Monday, March 31, 2008

Wellycats 2 is ON!

If you're in Welly on Wednesday 2nd (tomorrow) and you have a fixie or singlespeed, get to Emporio (behind it, in Walter St) at 6 for some fun.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Voodoo Guru

Dan has a nice new Voodoo frame that he's SS'ed, which I just discovered buried in the Scared Shiftless inbox (I keep forgetting that it's there!). Still got those dodgy red grips though. Do your mates say "what a Wanga" to you, Dan?

Thursday, March 20, 2008

One BIG wheel

Forget your 29ers, this is where it's at, at least as far as unicycling goes. A 36 incher! This young dude gets around town on this beast, drawing plenty of attention along the way, and cruises the Makara trails on his 29er.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Wellycats!

Alleycat racing is a big part of bike messenger culture in the States, and Wellington now has it's own little race around the city streets: Wellycats! The best thing about it was there wasn't a bike messenger in sight, just a bunch of mountain bikers on whatever singlespeeds or fixies they could cobble together. Of course, the best place to start an alleycat is in an alley, and behind Emporio was the gathering spot. The rubbish skips and broken beer bottles added to the authenticity.
The rules are simple; get to the checkpoints in any way you please, first one back with all the points stamped on his card wins. Then drink beer. There were time bonuses for the first rider to each checkpoint, and I picked up the one at the SPOKE office (only about 200 metres from the start, and no-one else went there!).

And they're off! Owen and me almost didn't make it out of the street, trying to go in opposite directions on the wrong side of each other. Most went to the Basin Reserve first, Mark headed to the Beehive for the sprint win, then it was a heinous climb up to the Met Service.

Benji got a flat down near Parliament and ended up running his 50c dumpster-special back to the finish, proving that you should spend at least a dollar on a bike.

I show off my unco-ordinated running dismount skills. A couple of monumental navigational errors had me riding up Cuba Mall, like a salmon swimming against the current, pissing off a few pedestrians.

And the winner is.... Ricky stomped around the course on his brakeless ghetto fixie in 20 minutes, then made us all feel ill with this unbuttoned shirt victory salute. Thanks to Paul for putting this on, it was a blast and I can't wait for the next one (last Wednesday of each month is touted).

*For some real hairy Alleycat action in London and New York, plus other stuff, check this site out.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Release the hounds

Our singlespeeding cohort from Newcastle, Dan, asked me to "be a dear" and post the link to Wolfhound Cycles blog. Apparently, these bikes are "getting him moist", something that I'd rather not think too much about.





There are lots of cool pics on the manudfacturing process of these sometimes funky, sometimes downright strange looking bikes. Worth checking out their full site too. Keep some tissues handy, though.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Fix Push

The fixie movement has gotten out of hand, right? Well that's nothing... check this shit out!

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Menage a trois

Check out Declan Cox from Valley Cycle's bike:


So much potential. So tastelessly executed. Sorry Dec, but putting neon green Lizard Skins grips, Titec carbon bars and an SDG I-Beam saddle on a vintage Merlin Titanium frame that deserves something classy from vaguely the same era is just wrong.

Fashion gripes aside, I've ridden this bike offroad and it's super sweet. I've yet to come across a rigid singlespeed that handles as well as this baby.

Here's my Cross Check after the transformation that was blogged a few posts ago:

This is yet to be taken to the trails, but if the way it feels on the streets is anything to go by it should be a ripper. 700x32 Smallblock Eight tyres, EA50 riser bars, 38x18 (free) and38x16 (fixed) gearing. Bummer that I didn't get the time off to go to Vegas for the SS nationals. Brett might get the chance to hurt himself on this bike instead.

Last up, check out what you can get from Surly, fully built, fixed and ready to go:

The Steamroller complete. Pretty well specced with Surly 1x1 hubs and a Surly sprocket, and great value at around $1300. My flatmate Karen plans to use this as a round town bike, having ridden my cross check in one of its previous fixed-wheel incarnations and loved it. I'm looking forward to putting a few miles on it too. These guys must be taking the piss with the included owner's manual though: