Monthly Archive for July, 2008

The New Bike Loan Program from Unitus

A good bike can be many things - transportation, recreation, total elation.  And also a big chunk of change. But if you live in the Portland area, getting a Sweetpea just got a little easier with the new Bike Loan program from Unitus Community Credit Union.

Bike Loan

Much like getting a loan for a car, you can now get a loan for up to $2500 towards a custom Sweetpea Bicycle. The details are here, but instead of a couple big payments, you get to spread it out over the course of a year. Our hope is that by participating in this program, it will be easier for you to get your dream bike.  (To see a little press about the Bike Loan Program, click here.)

Sweetpea Bicycles featured on Alltop

Calling themselves “highly subjective and judgemental”, Alltop has chosen the Sweetpea Bicycles blog as one of their top cycling sites on the web.  Alltop calls themselves a “digital magazine rack” for the internet and tracks all-the-top sites in a multitude of different categories.

Alltop, all the top stories

This is really exciting news for us.  One of the folks behind Alltop is Guy Kawasaki, who is certifiably one of our Business Heroes.  Besides working at Apple when the Mac came out, Guy also wrote the Art of the Start and whose line “the best reason to start a business is to make meaning” has helped guide us through a lot of tough decisions.  I can’t remember where we first ran into his work, but I have handed out this link more times than I can remember (it really gets going around 4 minutes).

If you get a chance, check out Alltop.  I found some great new stuff in there, and if you think some great cycling blogs are missing, drop them a line.

Holding On

200K

We moved. For those of you that read our blog, you will recognize this as a familiar topic. But this time around it was a little different, we moved everything - our entire life in one weekend: home and shop.

One of the things about moving is that it brings you face to face with what you own. From the bike you ride everyday to the random t-shirt from a race you did in the 90’s, its all there. Some of it still in boxes from the last move, some of it strewn around the house. Random stuff, photos, love letters all stored in boxes. The most important moments (at least they were at the time) stored safely so that they can be remembered, or just kept.

Getting ready for the big weekend got us thinking of the things we hold on to. Nat’s mom has “Keep or Chuck.” The rules are simple: Pick up an item. Keep it or chuck it. You have to go into it with the right mindset, otherwise you go soft and keep the stuff you don’t really need to keep around. Natalie took this in another direction with her “Things I Used To Own” Project. She decided that she wanted to keep the memory of some things, even if she didn’t want to keep the actual object. Therefore, she started taking pictures. The Utah Phillips concert stub, the beads that were a gift, the wind up Godzilla that came from an old architecture professor – all saved and discarded at the same time.

But holding on to things goes even further sometimes.

We have this old dresser that I inherited from a roommate years ago. He had a girlfriend who spilled patchouli all over it. It never smells unless we move it. Then the memory of that girlfriend – who I never even met – comes back to me.

Then there is that race I ran back in Duluth. It was a trail race. I was fit. And I wanted to win. Me and this other guy when toe to toe over hills across creeks on extremely technical trails for miles on end. I would try to destroy him. He would try to destroy me. Then on this long downhill section, he pulled away. I leaned in and ran faster than I should have - the memory of which is lodged equally in both of my hamstrings, neatly stored and accessible at anytime.

We store stuff. Sometimes in boxes. Sometimes in basements. But sometimes, the things we store are wafting on a breeze. Sometimes, they are stored in muscles and bones.

Speaking of holding on, we did our first brevet a couple of weeks ago. It was a 200 K which wiggled into 126 miles of total cycling. The beauty of doing something epic is that you are making memories at every moment. But it’s also a lot like being in a field at night surrounded by fireflies: you don’t know which ones are going to end up in the jar and which ones are going to go free. You can read Heidi’s wonderful report here.

Introducing: Two Bite Curry

Like all good curries, this one was stewing for a while.

Two Bite Curry

I was chatting with a fantastic lady at the Sprokettes Mobile Dance Party, confessing that I was woefully lacking in the sass department.  This is something I have come to terms with, but every year Pedalpolooza shows me just how high the bar is set.  This lady explained that it was all about the outfit -  she was wearing a dayglo unitard beneath some baggy mountain bike shorts that she credited for her rockin’ groove.  Before, the unitard - pretty tame.  After the unitard - a different story.  The lesson: You have to trust that its in you, and just walk out the door loaded for bear.  Which brings me to the bike.

Based off of the 26″er, this geared cross rig is designed for a couple of different uses.  With room for fenders, brazeons for racks, and a triple chainring up front, it behaves as an trusty upstanding commuter.  For most of the year it will diligently carry groceries, haul the puppy trailer, and pretty much stay out of trouble.  Come the fall, it will lose its racks, fenders and mild mannered ways for  Cross Crusade.

But its true purpose is to help me show up with a little somtin extra, because I’m fresh out of unitards.


Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.