Cycling
Having just sloughed
the final scabs that resulted from my most recent tumble, I have pause to
reflect on my relationship with the bicycle.
I got my first
two-wheeler when I was eight or so in Dauphin, Manitoba. It was red, which was
good, and had a narrow racing-style saddle, which was also good, but had regular
sit-up-and-beg handlebars, which weren’t so cool. It was also way too big for
me. My folks, in a display of frugality that would continue to affect my life
over the years, bought me a second-hand bike that I could “Grow into”.
Unable to reach the
pedals at all from the seat, I was forced to learn to ride under-bar. I simply
assumed that this was a standard technique, but apparently I was alone in my
experience. It wasn’t a comfortable position to ride in, with the cross-bar
alternatively crushing my ribs and hips, and the handlebars clutched
asymmetrically to overcome the lack of balance. Not relaxing in the least,
there was no opportunity for resting or wool-gathering as all attention was crucial
to simply remaining somewhat vertical. High speed riding was more or less
impossible, which was fortunate since the dismount was seldom graceful.
As I grew, I was able
to ride astraddle the bike, but not stand without the cross-bar smacking me in
the testicles. This didn’t help when it came to perfecting the dismount, so I
took the simple expedient of leaping from the bike to the boulevard (lushly
lawned, as I recall), and leaving the bike to carry on without me. It would
clatter to the pavement a little further down the street where I would pick it
up when I had regained my composure. The parental units didn’t quite approve of
the process but didn’t appear inclined to correct me. This was, of course, in
the golden years of child-rearing before things got all dangerous.
They did, however, in
a continuing campaign to keep my bike from being the least bit cool, attach a
basket to the front. Practical, I know, especially in light of recent events,
but uncool in the extreme.
My older friend Jerry (born
August 2 versus my August 20. Times were tighter then.) used to get out our
bikes whenever a nice day presented itself and ride around all day, often far
out into the countryside. From anywhere in Dauphin, the countryside was always
quite close. We would load up my basket with sandwiches and drinks and spend
the days exploring. Our favourite haunts were the verdant banks of the
Vermillion River, where we would catch and torment the amphibious and
crustacean inhabitants, and the dump.
Hill’s Paradise, it
was called, after the family that undertook the care and frequent extinguishing
of the heaps of refuse. They would allow us to roam the less hazardous areas,
but otherwise leave us be. As I say, it was less dangerous then. We didn’t even
have to wear helmets, for god’s sake. Madness.
The other thing we
never worried about was theft. You could leave your bike virtually anywhere in
town, secure in the knowledge that it would be there upon your return. Not so
much so in Winnipeg, where we moved when I was nine. The old bike carried me
far and wide in Winnipeg with no major problems until I turned thirteen or so.
As with many boys of that age, I was in the process, a process which would
carry on for a couple more decades, of becoming progressively more stupid. I
tended to leave my bike unattended in the old manner, even doing so in the
downtown area. At this time in its life, Winnipeg’s downtown was not the
dangerous and unpredictable hellhole it was to become, but it was still an
unlikely place to find your bike if it was left alone for, let’s say, five
minutes. I lost two bikes this way along with the bicycle locks attached
uselessly to the seat-post. The last one was reclaimed, thanks to the attention
of the Winnipeg police, for which I thank them. I have the utmost respect for
the members of the Winnipeg Police Department; they never hung a beating on me
that I didn’t richly deserve.
In a vain attempt to
render my bike more cool, I impulsively ripped the fenders and chain-guard from
it, thereby rendering it simultaneously useless in the rain or while wearing
trousers. It also reduced my Dad, a soft-spoken and reasonable man, to
speechless rage when he discovered the fenders and chain-guard crumpled in the
garbage. Oh, he was cranky. I still rode the bike for several years after that,
but I suppose that was the original basis for my fair-weather preferences that
exist to this day. Never much cared for the prospect of riding in the rain, or
snow, god forbid, so it didn’t affect me much unless I was surprised by the
weather. Luckily, that never happens in Winnipeg, as everyone knows.
Gitane
Monshee
Gitane
It was to be several
years, I think I was nineteen, before I owned my first proper bike. I picked it
up at Joe’s Cycle in Saskatoon and rode the hell out of it. This was to be an
on-going trend with cycles from Joe’s, but that’s for another day.
This was a Gitane, a
sort of low-rent ten-speed from a small, unknown manufacturer. That’s the way I
seem to like it. Unusual and rare always gives me a feeling of exclusivity and
sophistication that far outweighs the inconvenience of not being able to obtain
parts or even tools to fit said parts. It’s made me a tinkerer of great
patience and little accomplishment over the years. I could tear down and
re-pack the bearings on that beast with my eyes closed, and I did so way more
frequently than was ever necessary. It was a fine-tuned piece of information
and I loved it to death. In attempting to remove the crank from the bottom
bracket, I kind of buggered up the threads to such an extent that the bearings
would come loose every fifty kilometers or so. They even have a name for this
condition, brinelling, so I guess I wasn’t the first. Had I had the correct
tool for the job, this would not have happened and, as new parts were
unavailable, the bike was rendered somewhat useless. My ne’er-do-well soon-to-be ex-brother-in-law
took over ownership of the poor abused creature after he lost the privilege of
driving cars. Not a moment too soon, might I add. The last I saw of it, it was
in the basement of my sister’s place with electrician’s tape wrapped around the
brinelled bottom bracket, as well as the back tire. Must have made for an
interesting riding experience.
Monshee
After retiring the Gitane
to the loving care of my brother-in-law, I went to Gooch’s (my favourite
bikeshop name, ever) and found myself a lovely Monshee in the most unlikely hue
of orange. Like I said, I never went for the easy-to-replace or repair models.
It was sleek and shiny with brake cables that ran through the frame to lessen
the clutter and shifters on the very ends of the handlebars so that you didn’t
have to move your hands to shift, as long as you were in the down position, but
were otherwise a pain in the ass.
One of my favourite
times to ride the Monshee was late of an August night, when the day had been
steamy and relentless as only a summer day in Winnipeg could be. With virtually no wind to contend with, the conditions
were perfect for high-speed cruising through the newly constructed
neighbourhoods near my Grannie’s place. I was living there at the time, barely
employed and sleeping at odd hours, so midnight rides seemed to be just the
thing.
One particular housing
complex consisted of dozens of sets of townhouses, about five to a set, laid
out at angles to one another so that the roadway through the neighbourhood
presented a smoothly pave sort of slalom course. In the middle of the night it
was well-lit and unoccupied by vehicles so I felt confident. On this particular
night, something had changed, unbeknownst to me. The people in charge had
apparently grown concerned at the speed of traffic through the complex and had
seen fit to install speed-bumps across the pristine, linoleum-smooth pavement.
Without telling me.
I came around a
corner, fully leaned into the curve and already anticipating the next turn,
when the first bump appeared where it most emphatically oughtn’t to have been. I
hit it and went airborne. It’s surprising how clear things become in situations
like this. As I flew through the cool night air, I was already deciding how to
land. Not doing so in the presence of the bicycle, with all its hard, pointy
bits was paramount, so I kicked out of the pedal-clips and prepared for
landing.
Upon reaching the
ground, it was evident that I had sufficient momentum to continue along for
quite some distance, so landing on my elbows and knees as I had was simply not
on. I rolled to my back and waited until the flight had taxied to a full and
complete stop. The blessing of the
brand-new pavement was that there was very little gravel to add insult to
inevitable injury, but my T-shirt was definitely not going to be wearable after
this. This particular mishap didn’t require a visit to the hospital, so hardly
merits inclusion in this series, but it was fairly spectacular from a
scab-formation standpoint.
Much as I loved the
Monshee, it was an ill-fated relationship and the bike was stolen one
lunch-hour not too much later, from a closed garage. Not locked, though. Stupid
stupid stupid.
It sure was a pretty
bike. Perhaps too pretty.
BRC
BRC
I did have the sense
to insure the bike, so heading back to Gooch’s was not as onerous a prospect as
it might have been. There I found another red bike, a BRC by name.
The BRC was nice, but
unremarkable when compared to the cat-like Monshee, but it had the benefit of
randonneur handlebars. These are similar to regular ten-speed style bars, but
are a bit narrower and sweep up slightly before continuing around and down to
the ends. This made for a very comfortable ride, as I could ride with my hands
close together on the bars in a very relaxed position (my favourite for
cruising), or slide them outwards and up a little to rest on the boots of the
brake levers. This lifted my head a bit and made for a more alert position
suitable for riding in and among the Winnipeg drivers. They’re all trying to
kill you, you know. Once you’ve accepted that fact and your position as prey,
it sharpens your perceptions and forces you into a more defensive mode of
thought. Fact is, I should learn something from this observation; I have never
had an accident involving another driver.
I was out
traffic-jamming on Portage Avenue one Saturday afternoon, on the homeward
stretch, so about twenty K in and feeling pretty sparky, when I pulled up at a
traffic light next to an older gentleman on one of those little fold-up style
bikes with the tiny wheels and tall seat and handlebar posts. We nodded to one
another in quiet appreciation of a fine summer day. When the light changed I
pulled away and didn’t really give him another thought.
At the next light, he
was right there beside me and said, in a fairly thick Austrian accent (which I
sort of recognized because I grew up with them), “If I thought we was going to
race, I would have brought my road bike.” And he took off.
As I tried to make up
for the low-gear torque advantage he had on me, I had occasion to observe the
hard knotting muscles in his calves. In addition, the little bike he was
riding, on closer inspection, was a very high quality piece of information. The
chain-wheel was the size of a pie-plate and led back to a tiny three-speed hub.
We rode along for a while and chatted at the stops, but then turned off onto
more lightly traveled streets to carry on our conversation.
As it turned out, my
companion had been an Austrian cycling champion in his youth, about the time I
was born. He gave me some very poignant advice about cycling that I remember
and use to this day. Using the gears so as to maintain a consistent cadence, as
well as gearing down a bit to keep said cadence a bit quicker has made riding much
more pleasant over the years and kept the memory of our encounter fresh in my
mind to this day.
The problem with
learning how to ride better, for me at least, is that I’ve never learned to
ride smarter, and my tendency to crash continued undiminished. I was riding
home one night in the rain down Main Street in Winnipeg which is a stack of
stupid right there, and failed to notice through my rain-splattered glasses
(can’t see with them, can’t see without them) that one of the parked cars was
equipped with trailer mirrors. They protruded into the lane just enough to
catch my handlebar and send me flying. I generally only ride as fast as can, so
it sent me flying a fair ways.
I made an unfortunate
three-point landing—knee, chin, and teeth, apparently—but was up in seconds and
scrambling my bike out of the way of the oncoming traffic. When I regained my
composure, I was not at all pleased to realize that I’d knocked out some front
teeth. Up ‘til this point in my life, I had been blessed with really nice
teeth. So much for that. Everything else seemed fine, though, except the front
wheel of the bike, so I started walking. My knee hurt some, but the five mile
walk home in the rain left me with ample time to reflect on my idiocy.
On arriving home, I
pulled off my soaked boots and realized that there may have been more to the
pain in my knee than I thought. My left boot was kind of full of blood. Despite
only a tiny scrub-mark on my jeans, there was a two-inch long gash on my knee
that would require substantially more than a Band-aid to deal with. Off to the
emergency ward we go.
The attending physician
was disarmingly relaxed about the whole process, exclaiming gleefully, “See
that! That’s your patella!” It took some internal stitching and eleven external
sutures to close up my knee, and three for the chin. The missing teeth were
beyond his abilities, so would have to wait. He asked what sort of bike I’d
been riding, and when I described it, he said, “Wait a minute. You did this on
a ten-speed?”
Miyata
Marin
Miyata
The BRC was the bike I
had with me when I moved to Saskatoon and this is where I really started to
ride. My buddy Clare would run to my place on Saturday morning, a distance of
about seven K. I’d get my bike and ride alongside him back to his place, where
we’d pick up his bike and ride over to McDonald’s for an Egg McMuffin and OJ.
Then we’d ride.
We’d scoot around for
most of the day, riding fairly aggressively all over the city. I didn’t have an
odometer at the time, but I am very curious as to what sort of kilometerage we
were amassing. Did I mention that Clare was fairly fit?
Naturally, we’d end up
at one bar or another at the end of the day, usually Mr. Steer’s. This was a
cowboy-themed steakhouse owned by Greeks and run by a German guy. The food was
fairly standard chicken-and-ribs fare cooked up by the Korean chef. An
international sort of place.
We’d stop by for a
small glass of water and a large glass of beer or two and then go our separate
ways. This was before the place really got rolling and earned the nickname
Alcoholics Unanimous, then we’d never leave.
It was on one such day
that I rode home after a couple and, because I was going out that evening,
locked my bike up behind my apartment building, rather than inside, under the
stairs, where it belonged. This would prove to be a grievous error because,
sure enough, after a bite to eat and a change of clothes, the bike, she was
missing.
Joe’s Cycle, where I’d
picked up the Gitane lo, these many years ago, was still in business, so it was
thee I headed with my meagre insurance settlement. Nothing particularly caught
my eye at first glance, but there was one lithe and stealthy looking steed that
could be adapted. The baby-blue handlebar tape could easily be changed, but the
matching seat definitely had to go. I couldn’t get the randonneur bars that I’d
grown to love, but all in all she was lovely. The ultra-skinny wheels made it
look like it was going fifty just sitting there. I’d learn to hate those wheels
over the years, as the rims would bend with the slightest provocation, and the
streets of Saskatoon are nothing if not provocative.
It did go like stink,
though, and I rode the hell out of it for nigh on twenty-five years. Bought it
while I was courting my soon-to-be-bride, and still have it on rollers in the
basement thirty-one years on. The Miyata went into the basement a few years
back when I scared my lovely wife half to death when I crashed on the way
downtown one morning.
I’d been accelerating
for the sprint down the Broadway bridge when, for reasons unknown, I changed my
mind. I hit the brakes and slid over towards the sidewalk where I would be safe
from the early morning traffic. Slid being the operative word. The pea-gravel
in the gutter, left over from the spring, made an otherwise innocuous maneuver
rather more complicated. I managed to maintain control for the first part of
the slide, but with stately elegance, down I went.
When I regained my
composure and took stock, I realized my pants were ruined and my thumb was
cocked over at an extremely uncomfortable angle. It wasn’t broken, but it was
sure as hell dislocated, so I gave it a tug and popped it back into place
before it started to swell. A gentleman in an SUV pulled over to see if I was
okay and, being the observant sort, saw that I was not. He helped me throw the
bike in the back and gave me a ride to the hospital. Not only that, he called
my wife and, later in the day, dropped my bike off at home. Sweet guy.
When the thumb felt a
little better and my lovely was less jumpy about it, I went out looking for a
new bike. And a helmet. Yes, up until this juncture, I had refused to wear a helmet.
There’s nothing like the feeling of freedom of the sun on your face and the
curb in your hair.
Wind. I meant wind.
Marin
The guys at The Bike
Doctor had been doing a great job of maintaining the Miyata for the past while,
as I couldn’t find the time to do it myself. Besides, they tuned it up in a way
that I just couldn’t seem to match. When I picked it up after a tune-up, it
would just dance under me. In a good way.
Jo insisted that I buy
a bike more suitable to my advancing years, as I had recently turned fifty, so
if I couldn’t act my age, I could at least give myself a fighting chance at
achieving a few more good years. She appeared to be under the mistaken
apprehension that the cause of the whole falling-down thing was the narrowness
of the tires I was riding on, so we were looking at something a bit more
substantial in the rubber department.
I tried on a
half-dozen different breeds of bicycle over the next few days, I’m sure trying
the patience of Greg, the owner of the shop. I’d stated early on a ball-park
price range that I had in mind and, naturally, found that the only bikes I
really liked were somewhat more expensive. Story of my life. There was one
Italian cyclo-cross that almost had me, but the ride was a little too harsh for
my liking, and the price was just beyond stupid. I finally settled on my Marin.
Lucas County ALP, by name. I think it stands for Aerodynamic Light Performance,
or some such, a kind of hybrid with luggy tires that are not too wide, a welded
aluminum frame, and excellent gearing. Turns out it weighs somewhat less than
the cat-like Miyata, as well. As it turned out, even with all the switching of
parts and customizing of the bike, it came in on budget, thanks to a monster discount
given unbidden by Greg. Love that man.
The more substantial
tire/wheel combination didn’t manage to slow me down much and definitely cut
back on the number of bent rims that needed repairing. The bike definitely felt
more stable, which was nice, but probably gave me a bit too much confidence. That,
and the helmet lent an air of invulnerability that would surely lead me to
grief. I did know the way, after all.
This leads me to the
events of last month, on the eve of our thirtieth wedding anniversary. I was
bringing roses home to my bride, preparatory to going out for a pleasant meal.
A couple blocks from home, accelerating from the Stop sign, at which I had
dutifully come to a full and complete stop, the paper wrapping on the flowers,
which was clutched to the handlebar in my left hand, ripped. The flowers fell
to the street and, as I watched them recede behind me, I hit the brakes. The
front brakes. As I felt the rear wheel lift, I realized that things were not
going to go well from this point on.
I was right. When I
came to my senses, or mostly, I saw that a guy was standing there watching me
flail around on the ground like a fighter on the eight-count. He looked very
concerned and asked after my condition. His little girl seemed quite
unbothered, but then I wasn’t paying attention at this point. They helped me
gather my things and walked me the last couple of blocks home.
I was mildly
concussed, thoroughly road-rashed and quite contrite. The result of my
high-speed headstand is a sore neck, and apparently I was punching the road
with both hands as my knuckles are a mess.
The bike has been put
away ‘til spring at this point, but I’m looking forward to getting out there
again at the first opportunity.
So that’s the way it
stands for now. I’ve spent many of my happiest hours on my bike, and some of my
scariest, but that’s kind of the story of my life. Like a bicycle, I have no
reverse. Headlong and care-free is the way it’s gotta be.