Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Packed

Packed

"If your bike has couplers, or if you have a spendy bike case, or if you pay a shop to pack your bike, or if you have a folding bike, shipping a bike is still a pain in the ass for everyone involved."


That is what one of the wisest blog posts of all time has to say about mailing bikes, and I am sure they would apply the same to travel. Based on the stories I've heard about traveling with bicycles, it certainly seems to be more often a pain than not.


So I am going abroad again, and this time I'm taking a bike along. Never done this before and I'm getting really nervous! It almost feels as if I am doing something illegal by putting a bicycle in a suitcase. "Can I get away with it?" I find myself thinking as I glance over my shoulder furtively.




Well, I guess I am about to find out for myself how much of a pain it really is. Will write about it once I cross the Atlantic!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Honeyman State Park



A short walk from the campground and through the forest leads to this beautiful little lake surrounded by the forest and sand dunes. Double-click on the image to see a larger version... it is a portion of a panoramic view that doesn't quite capture the full beauty and serenity of the place, but does a pretty good job of it!





I sat up on top of this sand dune for several hours, listening to the quiet. The only other people around were those two youngsters at the edge of the water, far below. Optical illusion? After looking at this image for awhile, it is hard to tell whether you are looking down toward water, or up toward sky, either way, it was a long way up/down.





As the sun lowered toward the horizon I left my gorgeous viewpoint and ventured down to the small lake.





Jessie M. Honeyman Memorial State ParkSouth of Florence, OregonSeptember 29, ..

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Speed, Lugs and Jewel Tones: a JRJ Grass Racer

JRJ Grass Track Racer

Still active today, Bob Jackson Cycles are a British builder of classic steel bicycles that is well known around the world. Less commonly known is the name JRJ Cycles that preceded it. Bob (John Robert) Jackson began building bicycle frames in Leeds, England, in 1935, offering track and road racing (time trial) models. Part of Chris Sharp's collection, this particular bike is a 1950s grass track racer that once belonged to Leslie White of the Maryland Wheelers near Belfast. The owner raced it into the late 1960s, achieving numerous victories in Northern Ireland. He then hung it up, and the bike remained untouched for over 4 decades. Today it is preserved in as-raced condition.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

The JRJ name, headbadge and transfers were used exclusively until the 1960s, and still appeared into the 1980s after the switch to "Bob Jackson."




JRJ Grass Track Racer

The transfers included renderings of olympic rings, the full name on the downtube reading "JRJ Olympic Cycles." As with other English "lightweight" manufacturers of that time, there was a strong emphasis on performance and competition, which explains the olympic imagery. "Always first at the finish!" was the JRJ Cycles' slogan on advertisements from the 1950s.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

Traditionally, English racing frames from this era tended to be painted in saturated, jewel-like tones, known as a "flamboyant" finish. Not quite the same as pearlescent paint, the flamboyant colours are foil-like, resembling the look of candy wrappers. Bob Jackson had his favourite signature shades, including the red and blue on this bike. The blue leans toward seafoam, and the red is a raspberry-like crimson.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

White lining around the lugs and fork crown highlights the elaborate shorelines.




JRJ Grass Track Racer
The bottom bracket lugs are especially interesting - there appears to be a reinforced lug of sorts connecting the chainstays to the bottom bracket.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

The frame is Reynolds 531 tubing.




JRJ Grass Track Racer
Though it has not been ridden in decades, the large shimmery machine is so marked by care and wear, that it feels alive with the owner's presence and energy. Seeing it leaned against the hedge on a rainy morning, I can't help but imagine the tall, powerful youth Leslie White must have been - his back stretched flat across the 58cm frame, his hands gripping the deep track drops, his legs pushing the monstrous gear in an all-out effort around a grass track.




JRJ Grass Track Racer
Grass track racing is an interesting tradition in the British Isles. In an earlier post, I mentioned how a ban on road racing from the 1890s through the 1950s led to the invention of time trials. The ban also explains the emphasis on track cycling in the UK and Ireland: Races on enclosed courses were the only kind officially permitted during this time. The grass tracks were similar to velodromes in that they were oval. However, the surface was not banked. Often the track was a multi-use field, temporarily set up for the race.Grass track racing is still done in the UK today, its popularity revived in recent years. At a grass-roots/ community level, a race like this can be organised fairly easily, wherever a flat playing field is available.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

The style of races held was similar to those on the velodrome, and the bikes were fixed gear machines with track style fork-ends.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

Typically the fork crown was drilled for a front brake: The rider would remove it upon arrival to the race. The tires were of course tubulars - "sew ups." Too deteriorated to hold air, the ones on this bike are original.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

Also original are all the other components. Most notable among these are the English-made Chater Lea crankset and hubs, quite rare now.




JRJ Grass Track Racer

The Chater Lea pedals are fitted with Brooks toe clips and leather straps.




JRJ Grass Track Racer
I can make out a faint Brooks stamp on the side of the saddle, but not which model it is. The saddle is long and very narrow - measuring just over 120mm across at the widest part.






JRJ Grass Track Racer
The stem and handlebars are stamped with what looks like Cinelli; I did not want to disturb the patina by cleaning up the inscription.




JRJ Grass Track Racer
When talking to Chris Sharp about the JRJ, I asked whether he plans to make it ridable. He has many vintage bikes, some of them quite old and storied, and he does not shy away from using them. But Leslie White's grass racer, he wants to preserve the way it is. Having met the bike's original owner, part of it is wanting to honor him. But part of it also is the history. In person, standing near this bike and touching it... There is just something so incredibly alive and exciting about how freshly used everything looks.I can readily imagine it all: a grassy field, a gray sky, a crowd of locals gathered to watch, and the riders - a blur of jewel tones against the overcast country landscape.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Ducklings on Elbow Lake


































We saw a lot of neat and interesting things on yesterday's kayak adventure on Elbow Lake on the Gunflint Trail. Probably the most entertaining (and definitely the cutest!) sighting was this group of ducklings that we saw on the opposite end of the lake from the boat landing. They must have been hiding in the brush along the edge of the lake when we first went by because we didn't see them until we were heading back to the landing. They sure were cute as they swam along the bank close to shore. This sighting along with the Loon earlier in the trip really made the day special. We also saw a bald eagle perched atop a giant pine tree and a goofy gull that was flying around in the distance the whole time we were paddling. There are always fascinating things to see when you spend time on the water and today was no exception!

A short history on rockered skis?








This is a cut and paste from the DPS web site.



Th full unedited version can be found here:

http://www.dpsskis.com/company/timeline



I've included some of their time line here becauseit mirrors my own thoughts in a similar time line. It is not an endorsement of DPS skis. I'll do that myself much more clearly in the upcoming ski reviews along with other manufacturer's skis. I don't think anyone can deny Stephen Drake's/DPS's involvement in the current crop of state of the art skis.



Back in the mid '80s there were European back country skis that were wider than normal...up to 80 and 85mm under foot. The Rossignol Alps 3000s was an example. They had much bigger tip curves to help get the tips out of the snow and on planequicker. Typically skied in a 180cm or a 190cm. Short when a 200 or 205cm ski was more typical for the adult male. The short and fat, Alps 3000 was acommonski for Canadian Heli Guides at the time.



Prehistoric, The Rumblings: 1997-2002



1997DPS founder, Stephan Drake, is spending his second season in Las Leñas, Argentina. He is on Rossignol Viper skis, 60-something mm underfoot. After a 1-meter storm, he makes his 100th over-the-head face shot turn down Eduardos. He collapses in a pile of exhausted sweat at the bottom. His pro snowboarder roommate ollies over him at 50 mph and slashes a huge wave feature at the bottom couloir exit. Stephan (and Dane) wants freedom from the fall line, and ponders quitting skiing and taking up snowboarding.



1998Drake picks up Volkl Snow Rangers and Rossignol Bandit XXX's—temporary solutions that offer glimmers of hope.



1999Drake buys a dusty pair of Atomic Powder Pluses sitting unused in the backroom of a Colorado ski shop. 115mm underfoot and surfable, he takes them down to Las Leñas the following season. There will be no more thoughts of snowboarding from this point on.



2000Drake lands a cliff in the Aspen backcountry, and bends the tips of his heavy metal Powder Pluses into a Rockered shape. Initially he is bummed. After skiing them further, the skis take on a whole new life; they ski more dead, but are surprisingly more surfable. The fall line opens up.



2000Drake is spending every summer surfing pow in Las Leñas and experimenting with big skis. High speed pow skiing is now outpacing snowboards.



2000-2002Drake builds a collection of Rossignol Axioms and Atomic Powder Pluses. He custom paints their topsheets.



Beginnings: 2001-2005

2001-2002Drake is riding hard with Volkl Snowboarder and former Swiss ski team member, Cyrille Boinay in Las Leñas. Drake's skis are now 110mm underfoot, custom-painted, custom rockered Rossignol Axioms with a build date of 1993. The two chairlift rides and late nights are spent discussing how the lifestyle of storm-chasing powder junkies, and this new dynamic way of surfing powder on skis isn't being represented by manufactures or media. At Las Leñas' Atenas wine bar they conceive a new ski brand that will reflect the culture and a revolutionary ski technology—carbon fiber. Drake is tired of trekking around the backcountry and wrestling skis that weigh 14lbs/pair. He wants light, ultra-high performance versions of the double metal laminate clunkers he is skiing on. Surfing and snowboarding have it right; light equipment is best for both energy conservation and high-performance riding; carbon is the ingredient to make it happen in skis.



2002-2003DrakeBoinay, Ltd. is formed (DB Skis). A four-ski quiver is designed. A U.S. based manufacturing partner is secured. The flagship shape is the Tabla Rasa- the first 120mm underfoot pintailed, and rockered ski ever made - 30cm's of Rocker go into the design and design notes, but DB's manufacturing partner can't quite build it. It still skis great with its long nose and setback stance. In the Tabla Rasa's product and design descriptions, the benefits of "Rocker" are touted. Rocker officially enters skiing's vocabulary.



2002-2003Boinay and Drake meet Swedish ski photographer Oskar Enander in Engelberg, Switzerland. They enjoy great powder sessions and lines in classic European ski bumming fashion.



2001-2003Meanwhile, in Colorado, Shane McConkey and future DPS partner Peter Turner are building the Volant Spatula. Its design characteristics are dubbed, "Reverse Camber and Reverse Sidecut." The Spatula takes powder skiing to ‘11’.



2005Drake and Peter Turner meet in Utah. A partnership is born. Instantly they launch into discussions of flex patterns and laminate structures. The fire is rekindled for the perfect carbon fiber ski. Turner infamously tells Drake, "it will be no problem for us to build these carbon skis elsewhere." DPS is born, the vision to create the perfect ski using spaceage material continues, and the duo begin designing an entirely new five-shape quiver of skis, including the iconic and groundbreaking Lotus 138 and Lotus 120. The Lotus 138 morphs the Tabla Rasa and Spatula concepts into the first Rockered ski with sidecut: a design that is copied by another brand within 1.5 years. The Lotus 120 shape becomes the template for the iconic 120mm pintail design: a shape that practically every major and small manufacturer now produces.



-The move is made to switch back to plastic sidewalls. Another start-up issue forces yet another radical move in production engineering. Through the process, a huge breakthrough is made that gives long-term viability to the pure carbon ski concept. Now, pure carbon fiber skis can be made with the consistency and regularity of conventional fiberglass skis. All cosmetic durability issues are nailed. The warranty rate on a high-end carbon skis drops below 1 percent. The future of high-end carbon skis is secured.



The groundbreaking Wailer 112RP is introduced alongside a new Women's line. DPS relocates its HQ to SLC—under the shadows and deep snow of the Wasatch.



Editors note:

Bottom line? What we can do so easily now on some of the most advanced ski designs, you simply couldn't do prior without using a snow board.


Confusing Relationships

This past Friday, Charlene, a new-found "Shuder" cousin and her son came down from central Michigan for a visit with me and one of my first cousins. We got acquainted, shared some information, had a good time, and got a bit confused.

Our common ancestors, Nancy Jane Lavering and Isaac Shuder, were related to each other before they got married. As I attempted to explain their relationship and determine our relationship it just got more and more confusing. We finally did get it figured out though, I think. Nancy and Isaac were 1st cousins once removed, and Charlene and I are second cousins once removed, as shown in the image below, which can be read by clicking on it to make it bigger:


The problem I have with the standard relationship charts, is that you have to know your relationship to your common ancestor as well as the relationship of the person you are trying to determine your relationship to. Now, if I'd had the basic information for those ancestors and their children entered into the genealogy software that I use, which is Legacy, it wouldn't have been a problem, but I didn't and still don't. Actually, I did have it entered a couple of years ago, but that's another story. Anyway, Legacy has a neat feature that allows you to display and/or print a fancy chart mapping out these things. It's really a nice chart, but I couldn't use it. . .

Examples of the Standard Relationship chart can be found at:
  • http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~gentutor/chart.html

  • http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~hornbeck/chart.htm
A rather nice, slightly different chart with a pdf file available for download is at:

  • http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kordyban/chart/relationship_chart.html

** Update July 31, .. **

What is a First Cousin, Twice Removed? is an article in the Genealogy.com Learning Center that provides some helpful information on relationships. The Learning Center is a very good resource whether you are just starting your family search or even if you are a more advanced researcher.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Campobello Island :: Mulholland Point and Seals in the Narrows

Thursday, September 20th - - In 1958 the governments of Canada and the United States entered into an agreement to construct a bridge across the Lubec Narrows to provide easy access to and from Campobello Island.






The Roosevelt Memorial Bridge was opened for operation in 1962. A portion of Campobello Island can be seen on the left while the town of Lubec, Maine is on the right. Taken from Mulholland Point.





There is a small park at Mulholland Point, which includes the Mulholland Lighthouse. Several signposts provide information about the bridge, the lighthouse, and give a brief history of the town of Lubec, Maine.



But what fascinated me, not visible in that first photo, was the high waves caused by the out-going tide. And then, there were those little black specks in the water, which upon closer examination with the help of the zoom lens, turned out to be seals!





I happened to arrive just as the tide was starting to go out. The water was moving very fast out in the middle of the narrows where the waves were the highest.





The larger seals would fight their way up the current and then rapidly float back downstream. They were certainly having fun, and I was certainly enjoying watching them.





There were probably about 25-30 seals in the group. I'm guessing that it must have been a good feeding area. The seagulls were flying all around also dipping in and out of the water.





The seals were continually diving and disappearing into the water, resurfacing some distance away from where they went under.





The next morning on my return to the United States, I stopped to get a shot of the Mulholland Lighthouse and the town of Lubec, Maine on the other side of the narrows. Even though the tide was low and not moving rapidly, there were seals floating in the water. I even saw an eagle flying amongst the seagulls.


Summer OR

For me a dozen or so really note worthy new items at OR related to alpine climbing is a huge success.



No ice or sheep in sight, so many of the great minds in the industry compare notes @ the RAB booth ;-)











BD has a new lwt helmet which I really liked. New biners again and of course some great cams. More on all of this shortly. The new BD Vapor helmet is a stand out.



6.6oz or 187g BD's new Vapor. Very very nice new lid!





























But the ugly award goes to Petzl. I happen to like ugly so the newPetzl Sirocco climbing helmet @ just 165 grams was a HUGE hit with me. More to come but super durable, and super protection at 165g! I don't give a chit how it looks. And $100 full retail! This will be my new lid as soon as they are available.















The newSiroccois TOUGH!

















Ice tools? I have now actually seen the newest lwt Petzl hammer for the Nomic. Nice bit of kit. But from that I have decided to do a new run of the Cold Thistle hammers asap. There is easily room for both imo. As I mention earlier the Lynx crampon is being shipped to the NA market again. They simply over sold last year's production. It has been a very popular crampon for good reason.



















Read more: http://www.thegearcaster.com/the_gearcaster//07/petzl-sirocco-climbing-helmet.html#ixzz22h26BRse

Under Creative Commons License: Attribution Share AlikeB













photo courtesy of Wild Snow


NWAlpine's new wind shirt made of Dyneema.

I have a sample I will be testing but Wild Snow as a write up on line now.

And more Neoshell kit that I am really excited about! Still under wraps at the moment.



http://www.wildsnow.com/7910/shell-jacket-is-tear-proof-5-ounces/



The "WOW" at the show for me was the new Scarpa's Rebel Ultra. Only 60g more than the original Rebel and it will take a clip on technical crampon! Very close to 1 1/2 lb or 680g per boot. Outstanding!! More to come on this one asap.





















Here is one of the best from this year's show. Another lwt Rebel from Scarpa. More to come asap.







I've been climbing in the Rebel the last couple of months and really like it. An in depth review on that boot is coming soon. However the new Rebel Ultra is going to be a huge success imo. I am chopping at the bit to make the Phantom Ultra (my favorite ice boot currently) and Rebel Ultra comparison for ice climbing. These things should really rock. I believe I first saw a pair of these on Ueli Steck climbing the Dru Coulior last fall...but no one would comment past, "that shoe only exists on the feet of Ueli Steck". Guess that might have been true last fall...it is not now and will be availabel to the public next spring. A fully featured fruit boot we can take into the mountains? Some one is getting the message, finally! Very exciting boot imo!!









Arcteryx? Official word on the Duelly from the guy actually making the changes? Not going to down insulation and not going away. Just a slight revamp of the pattern, so we'll have a better fit. Dually will be back again in the fall line up. Some very cool new clothing combos I had not seen there in the Gamma line up though. Damn! Another I want! And the possibility of some super suggestions coming directly from the Arcteryx designers on the combos and layering systems they use personally.



Another big one for me is the newest food being offered. Gu has/needs some serious competition I think for climbing calories.



Three new food companies (and their food products) that impressed me were www.Bridgford.com, Hotcan.com (hot drinks and soup available now as well) and www.aclimate.com All are worth checking out. And I'll be writing more on then asap.



http://www.bridgfordfoodservice.net/ready_to_eat/index.php



http://www.acli-mate.com/natural-high-altitude-remedy



http://www.hotcan.com/



Hopefully we'll get a few more things to test in the near future from Millet, Mammut, Mountain Hardware and RAB that I am really interested in for alpine climbing.



Down the road? For alpine climbers there is James Bond kind of stuff being talked about behind closed doors at every level. Gear that is yet beyond my imagination.



I've been looking at sun glasses again and will have a review of several of my personal picks from a huge fields everyone seems to be playing in these days.



I'll add more as I unpack and get to my pictures and notes.