremely rocky trails served up by the Boulder County open space.  After the ride, we headed back to town and found parking lot fundraising burgers at the local Alfalfa health food store. Yum.

Dave will pay dearly for the few hours of mountain biking in Colorado.  Sunday brings a flight to New York city where he will serve as babysitter while the ladies shop the streets of Manhattan. 
Hope you enjoyed your time on the Colorado trails.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Breckenridge Yeti Tribe Meet Best Yet

Yeti Prez, Chris Conroy places the #10 Tribe Meet pint glass into my "Holy Grail" display case.
The 2011 pilgrimage to Yetiland had the group nestled in a unique "pine chip" setting outside the high country city of Breckenridge, Colorado.  It was the 10th modern day Tribe Meeting and was enjoyed by Yeti freaks from around the US and the globe.  

Seven COMotion Sports team members including Boni Sandavol, Sarge, Evie Calhoun, Jenny Gilkerson, Chris and Megan Taylor, and Ben Truitt attended this year's meeting showing support for our favorite sponsor. 
Weather could not have been better with warm temperatures, afternoon cloud cover and light breezes.  Nights were cool enough for the hoodies but ground sleepers did not freeze.

Saturday's Epic ride showed 3 busloads of freaks summiting Hoosier Pass, then descending into Southpark (Fairplay) and up again to the Kenosha Pass trailhead. Park County sheriff folks managed to get us across Hwy 285 without fatalities.
Ride options ranged from a 20 mile straight up and over Georgia Pass back to camp to a 40 mile version that added the West Ridge to Hwy 9 section of singletrack.  The rocky technical descent into Breck was perfect for my  575.  Many tires, rims and derailleurs were wounded on the downside ride.

All the big names with the company were on hand including pro racer Jared Graves,  Jared hung out at the RV and signed my recently completed BMX Yeti.  The limited edition bikes were release for Jared's 2008 Olympic Games competition.

Good times for sure.  Looking forward to the 2012 event and curious how the Yeti planners are going to top this one.  Somehow, I think they will.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Silent Summer Is On

Wow,  Teresa and I have been laying low this summer realizing that the retirement age of  68 or whatever number the current administration is able to legislate is a long-time coming. We're taking a 3/4 life-well deserved break from careers.


Salida crew at butt woop'n discussion of competition.....Ziggie hates the camera flash......
 Been supporting the COMotion troops at races, camping in RMNP, attending Rockies games and are bringing in grandkids all summer long.


24 Hours of  E-Rock winners
Teresa and Meg Taylor clean up the Crested Butte condo damage June 26th.
Tori and Katy and Sugar enjoy faux fireplace at Rocky Mountain National Park
Hiba and Nafe-great week in Peaceful Valley
Spending time watching birds, counting coyote sightings and spoiling the weiner dogs.

Gearing up now for Keystone, THE 10th annual Yeti Tribe meeting in Breckenridge, Snowmass and Sol Vista.  Hope your summer has been as fun!

Sunday, May 15, 2011

YETI BMX BIKE COMPLETE !!


I have always propelled myself on 2 wheels. 
Two early morning paper routes got delivered on the Sting Ray well, a "Sears knock off version" of the Schwinn original when I was 12.  I wheelied that bike block after block and only rode both wheels when I wanted to.  Broke the frame 3 times and had nothing but pedal axles.  Seventy -one steps dropped on the descent off Raley Chapel on the Oklahoma Baptist University campus six times a week.
 When the Sears 20" bike was my ride, the term BMX had not yet been coined.  They were just Sting Rays.

Nearly 45 years later, I have returned to the perfect cul de sac bike to test the small bike skills again and re-live the fun stuff kids love.  If you know me, you know I have not yet grown up and am not in a hurry to do so. 

The Yeti Super X -BMX frame is one of only 200 built for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.  Australian Yeti factory racer Jared Graves piloted his Yeti Super X BMX to a 6th place finish after crashing off the medals ranking in the finals.

Not likely that I'll be headed for the London Olympic races but it will look cool in the pits of the upcoming cross country race venues.  And there's the pump track in Golden and the soon to open Valmont Bike Park in Boulder grandpa will soon be shredding on the mini-Yeti.

Yeti 20er   BMX Specs

Handlebars –Blacklabel 8” Turquoise
Grips-ODI Yeti Clamp On- White
Brake Lever- Shimano DXR
Brake Cable Housing-Jagwire-White
Brake-Shimano DXR
Stem-Sinz- 50mm
Top Cap-Yeti-round thing
Fork-Sinz Stealth Carbon
Headset-Chris King-Black
Front Wheel-Answer Aluminite TI Limited Edition Expert 1.5-White
Front Tire-Maxxis Holyroller 2.2
Front Tube-black and holds air
Crankset-Shimano DXR 180mm
Chainring-Shimano DXR 42T
Pedals-Crank Bros Mallet-Custom Yeti Turquoise
Chain-SRAM 971 W/Quicklink
Seatpost-Thompson 31mm Setback
Seatpost Clamp-Salsa 35.0mm
Saddle-SDG Yeti Team Issue Turquoise Stitching-Ti Rails
Rear Wheel-Answer Aluminite TI Limited Edition Expert 1.5-White-16T Cog
Rear Tire- Maxxis Holyroller 2.2
Rear Tube-black and holds air

Saturday, March 12, 2011

FIRST 29er TRAIL RIDE FEELS MIGHTY FINE

Saturday I hauled the new Yeti Big Top 29er to the Doudy Draw trailhead for my first off-road ride.
After a couple of years watching the 29 inch mountain bike gain in popularity.  I have to admit I was curious if the bigger hoops really made a difference in how the bike cornered and ironed out rough trails.  I found switchbacks were easier and the babyheads floated beneath the Fox fork.  Still need to test downhill handling and butt-beat factor on a 4 hour + ride.

The fit set up was copied from the 575 so the feel was very familiar.  Cockpit lengths and saddle to pedal height had nothing to do with the fact that the skewers sit 1 1/2" higher than my other bikes.  Stand over height was no problem for this 5'9" racer.  Even if a small sized Big Top was offered, I probably would have chosen the medium frameset .  I opted for the SRAM build kit from Yeti as a matter of value.  You simply can not buy all the components individually cheaper than the Yeti build kit. 
 For the Big Top, only one component level was offered.  I found out with the 575 Race level components that you don't have to be at the XTR Pro level to build a solid training/trail bike.  What you do see is more weight.  The Topeak Prepstand Pro scale tells the story.  Who cares? You're training right?  The small XTR'ed ASRc will feel like a feather on the Mountain States Cup ski slope climbs in June.
Only custom parts are grey shifter cables, white Yeti SDG saddle and to preserve the clown bike factor, The Big Top sports cheesy "8 Ball" valve stem caps.
And did I mention we're celebrating COMotion Sport's 8th MSC championship? Gonna be a fun year.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

SORRY FOR THE LAG IN POSTS

Jeezus, been a crazy busy year so far with so much happening work wise, COMOtion Sports operations, boring health issues and new bike projects.  
All normal training cycle steps have gone south with suprise cases of shingles, (that's for old people!) plantar faciitis, a sliced finger and lost nail, and fatigue. Did finished  the12th ($40 co-pay ea.) sessions with physical pherapy masochist Shane to re-break the fibroids in the bottom of the foot and stretch them into submission. 80% successful.  Sleep in a boot until I tell you different>>>>>>

Otherwise, I'm great!!

With training camp less than 3 weeks away, I'm gonna spend the bulk of the time trailside cheering on my teammates.  I make mean Taco Soup.
First 29er ride....?  Sidewalk commute to Walgreens for more finger bandages.  Go  figure.  BMX project suspended when I found out SINZ products are "mid-grade".  Snob factor sets in.

Full 10 hours this Saturday coaching COMotion recruite Jeremy Miller building his spanking new Yeti ASRc race bike.  As usual, curve balls thrown with missing parts, no cable routing instructions and mis-matched components.  Left everything long and tall for re-trimming after Retul fit exposes fit issues.  See you next weekend Teresa,..Love you!

Sunday, January 30, 2011

SIDELINED YETI ARC BACK ON THE TRAIL

Remember when you were a kid and lost one of your toys under the bed.  Then the bed was moved and you found it?  It was like a new toy!  That's kinda the way it was when I finally got the 2003 Yeti ARC off the basement rafters and back on the trail.  I got a new bike!

The ride died when I somehow got talked into selling the Fox fork and rebuilding the original World Cup SID to get her back to fighting weight.  I still have 2 World Cups sitting on the bench waiting for the rebuild.  But, they are rim brakes only.   In the meantime, I got this smok'n deal on Craig's list for a disc wheelset and sold the Mavic Crossmax rim brake wheels to a riding buddy.  Don't have a fork to use on the new disc wheelset.  Life is complicated. 

One of the COMo Bro's had an abandon Manitou Skareb AC/DC fork laying around and I begged long enough until he let me have it for loose change.  It's one of the first forks the Manitou engineers (or marketing) geniuses shocked the world by placing the reinforcing bridge behind the axle instead of the front where God had intended.  Works great and reduces the number of handicapped frames littering the basement.

Took the bike on the Dry Creek run today and it felt great.  Minor adjustments needed here and there but helped my hardtail buttocks get ready for the Big Top being delivery next month.  Reminded me too, how good burning quads can feel.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Estes Park Weekend

We just spent a weekend away from physical therapy pain, work and life with long time hunting buddies Gary Littlepage and Paul Springer. Thankfully, their counter-balances Meg and Rhonda were there to help keep our sanity.
Every couple of years we head off  to an excellent hide-a-way cabin above Estes Park. 
The goal,,,,,NOTHING.

Rhonda prepares a salad to-die-for on evening one.
Friday was a slow day getting ready for a 7:30am workout with my ASTYM http://www.astym.com/ therapist, Shane of Cornerstone Physical Therapy.  Lot's of fun on the journey to a quick recover for the plantar faciitis I whined about in the earlier post.  No pain -no gain.


Major "Nook" time for Teresa

The only focal point of the weekend was a gut-filling appointment with the Dunraven Restaurant specializing in Italian cuisine on Saturday night.  Mission accomplished
Everyone there is in the medical business besides me so there is the usual talk of current age related issues, Obama-care and the fact that we are all thankfully welcoming Gary into his 7th year of beating prostrate cancer.  Pays to be a stubborn Yankee. 
 Not a lot to do with cycling this week but that may be the point.  Winter time will be spent off the bike preparing for the upcoming race season through PT, spin classes and re-building the old body.


Meg and Gary are retired and busier than ever.  The couple squeezed in a trip down the Danube River in Germany between an Arkansas relative visit and son's wedding in 2010.
Life, animals and people are good in Colorado.....

Crap! that rowdy old bunch from Denver is here again!!