Every Day Adventurers

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Cargo Bicycles, Utility Bikes, Longtail Limos and other Xtracycle cycling chatter

Family Camping Adventure

All packed and ready to roll!

Lou and her two adorable boys brought along their new Xtracycle to hit up some rails-to-trails trekking into the Australian wilderness. This being Lou’s first bicycle supported adventure, she took it easy, exploring what it was like to carry cargo and two kids by cargo bike, something we recommend all families do before hitting the woods with family in tow.

Enjoy some more snaps from their adventure and thanks, Lou, for expanding your comfort zone and trying something new! Good luck on your other every day adventures!

Park and play time!

Three

Read Lou’s entire post about herXtracycle cargo bicycle camping adventure.

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Cobb, Continued.

These are Mike Cobb’s words and wisdom from his Xtracycle tour around Europe as part of the Pleasant Revolution. Enjoy!

Wifi is precious and rare for this mechanic… just performed field surgery on my iPhone to replace the battery. Disabled the camera in the process! So- I can only send old pictures + hopefully a few that tourmates e-mail to me. But let’s start this off right!

Tower Bridge, London - World Naked Bike Ride

Tower Bridge, London - World Naked Bike Ride

Had a one week vacation from our working vacation. Ljubljana, Slovania, the city of love, is where it started.

Ljubljana: Soooo full of grafitti. Seems as though civic concerns lie elsewhere. I like it – street level culture staining the walls. Saturation of personality. Sweet, mellow.

The squat in Ljubljana – the 5th squat or so. Always a somewhat creepy adventure. Squats attract creative people, anti-establishment people, rebel-rousers, sick people, poor people, drug adicts. This one had no electricity, lit by candles stolen from the local cemetary. One morning I watched a young man conspicuously trying to act casual outside the main building in the courtyard. It was a tough role to play as he kept puking in the storm drain. You can’t puke quietly. Or casually. After finishing, he quickly stood erect and wiped his whiskers. I just can’t stop assuming he was a junky who’s junk stream dried up – at the squat looking for a solution. William Burroughs has filled my head with diagnosis details…

Spent the night last night on a rugby field inside an Aix de Provence, France sports complex. I slept in my bivi sack on the field’s grass. Woke up to cloud bursts that delivered regular intervals of rain – 15 seconds of hard rain, 50 second break, 15 seconds of hard rain…kinda like a sprinkler…After about 4 or 5 rounds of this onslaught, it dawned on me that it WAS a sprinkler. Moved 30 meters away to the dry zone while Kipchoge first attempted to thwart the rain-makers with heavy rocks, then successfully with cooking pots AND heavy rocks. The tent-testing ended.

I’m finding a lot of “raw sienna, reduced red” (color of my room) all over provincial France. Often the main road through villages is canyon-walled with solid shop/residential walls, buffered by minimalist one meter sidewalks. These walls are often awash in subtle variations of “raw sienna, reduced red”. It’s a faded earthy yellow, familiar like memory from dreams. Truly soothing and pleasant. The feeling of ancestral habitat.

Skateboard for a snapdeck, a soccer ball, running shoes: my tools of diversion.

Skateboard for a snapdeck, a soccer ball, running shoes: my tools of diversion.

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Adventures of Cobb

Mike Cobb is a Portland, OR based Xtracycle rider, mechanic and general suave dude touring the European continent as part of the Pleasant Revolution. These are his adventures.


Speaking of Scotch, a couple days ago, I found a fifth of the stuff, decades old (?), 90% buried in the soil of our roadside hobo camp (Bratislava, Slovakia). Drank it up with water and honey (with abandon).

In Budapest currently, having a devil of a time repairing the (3rd) broken frame. For the first (2), I splinted, then found access to awesome DIY metal shops w/MIG machines in Berlin and Vienna, respectively. Tried campside brazing this morning with insufficient flux and insufficient lots of things. FAIL. Now seeking welding service….

I am more determined than ever to assemble tools and materials for SUCCESSFUL campside brazing in the future. Mark the words…

Vienna just caught on with the fixie craze 5-8 years ago and the tallbike craze just 1-2 years ago. The Bike Kitchen is opperated by a gang of bike punks who wear “colors” in the form of heavily adorned flourescent green safety vests. Aside from the safety vests (which I love), the Vienna bike punks have recreated a big chunk of the Portland bike punk scene. Strangely cozy and familiar.


Cool kid fixie panda

Cool kid fixie panda

Hofi of Heavy Pedals, Vienna, Austria

Hofi of Heavy Pedals, Vienna, Austria

My fixie for a day and Hofi's Heavy Pedal Express

My fixie for a day and Hofi's Heavy Pedal Express


My morning with Hofi – delivering high class sandwhiches and bread to business Vienna. We swapped bikes a couple times – a locally made 70′s road frame converted into a cool kid steel toeclip fixie and my favorite iteration of the Long John – Larry vs Harry Bullit. The custom Bullit box folds flat w/o tools (Designed by Hofi).

Dremel + Car Muffler = New Frame Lug

Dremel + Car Muffler = New Frame Lug

Cutting up a ground-score muffler for frame-repair lugs. Battery-powered Dremel – yeah!

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Made It, Minus One Bag

Ross Evans, one of our fearless leaders is off on an adventure to our Xtracycle  manufacturing plant in Taiwan for a week.  He’ll be checking in with us often, sending pics and updating us with his…

…everyday travel adventures!

I should have taken a photo of the sign they sent for me around the carousel.

Security was going to make me throw away the fine local jams I brought as gifts. So I went back and checked my bag.

Alas, now I’m minus one bag.

They are giving me $100 to buy clothes. (I asked!  biz class gets more $.) The breakfast platter was “hindu vegetarian”. Silverware and porcelain.  Wow!  Slept well too.  Fun to ride in the “upper deck” of a 747.

Off to the Taichung bus. Fego or bust! Love and lollipops,

Ross


Sent from my b¡cycle.

welding

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High Sierra – Part Deux

We landed in Quincy, CA late Thursday night – after a flat tire just as we edged out of the Bay Area (changed in under eight minutes – go team!) and a drawn out Thai dinner in Marysville that left us burping curry and feeling sleepy. Two hours later Ross was wiped from keeping his eyes glued on the windy mountain road, I was simply giddy to be suddenly on a work vacation, and Rick was, as usual, shooting photos.

rick and ross

rick and ross

Outside the Airstream, folks picked guitars and sang folk songs under the strange light of the adjacent sawmill – the giant piles of lumber misting into the night…something about keeping the wood wet so it doesn’t crack someone said. I thought the scene was just plain creepy – a perfect backdrop for a scary movie. But the guy playing the Melodian with incredible finesse made the whole horror movie notion less plausible – I returned to feeling giddy with each song perfectly accompanied by the master Melodianeer.

Our camp spot was primo – right on the corner, in the more bourgeois RV camping zone, sure to yield great foot traffic and ridiculously close to the main music stage. Truly, a fantastic spot to pop out the Airstream porch and break into the 8 lbs of organic raspberries we scored at Costco .

all set up!

all set up!

Up went the Xtracycle tent, out came the Radishes, and quickly they were plucked up by High Sierra staff ready to release their golf carts in the name of a more social, undeniably more sexy mode of transport. Box office administrators, merchandise divas, well caffeinated paramedics, hipster artist liasons came one by one to meet their steed.

Rick quickly walked them through the essentials of Xtracycling – how to carry people (slide forward for better control) and stuff (big stuff, little stuff, long stuff, heavy stuff). And off they went, diminishing our fleet and leaving us strangely without much “work” to do after all.

bindu rocks his radish!

There is truly nothing like the moment when you realize that the work that is calling you to task involves riding out into the night with a DeWalt portable job-site stereo strapped to the back of your bike, a cowboy hat on your head, a bottle of tequila in your FreeLoaders and an available seat on the back of your Radish.  Except perhaps the moment right after when you realize that you have four more days of “work” to go.

stooping

When I wasn’t cavorting by bike, I spent a good deal of time just sitting in my orange Alite chair, catching up on what is about 30 years of too few evenings spent “stooping” (sitting on one’s porch, people watching, falling into conversation, sharing food or drink with a stranger). Passers by were curious about the bikes, wishing they could borrow them, rent them, buy them. I realized we could stand to bring 3 times as many bikes as we did next year, but for now, Xtracycle was a limited resource, a finite source of human powered fun in this quaint mountain town.

This place was perfect for the bicycle – flat, just big enough where a bike gets you where you want to go in no time, and not too crowded. At night we would cruiser over to some music at the main stage.

cruising towards the music.

cruising towards the music.

John Butler tore up the stage with incredible guitar work and vocals. Ani DiFranco was fantastic, refreshing, The Loyd family players – a marching band from Oakland – soothed my funk deprived soul. Michael Jackson could be heard after hours in several directions at once – as folks at this event paid tribute to a legend. Drums and guitars and the rare Melodian wound their way into the night as big stages quieted down and the stars came alive. Laughter was universal.

nate salutes the mountains

nate salutes the mountains

Each day we’d cruise across the flats of this Sierra foothills town – maybe three miles – to the river at the opposite end of the valley. We stumbled upon that phenomenon I’ve come to love about California in the summertime: the mountain river rope swing spectator scene. A perfect viewing spot was created by a road pullout, where one bathing suited body after another would endeavor to understand the physics of a rope swing terminated by a BMX handlebar and a ladder made of an old freight pallet – the crowd cheered on the adventurous and the stupid. To my amazement, I managed to pull off a back flip – my first of the season – without a hiccup. Isn’t that always the case for firsts in a while – the brain is pleasantly surprised to see the body do what it knows so well. My second rope-swing improvisation became a sideways fetal position belly-flop that folks wouldn’t even acknowledge with a sarcastic cheer or laugh at my expense – so I called it a day for aerial stunts and laid out under the sunshine until I couldn’t take another milligram of Vitamin D coursing through my system. I quickly downed two beers to my system in check.

And so the days rolled on, in a kind of perfect repetitive haze, a throwback to the days of summer camp and romance and rivers and rope swings and bikes. The music all around us acted as a soundtrack to the weekend, each song indelibly marked with the feeling of total freedom afforded by two wheels and nothing specific you have to do except manifest a good time.

jam friends

jam friends

When it came time to depart on Sunday, the bikes came back in great shape, and we downloaded the stories and adventures of their caretakers. Two of the bikes remained at large, and, perhaps ironically, happened to be the bikes loaned to two of the key organizers of the entire event. As I’d suspected, the two perpetrators had been converted to Xtracycle lovers, and each negotiated a deal with us to keep their bikes through the end of the event – we did our best to drive a hard bargain, but in the end, we capitulated to their demands, flattered that our Red Hot Roots had woven themselves into the fabric of this event.

3694662825_919a733f46

The last two Radish’ have since been returned, and we eagerly look forward to facilitating more adventures with Radish and the Red Hot Roots Tour at next year’s High Sierra. But that’s a long ways away – we’ve got a lot of events to hit before then.

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