Cyclocross, Solar Physics, & Life in Belgium
categories: Cycling, Life
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I’ve been pretty badly behind in updating my blog, although it’s not totally without reason. I’ve been on the road almost nonstop since April, first hitting the US (see the last post), then La Roche-en-Ardenne here in Belgium, then Denmark and Sweden, Switzerland, and a few other spots. And when I wasn’t traveling — and sometimes when I was — I’ve been training hard enough on the bike to have relatively little time for much else.

But I’m slowly catching up. The photos from the US trip are up on Flickr.

The trip was great, with stops in Boulder, Steamboat Springs, where we picked up bikes from my new sponsor, Moots, Topeka and Kansas City, where Mindi’s brother got married, Philly, and New England. And, of course, we had the chance to catch up with lots of family and friends we miss a lot in Europe.


First ride on the new bike
Ready to ride in chilly Steamboat.

categories: Cycling, Life
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It’s been a long time since I posted an update here, largely because the demand of my work on the newly-launched PROBA2, writing for Cyclocross Magazine, and still trying to race once in a while have all but maxed out my waking schedule. But, fear not, here’s the update you’ve been waiting for!

categories: Cycling, Life, Science
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So I haven’t written anything here for a while. That’s because I’m busy at work and busy breaking more bikes and not racing. The not racing thing was intentional, since we’re going to be spending pretty much every weekend between now and the end of January at bike races, it seemed like a good idea to take at least one away from racing to get some stuff done around the house that we’ll never get to again. The broken bike thing, well, that’s just life these days and, anyway, the bike that broke has been through a lot, including being hit by a car, crashed more than once, ridden through New Hampshire slushfest winters, and, once, dropped down the stairs of our apartment in Portsmouth. So I can live with the idea that it’s life has run its course — although it would be a whole lot easier to swallow that if my SuperSix had not decided to go and take its own life at the same time.

The good news is that the weekend off made it easy to get a lot of other stuff done. We managed to pull off some live coverage of the World Cup in Treviso, which was exciting, and, later, find some time to do a real writeup as well.

categories: Cycling, Life
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Yesterday I wrote about my own little piddling troubles with my bike. VIsiting Fat Cyclist today for the first time in a while (prompted by a shout out from the ever excellent Bike Snob NYC) put things in perspective.

Fatty’s blog is a must-read these days, and that’s all I’m going to say about that right now.

categories: Cycling, Life, Politics
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Pardon my language (but I live in Belgium where people really don’t get remotely riled up by supposedly ‘bad’ language, and, anyway, there’s no better way to put this) but this shit just sucks. I’d love for somebody to explain to me how, exactly, cyclists “endanger” drivers.

This nonsense just blows my mind. But I suppose there’s bound to be some blowback as communities around the country take serious steps to make cycling safer (setbacks & disappointments aside) and many more people continue get involved as racers, commuters, or recreational riders.

Anyway, all this is moot over here. I’ve never had trouble with a driver while out on my bike. Not one single time (which is not to say that riding on Brussels’ streets is a picnic, just that people don’t go out of their way to intentionally harass you if you’re on a bike.) Once a truck came a little too close to hitting me for comfort when he didn’t see me in an intersection. The guy actually went out of his way to chase me down and apologize! (In the US he probably would have just thrown a nice ‘apology’ rock at me and moved on.) The only other time I had to actually interact with a driver was when I was carrying my bike over a stretch of road that was totally covered in glass and a guy, not seeing the glass and thinking something was wrong with the bike, pulled over and asked if I needed help.

The weird thing is that the roads here are way narrower and often more crowded than anything in the US, it’s just that there’s a culture of cooperation. Hopefully that kind of culture will grow in the US as more and more people start riding bikes, but for now, I’m not holding my breath.

Credit to metafilter for pointing this story out.