October 8th, 2008 2:52 pm
Representatives of the Trek Bike company will be pulling into Camp Mack, off Route 501 north of Brickerville, pulling a trailer of Trek and Gary Fisher bikes on Sunday, Oct. 26. Both road and mountain bikes will be available for test rides between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.
The event is being sponsored by Green Mountain Cyclery, Reading Road, Ephrata.
According to the Trek website, anyone interested in doing a free test ride should bring a drivers’ license and a credit card. The credit card will not be charged unless you disappear with the bike. You can also bring riding shoes, a helmet and pedals. The bikes will have most common pedals and a few helmets will be available, if you don’t have one. For minors, under age 18, a parent or guardian must sign a release form. Trek asks that rides be kept to 30-40 minutes so that someone else can have a turn.
Bikes in the trailer are expected to include the Madone 5.2 Pro, a $4,000 carbon road bike, and the Gary Fisher HiFi Pro Carbon mountain bike, priced at $7,150.
Tags: mountain biking · Green Mountain · ride · cycling
September 25th, 2008 11:57 am
On Wednesday morning, in the pre-dawn darkness, I was counted a half-dozen other bicyclists on the 12 miles of road I covered between Lititz and downtown Lancaster. The number was unusually high. I have noticed more commuters in recent months - those cyclists like myself, carrying bags of clothing and sometimes a coffee thermos on their bikes.
As the mornings have grown darker and cooler, I have been watching to see if commuters who began riding in summer’s daylight and warmth would continue. Would the slightly lower price of gasoline, lack of tights or lights send them back to their cars? I am glad to see them persevere.
Yet, commuters make up only a small minority of even avid bicyclists. The League of American Bicyclists’ commuter tips page makes the case for commuting: it saves money on gasoline; it save time at the gym; it is less stressful than driving; it reduces traffic congestion; and it is healthier for the rider and the environment.
A list of common excuses people use for not commuting, and the League’s responses to them are here.
Commute by Bike, a web site devoted to bicycle commuting, is another resource for getting started. It has beginner tips, product reviews, news and links for more information.
The page also has this calculator that can estimate how much a commuter would save by taking their bike. The tool calculates only the savings in gasoline costs. If you were to make the leap of giving up a vehicle, you would save about $3,000 annually, according to the League’s web site.
Tags: commuting · Transportation · Lancaster · cycling
September 24th, 2008 1:20 pm
Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong made his return to professional cycling official today at a press conference in New York City. Armstrong said he hopes to win an unprecedented eighth Tour. Armstrong, who was introduced by former President Bill Clinton and praised by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, announced he would rejoin his former director sportif Johan Bruyneel at the Kazakhstan-supported Astana team in 2009.
The complete story is here on Velonews.
Also this morning, the New York Times published a well-written article on racing the Tour of Missouri by Columbia rider Michael Barry.
Barry previously wrote the book Inside the Postal Bus, his account of being a domestique on Armstrong’s former Postal Service team.
Tags: Tour de France · season · professional · cycling · sports
September 19th, 2008 1:15 pm
One hundred and twenty bicycle riders will pedal out of Manhattan at 10 a.m. Saturday to start the 2008 Brita Climate Ride.
The riders will take five days to cover the 320 miles from New York City to Washington, D.C., where they will take their message about global climate change to federal legislators. Along the way, they will attempt to raise awareness about the climate crisis.
On Monday, the riders will make their first scheduled stop in Lancaster County at the Strasburg Country Store & Creamery, 1 W Main Street, at 1 p.m., where they will stop for ice cream.
Beginning at 3 p.m., they will be at Camp Andrews, 1226 Silver Springs Road in Holtwood, where there will be sharing their traveling “climate conference on wheels” before bedding down for the night.
The public is invited to the camp to meet the riders. During the evening hours there will be speakers, including: Gary Ferenz, of Conectiv Energy, from 7-7:10 p.m.; Wood Turner, of Climate Counts, from 7:10-7:40 p.m.; presentations on carbon trading from Point Carbon, beginning at 7:40 p.m.; followed by discussions by individual riders. The featured speaker of the evening is Randy Swisher, executive director of the American Wind Energy Association.
The public is invited back on Tuesday morning to wake the riders for their 7 a.m. departure and see them off as they head to Washington.
Tags: Lancaster · ride · cycling
September 19th, 2008 12:10 pm
The morning air is cooler. Bicyclists are breaking out arm and leg warmers and vests. Autumn officially begins Monday.
You know what that means: ’cross season.
The Mid-Atlantic regional cyclocross series opens Saturday with the Nittany Lion Cyclocross Race, sponsored by Penn State University’s Lehigh Campus. The race, in Fogelsville, is the first UCI-sanctioned cross race of the 2008-2009 season in North America.
On Sunday, ‘cross racing heads to Baltimore for the Charm City Cyclocross Race, in the city’s Druid Hill Park. Registration for the Category 4 Men’s division has already been closed after reaching the 100-rider field limit. Other divisions remain open. Advance, on-line registration closes at 9 this evening.
The weekend races are the first of the Mid-Atlantic Cyclocross, or MAC, series. There are a dozen races in the series which goes until Dec. 7. Those races are held over an area that stretches from Long Island, NY to the north to the Washington, D.C. suburb of Reston, Va. to the south.
Other races in the series are:
10/18: Cyclocross at Granogue, Granogue Estate (Wilmington) Delaware (UCI C1)
10/19: Wissahickon Cyclocross, Ludwig’s Corner (Philadelphia), Pennsylvania (UCI C2)
11/1: Fair Hill Cyclocross, Fair Hill Maryland (Newark Delaware)
11/8: Beacon Cross, Bridgeton, New Jersey
11/9: HPCX, Jamesburg, New Jersey (UCI C2)
11/22: Whitmore’s Landscaping Super Cross Cup #1
Southampton “the Hamptons” New York Day (UCI C1)
11/23: Whitmore’s Landscaping Super Cross Cup #2
Southampton “the Hamptons” New York Day (UCI C1)
12/7: Capital Cross Classic, Reston, Virginia (Washington DC) (UCI C2)
For more information, see www.midatlanticcyclocross.com.
The series does not include Wonderland Cyclocross Race, in East Lampeter Community Park, on Nov. 22. That race, being presented by Christiana Cycling, is the only ‘cross race in Lancaster County this year. Registration for that event opens Monday.
Tags: cyclocross · fall · season · races · cycling · sports
September 16th, 2008 11:29 am
A former Elizabethtown man, whose bicycling group raised money for the fight against childhood cancer, has been charged with stealing almost $6,000 from donations, the Lancaster New Era reports today.
Jeffrey S. Schaeffer, 40, formerly of the 300 block of North Market Street, Elizabethtown, was founder and president of a charity group called Cycling For Life, which collected money for The Four Diamonds Fund at Penn State Hershey Children’s Hospital, police said. Between February 2005 and October 2006, according to Elizabethtown Police Detective Clair Martin, Schaeffer had access to the money that had been collected and “during that time, on many separate occasions,’’ took a total of $5,929.
Schaeffer, himself a cancer survivor who now lives in Middletown, Dauphin County, had been injured at his job and was unable to work, according to Martin. Consequently, the detective added, “he was experiencing money problems and used cash or took money to buy gas.’’
When other members of the cycling group noticed discrepancies in the funds, Martin said, they tried to ask Schaeffer “who kept dodging their questions.’’
“So they went to the bank and looked at things on their own,’’ Martin said.
That’s when they discovered the problem. The members – all residents of Lancaster and Lebanon counties – went back to Schaeffer and he admitted what he had done, Martin said. He also promised to repay all the money, police said, and is in the process of making restitution.
[Read more →]
Tags: charity · cycling
September 15th, 2008 2:05 pm
The Lancaster Intelligencer Journal this morning has a article on local bicyclist Steve Farrah, who rode from the Pacific to the Atlantic with friend Joe Peko of Lewisberry.
After dipping their tires in the Pacific in June, they crossed the desert, the Continental Divide, the Great Plains and the Appalachian Mountains as they journeyed east. They survived New Jersey traffic to dip their wheels in the Atlantic on Aug.2.
The two, who chronicled their adventure on 2geezers2oceans.blogspot.com.
“All you need is time and ambition to take a bike trip cross-country. If your heart is in it, you can do it. Most anybody can,” he said.
The full articles is here ….
After Steve Farrah finished the five-mile Red Rose Run in May,he hung up his running shoes for bicycle shoes.
The 62-year-old Lancaster Township resident and his friend 61-year-old Joe Peko of Lewisberry dipped their back wheels in the Pacific Ocean at Oceanside, Calif., on June 5 and began a coast-to-coastbike adventure.
“Joe’s wanted to do this for years and years,” Farrah said. “I was just along for the ride.”
Last year, the two rode in the Bicycle Tour of Colorado and had such a great time they thought they would try a longer course. Farrah said he kept an article he had read about a year ago about Thomas Talbot and his four daughters who bicycled across the country.
When he and Peko decided to make their own cross-country trek, Farrah contacted Talbot. “He was very enthusiastic. He gave me many pointers and said I’ve just got to do this,” Farrah said. Farrah did a lot of searching on the Internet and read up on what they would need for the trip.
[Read more →]
Tags: tourism · Race Across America · Lancaster · cycling
September 12th, 2008 11:24 am
The Green Mountain Cyclery bike shop in Ephrata will hold the local Trek WSD Breast Cancer Awareness Ride on Saturday, Oct. 11, at 10 a.m.
Green Mountain, 285 S. Reading Road, is one of six Trek dealers in Pennsylvania and one of 100 participating dealers in the United States and Canada. Trek hopes to have 10,000 men, women and children participate in the ride to raise awareness of breast cancer and raise money for the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
The cost to participate in the 10-mile or 25-mile casual rides is $25. Participating riders will receive a gift bag and the chance to win prizes. The online registration page, at active.com, promises an additional gift to the first 20 people to register for each location. Online registration is available until Oct. 10. Same-day registration will be available at Green Mountain up until the time for the ride.
Tags: Ephrata · charity · Green Mountain · ride · cycling · sports
September 11th, 2008 1:59 pm
A widely circulated Associated Press report this morning quoted an official with Momentum Sports Group, owner of the Health Net-Maxxis domestic professional team, confirming the company is negotiating with Lancaster County native Floyd Landis for his return to cycling.
Team director Mike Tamayo, speaking at the Tour of Missouri race Wednesday, confirmed the talks.
“We are in negotiations with Floyd Landis to ride for the team in 2009, but we do not as of yet have a signed contract,” Tamayo said.
Landis did not return calls to his Murrieta, Calif. home or e-mails, the AP article stated. His parents also did not immediately return a call for comment this morning.
The news of Landis’ contract negotiations came soon his former U.S. Postal teammate Lance Armstrong announced he was coming out of a three-year retirement to rejoin the professional peleton. Despite at least one news account this morning, there is little chance Landis, the 2006 winner of the Tour de France, could be lining up against Armstrong, the seven-time Tour winner.
Momentum Sports is supposedly negotiating with a new title sponsor for the team, but the team’s impressive record doesn’t include the high-profile European stage races. Health Net has raced outside the United States only once this year, in March’s Tour of Taiwan.
Local bicycle race organizer Rich Ruoff has been watching Landis’ career since he started racing mountain bikes as a teenager. Ruoff said he believes Landis still has the physical ability to be competitive at the top of the sport. It won’t, however, be easy for Landis to return.
“When you stop racing at the top level, it’s really hard to come back quickly,” said Ruoff. He said it may be a year or more after Landis begins racing again before he will be competitive.
“It’s doubtful that they will ever let him do the Tour de France again — that’s at the organizer’s discretion — but he could be a top racer at the domestic level,” Ruoff said this morning.
Long-time Landis friend Mike Farrington, owner of the Green Mountain Cyclery bike shop in Ephrata, said it is disappointing that Landis is considering signing with a domestic squad. Outside of a few prominent stage races, such as the Tour of California and Tour of Georgia, there are few events on American soil that will really allow Landis to shine.
“He can win the tour of Alabama, but what’s that,” said Farrington.
He said he hasn’t spoken to Landis for a few months.
[Read more →]
Tags: Tour of California · Floyd Landis · Green Mountain · France · mountain biking · Lancaster · Tour de France · professional · cycling · races · doping · season · sports
September 11th, 2008 1:07 pm
Two Lancaster Countains took second places in the wet Cyclosportif rides prior to last Saturday’s Univest Grand Prix professional race.
The sportif riders took to the race course in the morning for 40- and 60- mile rides that began and ended in Souderton. The rides were not races, but participants wore timing chips were and ranked by their finishing times.
According to preliminary results released today, Tim Card of Mount Joy was the second finisher of the 60-mile ride, with a 2:41:23, or about 22.5 miles per hour. John Martin, of Lancaster, finished second in the 40-mile ride. He completed the shorter course in 1:59:13, or about 20 miles per hour.
The rain held off for the first hour of the ride and was spotty and light for the reminder. The soaking rain that was the remnants of Tropical Storm Hanna came later as the professional riders entered the circuits of Sounderton on Saturday afternoon. Garmin-Chipotle’s Lucas Euser rode through the downpourto victory after his team effectively controlled the race. His teammates, Pat McCarty and Tyler Farrar took the third and fourth spots at the finish, with only Frederik Ericsson of team CykelCity in the middle.
Tags: Lancaster · ride · races · cycling · sports