Eel postponed until tomorrow. Bad weather today and good weather tomorrow.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Postpone
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Copyright infringement
If you read this blog, you know it's not very good. We're not very good at riding bikes and we're way worse at writing. After you've read all the good bike blogs on the internet (of which there might 1.3 or so), you come here because you live near Hartford and you want to remember that the cycling scene around here is not worthy of report. However, I surfing the website the other day and I came upon this.
What the fuck!?
I worked hard on that bike ride. I had to drive all the way to Vermont to do it, in addition to the riding part! Then, I had to write about it. You better believe that when some spam blog steals my precious literary work, I'm going to do something about.
So, I filled out some complicated Google copyright infringement form and got an email from Google that apparently they're taking care of it (the offending spam blog is hosted by blogger). However, they're only going after two the examples I sent them and I'm fairly sure that the spam blog has co-opted every single beat bike blog post ever. Even former bloggers like Joel, El Presidente de Chine and Rich aren't safe.
Is anything sacred? Read more!
Nobody loves us in the winter
Seems like the BeatBikeBlog only gets a quarter of the page hits in the winter. What's up with that you fickle nancies? Perhaps we write worse in the cold weather. Too cold to type.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Hiking in the dark
If the weather is crappy on Saturday, I think I rather go for a ride on Sunday.
Speaking of Sunday, Johanna and I went for a hike on Sunday and it was really great. We went to the section of the Appalachian Trail by the Schaighticoke reservation. It was a new to us section and really great. Nice views, trail in good shape. The return loop along the Housatonic was very nice road. Anyway, I recommend this as a very pleasant alternative to the north of Salisbury, because it's so peaceful and it makes a loop. Park on Schaighticoke rd in Kent right off Bulls Bridge rd.

Monday, November 26, 2012
Another Eel
It's been awhile, huh?
Let's ride another Eel this Saturday. Meeting 10am on the rocks at Hyland Park in Hartford. A 'cross bike will be a good bike, but you don't like that on singletrack, ride a mountain bike. Of course, Jobst Brandt can ride anything on a road bike with slicks. Plan on six or so hours, so lights may be needed. I don't have a route in mind yet, but I will in a few days.
Also, how come people keep spray painting roots? It seems like every time I'm on a trail these days in a park, someone has spray painted the roots.
Read more!
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Food
I have a pretty high metabolism. It's mostly pretty nice, because I don't get too cold in the winter. I think it has slowed a little bit or things have changed because I'm not a vegetarian anymore, because I don't have to eat as much during the summer. Or, when I ride by myself, I don't push myself too hard so that I blow up and die. It still happens a bit when I ride with other people. This year's De Tour was a good example of that. I rode fast with Salem and Jessie and when I got back to East Hampton, I burned up all my energy and ground to a halt.
Anyway, the temperature has gotten a bit colder, so I have to burn more to stay warm. That means I need to bring more food with me so that I don't pass out in Penwood and have to eat tree bark to avoid death. Not that that happened today, but it occurred to me after I ate the last of my food at the turn around point that I probably should have brought a little bit more. Or, I should ride with other people who can carry food for me.
Do other people have this problem? I was ice climbing once (and the only time) and the good ice climbers were telling me about that the nice thing about ice climbing is that you eat whatever you want because you burn so many calories staying warm (as well as climbing up the side of icy cliffs). It's not that I'm concerned about getting fat, it's more that I'm concerned about running out of energy and having to resort to eating tree bark. Read more!
Friday, November 23, 2012
Not thankful for
Anyway, do you think we should do an Eel-esque ride next weekend?
Read more!
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Thanksgiving greeting from some guys on a causeway
Monday, November 19, 2012
This was life changing
As you may recall, I do The Eel.
Well, now you have to watch and read this.
And another thing, when should we do another eel? Read more!
Monday, November 12, 2012
The Writing's On the Lamp Post
I did appreciate a man grunting at me to signify he was passing me on the sidewalk as I strolled along Farmington Avenue. His weaving, flailing, and almost bailing off the bike while making a fairly simple maneuver informed me, after the fact, that the lecture I delivered to him about riding in the street likely clung to a non-firing synapse.
Here's the thing: the cycling activists generally know better than to ride on the sidewalk, so sending the message to us is the wrong audience. And doing street preaching at the offending cyclists as they pass generally gets us nowhere because half are in a haze of permanent impairment, and the other half are not going to believe that it is safer for everyone if they would just take the lane.
Security guards and cops who ride on sidewalks while patrolling, not while actually in pursuit of a suspect, set a bad example.
How to get the message out?
Read more!
Bicyclists get to eat more.
Come on out to the 2012 Bike Walk Connecticut Annual Dinner and celebrate your purposeful and righteous appetite. The food is good, the company better, and the silent auction is killer. Thursday, November 29th at CCSU. Oh yeah, and the featured speaker is Dan Esty, Commissioner of DEEP.
And this weekend is another food themed bike event - Cranksgiving. Ride around Hartford, at a pace of your choosing, collecting canned goods that will then be donated to a food pantry. Registration starts at 9am on Saturday the 17th. Trinity College Chapel.
Ride more, eat as much as you please without the inconvenience of buying new pants... unless you tend to wear out the seat.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Ill prepared for the weather
I like winter riding and I like riding in the snow. I may not have a fat bike, but I've got fenders and I've even got studded tires. I've got some gloves, lights and a hat. Regardless of those things, I've been freezing my ass off the last few days because I can't remember how to dress. With the snow today, I think I finally had the right gloves and was adequately insulated. I can remember riding in tshirts in December last year or the year before last or something.
Today, there's a mild nor'easter. I went to Home Depot and the snow was the big flake, wet kind. The temperature has dropped like ten degrees and now the flakes are small. Maybe I'll go do something recreational later. Read more!
Monday, November 5, 2012
Vote
No matter what happens in the next 27 hours, Joe Lieberman will no longer be the senior senator from Connecticut. This has special meaning for me because six years I had a crappy night because Ned Lamont had just conceded after losing pretty badly. I had taken a semester off from school to organize the first congressional district for the campaign that started in the upstairs (funky) room of La Paloma Sabanera, where I had worked for Luis Cotto. That November evening was a long descent from the August night where we were so high with elation we thought we were single-handedly end the war in Iraq and pass universal healthcare. Those things finally (sort of) have come to pass and I like to think that beginning in 2006 there was a wave that started in Connecticut.
Anyway, I'm really glad that I can vote for Chris Murphy tomorrow and truly hope he wins. Read more!
Monday, October 29, 2012
Sir, come Burke
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Alley! Cat!
Every so often I wonder whatever happened to alley cats. Then, I get an email about one.
Here is one such example coming soon to Hartford. Details are below and speak for themselves.
Monday, October 22, 2012
Chris is a Richard.
Not really. We love Chris. But I did take a compromising picture of him on the way back from Middlefield. Although we didn't have the promised breakfast at O'Rourke's in Middletown, we did meet up with a fascinating group of ladies from the New Haven area at the orchard and they gave us cider donuts to avoid the bonk. A stop at the Blackbird Tavern provided the fuel for a trip back north.
And then my sister came to Hartford. We rode bikes, marched in parades (as a Dragon and Foot), and danced until we nearly collapsed. Kristen knits and I tried on her hat. It made me evil. Maybe Kristen will come back and stay a while... All in favor?
I woke up late for the Bike Walk CT Traffic Safety 101 course on Sunday, but one of the instructors, who I insulted in the title, gracefully let me sneak in. I've decided to take this course because I'm an incorrigible scofflaw and need re-education. That and being a League of American Bicyclists Cycling Instructor seems like something I could use in the future once I tire of silly jet engines. One poor fellow managed to endo during the emergency stop exercise - no permanent damage though.
Read more!
Flower Street Decision
The gist of it is that the road will be closed to motor vehicle traffic, but the DOT should created a reasonable option, like a bridge, for pedestrians and cyclists. I think it's an ok resolution, though I don't think should is a very binding word, the hearing officer doesn't give any reason why people were denied intervenor status and doesn't mention any written testimony. I think the process was pretty messed up and I think there should have been some chastisement of the DOT by the hearing officer.
Here it is.
Thanks to Robert Cotto for sending me the PDF. It was mailed to him. Read more!
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Apple problem
I went to Glastonbury yesterday and bought some apples and corn at the farm stand on tryon rd. Then, I rode home through the Glastonbury meadows. This added to the fallnessity of the ride, but really bruised my apples.

Sunday, October 7, 2012
More fall riding
I feel compelled to give a shout out to Haywood farm in New Hartford, because they gave me a free apple yesterday. I stopped in wanting cider, but they only had half gallons, which is a bit much in one sitting. So, I decided to have an apple instead and they only had bushels. (Or maybe pecks.) (I'm pretty sure a small basket is a peck.) I asked if I could buy just one apple and they gave it to me for free. It was a good apple, too. Head out to Hayward farm in New Hartford, very near the Harwinton line with more than a jersey pocket and buy some apples.
More trappings of fall!

Saturday, October 6, 2012
Pretty bikes and leaves.
I agree with Brendan. Fall in CT is a short, but beautiful time for riding - when it happens to stop raining.
Friday I tagged along with Patrick from Hartford Bicycle Studio to Providence Rhode Island for the Builder's Ball, a regional custom bike builder show. The Builder's Ball is the nearby, accessible, and cheap ($3 entry) alternative to the annual North American Handmade Bicycle Show. Lots of expensive eye candy about. I was particularly taken by the Connecticut builder, Watson Cycles. Photos of their commuter bike and a monster Iditarod bike included below. The snow bike included not one, but two flask holders. I was fantasizing about rolling in to work or to the coffee shop with that beast. What an over the top, yet still functional, bike!
Patrick had kindly tied my road bike to his roof. Yes. No roof rack needed, just some ratchet straps. My plan was to see if I could drum up a couch surf arrangement for the evening. That didn't pan out. After checking the weather forecast I headed out into the clear, cool Providence evening and followed the Washington Secondary Bike Path Southwest out of the city. Smooth rolling to West Warwick, RI where I found a quiet city park where I rolled out the sleeping bag and air mattress. Under the stars, as I didn't bring my tent or hammock.
The ride back today was quite nice. Very quiet, rolling terrain leaving RI and I haven't done much riding in the far Eastern parts of CT so those were fresh tracks for me. Took a pretty swamp photo, but it looks kinda creepy. Maybe it was the ghoulish month of October that fouled it up?
Read more!
Friday, October 5, 2012
Fall riding
When I was in middle school and high school, fall used to be my favorite time of year. I actually liked all those new England trappings of fall. For some reason, I get a lot more enjoyment out of daylight now. So, as it starts to get dark early, I get depressed. It's especially bad when day light saving time is over. Everything feels very claustrophobic.
The one upside is that leading into this bleak period, the weather becomes pleasant and the trees are.pretty. I think we're at the onset of that now. I got to enjoy some of that when I rode up to westfield the other day. Apparently, they extended the bike path over passed the really sandy section, but not over the scary train trestle.
Also, will there ever be a time when I'm next to the southwick dirt jumps and I'm not on a road bike?



Thursday, October 4, 2012
Take back Farmington Ave
Get out, make some noise. Tomorrow (Friday) morning. Put bikes and feet on the street. West Hartford citizens are taking action.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Canoe race!
Envisionmess?
Discover Hartford? I live in Hartford! There's nothing left to discover.
What you really need is a canoe race. I missed the one on the Hockanum back in the Spring, but another one is coming up and it partially benefits a good cause (not that the other part benefits a bad cause, I think it just benefits canoe racing, which is still a pretty good cause).
So, anyway, come down to the Nayaug Canoe and Kayak Race on Oct. 7. Here's the schedule of events. From a cyclist's standpoint, the race can be watched from the meadows, which always a nice place to be.
The part that benefits is the paddle with a pro and it benefits traumatic brain injury. Joe Damon, who has tbi, is organizing that part. Here's some info about paddle with a pro:
PWaP is a benefit event of the NCR, which teams up a novice canoeist. The pro should offer casual paddling instructions. Paddlers must be over 10 years old and are selected by a random drawing of tickets in a hat. There will be 6 paddlers selected to paddle with one of 6 pros. The minimum donation is $10 and we hope that folks will purchase several chances to improve their odds of being selected in the drawing. Proceeds benefit the Brain Injury Alliance of Connecticut. The PWaP event will be held at 12:30, after the pro races and before the novice level races. The paddler drawing selection is at noon.
- Can you describe the new Paddle With a Pro event? Who is eligible to enter and how and when do they register? When will it take pace? What is the cost/suggested donation? How many people can participate?
After paddling with a pro, you'll totally be ready to win the race next year.
Pictured above, of course, is the Hockanum, where I missed my chance for canoe glory this year. Read more!
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Are you ready to get out and ride (greater) Hartford?
Open letter to folks that like to have fun,
Get off your ass and ride both these great events in Hartford happening within a week of each other. Tell your friends, co-workers, and perfect strangers that they are total dorks if they don't show. Hartford's bike culture is rising like ocean sea levels - started slowly, but now we're picking up speed. Watch out for bike flooding in low lying areas.
Real Ride - Riding Around a Tree - Saturday, September 22nd.
- There will be three sound systems (think boom box times 10) blasting tunes from bike trailers. Front, middle, and tail of the group. An upgrade over previous rides.
- Meet at Real Art Ways (56 Arbor Street, Hartford) to fancy up your bicycle. Cover yourself with things that glow and blink. We ride once the sun has set. Light up the night on this guided bike party through Greater Hartford. We all leave together, pause a few times to regroup and finish at Real Art Ways for snacks, sips and tunes.
- Highlighting this ride: Adam Niklewicz 's "Walking Around a Tree" projection will make its debut on Saturday, September 22 on the facade of the AT&T building downtown. "Walking Around A Tree," along with the sculpture/installation "The Charter Oak" on 215 Pearl Street, is a collaborative effort between the artist, the City of Hartford, The Wadsworth Atheneum and Real Art Ways.
- The ride is FREE. Refreshments and light-up accessories will be available at the cafe for purchase.
Discover Hartford Bicycle Tour - Saturday, September 29th (NEW ROUTES)
- Family-friendly, leisurely ride to discover Hartford's neighborhoods, parks and architectural and cultural gems. Choose from 10-, 25-, or 40-mile routes. Registration / check in begins at 7AM in Bushnell Park and the rides leave at 9AM.
- Online Registration is open. $30 for Bike Walk CT members and $40 for non-members. Online registration ends on September 27th, and goes up to $45 for everyone day of the event.
- Proceeds benefit Bike Walk CT, the organization making you safer with the 3-foot law and vulnerable user legislation. Bike Walk CT gets more bike commuters on the road with the very successful Bike to Work events. You can learn how to ride the streets safely with their Traffic Skills 101 course.
- Volunteers are still needed. You can sign up online.
- Spread the word by inviting your bike loving (or bike curious) friends to the event on Facebook.
Tony C
Read more!
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Cheap or expensive?
Monday, September 10, 2012
Very slow ride
Some years ago, erstwhile beat bike blogger El Presidente de Chine (de Cine?) wrote about riding slowly. People were way into it. I don't own a Raleigh 20 folding bike, so I was unable to get into it. I wish I owned a folding bike, because I'd like something that I could take on an Amtrak train. Johanna has this old JC Higgins kid's banana seat bike in Vermont that makes me ride slow, but in addition to being very hard to ride farther than a mile, the tires are always exploding. So, I don't ride it very much.
I do like the idea of going slow. I mean, if you've seen me race, you've seen me go slow. I also like walking slowly. I canoe slowly. When I grill things, it usually takes four hours.
So, to add that ethos to a bike ride, I decided that I should go fishing in the middle of it. This is distinct from riding to a place to go fishing, this is fishing during a bike ride. I rode 15 miles yesterday in 3 1/2 hours. Very slow!
Read more!
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Broken Shoes
How long are cycling shoes supposed to last? I used to have a pair of Cannondale shoes and they broke after two and a half seasons. The plate where the cleat mounted detached from the rest of the sole and would flex a lot and make it difficult last night. Up until last night, I had a pair of Answer shoes. I knew they were on the way out because they were developing holes, but they failed because the left shoe's sole detached from the upper. It was an interesting feeling. Those lasted three and a half seasons. May my knee over pedal spindle is all wrong.
I bought a pair of Carnac shoes. I hope these work ok. Maybe four and a half seasons?
Also, I narrowly avoided this cute guy and wowed him with my bike handling skills.
Read more!
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
It's not alright. He was 8 yrs old.
Last Thursday Elijah Montalvan was struck by a car and he died on Saturday, September 1st, 2012. He was riding at night, pretty damn late, and was struck by a driver with a suspended license and no insurance. It doesn't say in the article, but I can almost guarantee that there wasn't a bike helmet or bike lights involved. How many things are wrong with this? Too many.
Linda was our inspiration for putting together a ghost bike for Elijah. She is just one year past the death of her partner, Will Laramie, who was struck by a repeat drunk driver. Linda was planning to put up a ghost bike back up on Burnside, locking it securely this time so the bike isn't lifted by scrappers. The intersection where Will was struck, Burnside and Larrabee, needs some work. While mounting the bike, we chatted about how the intersection would be safer for bikes and pedestrians if instead of a speed encouraging Y-intersection, the streets came together perpendicularly. This would reduce speeds through the intersection and provide better sight lines. Much thanks to the always vigilant and motivated Kevin Sullivan for finding the youth bike and towing the bikes over to East Hartford.
The question is, "Will East Hartford take the tragic death of Elijah, and many other cyclist deaths in their city, and choose to take action?" Bike Walk Connecticut has education programs that can be implemented in schools, and the annual Will Laramie Benefit Concert was organized to help benefit / support that type of education. Ghost bikes can only do so much. The next step is making bicycle safety education part of a child's education. Kids learn how to play bean bag dodge in gym class, why not basic cycling safety? Cycling safety education could even be worked into a recess program.
Note: For those that know me well. The Burnside ghost bike is the Huffy Sweekstakes, also known as Good Vibrations Deluxe.
Read more!

































