2005 Tour de Cure Team Forming

If you’re interested in riding in the St. Louis Tour de Cure this year and are looking for a team, or if you just need an excuse to donate to the American Diabetes Association, look no further:

Velocity Charity Cycling Team

What is the Tour de Cure?

Each year, the American Diabetes Association organizes the Tour de Cure across the country. This is not a race, but a fund-raising event to support the treatment for Diabetes and the research for a cure.

The American Diabetes Association’s mission: to prevent and cure diabetes and to improve the lives of all people affected by diabetes.

Riders select a distance that is comfortable for them, but ideally one that proves challenging enough to encourage you to support their effort. Please join us in the fight against Diabetes.

Please sign up to ride with us or support me with a donation to the American Diabetes Association.

Thank you.


Year Miles Team
2004 100 Velocity
2003 50 Velocity

2004 MS-150 Day 1

Hans, our fast and fearless team leader, led Kurt and me to complete today’s century ride. This morning we left the start line around 8:30am, and returned around 5:30pm. I’ll have to check the map to find all the rest stops and factor in how long we spent at each one to find our actual ride time and average speed. My bike computer is apparently not set correctly, and isn’t reporting accurate numbers. The 100 miles left us pretty beat, but we’re not stopping from finding sushi for dinner, though we’ll likely be crashing early this evening for a full nights sleep to prepare for tomorrow ride.

Tomorrow the plan is still to ride another century; today’s seemed easier than I expected, but I’m still tired and sore. I’ll likely take the century route no matter what, and just ride until I collapse. Picking up my lifeless corpse is what the support vans are for.

In the meantime, you can check out how my fundraising went, and you can still contribute if you’ve not.

National MS Society’s 2004 MS-150 Bike Tour

I’ll once again be participating in the National MS Society’s annual MS Bike Tour to help raise funds for research and local programs. The two day event is held September 11th and 12th in Columbia, Missouri.

Last year, with admittedly some difficulty, I completed 150 miles as 100 miles the first day and 50 the second. This year, I’m challenging myself to pedal the 100 mile loop each day to accomplish a double century. It’ll be hard, but it’s a small thing for me to do for people who face the devastating and relentless effects of MS every day.

Please consider sponsoring me and supporting the MS Society, or you can just view my progress.

Thank you!

My new bike is officially, finally home

And so am I, because regardless of the weather, I’m not going to focus on work when I’ve got a new toy begging for a ride during what’s turning out to be a pretty day.

But before I can do that, I have to install the SPD pedals from my mountain bike, since the SPD-SL shoes to go with new bike pedals were back-ordered.

Thing is, I don’t have the tool to replace the pedals, so I’ve gotta hit the bike store first. So I need to hurry while the rain stays away. So I need to finish my sandwich and this sentence.


The girl at the bike shop was telling me they didn’t have the 15mm wrench I needed but another store did or I could just bring it in and they could do it… when I realized that I did in fact have what I needed. Back home I am. But the guy who put the pedals on the mtn bike made it too tight, and I can’t remove them. So I’m thowing the bike on the car roof to take it to the shop so they can do it. This is not how I planned on this afternoon going, but thats because this is more funny.


The girl at the bike store has a bigger wrench than I did… she got the pedals off for me. Because I am weak. I mean because she had more leverage.

Just got back from “testing” out the bike. Having spent the past year on a mountain bike, it was certainly different.

Having a road bike makes no difference in speed. Really.

(I love this bike!)

Bicycle bike bike.

Bike bicycle, road bike, bike. Bike Titanium bike Airborne bike Zeppelin bike.

I’m so bike freaking bike bike distracted.

Bike new bike.

I’m totally jinxing its delivery.

Update:

Yup, totally jinxed.

ooooops I screwed up a bike did arrice today but it was not your bike…
It was a 58 Valkyrie

I called the boys and your is still in production..not expected to ship until monday..sorrry

I’m dying over here.

Road Bike Shopping

Since wearing myself out last year during road rides on my mountain bike, I knew I wanted to get a road bike. They’re lighter, faster, and would allow me to go farther with less fatigue.

Heather already had one. Hans got one earlier this year. But it wasn’t until Alex found one that I caved.

For months I’ve been randomly watching ads for a good deal on a used bike, and even pricing some new ones, but not until recently was the option real. I convinced Kelly we should spend some of our bonus monies on toys instead of debt, in an unusual role reversal. She came around.

I want something light, quality, and durable; I don’t anticipate getting another for a long time. I would prefer a Titanium bike because I’m used to being rough on my mountain bike, and I get the impression that a Ti road bike would better accomdate my version of being careful with a lighter frame.

But Ti is expensive, and I was recently distracted by a few ads and auctions for some Trek 5200s. They’re pretty OCLV (Optimum Compaction Low Void) carbon fiber frame bikes; light, fast, and good enough for Lance. Despite my concerns of the carbon fiber being more fragile a bike than I should ride, I found a few deals online. (With some help from Hans on one if not both. He’s a bad influence.)

One classified was for a shiny blue bike re-posted a few times that still looked like a great deal. I emailed the seller with a few questions, but received no response. Several frustrating days later, I emailed again and simply asked if the bike was still for sale, and within an hour he responded informing me the bike was just sold.

The bike that held my attention on ebay was the same model and year, but with a lesser grade component set and a different paint job. It also was running for several hundered less than the blue one. Today I saw that price climb as more people bought into the auction as it got closer to ending, but I remained excited all day and spent my time planning my bid sniping strategy. With half an hour left, I successfully posted a small bid to an iPod (also a necessity) to make sure I wasn’t going to find any weird account behavior with the bike auction sniping. But as the close of the auction approached, my doubts of needing this particular bike increased, and the amount of money I wanted to spend on it dropped. Hans had to suffer the majority of my babbling over IM. With a minute left, I finalize the lowered max I wanted to spend, and loaded the bid form. At 30 seconds, I hit submit. I find out I’m not logged in, and am offered the full login form. 20 seconds, I enter username, realize I’m not 100% certain of the password. 15 seconds, f*ck it. Close Browser.

It wasn’t meant to be.

I’m going back to looking for the random deal on a nice Titanium bike before I spend too much for something I have too many doubts over.