Archive for the 'Great Ideas' Category

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.

One Less Car, One Year Later

(Editor’s note: Completely reckless use of linguistic devices ahead.)

Quietly, like a new years eve celebration that goes to bed at 9:30, we celebrated our one year anniversary of being car free.

One Less Car

There was less fuss to going car free than I would have anticipated - the lease was up, so I put the bike in the back, went to the dealership, gave them their car back, and rode home. That was pretty much it. Not a lot of planning. A little gearing up in terms of a good rain jacket and gloves. We did go big on the fenders now that we didn’t have car or gas payments.

A couple of days into it, we were still pretty pleased with ourselves to the point where even the steady spring drizzle didn’t seem to dampen our moods. When you need to go somewhere, and you can only go by bike, then you go by bike. The simplicity was oddly comforting. When we didn’t ride, we found ourselves walking around the city noticing things we hadn’t really noticed before.

The first hitch came when we dearly wanted to cash in a coupon from the Portland Nursery across town. How were we going to haul plants and mulch? That is when we discovered the beauty of the Zipcar. Like 823-BUMP, Zipcar filled the hole in our transportation options in no time. We took those big trips to the store, and ran luxuriously quick errands on dark rainy nights. We went to the coast when we wanted to. We got a puppy - who we now haul around in a Burley.

We admit that we have it lucky: we are close to a lot of services and there aren’t kids to schlep around. And while we miss hitting the trails as much as we used to, we now have a closer relationship to our travels. Like living on a farm, we know where our transportation food comes from.

I saw an interesting comment the other day, about the cognitive disconnect that people feel when they start to really understand the impact of cars. But I don’t feel any smugness in being car free, nor do I feel like I have escaped the disconnect. We use cars, and might have to buy one someday. But I can say that going car free was easier than I thought. Kind of like taking off the training wheels.

Business Hero: Twyla Tharp

There are a lot of interesting questions around creativity.  There are also a lot of interesting questions around business.  And sometimes, the two questions mix.  I had, of course, heard of Twyla Tharp and seen some of her work, but had never thought of her in a business context until I read a remarkable conversation with her in the Harvard Business Review.  Copying.  Failure.  Mentoring.  Pain.  This woman covered it all, so we are adding her to our list of infrequently updated Business Heroes.

Twyla

Maybe its just me, but there is so much deep wisdom and tough effort, it is hard not to be impressed.  In one section she notes that to get creative, you need to start copying.  Not because copying is right, but because “real learning comes not from taking someone else’s solutions, but by taking someone else’s problems.”  She talked about the need for movement and how it changes the mind, and also about her mentor of 20 years, who she met only three times.  “I recognized that he was the person who knew the most about what he was doing. . . so I tried to learn as much as I could from him.  I mentally parked him in the corner of my studio and the insistence on thoroughness that I saw in him became my standard.”  When you start talking about bodies and creativity, you invariably see a lot of parallels to designing and building custom bikes.

But one of her main points is this: creativity takes discipline, and that you have to prepare for it with routine.  (More on that here.)  But at the same time you have to take risks and you have to fail.  Otherwise you stagnate and your work gets less interesting.  Good lessons for all of us no matter what we do.

Good for One Sweetpea Bicycle

Good For One Sweetpea

Someone’s gonna get a Sweetpea, and they don’t know it yet.

Open Source: S’mitten Pattern

We promised a long while ago to open source the S’mitten pattern for all those folks who have the mad skills to knit their own. There’s snow on the ground here in Portland and the radio reports no morning kindergarten, so we figure it’s S’mitten knittin’ time.

adventures in knitting 001

So here is the deal. We are open sourcing this because, 1) the world needs more three fingered gloves and 2) because some of you talented knitters out there can make this thing better, stronger, faster, cozier. So if you use this pattern and improve on it, please comment and let us know.

Hand Knitted S’mitten Pattern

Continue reading ‘Open Source: S’mitten Pattern’

Sweetpea Bicycles Hires New Assistant Production Manager

For Immediate Release:

Sweetpea Bicycles announces the addition of a new Assistant (to the) Production Manager.

Puppytown

After a long and in depth search, Sweetpea Bicycles has selected a new Assistant Production Manager - Greta the puppy.  “With weeks of experience in looking adorable and a recent graduate from the Humane Society, Greta the puppy is a welcome addition to Sweetpea Bicycles, LLC.” Natalie Ramsland, Owner.  Greta is being trained by the current Production Manager whose role was recently expanded to lead the sales team.

Cigars and Onions

An Onion

A long while back, Natalie and I thought it would be important to take up some bad habits to offset all the cycling, running, and multivitamins we take; so we decided to start smoking.  We now smoke a cigar together every six months or so.  At first, I wasn’t quite sure how to do it. . . that is, be a smoker.  What I found was that it wasn’t that hard to do, but it was hard to do casually.  The first couple of times we fumbled around with things, and I think we have the hang of it now.  But a couple of months ago, I was taking a slow draw off a cigar when something hit me.  It was the taste in my mouth and the smell in my nose.

This shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise as this the what the whole deal is about.  But what was so remarkable was that in a single moment I was instantly reminded of my grandfather.  He used to smoke cigars regularly, and as a kid when he would lean in and give me a kiss on the cheek, I would be able to taste the smell in my nose.  It was only when he leaned in close when that this would happen, and it was something I had not thought about in nearly twenty years.  And now, it reminds me of him and conveys a certain perspective: I don’t just remember him, I remember him when he was close.  So now when Nat and I cozy up to a big cigar, I can lean back and remember my grandfather.  And it’s nice.

I would have never been reminded of this had we not done something entirely new and completely out of character.  Which of course brings me to the subject of onions.  When I was growing up, I would look at my parents completely aghast as they consumed raw onions on things like sandwiches and salads.  This in my mind was tantamount to eating dynamite.  And I was recently reminded of the horror I felt in college when I saw a friend of mine who during a play had to eat an onion like an apple.  So imagine my surprise when at breakfast some raw onion made its way into my mouth accompanied with some bagel, cream cheese, capers, tomato, lettuce and lox.  Maybe it was the combination that made it possible, but I really liked it.  I think that the feeling I felt afterward is termed cognitive dissonance.  I guess I knew that tastes change as you get older, but what I didn’t realize was how those changes are connected to things that have been deep down a long time.

Field Trip to Cycle Oregon

Made in Oregon Bike Expo

We had, of course, heard about Cycle Oregon.  Two thousand riders canvassing a different route across Oregon every year for the last twenty years.  We had heard talk about a well oiled machine.  Rumor had it that they were so good, the minute you thought you needed to hit the can, there was an empty Honey Bucket right behind you.  We had heard about the performances, the incredible support services, and the beer tent open every night.   It was just about enough to make a loyal RAGBRAI rider bristle with envy.  So when they invited local Oregon bike businesses to represent at what they were calling the Made in Oregon Bike Expo, we eagerly agreed to come.

Made in Oregon Bike Expo

At this point you are probably thinking to yourself “I hope this isn’t a post about an expo.  That would be the most boringest piece of blogging on the entire internet.”  And I assure you that I am not going to bore you with details of conversations with all the amazing people we met, or how cool it was to meet some of the other builders that showed up.

What I do want to write about is Cycle Oregon, because we were absolutely overwhelmed by just how incredible this event really is.  First of all the rumors are true: the place runs like clockwork, the ride we went on was absolutely beautiful, and there is just a lot of camaraderie to go around.  But what is really amazing is that the ride was originated as an economic shot in the arm for rural Oregon communities, and on top of that their proceeds go into the Cycle Oregon Fund which provides additional funding for small rural communities.  The site for the expo was Diamond Lake which from a grant from Cycle Oregon recently restored the trout population which had been ravaged by an invasive non-native.  And as everyone relaxed after a day of riding, they got to make the statement “thanks to you joining the ride, we were able to make this lake viable again.”  The expo was amazing, but we left feeling as if we had just left in the middle of a birthday party. With a little luck, next year we might just become Cycle Oregonians.

Emerging from the Internet

Many months ago, we found ourselves sitting in our accountant’s office feeling kind of nervous and humble.  We build bikes.  We don’t profess to be experts in accounting.  (Which is a scary thing to admit.)  When you are in situations like that the mind works overtime; I think we were half expecting him to say “Well, it looks like you owe the government a lot of money, and because you are a manufacturing  operation you fall under a special category requiring you to work off any debt during the night shift at a nuclear power plant.  I am required by state AND federal law to escort you to jail now.”  I took Natalie’s hand in mine, and we sat patiently awaiting our verdict.

He looked over our documents slowly interpreting the numbers on the page trying to understand the story that they told, and after a long silence asked “What’s this two hundred bucks for marketing?” “Mostly website stuff,” I answered.

He took off his glasses and looked at us.  “Can I offer you a free bit of advice?”

“Kids your age feel comfortable doing everything on the internet.  But a lot of people my age need something to touch.  You know, something to hold in their hands.  You guys need to spend a little money and get some brochures or something.”

It was like the Zen Master had hit us on the head with a stick.

At that moment, we saw a glaring weakness in our kung fu fighting style, but didn’t quite know what to do with it.  Something to hold and touch sounded right.  But a brochure sounded boring.  We had a solution in front of us, but just hadn’t discovered the problem yet.

Months later it hit us.  We have a wait list.

The 8 or so months from placing an order to receiving your Sweetpea doesn’t have to be a desolate trek across the desert.  It could be fun.  Or at least interesting.  We got to thinking about college admissions and those lonely months between the “You’re In!” letter and actually showing up for the first day of school.  I remember anxiously awaiting any word, and devouring the mail as it came in reading and re-reading everything.  Maybe we could do the same.

Around the same time we got a call from HP.  There was a Top Secret Project, and they wanted us to be involved.  The end result is the “What do you have to say?” campaign and the HP Small Business Community.  And for us, it’s a way to develop ideas and make the process of buying a custom bike easier.  Think of it as “What to Expect When You’re Expecting a Sweetpea.”  Watch this space.  More details to follow.