finding thePerfect
Transcription
finding thePerfect
$6.95 JULY 2014 Vol.41 No.6 TOURING AUSTRIA’S RIVERS 20 ALONG THE MEKONG 28 A publication of ADVENTURE CYCLING ASSOCIATION Perfect Reclined Ride finding the R EC U M B E N T ROU N DU P 10 MYSTERY OF MIKE RUST 34 A September to Remember Great Lakes Relaxed Sept. 6 - 13 • Wine & Harvest Sept. 7 - 14 • Sierra Sampler Sept. 20 - 27 CHRIS GUIBERT adventurecycling.org/tours Letter from the Editor A BIKE FOR MIKE The time has finally come for new wheels ➺ IT’S BEEN many moons since I bought a new bike for general riding and bike-travel purposes. Since 1993, I’ve been riding a Cannondale T-1000, a bike that has served me well in all situations. It’s been under me when I crossed Scotland, Oregon, and Montana (three times). In my more reckless years, I even rode it on singletrack and over countless miles of dirt. Over the years, I’ve replaced just about everything — even the fork — and some components more than five times. The T-1000 has basically been a bicycle laboratory of crazy ideas, most of which have worked quite well. My favorite setup included a straight handlebar with Newk drop clip-ons and a Bruce Gordon Rock n’ Road front tire (sadly, the T-1000 frame could not accommodate such a wide tire in back.) Sometime around 1998 or so, Wes Williams of Ibis and Willits fame sent me a bike that he’d built for himself. It was a bit too big for me but I rode it happily for a couple of months anyway. It was an all-rounder with 29-inch wheels, drop handlebars, and rack mounts, and it handled all the terrain I was fond of riding much more confidently and gracefully than the experimental Cannondale. This was the bike I’d always wanted. No collection of one-dimensional bikes for me. One man, one bike. But there was a catch. I had to return it to Wes. For a variety of reasons, I never had one built for myself, but I never forgot that bike. Jump ahead 13 years and I’m wandering the halls of Interbike. Numbed by the multitude of bicycle clones I saw EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Michael Deme editor@adventurecycling.org MANAGING EDITOR Alex Strickland astrickland@adventurecycling.org JULY 2014 Volume 41 Number 6 ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG ART DIRECTOR Greg Siple gsiple@adventurecycling.org everywhere I turned, I decided to visit Co-Motion’s booth to look at some bicycles designed for touring. Well known for tandems, Co-Motion also builds singles, some of which have been the subject of our “Road Test” column. And that year they debuted the Divide, a 29-inch off-road touring bike. Well, I was smitten. And smitten I remained. Finally, the first steps have been taken, necessary measurements made, and I should take possession of my new bike by the end of July. For many of you, reading about a diamond-shaped bicycle is of no interest, so we hope you’ll find the content of this issue satisfying. Inside you’ll find a roundup of recumbents designed for touring, a road test of the Azub Six, and a recumbent travel piece by Chet Rideout. And online, we’ll be posting a profile of Catrike. And remember to visit us online at adventurecycling.org/ mag where you’ll find additional content and online-only features each month. Michael Deme Editor-in-Chief, Adventure Cyclist editor@adventurecycling.org CORRECTIONS: • The “Letter from the Editor” in the June issue incorrectly stated that the famed Buffalo Soldiers rode from Missoula to St. Louis in 1987. Their journey was in 1897. CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Dan D’Ambrosio Patrick O’Grady Willie Weir Jan Heine June Siple Josh Tack • In June’s “Early 20th Century Crossers,” the two photos of Norma Jean Belloff (pp. 22-23) came to us courtesy of Iris Paris and the image of Ruth Orkin (p. 31) was from the New York Public Library Archives. ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Rick Bruner (509) 493.4930 advertising@adventurecycling.org DESIGN IridiumGroup 72 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10016 COPY EDITOR Phyllis Picklesimer 03 contents VOLUME 41 ∞ NUMBER 6 ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG JULY 2014 is America’s only magzine dedicated to bicycle travel. It is published nine times each year by the Adventure Cycling Association, a nonprofit service organization for recreational bicyclists. Individual membership costs $40 yearly to U.S. addresses and includes a subscription to Adventure Cyclist and discounts on Adventure Cycling maps. For more information about Adventure Cycling Association and Adventure Cyclist magazine, visit adventurecycling.org or call (800) 755-2453. SUBMISSIONS INFORMATION: Adventure Cyclist accepts stories, articles, and photographs for publication from various sources. We publish stories about bicycle travel and other recreational cycling subjects but do not cover competitive cycling. If you are interested in submitting a story or article to Adventure Cyclist, please visit us online at adventurecycling.org/ adventure-cyclist/adventurecyclist-submissions for further information and guidelines. CURRENT ISSUE NOTES: “Seems like summer just started and here we are finished with our second-to-last summer issue. I guess time flies when you’re having fun. For the past four or five years, we’ve given an issue over to non-diamondframe bicycles. Not being experts ourselves on these human-powered machines, we’ve turned to Bryan Ball of Bentrideronline.com as a partner. He’s been instrumental in helping us shape content that we hope is useful to both veteran recumbent riders and novices alike. Thanks for your help Bryan. It’s always appreciated.” – Michael Deme Editor-in-Chief, Adventure Cyclist OUR COVER: A recumbent cyclist enjoys the ride during a recent Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa (RAGBRAI). Photo by Dennis Coello. 04 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 features 20 TOP 12 RECUMBENTS FOR TOURING 10 PEDALING THE MEKONG 28 ➺ With a market full of outstanding options, there’s a perfect recumbent ride out there for your next adventure. by Bryan Ball ➺ Detouring away from a dreaded stretch of tarmac leads to unforgettable meetings along the backroads of Southeast Asia. by Willie Weir BIKE TOURING AUSTRIA’S GREAT RIVERS 20 ➺ Traveling the bicycle paths along the Inn and Denube Rivers gives a glimpse into the spectacular scenery, great food, and fascinating history of Central Europe. by Chet Rideout THE MYSTERY OF MIKE RUST 34 ➺ A pioneering mountain biker vanishes into thin air, leaving a few troubling clues behind — and no answers. by Dan D’Ambrosio 34 51 $6.95 JULY 2014 Vol.41 No.6 TOURING AUSTRIA’S RIVERS 20 ALONG THE MEKONG 28 MYSTERY OF MIKE RUST 34 A publication of ADVENTURE CYCLING ASSOCIATION Perfect Reclined Ride finding the R EC U M B E N T ROU N DU P 10 This Month Online ➺ For more Adventure Cyclist related content, be sure to visit our website at adventurecycling.org/mag. 28 PROFILE: CATRIKE A visit to Catrike’s Florida factory shows the high-tech approach the company is taking to innovate for the future. adventurecycling.org/catrike DEPARTMENTS LETTERS COLUMNS 08 Waypoints 03 LETTER from the Editor 18 Road Test By Bryan Ball Azub Six 38 Final Mile 41 C ompanions Wanted 44 Life Member Profile 46 Marketplace/Classifieds 06 LETTER from the Director EARED UP G Highlighting some of the best recumbent panniers, womens cycling apparel, and more. adventurecycling.org/onlinefeatures 42 Road Test By Nick Legan Tern Eclipse S18 51 Open Road Gallery XXXBIKE MODEL AZUB SIX Tk tk tkt tk tk tk tk Built for comfort tkt tk tk tk tk tkt tk over the long haul. tk tk tk tkt tk tk tk $3,000 tk tkt tk tk tk tk tkt tk tk tk tk tkt tk. $0,000.00 18 00 ACK YOUR PANNIERS CONTEST P Jump on Pinterest July 11-31, and show us what you would bring on your dream bike tour and you could win a set of Arkel panniers! More info at pinterest.com/advcyclingassoc/ adventure-cyclings-pack-your-panniers @kleen: @advcyclingassoc Best. Issue. Ever. History, people of color, gear, even learned about trail finally. More! More! Kudos all. ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG @AdvFamInMotion: Just a little #afternoon #reading! Love this #magazine!! @acaroutes @advcyclingassoc 05 Letter from the Director JULY 2014 Volume 41 Number 6 www.adventurecycling.org MISSION Adventure Cycling Association inspires and empowers people to travel by bicycle. SHORT STUFF As part of the bike-travel boom, short tours are spreading too ➺ I’M WRITING from Adelaide, Australia, at the end of an eventful National Bike Month. I’ll write later about my trip Down Under (I’m about to mountain bike into the Outback after presenting at a productive global Velo-City Conference), but wanted to mention a phenomenon I saw on an earlier trip to Tennessee: the growing popularity of short bike tours. In mid-May, I was asked to do a speaking tour through the state, including a keynote at the Tennessee Bike Summit. While there, I met with members Austin Bauman and Robyn Elliott. Austin and Robyn operate small tour companies (Austin has Green Fleet Bicycle Tours in Nashville, Robyn has Bicycle Tours of Atlanta) and they are seeing more demand for day tours in their cities. While these are typically short rides, they share some of the same DNA with longer tours — discovery, learning, enjoying local people, cuisine and customs, and experiencing the world by bike. Often, these short tours re-introduce the bike to folks who haven’t cycled for decades. Austin and Robyn are part of a national trend, including the franchising of Bike and Roll rental and tour businesses in multiple cities, and the emergence of other day-tour operators. In fact there is now a Bicycle Tour Alliance that is developing best practices for day tours and includes companies from New Orleans and St. Louis to Denver and Key West. You can learn more at bicycletouralliance.org. (They’ll also be hosting a conference in Nashville in January 2015.) Another trend is that these tour operators are offering bike overnights. Robyn is developing Southern Getaways. In the Big Apple, another member, Gotham Bike Tours, is offering three- 06 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 AREAS OF FOCUS Provide the premier tools and inspiration for people to travel by bicycle. Expand and integrate bike travel networks for North America. Create the best possible conditions for bicycle travel. HOW TO REACH US To join, change your address, or ask questions about membership, visit us online at www.adventurecycling.org or call (800) 755-2453 or (406) 721-1776. EMAIL memberships@adventurecycling.org SUBSCRIPTION ADDRESS Adventure Cycling Association P.O. Box 8308 Missoula, MT 59807 HEADQUARTERS Adventure Cycling Association 150 E. Pine St. Missoula, MT 59802 Jim and Robyn Elliott during a break in their Atlanta bike tour. day trips that utilize New York City’s transit system to get out of town. As proprietor Lukas Herbert notes, the idea is to remove as many barriers as possible to get people out on a bike overnight for the first time. “Then, if they do our tours, maybe they can ‘graduate’ to a bigger, longer tour, maybe even strike out on their own. Regardless, the goal is to increase bike traveling, which is a good thing.” (We’re pleased to note that Gotham got the idea after learning about Bike Overnights at an Adventure Cycling member gathering in Manhattan.) This is the grassroots level of the global boom in bike travel. It ties in beautifully with the renaissance in American urban cycling — and with the larger trend of companies offering the broadest possible spectrum of bike tour experiences. I’ll report in the future on my travels in Australia, but in the meantime, don’t forget that close to home you may have a budding bike tour company that will provide you new ways to explore your own backyard! Jim Sayer Executive Director jsayer@adventurecycling.org STAFF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Jim Sayer jsayer@adventurecycling.org CHIEF OPERATIONS OFFICER Sheila Snyder, CPA MEMBERSHIP & DEVELOPMENT Julie Huck Paul Hansbarger Amanda Lipsey Thomas Bassett Gage Poore Josh Tack Meghan Holler MEDIA Winona Bateman Michael McCoy Alison Riley PUBLICATIONS Michael Deme Greg Siple Rachel Stevens Cassie Nelson Alex Strickland IT DEPARTMENT John Sieber Richard Darne David Barth TOURS Arlen Hall Darrah Rogers Lydia Hess Michael Lessard Mandy Hale ROUTES AND MAPPING Carla Majernik Jennifer Milyko Nathan Taylor Casey Greene Melissa Thompson SALES AND MARKETING Teri Maloughney TRAVEL INITIATIVES Virginia Sullivan Saara Snow CYCLOSOURCE Patrick Finley Geoff McMillion OFFICE MANAGER Beth Petersen BOARD OF DIRECTORS PRESIDENT Wally Werner VICE PRESIDENT Donna O’Neal SECRETARY Andy Baur TREASURER Andy Huppert BOARD MEMBERS Leigh Carter Todd Copley Jennifer Garst George Mendes Jeff Miller Luis Vargas Carol York In May 2014, we held our most successful U.S. Bicycle Route System fundraiser to date, the 5th annual “Build It. Bike It. Be a Part of It.” campaign. With the help of hundreds of donors, we surpassed our goal of $125,000, raising more than $150,000 for the project! Many thanks to the organizations and individuals that helped us reach our goal! Special thanks to the Tawani Foundation and an anonymous donor for providing matching gifts. Thank you! Adventure Cycling Association Business Sponsors Club Sponsors In-Kind Sponsors AlphaGraphics • Beer & Bike Tours • Bikeflights.com • Bike2Power Bike Touring News • Cygolite • Detours • Growler Cage • Nutcase Ortlieb USA • Osprey Packs • Park Tool • Primal Wear Thunder Island Brewing • Velo Orange WayPoints News you can use from around the world of bicycle travel edited by Alex Strickland IN 2011, New York Times staffer Bruce Weber cycled from the Oregon Coast to New York City, covering much the same trail as the pioneer pedaler Frank Lenz blazed back in 1892. But make no mistake about it, Weber was not bobbing over railroad ties on a 57-pound no-speed Victor, lost to the world. As a test of deprivation and endurance, this odyssey wasn’t even on a par with Weber’s own previous transcontinental excursion, registered in pre-Internet 1993, after he pushed his conventional touring bike an average of 65 miles a day. No, this latest adventure was accomplished on an $8,000 custom-made titanium framed 24-speed, moving at a leisurely 50-mile a day clip with a cell phone mounted on its handle bars. Still, Weber’s safe arrival home was no small feat for a 57-yearold ex-smoker who 08 generally spends his workday at a desk writing obituaries (a serious health scare at the end of the story underscores that point). Any one who has ridden across the U.S., or has at least thought about doing so, will likely enjoy Weber’s detailed travelogue, which is based on the popular blog he posted in real time on the Times site. But perhaps more importantly, Weber’s methodical meanderings gave him plenty of time to ponder his life’s journey — past, present, and future — and his deeply personal reflections will resonate with those near or past the mid-life milestone. Readers will empathize to varying degrees with Weber’s acerbic persona and left-leaning politics, as he recounts his comfortable but tension-filled middle-class upbringing in suburban New Jersey and his struggle to find domestic bliss. But all can appreciate his dry wit and occasional “laugh out loud” lines. My favorite episode was when his penny-pinching dad tried to sell him a used car for $2,000. Weber’s sympathetic mother, overhearing the heated exchange, piped in from the couch: “Just give him the #$%^&* car, Sam.” -Review by David V. Herlihy ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 STRANGE LOOP, BIG ADVENTURE Cycling and hiking up, down, and across the U.S. ➺ ADAM BRADLEY is no stranger to ambitious adventures from setting a speed record on the Pacific Coast Trail in 2009 (65 days) to walking, riding, and paddling from his front door in Reno, Nevada, to the Bering Sea. But his latest goal might eclipse them all. Bradley has mapped out a “Strange Loop” to take him more than 15,000 miles up, over, and through nearly every part of the Continental U.S. on foot and by bicycle, starting and finishing in Reno. The route starts on foot by hooking into the Pacific Crest Trail and heading south to Southern California, where Bradley will trade his hiking shoes for clipless pedals and ride from San Diego to Baxter State Park in Maine, the head of the Appalachian Trail. Back on foot, Bradley will hike down the AT — racing the oncoming winter in New England — before getting back on two wheels in Alabama to follow portions of the proposed U.S. Bicycle Route System and then the Southern Tier Route to Sierra Vista, Arizona. From there it’s a mere 5,100 miles of walking up the spine of the Rockies along the Continental Divide Trail and then back down the Pacific Crest Trail to Reno. Bradley expects the trip to take about 16 months, culminating in the fall of 2015, and marking the first time anyone has connected the three major long-distance hiking routes (the Pacific Coast Traill, Appalachian Trail, and Continental Divide Trail) under their own power. To follow his progress, visit krudmeister.blogspot.com. PHOTOGR APH COURTESY OF ADAM BR ADLEY NEW YORK TIMES OBIT WRITER FINDS THAT LIFE IS A WHEEL ALLIANCE DROPS ANNUAL BENCHMARKING REPORT Biannual analysis pulls latest data from around the country ➺ EARLIER this year, the lower bicyclist and pedestrian Alliance for Biking and fatalities where there are more bicycling and walking united states Walking released its massive people biking and walking. l More people tend to bike compendium on the state benchmarking report of bicycling and walking in or walk to work when a city all 50 states, 52 major U.S. has strong biking and walking cities, and select mid-size advocacy. In 1996, there cities. Compiled every two were just a handful of state years, the Benchmarking and local biking and walking Report is a joint effort advocacy organizations and between the Alliance and only 10 full-time staff working the Centers for Disease on these issues. Now, there Control and Prevention’s are over 230 state and local Healthy Community Design biking and walking advocacy Initiative designed to examine how biking and groups and over 500 full-time staff. A growing walking trends relate to public health, safety, number of concerned citizens are organizing and social and economic well being. A few for safer, more accessible streets for walking and highlights from the report include: bicycling. l The average large American city l A large percentage of commuters bike experienced a 5.9% increase in population from and walk to work in Alaska, Oregon, Montana, 2000 to 2010 without comparable increases New York, and Vermont. Not so much in South in land mass, and budgets are tight across the Carolina, Atlanta, Mississippi, Tennessee, and board. Both of these factors point to a need to Texas. find cost-effective modes of transportation that To download a full report visit move people without taking up more space. bikewalkalliance.org/download-the-2014l There is safety in numbers — There are benchmarking-report. in the 2014 TOUR DE FRANCE, RECUMBENT-STYLE Vida Bike is putting on its first-ever laid-back tour of France, the country where recumbent bikes were popularized in the 1930s. In July and August 2014, Vida Bike will offer the opportunity to tour France in 39 different stages. The length of the stages varies from 25 to 40 miles each and riders are free to pick up their favorite stages. The itinerary follows ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG cycling paths, greenways, and veloroutes through the most beautiful regions of France from charming villages to major towns. This unique ride is more than 1,200 miles long and Vida Bike coordinates luggage transport and lodging, plus the company offers recumbent rentals for convenience. The schedule is available on Vida Bike’s website vida-bike.com/ en/tour-de-francerecumbent. CICERONE GUIDES OFFER EURO TOUR BLUEPRINTS WHEN it comes to guidebooks, travelers’ loyalties to a particular press can be as deeply embedded as a Chicagoan to their deep dish pizza. But for cycling in the Old World, Cicerone Press makes a strong case for branching out and giving thin crust a try. Diminutive in size but big on information, Cicerone makes books covering routes all over Continental Europe, and especially the publisher’s home stomping grounds of the U.K. The books are solidly built, with waterresistant pages and small enough dimensions to avoid getting bent out of shape in a pannier. Inside there are detailed route specifications, plenty of lodging contact information, maps, and short vignettes on notable spots along the way. We’d like to see more details about the best local grub, but figure for most of Cicerone’s routes through gastronomic wonderlands like Bavaria and France all you’d have to do is look up. Cicerone also makes guides for hikers, mountaineers, and climbers, should you be so inclined. Available at Barnes & Noble and online through Amazon or at ciceroneguides.com. 09 TOP TWELVE RECUMBENTS FOR TOURING BY BRYAN BALL 10 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 DENNIS COELLO T ouring has always been a major part of the recumbent market. It’s not difficult to see why. The comfort of a recumbent allows a rider to potentially travel more miles per day. When you’re sitting back in a recumbent seat, it’s much easier to take in the view around you. It’s also easier to snap a photo on the move, especially from a trike. Contrary to what you may think, it can also be easier to distribute your touring load more evenly on a recumbent. More riders than ever are choosing recumbents for their adventures. Here are some of the best. Azub T-Tris Azub has built their business around expedition touring and they know what they’re talking about (see Road Test on page 18). They and their customers have explored some of the most remote places on earth, and Azub has applied all of this knowledge into the design of the T-Tris. The T-Tris folds for transport and is one of the only tadpole trikes in the world that can easily carry four panniers. It’s also a very durable, comfortable, and good-handling three-wheeler. The aluminum frame means that it’s not too heavy and performs fairly well. Azub started in the Czech Republic a little over a decade ago and was primarily a European-only brand for most Linear Limo of that time. However, they’ve begun building a very robust dealer network in the U.S. Price - Starting at $2,654 More info: azub.eu Bacchetta Giro 26 ATT When you think about Bacchetta, you won’t be blamed for immediately focusing on their many racing exploits and their lightweight carbon fiber and aluminum highracer-style bikes. However, they’ve also adapted that highracer design into a pretty good touring bike. The Bacchetta Giro 26 ATT comes with an aluminum frame, dual disc brakes, and three different seat options. It can also be had with racks for four panniers and with a 700C wheel option. If you strip off all of the touring gear for weekend rides with your local club, it also isn’t much slower than its race-winning stablemates. Price - $2,100 More info: bacchettabikes.com Catrike Expedition Catrike is one of the most popular trike companies in the world (visit adventurecycling.org/ catrike to see a company profile). Their 12 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 top-selling model for several years now has been the Expedition. Catrike keeps introducing new models with new features, but the relatively unchanged Expedition keeps on selling like hotcakes. It’s not hard to see why. The Expedition is very versatile. It’s light and stiff so it can easily be set up to be a fast sports trike, yet it also makes a great tourer or commuter. The Expedition has a very robust aluminum spaceframe design that is fairly unique, but it still easily accepts most rack and pannier combinations. The fact that there are so many on the road also means that there are aftermarket upgrades galore. Price - $2,550 More info: catrike.com Cruzbike Sofrider Front-wheel-drive recumbents with moving bottom brackets have been rapidly gaining popularity the last few years. Cruzbike is at the forefront of this emerging segment. The North Carolina-based company has made a lot of headlines with their numerous speed records and recent Race Across America win, but they aren’t all about performance. Some of their models have also garnered some favor with expedition tourers. Chief among them is the Sofrider. Not only is it Cruzbike’s least expensive model, it can also handle fatter tires, fenders, and a seatpost-style pannier rack. It also has the lowest learning curve of any Cruzbike. Price - $1,195 More info: cruzbike.com ICE Adventure Bacchetta Giro 26 ATT Easy Racers Tour Easy/Gold Rush The venerable Tour Easy has been in production since 1978. It was one of the first mass-produced recumbent bicycles in the world and is still one of the very best. It has crisscrossed the U.S. more than any other recumbent design, and it’s easy to see why it remains a popular choice with laid-back cycling vagabonds. The lighter aluminum version is called the Gold Rush and has become equally popular. The upright seating position and low bottom bracket make it very comfortable, whereas the optional front fairing still allows it to be quick. It’s been around for a long time so there are many aftermarket options available for things such as mid-ship pannier racks, provisions for water bottles galore, and double-legged kickstands. Easy Racers has recently updated the design to make the frame a bit stiffer and allow for easier use of the S&S couplers for transport. Price - Tour Easy $2,495 Gold Rush $3,495 More info: easyracers.com GREG SIPLE Greenspeed Magnum Greenspeed is one of the oldest names in the recumbent trike world. They’ve been building some of the best trikes in the business for nearly 25 years and pioneered some features that are now standard equipment on almost every trike in the world. Their attention to detail has even driven them to produce their own custom trike-specific tires. Their newest model is the Magnum. The Magnum features a robust folding aluminum frame with a 400-pound weight limit and a smooth-shifting and reliable component spec. The Magnum’s seat is adjustable for both height, and recline (a very unique feature in the market). Greenspeed’s cargo rack is also one of the best you’ll find. Price - $3,290 More info: greenspeed.com.au Recumbent manufacturing at Lightfoot Cycles along the TransAm Trail in Darby, Montana. HPVelotechnik Street Machine Gte If ICE Adventure The ICE Adventure is there were an official recumbent touring bike of the rest of the world outside of America, it would probably be the HPVelotechnik Street Machine Gte. Greenspeed Magnum The aluminum-framed Gte was introduced in 2001 to replace the venerable but slightly outdated Street Machine GT. It’s lighter than its predecessor and has proven to be every bit as robust and reliable. It also features a much more advanced “No Squat” rear suspension system, more seating options, and a slew of drivetrain and accessory options. HPVelotechnik once told me that they put almost as much time into designing the racks on their recumbents as they do the rest of the bike. It shows. The Street Machine Gte can easily handle four panniers and however much weight you choose to throw on it. And it will carry you and your belongings in efficient full-suspension comfort. Price - Starting at $2,695 More info: hpvelotechnik.com ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG a mass-produced descendant of the company’s now-defunct custom-built Expedition touring trike. Mass production has not made it any less special. If anything, the Adventure is even more capable than its bespoke predecessor. The Adventure has loads of ground clearance and a very comfortable seat that isn’t nearly as low to the ground as most other tadpole trikes. It folds for transport and shipping and is available with a very sturdy rack, the best fender mounts in the business, and myriad water bottle and accessory mounts. It’s also available with a simple and bombproof elastomer-based full suspension system and even comes in an HD version for larger riders. The HD features a wider seat and tougher frame. Price - $3,010 More info: icetrikes.co Lightfoot Greenway Delta trikes don’t get much love among serious recumbent riders, but the unique style can make for excellent tourers. Some of the best are built by Lightfoot Cycles in Montana. If you’re looking to carry a lot of gear and aren’t solely focused on your average speed, the Lightfoot Greenway is a great option. Its large cargo shelf can carry more equipment than any single person will ever need on a tour and the whopping 109-speed drivetrain makes sure you have gearing low enough to haul that load up almost any hill. The Greenway is available in multiple steering configurations and three different track widths. Price - $3,680 More info: lightfootcycles.com Linear Limo Linear isn’t exactly a household name in the recumbent world, but their updated Limo model is an outstanding long-distance touring machine. The basic design began production in Iowa way back in 1985. Lightfoot Greenway The company was purchased by Peter Stull and moved to upstate New York in 2002. The bike’s frame structure was almost completely reworked over the next several years, and the newest 3.0 model is one of the most durable recumbents you can buy. It can carry two sets of panniers and all types of fenders and accessories. The large aluminum box frame also allows it to remain fairly lightweight 13 while still retaining the strength needed for cross-country jaunts. Numerous seat and drivetrain options are also available. It also comes in an “LR” Tour Easy in the category of long wheelbase recumbent longevity. In 2005, the Kansas-based company updated their classic design with a dual RANS Stratus XP model for those who want a slightly lower seat height. Price - $2,495 More info: linearrecumbent.co RANS Stratus XP The RANS Stratus is second only to the Easy Racers 14 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 26-inch version called the Stratus XP. Like the original Stratus, the XP enjoys the availability of a host of aftermarket modifications, including the usual mid-ship pannier racks preferred by so many LWB riders. The larger wheels help it roll along a bit faster than its predecessor, and multiple seat options are available. Price - $2,500 More info: rans.com Volae Expedition Volae is a fairly new name in the recumbent world, but they probably have more heritage than five other brands put together. Volae was created by Hostel Shoppe (one of the oldest and largest recumbent dealers in the world), and the frames are hand built by the famous Waterford shop in Wisconsin. Their touring-focused model is called the Expedition. Like all Volaes, the frame is exquisite. The Expedition comes with dual disc brakes and 26inch wheels. A take-apart frame and two different seat options are available as well. Price - $1,595 More info: volaerecumbents.com Bryan Ball is the managing editor of ’BentRider Online (bentrideronline.com). He contributed “Getting Down, The Lowdown on Recumbents” to the July/August 2007 issue and “Recumbent Primer” to the July 2013 issue of Adventure Cyclist. ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 15 RECUMBENTS, TRIKES, QUADS, TANDEMS, AND FOLDERS RECUMBENTS, TOURING: AZUB azub.eu, +420 774 2982 29. Offers the Six, Max, Mini, and other recumbent bikes and trikes from €1890. BACCHETTA bacchettabikes. com, 866-364-9677. Offers 4 versions of the Giro and the Bella from $1700. CATRIKE catrike.com, 407999-0200. Offers the Expedition and the Road touring trikes from $2550. CHALLENGE challengebikes. com, +31 24 34308 54. Offers the Seiran, Mistral SL, and Ventus. CRUZBIKE cruzbike.com, 888225-2789. Offers the Sofrider (from $1195) and Quest (from $1995). round, Pino, Kettwiesel, Trix, and custom touring configurations from $3939. METABIKES meta-bikes.com, Offers the MetaPhysic with 700C, 650C or 26” wheels from $3295. HP VELOTECHNIK hpvelotech nik.com, +49 61 92 97 99 2 0. Offers the Scorpion (basic model: $3145), Street Machine Gte ($2695), and foldable Grasshopper fx ($2895). NAZCA LIGFIETSEN nazcaligfietsen.nl, +31-522-490266. Offers the Explorer, Gaucho Tour, Fiero, Pioneer, and Paseo. From $1925. ICE TRIKES icetrikes.co, +44 1326 378848. Offers the Adventure from $3010. OPTIMA optima-cycles.nl, +31(0)251-261222. Offers the Falcon, Oryx, and Cougar from €1795. JUST TWO BIKES justtwobikes. com, 800-499-1548. Offers the Tricumbent from $2995 and the side-by-side quad Sociable from $3995. RANS ransbikes.com, 785625-6346. Offers a variety of recumbent models, tandems, and unique uprights. Also, airplanes. From $1995. LIGHTFOOT lightfootcycles. com, 406-821-4750. Offers the Rambler, Ranger, Verano and Greenway Trike. Industrial trikes also available as well as electric assist. From $2500. SLYWAY slywayprojects.com, +39 0372 29589. Offers the Explorer starting from €2652 (frame kit €1859). TRISLED trisled.com.au, +61 3 5981 0337. Offers the Gizmo touring trike (from $AU3700). TURNER RECUMBENTS turner recumbents.com, 520-2905646. Offers the Transport (from $960) and the Tribent Tandem (call for pricing). VOLAE volaerecumbents.com, 715-340-1133. Offers the Tour (from $1595), Expedition (from $1595, and the Venture tandems ($4495). RECUMBENTS, NON-TOURING: ATOMICZOMBIE atomiczombie. com, DIY plans for recumbents. AVD WINDCHEETAH windchee tah.co.uk, +44 (0) 161 969 9692. Multiple recumbent trikes STEINTRIKES steintrikes.com, Offers the suspended Nomad, Explorer, and Mad Max trikes, plus the Speedster FS two-wheeler. From $2750/$3895/$4195. BRIKE freedomryder.com, 800-800-5828. Recumbent handcycles. LINEAR linearrecumbent.com, 607-587-8835. Offers the Limo and Roadster from $2495. TERRATRIKE terratrike.com, 800-945-9910. Offers the Tour II (from $1499) and Tandem (from $4999). HUMAN POWERED MACHINES hpm.catoregon.org, 800-3435568. Recumbents, trikes, folders, and work bikes. LONGBIKES longbikes.com, 303-986-9300. Offers the Slipstream, Eliminator and the Gulfstream and Jetstream tandems from $3050. TOXY toxy.de, +49 4127 922 83. Offers the CL, LT and LT Special Edition (from €2270). Speedhub, Nuvinci, and BionX models also available. KMX TRIKES kmxus.com, 866-446-2065. Multiple trikes, including a kids model. HASE hasebikes.com, +49 23 09 93 77 0. Offers the Pino All- M5 m5recumbents.com, +31 (0)118 628759. Offers the 26/26 and 26/20 high and low bar, the Shock Proof 559 and 406, the 20/20 Fatty, and Tandem. All from €1033. TRIDENT tridenttrikes.com, 704-257-4611. Offers the Stowaway ($1549), Transport ($1999), and Chameleon single or tandem trikes (from $5995). RESOURCES: • recumbentcycling.blogspot.com • bentrideronline.com • bicycleman.com/recumbents/ recumbents.htm • bikeapparel.com/recumbent-manufacturers.html • atob.org.uk/folding-bikes.html (buyer’s guide) • recumbents.com/recumbents. asp (buyer’s guide) For an extensive list of folders, recumbents, tandems and more, check out EASY RACERS easyracers. com, 831-722-9797. Offers the Tour Easy Classic, Tour Easy Adventure (S&S Couplings) and Gold Rush Evo from $2995. All models available in Expedition distinction. FLEVOBIKE flevobike.nl, +31 0321-337200. Offers the GreenMachine in many variations with a 14-speed Rohloff Speed-hub from €3950. GREENSPEED greenspeed. com.au, 618-514-3955. Offers the GT5 Series II, GTT Tandem Trike, and Magnum for touring from $AU2990; Anura Quad also available. • rtrmag.com 16 GREG SIPLE Below is a list of popular recumbents, folding bikes, and tandems. If you know of any brands or models missing from this table that are specifically designed for touring or bike travel, email us at magazine@adventurecycling.org. — Mike Deme LIGHTNING CYCLE DYNAMICS lightningbikes.com, 805-7360700. Offers the Lightning Phantom II, P-38 and foldable P-38 Voyager from $2100. • recumbents.com • biketcba.org/TRICORR/compare.html • errcmagazine.com • recumbentbicyclesource.com • foldingbikes.co.uk • recumbentjournal.com • bikeroute.com/Recumbents • foldsoc.co.uk ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 • foldingcyclist.com EDGE edgerecumbents.com, 865-982-2555. Haiku, D’Jango, and Hepcat recumbents. e2 trike. MAXARYA maxarya.com, 416737-5745. Ray-1 and Ray-1X recumbents, plus folding bikes. RAPTOBIKE raptobike.com, +31 (0) 297 525 330. Low Racer and Mid Racer models. • ibike.org/library/bike-manufacturers.htm SUN sunbicycles.com, 305-2381866. Recumbents, tandems and trikes. DAHON usa.dahon.com, 800442-3511. Customizable Mu P24 for touring. WHIKE whike.com, +316 5478 3068. Recumbent with a sail attachment. KHS khsbicycles.com, 310-6327173 x 255. F-20A-H7, Mocha, Latte, and iPed. FOLDING BIKES MEZZO mezzobikes.com, 800222-7557. D9 for touring. AIRNIMAL airnimal.com, +44 (0) 1954-782020. Joey, the Rhino, the Chameleon, and custom models for touring. BIKE FRIDAY bikefriday.com, 800-777-0258. Variety of folding bikes and accessories for touring including the New World Tourist, Silk, Pocket Llama, Family Tandem Traveler, and others for touring, commuting, and road riding. BIRDY birdybike.com, 503-9287723. Variety of folding bikes and accessories for touring. MONTAGUE montaguebikes. com, 800-736-5348. Full-size folders. MOULTON www.moultonbicy cles.co.uk, +44 (0) 1225 865895. TSR-27, TSR-30 and the AM GT for touring. REISE & MÜLLER r-m.de/ faltrad, Multiple models for touring, including the Birdy Touring and Birdy Rohloff Disc STRIDA strida.com. Evo 3-speed. BROMPTON brompton.com, +44 (0)20 8232-8484. P6R, H6L, and H2L-X for touring. TERN BICYCLES ternbicycles. com. Link and Eclipse. CITIZEN FOLDING BIKES citizen bike.com, 800-682-9579. Their tagline is tremendous: “Folding bikes for going and being human.” CALFEE DESIGN calfeedesign. com, 800-965-2171. Multiple carbon and bamboo tandems available. TANDEMS CO-MOTION co-motion.com, 866-282-6336. Mocha, Equator, Java, and Primera for touring, but many other models available including triples, quads, and quints. Coupler options also available. recumbents and custom upright tandems. DA VINCI davincitandems.com, 303-936-1241. 10 road, off road and suspended tandem models, including the Global Venture and In-2-ition. REX CYCLES rexcycles.com/ frames-parts, 916-446-5706. Custom tandems, coupler options available. DAWES dawescycles.com. Galaxy Twin for touring plus 3 other models. FANDANGO MOUNTAIN TANDEMS mtbtandems.com, 678-445-0711. Custom touring tandems available. KHS khsbicycles.com, 310632-7173 x 255. Four models available: Milano, Cross, Alite, and Sport. KOGA koga.com, +31 513 630 111. Twin Traveller. LAPIERRE lapierre-bikes.co.uk. Tandem X2 Touring. LONGBIKES longbikes. com, 303-986-9300. Tandem ORBIT TANDEMS orbittandems. co.uk, +44 01756 748822. Routier Tour, Summit Tour, Pegasus Tour, and other models. RODRIGUEZ rodcycle.com, 206527-4822. Toucan ST and custom models, including triples, quads, and quints. SANTANA santanatandem. com, 800-334-6136. All tandems suitable for self-supported touring (48-spoke wheel option recommended). SEVEN sevencycles.com, 617923-7774. Axiom 007 in titanium (SL) and steel for touring, plus other models. THORN thorncycles.co.uk, +44 01278 441 505. Raven Twin. VENTANA ventanausa.com, 916631-0544. El Conquistador off road tandems in 26” and 29” wheels. Bicycling Tours for seniors 50+ Central Florida P’tit train du Nord Erie Canal, New York Allegheny Passage, PA Cape Cod, Massachusetts “Its not how far nor how fast, its the pleasure of the journey” www.seniorcycling.com Florida Keys. 37419 Branch River Road | Loudoun Heights, VA 20132 | info@seniorcycling.com ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 17 Road Test AZUB SIX BY BRYAN BALL ➺ EVERY Azub recumbent bears a sticker that proudly proclaims “Built in Czech” and their sales director, Honza Gala, can also proudly proclaim (although he doesn’t) that he probably knows more about touring with a recumbent bicycle than anyone else on the planet. Honza has ridden the world and spent weeks on end in some of the most remote places on earth. And he’s by no means the only Azub employee with such experience. All of that knowledge is on display in their Azub Six full-suspension shortwheelbase (SWB) recumbent bike. The Six may appear at first glance to be the most conventional bike in Azub’s lineup. It’s easy to overlook the old-school 20-inch front wheel/26inch rear configuration amidst their collection of trikes, off-roaders, and folders. The truth is that it’s really not that conventional at all. Every detail of the Six’s design is aimed at making it one of the best touring recumbents in the world. Closer inspection reveals that this bike means business. The beefy aluminum frame is obviously built to take a beating. The asymmetrical rear swingarm is similarly stout and designed to keep pivot joints to a minimum. There is only one large sealed bearing. It’s a simple but very effective design. The flat powdercoat finish that Azub uses is also tougher than most glossy finishes I’ve seen. 18 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 Azubs can be ordered in nearly any color and individual parts can be mixed and matched for a very custom look. You can order the Six with almost any sort of drivetrain and braking options you want, but when I ordered this bike in for review I let Honza choose the components and spec the bike out like he would if he was taking another one of his adventures. He made some interesting choices. The most visually striking accessory on this particular Six are the pannier racks. The Six’s standard rear rack is combined with both their Expedition and Super Expedition extensions. This means that the Six can carry a whopping three pairs of panniers. The racks themselves all seem to be very well made and can handle a combined load of nearly 90 pounds. They also allow you to customize your load and get all of your heavier items down very low to the ground and between the wheels so that handling isn’t adversely affected. Suspension is very important when touring on a recumbent in remote areas with underdeveloped roads. The Six came with a Suntour Epicon rear air shock and a MEKS carbon front suspension fork. Both are adjustable for preload and rebound and have lock-out features. The latter may come in very handy if you experience a shock failure in the middle of nowhere. Azub also provided a protective boot for the Six’s rear shock. The Azub’s suspension worked very well during the test. There was minimum power loss from suspension bob and the lock-out feature was great on smooth roads when you want just a bit more performance. Both lock-out switches were easily reachable from the cockpit. Azub offers several disc-brake options on their bikes and trikes but they are firm believers in more conventional rim brakes for expedition-style touring. They are easier to adjust, easier to get parts for, and have fewer failure points. The Shimano XT V-brakes on this Six functioned very well indeed, but you may want to consider going against Azub’s wishes and opting for discs if you plan on really loading up all six of those available pannier mounting points. Probably the most controversial components on that Azub specified on this bike are in the drivetrain. With all of the options, this bike would retail for almost $4,000. At that price, relatively low-end 24-speed Shimano Alivio SPECIFICATIONS AZUB SIX Price: $3,000 base, $4,356 as tested Seat Height: 22.5” Bottom Bracket Height: 24.5” Overall Length: 67-74” Weight Limit: 275 lbs. Frame: Aluminum 7004 T6 Rims: Remerx-X 36-Hole Hubs: Azub sealed bearing 36-hole Tires: Schwalbe Marathon Plus Bottom Bracket: Shimano Deore Crankset: Shimano Deore 22/32/22 Cassette: Shimano CS-HG51 11-32 Brake Levers: Avid Single Digit Front Rear Derailleurs: Shimano Alivio Brakes: Shimano XT V-Brake Pedals: None GEARING INCHES 42 32 22 11 104 75.6 52 13 88 64 15 76.3 55.5 38.1 18 63.6 46.2 31.8 21 54.5 39.6 27.2 24 47.7 34.7 23.8 28 40.9 29.7 20.4 32 35.8 26.0 17.9 44 components are a bit of a surprise. Azub’s reasoning is that in remote countries, 9 and 10-speed components are still a bit hard to come by. I will admit that while I can’t say that the Alivio parts worked as well as the higher-end stuff I’m used to, they are plenty good enough for all but the most dedicated bike snob. The gear range provided by the mountain bikestyle crankset and wide-range cassette should also give most riders anything they need. The Six can be ordered with either underseat (USS) or over overseat (OSS) steering. It can also be had with a hardshell or mesh seat. Azub prefers the OSS steering setup and hardshell seat for long-distance touring. The OSS bars are less likely to be damaged in a crash and more easily replaceable if they are. They are also a necessary option if you intend on using the Super Expedition rack extension located under the seat. The hardshell seat was chosen because it makes for a smaller overall package. I found the Six to be a very comfortable ride. Not only does the suspension do an excellent job of smoothing out the bumps, the Azub is also very ergonomically refined. The handlebars are adjustable via a folding stem much like you’ll find on many recumbents. What sets the Six apart is Azub’s Ideal Position System (IPS). On most recumbents, you can either adjust the boom or the seat in order to dial in for leg length. Azub’s system allows you to adjust to get ideal leg extension while still keeping your weight centered between the wheels. All of the seat adjustments are made with Azub’s trademark red quick releases. Once everything was dialed in, the Six was a very pleasant place to be indeed. Hardshell seats don’t always fit me well but I’ve always liked Azub’s. The optional Ventisit seat cushion provided excellent ventilation and I never felt like I was sitting in a pool of my own sweat. Everything in the cockpit felt like it was exactly where it should be and there weren’t too many CONTINUED ON PAGE 48 ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 19 BIKE TOURING AUSTRIA’S GREAT RIVERS Story and photos by Chet Rideout THE IDEA AROSE from our common lives as teachers and cyclists. As we finished our bike tour in 2009 from Anacortes, Washington, to Whitefish, Montana, I asked my Italian biking pal Piero Tassinari if we could plan a European tour in Austria along the river trails. My thought was, since both of us would be retired, we could ride in September instead of touring in the crowds and heat of August as we had in the past. He agreed and said he had already ridden some of them in previous years. We thought we could do it in 2011 but it wasn’t until 2013 that our plans became reality. I purchased maps of Austria and the bike trails and established a game plan. On this tour, my wife Lynn joined us, and years were passing; my 70th birthday lurked only a month away. She was glad there would be fewer hills than our previous tours, and we also decided to stay at gasthofs (inns) and bike 25- to 30-mile days. All three of us had long ago converted to recumbents because of their ergonomics — we appreciated riding in comfort, no longer suffering sore muscles or numbness from long rides. I carefully packed our bikes in big Amtrak bike boxes for our long flight to Europe, and we boarded a huge 747 British Airways jet (British Air doesn’t charge extra for bicycles) bound for London and then on to Munich. In Munich we stayed at a B&B where we could assemble our bikes and leave our boxes behind for the return trip. Then we took a train to Innsbruck. Piero was waiting for us on the Innsbruck train platform after his shorter trip from Forli, Italy. Soon we were wheeling through cobblestones in the old part of this magnificent mountain town on our way to the Inn Bike Trail, or Innradweg. Early the next day, we began what would be our morning ritual: eat breakfast, pack a sandwich for lunch, return to the room to pack the panniers, retrieve the bikes from the garage, and load the panniers onto the racks for travel. Although it had rained that night, the trail was already drying out and we were delighted to see the sun. Before long, we rode up the cobblestoned main street of Schwaz, a mining town. These silver and copper mines were the source of the fabulous wealth of the Hapsburg emperors during the 15th and 16th centuries. The parish church, built in 1490, was spectacular with the original worn stone floors and wooden box pews. It was originally divided into two seating areas, one for the laborers and their families, and the other for the well-heeled gentry. After touring the town, we continued our journey. Outside Jennbach, a transportation hub for the railroad, we found the Esterhammer, a truly elegant inn. Piero’s family arrived from Italy in a camper, and it was a great reunion. We gathered beside a flower-draped veranda and caught up on the latest news over a beer. The hostess even offered to do our laundry, and we found the Esterhammer had an indoor pool. The next day was Sunday, and there was a celebration at the church up the specialist for bike tours in Central Europe Visit Central Europe – a paradise for cycling Surprising density of ancient castles & fairy–tale chateaux Beautiful and varied countryside Excellent network of paved backroads Quality accommodation Easy and convenient self-guided tours Guided tours with local guides 8-day to 10-day tours Vienna to Prague Greenways Salzburg to Prague Vienna to Krakow Amber Trail Budapest to Krakow Amber Trail Passau to Vienna Danube Trail Vienna to Budapest Danube Trail Prague to Dresden Visit www.topbicycle.com for trip descriptions, dates and prices. For a free brochure, email us info@topbicycle.com Czech Republic 22 inzerat_Top_bicycle.indd ADVENTURE CYCLIST1 JULY 2 014 Slovakia Austria Hungary Germany Poland 15.2.2008 16:51:31 MAP: MARTHA BOST WICK road to commemorate the successful grazing season of the cattle in high pastures. A three-man brass ensemble passed us on their way to regale the congregation. We coasted down to the trail, biking in fair weather past a number of small towns, pausing only for “refueling” at a bakery. Our goal was Kufstein, a charming medieval town near the German border. It has a castle dating to the 13th century, which was modified by Bavarian ruler Maximilian in the 1500s. We stayed in what must have been the honeymoon suite at an elegant hotel, and again Piero’s family joined us for a traditional Austrian supper in the old town. We then headed north into Germany. Here the trail ran as a towpath along straight banks, and much of the way was made up of a sandy gravel. The trail signs on this side of the border changed from Innradweg to Inntal (Inn Valley). In May there had been huge floods on the Inn and Danube, and we saw another sign frequently: Umleitung — detour. Mud slides and erosion from ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG powerful May floods had required that the trail be rerouted. As we approached Rosenheim, we found the first inn full, but we soon settled in at the beautiful Hoppingerhof. In the morning, we retrieved our bikes, and a truck pulled a huge trailer out of the garage with 30 bicycles on it labeled Eurobike. This trail supports an enormous number of riders, mostly during the summer. The Danube Bike Trail from Passau to Vienna is ridden by 300,000 riders each year! During the rest of the tour, we had rain almost every day, but we had decent weather as we rode to Wasserburg. After lunch, however, the trail left the river and became quite hilly and the rain returned. By the time we reached Gars, it was very wet, and after quite 23 a strenuous day we stayed at a privat zimmer, or private room. Lynn was feeling the effects of our last day and wanted to take a break from the hills and the rain so we rolled our bikes onto a train to Passau. Piero still wanted to ride these last two days along the Inn so he left in the rain from the station. After a relatively short trip, we disembarked and worked our way to the Rotel Inn, a pleasant place with a wonderful view of the Inn River from the breakfast area. We found, however, that it had the smallest bedrooms imaginable — 5 feet by 10! My old camera had stopped working so I purchased another in town, and we walked around Passau. This was a super town that we enjoyed more than any others we visited on the tour. A highlight was St. Stephen’s Cathedral. The original church burned in 1662 and was rebuilt in spectacular fashion. Italian artists were brought in to contribute exciting sculptures and frescoes. We attended a mass and later went to an organ concert performed there on the largest organ in the world. It had 18,000 organ pipes in four carillons, all controlled with one keyboard — what a sound! After our second night at the Rotel Inn, Piero arrived from his solo biking excursion as scheduled, somewhat the worse for wear. He had ridden through heavy rain both days on the sandy gravel trail. The sand had worn his brake shoes down to the metal and scored the sides of his rims. While he was getting settled at the inn, Lynn and I, armed with rags and a bucket of soapy water, washed the bikes and cleaned and lubed their chains. NUTS & BOLTS Austria & Germany WHEN TO GO The Inn and Danube trails are extremely busy during the summer months, especially in August. We rode in September and it was quite wet, which I attributed to fall weather. In The Danube Cycle Way, John Higginson notes, however, that during a 40-day July-August ride on the Danube trail it rained at least a portion of all but five days. During the high season, reservations must be made in advance (at least two days), and you will not be lonesome; the trail will be packed with cyclists. Conditions can be quite cool, even in the summer; we found that winds were seldom strong, but usually flowed in our direction (west to east). MAPS, GUIDEBOOKS The best maps are the Bikeline series (1-3) for the Danube Bike Trail. Bikeline #2 is the only one in English, and covers the Passau- Vienna stretch. For the Inn trail I found the “Innradweg - Inn Bike Trail” map by Freytag and Berndt to be excellent. Maps of the cities (Munich, Linz, and Vienna) are best purchased locally and are much cheaper in Europe. ROUTE The trail is well marked, and usually easy to follow. With the guidebooks there should be no problem. The guides also make suggestions as to which river bank you should follow at which stage of the ride. EQUIPMENT Since we wanted to use our recumbents we boxed and took our bikes, a process I have found to be the toughest part of any European bike trip. We flew British Air because the boxed bikes travel free. We decided not to camp this time because locating camp sites and shopping at grocery stores is difficult, very little money is saved, and it rains often enough (especially at night) to make camping unpleasant. B&B accommodations also stored our bikes in a garage, whereas they would be in the rain while camping. We used rear panniers; rental bikes that I saw were provided with rear racks, so panniers would work well if you decide to rent a bicycle. It would be best, however, to make sure they are waterproof. Bike shops are common, and are listed in the guidebooks. FOOD We stayed at privat zimmers and gasthaus accommodations; both provide breakfast, and we made a lunch from rolls and lunch meats. Most of these, except the zimmers, also serve dinner. Bakeries are also common along the route. Water was plentiful throughout the trip. COMMUNICATION One of the biggest problems we faced was communication by phone. Finding a SIM card for a cell phone that works in both Austria and Germany is difficult. A SIM card I bought online in the U.S. did not work at all, and it couldn’t be tested until I arrived at the airport in Munich. When I purchased another in Germany, I had to figure out how to buy minutes over a computer with instructions in German! Three dozen cycling enthusiasts in the Great Northwest on a quest to make your cycling dreams come true. Contact us today for our July Offer! PROMO CODE: 2205 (ends July 25) BIKE FRIDAY MADE IN THE USA Visit us at: bikefriday.com/Adventure 24 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 800-777-0258 // BikeFriday.com Adventure Cycling members receive a 5% discount At breakfast the next morning we met Stephan and his wife Simone from eastern Germany. He told me about the Bikeline map of the Danauradweg or Danube Bike Trail. I wanted to get one but, not finding one in English in Passau, I had to wait until Linz. After visiting a bike shop to fix Piero’s brakes, we crossed the Danube and were thrilled to again be touring on a paved trail. From here downstream, the Danube was huge because Passau was at the confluence where the German Danube and the much larger Inn River combine. During this first of two days riding to Linz, we noticed that the river takes a sharp S-shaped bend, and the trail exists only on the south side. We crossed on a small ferry designed to haul bicycles. At Inzell we stayed at a gasthaus and visited the quaint St. Nicholas Church. In the year 1155, a nobleman who was rescued from drowning by local citizens had shown his appreciation by building this church for the community. Our evening meal featured stewed venison with spetzle and dark beer — delicious! We had read that the upcoming trail traversed a very natural stretch of river, and we enjoyed watching the Mute Swans. At Ottensheim we crossed the river again, this time on a ferry suspended from a cable. It crossed the river entirely by water power. The rudder on the raft made use of the rapidly flowing river water to push it across in either direction. Before long, we reached Linz where we visited the New Cathedral with seating for 20,000 and rode trams about town, and I bought the Bikeline guide at a bookstore. In the afternoon, we loaded up and rode in the rain to Langenstein. The next day, we endured a very cold and wet ride to the Mauthausen Concentration Camp Memorial, making our visit very grim indeed. Here, 200,000 prisoners came from 40 countries — the majority were, surprisingly, Spanish Catholics opposed to fascism. Everyone should visit one of these camps, but it is a sobering experience. We left this sad memorial and again ferried across the river. The weather lifted and we pedaled on to Ardagger Markt. ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG KOKOPEllI TRAIl SySTEM Kokopelli Trail to Moab, UT only 142 miles to go. Photo / Colin Meagher Fruita, CO FRUITA, CO / VIPER 9 / MOUNTAIN BIKING KOKOPELLI TRAIL SYSTEM Mountain bikers from around the world come to Fruita, CO for the challenging, high-desert singletrack of the Kokopelli Trail System. This trail network offers up long-distance flow options and demanding technical sections. Osprey’s lightweight, ultra comfortable Viper/Verve Series packs keep Kokopelli riders hydrated and focused on the trail. OSPREy’S TRAIl SERIES Watch Osprey’s Trail Series videos at ospreypacks.com. 25 This town, which had been ravaged by numerous floods in addition to this year’s flood, had a beautiful gasthaus called the Schiffsmeister Haus. This building was always just above the floodwaters and dated back to the 15th century. The next morning, there was driving rain, and we purchased some ponchos to help keep us dry. For our next overnight stop we picked the town of Ybbs and toured the Fahrradmuseum (bicycle museum). They had a comprehensive collection of European bicycles all the way back to the velocipedes. We were delighted the next morning to see blue sky from our room! Joyfully we biked down the trail, and before long the skyline was dominated by the sight of the spectacular Benedictine Abbey on top of a high plateau in Melk. We visited the abbey, which was built in the early 1700s. Inside is a high baroque church with a dome reaching almost 200 feet above the floor with frescoes and gilded statuary in every direction. The abbey also houses one of the most comprehensive church libraries in Europe, as well as quite a collection of Passau, Germany, sits at the junction of the Ilz, Inn, and Danube rivers. religious art. Again mounting our loaded bikes, we crossed a high bridge and on the north side of the river rode east into the Wachau Valley, famous for its extensive vineyards and sunflower fields. This region has supported an agricultural community for 30,000 years and has a Mediterranean climate. In Spitz we visited a 14th century church and stayed at a fine inn. At Krems we stopped at one of the local wineries and enjoyed their red wine during lunch in the city park. Downstream in Traismauer the Infostation directed us to a privat zimmer called Familie Schopper, and the lady of the house waved us into their driveway when we approached. We rode east to Tulln where we talked with two road bikers from Vienna, and miles later we stayed at the Gasthof Bar in Greifenstein. Checking our maps that evening we found that it was only about 15 miles to Vienna. The next day, we hit the trail at 8:30 B A C C H E T TA B i c y c l e s I n c . 2 0 1 3 a d # 1 G i r o 2 0 t o u r - 1 / 4 P a g e H o r i z o n t a l 7 . 3 7 5 " w x 2 . 3 7 5 " h 26 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 AM, eventually turned off the Danube River Trail onto the Danube Canal Trail, which led to the town of Wien (Vienna). This is a big city with a population of 1.6 million so even with our maps we found navigation a little difficult. We eventually found the Ring Roads that circle the old town, and with considerable difficulty we found our way to our two-night stop, an apartment we had rented through AirBnB. After settling Lynn in bed with a cold, Piero found on his iPhone that there was a bicycle tour of Vienna available through a company called Pedal Power (pedalpower.at). He signed us up on an English-speaking tour for the next day. The following morning Lynn stayed back while Piero and I rode our unloaded bikes toward the historic town center. The group gathering for the Pedal Power tour hailed from Australia, New Zealand, England, and Canada, and we got in some lively conversations. Our host, Horst Harrer, had a great sense of humor. He told us scandalous stories about Vienna’s past and present. On the tour, we saw the Jesuit Church of St. Michael with its flat ceiling painted with the trompe l’oeil effect, making it look like a dome. We viewed spectacular statuary in copper and marble and the Mozart Memorial. I was particularly struck by Mozart’s enormous musical legacy and the fact that he died (a victim of too much gambling and too many parties, according to Horst) at age 34! The next day we discussed our wonderful trip over coffee and said our goodbyes at the train station. Piero was heading to Innsbruck then back to Italy, and we were on our way to Munich. We arrived during Oktoberfest and had to weave our way through crowds of revelers on the way to our rented room. After boxing our bikes, we again traveled by cab to the airport to embark upon our 14-hour return to Seattle. Chet Rideout has been an avid photographer and cyclist since 1980, and has written articles about his recumbent touring trips in the U.S., Canada, France, and Italy. He and his wife, Lynn, live in Port Townsend, Washington, where they like to explore the regional waters by sea kayak. Protects your phone * from rain, snow, dust and dirt Gives full access * to all smartphone functions Keeps you connected * anywhere bike takes you www.bike2power.com Stay Connected Anywhere Bike Takes You! ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 27 Pedaling the M “H eat and dust. One long, boring road.” “I pedaled 140 kilometers a day just to get it over with.” “Miserable. Just plain miserable!” With comments like these from fellow touring cyclists, it was hard to get excited about the next leg of our journey in Southeast Asia. The route from Pakse, Laos, to Phnom Penh, Cambodia, was obviously one to be endured at worst and tolerated at best. We had coasted down from the Bolaven Plateau, the lush, cool, cof- fee-growing region of southern Laos. When you’ve come from a land of butterflies, waterfalls, and amazing coffee, heat and dust are disappointing following acts. I studied our map and wanted to weep. West of this pathetic route was the Mekong. In past travels, every moment that Kat and I had spent on or near this mighty river had been bliss. But there wasn’t anything close to a contiguous route, and large sections showed no roads at all. It was a journey for a boat, not a bike (except for those Story and photos by Willie Weir massive falls that make boat travel impossible between Laos and Cambodia). Most of the cyclists we encountered were on a schedule. They were on round-the-world adventures or had decided to traverse as much of Southeast Asia as they could in a month. They saw two points on a map, and the main road was the only way to connect them. But we had an advantage: time. We had no agenda, other than wanting to experience this part of the world. If trucks were on the road and life was along the river, we’d choose the river. What did we have to lose? We could always head back to the main road if the river route proved impossible. We ekong decided to follow the Mekong as closely as we could, however we could. It was one of the best travel decisions we ever made. The main road, south of Pakse, is east of the Mekong. The road on the west side follows the river and leads to Wat Phu. The Laos government had (or has) great plans for this temple site (designated a World Heritage Site in 2001). It is a relative of the massive Khmer complex of Angkor Wat in Cambodia. We stayed in a delightful riverside guest house where we could sip cold Beerlaos Lager while gazing out at the river. It is a popular day trip from Pakse for locals and travelers. What Wat Phu lacks in grandness (it is tiny in comparison to Angkor Wat), it makes up for in location and intimacy. The temple is at the base of mount Phu Kao and isn’t officially open until 8:30 AM but we got up before dawn, pedaled our bikes to the site, and slipped through the unlocked gate. We left our bikes and climbed the hundreds of stone steps, breathing in air scented by giant blooming plumeria (frangipani). South of Wat Phu the road ended and the fun began. We traveled through community after community connected by dirt tracks, footpaths, and rickety suspension bridges. We pedaled by tiny shops, riverside monasteries and schools; by lush terraced vegetable gardens, diesel-powered rice-milling machines; and large mounds of earth filled with wood smoking down to charcoal. We passed monks and students, and groups of old women playing cards. There were smiles and waves and greetings of “sabaidee.” And there were plenty of looks of astonishment and surprise as two foreigners on loaded-down bikes negotiated the tiny pathways under the cool canopy of trees and towering bamboo. We didn’t always end up on the “right” path, and we did plenty of backtracking. One dead end led to a stay with local teachers and the most amazing multi-modal school commute we’d ever seen. (You can read the tale in the August/September issue). A massive set of falls separates Laos and Cambodia so we had to pedal back to the main highway to cross the border. There we met some touring cyclists who reconfirmed that the main road was hot and miserable. So once we cleared customs, we took the first road back toward the river. The lack of a continuous route was part of the adventure. At one point when we could progress no further, we hired a father and son duo to take us downriver in their longboat. In one village, we camped on a high bank of the Mekong next to the police station (police shack, really). The officers were happy to show us the flattest patch of ant-free dirt and what part of the river to watch to spot the elusive Irrawaddy dolphins. I’ll never forget cooling off at the river’s edge one evening as the setting orange-red sun appeared to light the palm trees ablaze. Kids were laughing and playing in the water and small silent boats carried passengers along its smooth, ripple-free surface. A strange call from the opposite bank of the Mekong caught our attention. We looked up to see the unmistakable silhouette of a hornbill. Our most exhausting day came with a pedal across an island in the middle of the Mekong. After being delivered by a boat we hired, we followed on old oxcart path the length of the island. The route through stands of teak trees was partially marked, which was maddening, and sections of soft sand often swallowed our tires. By the time we’d made it to the southern end of the island, we were spent. Our bodies were coated with several layers of dust and sweat. 30 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 NUTS & BOLTS Mekong WHEN TO GO The dry season is October through April, with March and April the hottest of those months. LODGING A tent or a hammock with mosquito netting is a good idea. There are guest houses and hotels, and some home stays along the Mekong, but in some of the more remote stretches, having backup shelter is wise. Ask permission from a family (or the police) before pitching your tent. With the hazards of land mines in Cambodia and unexploded ordnance in Laos, wild camping is not worth the risk. PAKSE Bangkok is the epicenter of cheap flights when it comes to Southeast Asia. From Bangkok you could put your bike on a Thai train to Ubon Ratchathani, and then it’s just a couple days’ bike ride to Pakse, Laos. The Bolaven Plateau to the east of Pakse is lovely and worth at least a week-long loop trip. Pakse is also the gateway to 4,000 islands, a beautiful archipelago popular with the backpacker crowd in the Mekong, 85 miles to the south. MEKONG DISCOVERY TRAIL When searching the Internet for information about traveling the Mekong River Basin in Cambodia, you’ll likely The tourism department has a program in which families offer homestays. The homes participating have a small — and very subtle — sign. After much searching, we found a home with a sign and inquired about staying. Due to annual flooding, all the dwellings along the Mekong are built on stilts. Stairs lead to an open room under come upon the Mekong Discovery Trail. It isn’t really a trail in the traditional sense, but a series of eco-adventures to help promote tourism in this region. It is great in concept, but presently it’s a disorganized mess. From the pamphlets and web information we could find, phone numbers didn’t work, trails weren’t marked, and now the official website is down, with the link instead taking you to tourismcambodia.com. So, if you are trying to plan a trip in advance or book a trip with a tour company, double check your sources and try to find someone who has recently used the guide service or tour company. Or wing it like we did! a thatched roof. The floor was made up of woven bamboo mats. We parked our bikes below and were shown our sleeping area, a corner of the great room partitioned with sheets. It was stiflingly hot, and we both knew we wouldn’t sleep. With a combination of hand waving and sign language, we communicated that we’d like to set up our tent outside instead. Why anyone would want to sleep on the ground with the pigs, snakes, and bugs was beyond comprehension. They reluctantly agreed. But before we could set up our tent, the head of the village came by and indicated it was dangerous to sleep outside and we’d have to sleep upstairs. I was hot and cranky and hungry. “Fine. We won’t stay here then,” I grumbled. We got on our bikes. The family was obviously upset. They were losing out on much-needed income. Not more than 300 meters down the little dirt road, we found an opening near the river where we could pitch our tent. I had it nearly set up when a woman came over and with a stern look and a wag of her finger indicated we couldn’t camp there. We were to follow her, and she’d take us to a place to stay. Exhausted, hungry, and annoyed, we walked our bikes slowly behind her and finally arrived at the house we’d just left — awkward. Kat went down to the river to wash up, and I carried our gear up the stairs and moved into our hot and humid corner. This was going to be a long night. Opposite our sleeping space was Grandma’s corner. Her few remaining black-stained teeth and bright red-orange lips pegged her as a long-time betel chewer. I watched as she extracted a huge wad of betel from her mouth, took a large glug of water, swished and spit a stream of brown/orange discharge straight into the air. It disappeared through the porous floor. There was a two-second pause, and a voice from below said, “What was that?” It was Kat. She had returned from the river’s edge and was hanging up her towel. A look of horror flashed on our host’s face as she realized that her mother had just spat on their guest. After cleaning herself off, Kat arrived in the doorway. There was a long, silent, awkward pause. I didn’t know what to do or say. Sure, this woman’s mother had spat on my wife, but that was an accident. We had initially turned down their space for us in their home, and instead we had asked to pitch our tent where the pigs normally sleep. What message had that sent? Grandma had her head down, avoid- ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG Plug into the evolution of bicycle safety with the new Superflash USB & Superflash Micro USB. 25% of profits to bicycle advocacy Better Bicycle Products for a Better World 31 Nanning Hanoi Haiphong LAOS Gulf of Tonkin Vientiane ko n g VIETNAM THAILAND Ubon Ratchathani Da Nang Pakse Bolaven Plateau Wat Phu CAMBODIA Kampong Cham Kratie Phnom Penh Ho Chi Minh City S T OU 0 H CH IN A SE A Miles 100 200 ing, and floating our bikes down the Mekong, we pedaled into Phnom Penh during rush hour traffic. It was crazy, noisy, and chaotic. We spent four days exploring the city before finally saying goodbye to the Mekong. Its course winds southeast into Vietnam and the Mekong Delta, whereas ours turned south to the Gulf of Thailand and then northwest back to Bangkok. When I think back on our time along the Mekong, my mind keeps revisiting an encounter with a busload of Australians. We were visiting the 100-pillar pagoda in Sambor when we were approached by some men who were outside a tour bus. They looked Cambodian but had thick Australian accents. This was no ordinary tourist trip. The bus was filled with native Cambodians who had all fled the terror of the Khmer Rouge back in the late 70s. They all attended the same temple in Sydney. The group had pooled their money and filled the bus with food and medical supplies. They were traveling around to each other’s home villages and distributing the materials. For many of them, this was their first visit back to Cambodia. We asked them what it was like to come back. One man tried to answer, but tears soon choked him up and he excused himself. What an extraordinary journey: It was one of the few times in my life that I wished I could have stopped riding my bike and boarded a bus. And, truth be told, we could have. We met the group again in Kratie outside a hotel where they were packing up their bus. Some of the women came over and gave us gifts of fruit, snacks, and bottles of water. We laughed and talked with the group until it was time for them all to board. As the bus pulled away, I turned to Kat and said, “If we had asked to join them, if only for a couple of days, they would have said yes. We could have left our bikes in Kratie and found a way to return.” It was a moment in time I’d like to revisit, allowing myself just 30 more seconds and a chance to change the course of a journey. Then I recall that we only met them because of another choice we made — to slow down and make our way along an unknown path less traveled. It was a decision that transformed a portion of our journey that we had initially dreaded into a treasure of travel memories. Willie Weir is a contributing writer for Adventure Cyclist. He has learned that slowing down is not a sign of aging, but the bedrock of wisdom. Chatting with school children along the Mekong in Cambodia. 32 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 GLEN PAWELSKI CHINA Me ing eye contact. Our host was looking out the window toward the river. I felt ashamed. I wanted to make it alright, but I was socially paralyzed. Kat broke the silence. She walked over to our host, pointed out the window toward the bright orange glow of the sunset over the Mekong, smiled, and said, “You live here. This is one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever seen. Thank you.” The woman didn’t understand a single word Kat spoke. But Kat’s emotion said it all, and a smile swept over our host’s face. I swore I saw a mischievous grin on Grandma’s face as well. It was by far the hottest night of our long journey, but we both slept well. The closer we got to Phnom Penh, the wider the roads got. We chose the side of the Mekong that had the smallest road. “Traffic” now included bicycles, scooters, oxcarts, motorcycles, and the occasional car. It was more chaotic than the small paths up north, but it was a delightful chaos. I declared one stretch “The Day of a Thousand Hellos” because that is the number of times I answered back to someone greeting us from the side of the road. We stopped frequently for refreshing glasses of sugar cane-juice squeezed fresh by women with muscular arms who passed the stalks of cane repeatedly through a manual press (they have gas-powered presses in the big city). I asked to have a go at one stop, and I soon learned that cycling does nothing to prepare you for a job as a cane juicer. We stayed in hotels in the cities of Kratie and Kampong Chan, wandering the streets late into the cooler evenings. After two weeks of pedaling, walk- Headed for the heart of the redwoods. Then decided to seek out a vineyard worth a second visit. This one’s now marked as a favorite. Edge® Touring: GPS navigation with maps made for cyclists Not every adventure has a well-defined destination. With Edge Touring, you can take all the detours you desire without ever getting a paper map out of your pack. Preloaded bike maps let you search for a point of interest near you and start building your adventure from there. When you return home, upload your ride to Garmin Connect™ to relive it or share with friends and family. Learn more at Garmin.com/touring Edge Touring ® ©2014 Garmin Ltd. or its subsidiaries ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 33 The Mystery of Mike Rust A pioneering mountain biker vanishes into thin air, leaving a few troubling clues behind — but no answers by Dan D’Ambrosio F ive years after he disappeared near Saguache, Colorado, on March 31, 2009, Mike Rust’s family still does not know what happened to him. They’re certain he is dead and that foul play was involved, but Rust has simply vanished into the vast emptiness of Colorado’s San Luis Valley, where he had retreated to the isolation of 80 acres of land and a ramshackle house he built himself. Rust was a pioneer of mountain biking, helping to establish the sport in Colorado at the same time it was gaining a pedal-hold in California. Together with a partner, Don McClung, Rust started Colorado Cyclery in Crested Butte in 1985, moving to Salida in 1986 where the business quickly became a magnet for the growing legions of mountain biking enthusiasts. Rust’s older brother Paul, the second of seven children that included six brothers (Mike was number four), remembers joining Mike for an epic ride to the top of Monarch Pass, then back down to Salida on a hiking trail that had never been biked. “It was a blast. In those early days, nobody had done it,” Paul Rust said. Paul also remembers his brother’s approach to business. “It was great. They couldn’t keep up,” he said. “If you ordered a bike from them, you might get that bike in a few months or you might see it by the end of the year. Their priority was riding. Selling bikes helped pay the rent, but if they had the rent paid, the priority was riding.” Mike Rust was inducted into the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame in Crested Butte in 1991, which notes his cycling experiences were very influential on the early Crested Butte mountain bike scene “both in the technical and com- A heart-breaking event At the height of his success with Colorado Cyclery, Mike Rust checked out and moved to his 80 acres outside of Saguache, using the proceeds from the sale of his business, which mystified some people but not his brother Paul. “Salida got too civilized for him — too expensive, too many people. It just got too crowded,” Paul said. “He wanted out of that. He wanted to be way out where people couldn’t find him.” His brother was a loner, Paul said, yet “great in a social setting.” “All my brothers, we all liked a good time,” Paul said. “When my brothers and I got together, we’d ride bikes, go skiing, and party until we passed out at night. It was great, but Mike liked his own company. He was very comfortable in his own company.” Mike Rust’s remaining siblings — two other brothers have died — created a website, missingmikerust.com, where they are offering a $25,000 reward for information about Rust’s disappearance or whereabouts. “Mike’s family needs closure in this case — they need to know what happened to Mike, and they want to lay his body to rest,” the website says. “Imagine what it’s like to lose a family member and not to know what happened to them. It’s a heart-breaking event. If you know what happened to Mike Rust or can help searchers locate his body, please tell his family.” Rust, 56 years old when he disappeared, bore a passing resemblance to Paul Newman, with piercing blue eyes and handsome chiseled features. In a large black and white photo of him on the website, he leans against the seat of a dirt bike — Rust also loved motorcycles — wearing a worn leather jacket and a disarming smile, his long silver hair uncombed and unruly. In two more color photos taken on his property, Rust, still obviously in riding shape, conveys the independent, unconventional spirit that took him to the solitary life he was living in the sparsely populated expanse of western Colorado. Something bad going on Also a lifelong cyclist, Paul Rust owns Rocky Mountain High Wheelers in Colorado Springs, making state-of-the-art WARD LEARNED THAT RUST IS NOT THE ONLY PERSON WHO HAS DISAPPEARED IN THE VALLEY. THERE ARE MORE THAN A DOZEN UNSOLVED CASES. high wheelers that he and his brothers rode across Ireland as well as in Colorado’s “Ride the Rockies” annual tour. “I’ve never been interested in making old bicycles,” Paul said. “They’re meant to be brand new, with chromoly frames and aluminum wheels. They’re strong and lightweight. They just happen to have a large wheel up front and a small wheel in back.” Paul remembers the phone call he received from Mike’s girlfriend on the night of March 31, 2009. She said she had talked to Mike earlier in the day but now couldn’t reach him. She was worried. “I said there’s nothing I can do about it now. It’s dark,” Paul remembered. “Mike’s a big boy. He can take care of himself.” When Mike’s girlfriend called the next morning to say she had been to his place and he was nowhere to be found, and that there were groceries on the floor, Paul said he would be right down. He was joined by his younger brother Marty, who had driven the 160 miles to Mike’s property the night before, arriving at midnight. Paul and Marty started going through Mike’s things, looking for clues, checking out tracks left around the isolated property. Mike always had motorcycles around the place. “We jumped on the motorcycles and started following tracks,” Paul Rust said. “We followed tracks for two days, trying to put two and two together. By the second day, we decided we’d better call the police. He was missing. Something bad happened.” In fact, Paul was already convinced his brother was dead. “I thought right away by the second day that he was dead somewhere because it was Mike,” Paul said. “He was so strong-willed and tough. There’s no way somebody could have held him. I knew something bad was going on.” Once the brothers reported Mike Rust missing, the authorities mounted an impressive search for him. Paul said the National Guard came out. There were hundreds of people involved, some with dogs, some on horseback, as well as two Blackhawk helicopters that searched for an entire day with the help of a C-130 refueler. “We had a lot of resources in the first two weeks,” Paul said. “When we came up with nothing, I knew he had been disposed of rather efficiently.” The only clues were discovered by one of the dog handlers, who found Mike Rust’s bloody vest on the ground, along with a pistol butt, about three miles from his house on a dirt road about a half-mile off the highway. Rust’s motorcycle was found a month later, 20 miles away, dumped down a steep incline in the remote country. Nothing else has been found. Not the running kind Paul Rust has formulated a scenario MAP: MARTHA BOST WICK petitive arenas.” “Mike’s first Pearl Pass Tour was in 1980,” the Hall of Fame website says. “He carried his own gear to Aspen, sleeping bag and all, and rode back to Crested Butte the following day over East Maroon Pass on his Littlejohn framed bicycle.” Incredibly, the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame does not acknowledge Rust’s disappearance, ending its short biography of him by saying, “Currently Mike resides in the sleepy community of Saguache, Colorado.” The Passion of Cycling: • Tests of today’s best bikes • Rides off the beaten path • Technical articles • Cycling history 4x year, $ 36 www.bikequarterly.com 36 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 whoever had broken into his house, Paul doesn’t have a problem picturing what happened next. “He was kind of a hothead,” he said. “It was easy for him to get mad, and he was never apprehensive about letting you know it. He was not afraid of a fight and never backed down. He just wasn’t the running kind. I can say that about all my brothers.” A great soul Nathan Ward grew up in Salida in a house just four blocks from Colorado Cyclery. When he was in high school, Ward knew Mike Rust and his partner, although not well. Ward grew up to be a bicycle adventurer, writing regularly for Adventure Cyclist, and in February 2013, he and several partners started an independent film company called Grit and Thistle Film Co. Grit and Thistle’s latest effort is a film about Mike Rust called “The Rider and the Wolf.” “This is a feature film, by far the biggest project we’ve ever done,” Ward said. “All of our actors and bike talents are volunteers. Even Mike’s family and friends helped us out by working for free and volunteering.” Ward said the film is “90 percent pure documentary,” but does include a re-enactment of the last hour of Rust’s life based on the police report and “stuff we found out afterwards.” “We re-created it using his brothers as the bad guys, which is odd,” Ward said. “There are two bad guys in the film. No one knows, it could have been one, it could have been four.” As a native of Salida, Ward is familiar with the desolate valley where Rust had chosen to retreat to his 80 acres and handbuilt home. “There are no building inspectors. You can do anything you want,” Ward said. “It’s a land of independent people, armed to the teeth, who are known to shoot at cops if they come on their property. This is the cultural setting. The geographical setting is stunningly beautiful. You can see 70 miles as the crow flies. There are big peaks, big sky, and lots and lots of open space.” Ward learned that Rust is not the only person who has disappeared in the valley. There are more than a dozen CONTINUED ON PAGE 48 PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE FAMILY OF MIKE RUST of his brother’s final hours in his own head. He figures Mike was robbed by somebody who had been in his house before and knew he had guns. “Any detective will tell you 90 percent of the time robberies are committed by somebody who’s been there before,” Paul said. “I think that person came back with a couple of other people. ‘Hey, I know someone who lives way out. I know he has some guns in there.’ That’s what they were after.” Paul sees his brother arriving home from a grocery trip to Saguache and dropping his groceries on the floor when he realized someone had broken into his home. “He was very observant. Coming in he knew somebody was there,” Paul said. “He knew somebody took his pistol, which was my brother Joe’s gun and had sentimental value. That’s probably what enraged him. He probably took off and started following tracks, eventually catching up with them.” Paul Rust doesn’t think his brother had a gun with him when he chased after the thieves because all of his other guns were accounted for in the house. One of Mike’s best friends in the valley is a private detective who kept a collection of guns at Mike’s house and all were still there. “He could have taken a gun with him but he probably wasn’t thinking,” Paul said. Once his brother caught up with ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 37 Final Mile At journey’s end THE LAST CAMP STORY BY ZAND B. MARTIN ➺ THERE is cleaning to be done. The bags have to be emptied out and packed anew, breaking set habits; calls need to be made and arrangements confirmed. Trash will be consolidated and fuel shuttled off, and all things will be separated and divorced from their expedition-spun meanings. Carbon rasped from stove legs will stain fingers, and once-abandoned living spaces will sprout drying lines and sundered stacks of 18-gallon blue plastic bins, ready to absorb the detritus of endeavor. Lists and receipts and maps and journals will clutter a table beside cans of beer. Reactionary maintenance will be forgotten. In the rage of small necessaries, the march of tasks will weave through the great thing just accomplished but barely talked about. The goal needs to be put to bed, silenced, zip-tied to shattering conclusion. But that is tomorrow. Tonight those thoughts flutter, but forwards is balanced with backwards, and the reel of recognition 38 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 has begun to play. What might not have seemed real that morning, or the many mornings before, has come to pass. The trip is over, you did it, you’re finished. A short descent is all that’s left. All the structures and efforts up to this point break down tomorrow as their meaning fades. Tonight — the last camp — is what stands in the place of transition from peaks painted with snow reflecting sunlight to unwanted complexity over the threshold. For ours, we find a field in a place more telling of physical transition than temporal. The last sloping spurs of the Tien Shan diminish here and fade into union with the grass ocean of the Kazakh steppe. Satisfied with our progress, we stop for the night. It is singularly planar in geometric contrast to the low mountains behind. Horsemen wander the periphery of our tired vision, so recently alert, and now going out of focus as nylon sprouts mirror shapes one final time. The riders wander to unseen homes as habits take hold. As the day considers ending, a solar haze paints the steppe in mirage, a bizarre fata morgana unusual in the chill of March. The haze melts into alpenglow as dinner comes ready, telling of the shifting geography and season. As water boils, flocks flow around scrub knolls told not by sight but by the laziness of massed sheep, and ingrained systems click forward in their ordained and rehearsed steps. It’s a symphony of piles, stacks, grease, grit, and noodles. Last camps are places of rushed preparation and excitement for re-entry into that more harsh environment, but also of last quiet, last meal (if you planned right), and last untroubled laughter. The subtle temperature fluctuation that in a few days’ time you just won’t notice anymore. The empty food bag and the empty fuel bottle; the full memory card. The last camp is the pivot on which the experience turns, from internal to external; you will lose yourself tomorrow so today look at the peaks around you, at the river current folding gently around the bend, at the tanned cheeks and dirty hair of those who lifted you to this point. We barely noticed Kordai. The pass did not shout with snow or tug on faded clothes with switchbacks or tunnels. It rose unobtrusively, populated by a blended mélange of goats and sheep and the occasional lonely fir. At the tipping point, we paused for water and handfuls of Iranian crackers and candied almonds that had somehow survived from Tashkent. Behind us stretched the assembled ranges of Asia, building south to the Himalayas, and west to our genesis in Istanbul. We moved east through Turkey, the Caucasus, and Central Asia, focused less on this cold season than on altitude and biome. In Bukhara it was 60 degrees and sunny, while the Black Sea coast saw rain, Georgia snow, and Kyrgyzstan avalanche and blizzard. The Trans-Ili Alatau foothills here seem a diagram of mountains and tell of winter in windloaded cornices desiccated by a snap of longed-for spring. PHOTOGR APHS BY Z AND B. MARTIN The blur of habitual travel has blended the days or weeks into a rhythm of experience that has rolled forward into boiling tea, clearing hitches from cord, and storm-proofing wet, packed-out boot socks without any apparent input of energy or thought. The utterly reliant machine we’ve built is simple and beautiful, but it has served its purpose and in the morning will begin its last efforts. Tonight it has found this lonely spot where simplicity finds its last substantiation. Accessing the next pass has been habit and assumption. We’ve been programmed for this step, and the next, and the next. But there are no more passes, only a downhill fade as we drop trying to remember flight times and jotted paths through urban mazes. In its place is a sugar rush of excitement and bad sleep, of staying up too late because it doesn’t matter anymore. The trained guilt evaporates. It is a time of not changing socks or scrubbing the pot with the attention it yesterday required, of not shepherding battery life or the last bit of cheese or oil or chocolate. An empty pot usually signals the retreat of the off-duty cook to softer, warmer spaces. Tonight, elbow resting on upturned bike, we linger and stare. The light is magnificent, our muscles tired. Two months before, we rolled across the Galata Bridge and pulled up in the square between the Yeni Cami and the ferry dock. Asia lay just across the water, and through the lens of the Bosporus we could barely discern the great landmass before us. Now, in ending, we move plastic backgammon ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG pieces in practiced rhythm about the inked triangles of a sewn cloth board and consider the thing just ahead. It would be a shame to make a mistake now or to break the silence. Ahead there is a vague guilt around our deep desire for copious hot water, or the stupid roadside joy of having someone else cook our food for us and owing them nothing but money. We want to call our moms and check our email. But somewhere there is the harsh realization, not quite sunk in, that the day after tomorrow will be just another day. Someone will inevitably look forward and remark on a return to normality, to the “real world,” as if the depth of connection possible in a small team working hard in adverse conditions in the out-of-doors is fake, or meaning removed for its rarity. This is what we did for 400,000 years. The electric light on the horizon, the imagined urbanity of congested land, and the staccato sounds of gathering engine brakes on a distant highway all begin the process of waking us up to the unreal world. There is an unhappy cognizance around the realization of a future memory. We recline and consider our urbane future selves considering this final moment of simple comfort. A warm puffy jacket, simple food, a good friend, a sunset outlining peaks, and an evening with no agenda, no needs but scrap paper and pen, a book, and a sleeping bag. And still, between future shocks, the sun sinks on the last camp and makes beautiful the weary, happy, knowing smiles of the stubbled and tanned. We pedal into Almaty at dusk after 11 hours in the saddle and 160 kilometers on the road — our biggest day. With that, we finished what we had set out to do: cycle from Istanbul to Kazakhstan, a shade less than 4,000 kilometers, in two months. Through geographies sensible (snowbound mountain ranges, ancient rivers, and inland seas) and not (jigsaw borders and boundaries fortified in bureaucracy), we moved east from the edge of Europe to the center of Asia. We relied on the generosity of peoples of steppe, desert, and mountain, as well as scattered expats and the high-tide traces of the great Russian and Soviet empires. We beat the streets of Almaty, “Fatherland of Apples,” for bike boxes and the biggest bucket of plov we could find. The day would be a march of fools, racing for a drab spot of asphalt in an unknown city with cheap airfares. Finding closure in a hotel parking lot is difficult. Joy overwhelms thoughts of sensible endings, and like so many trips before, I look back to the night before, to our real ending. We revere last camps each time they come, and so we set up just upstream, just up valley, just out of town, halfafraid of this finality, of what it will bring to us and our team. These points come in succession and mark our real ending in golden light. Zand B. Martin is an explorer, teacher, and writer. His first bike trip, “Silk Road in Winter,” took him from Istanbul to Kazakhstan through occasionally unfortunate weather. You can read more about his travels at zandmartin.com. 39 S H A R E T H E J OY FOR A CHANCE TO WIN Spread the joy of cycling and you could win some cool prizes ■ For each cyclist you refer to Adventure Cycling, you will have one chance to win a Novara Ponderosa 27.5 valued at more than $999. The winner will be drawn from all eligible members in January of 2015. ■ Each month, we’ll draw a mini-prize winner who will receive gifts from Arkel, Jeff Jones Bicycles, Cascade Designs, Cygolite, Osprey, and others. n The more cyclists you refer, the more chances you have to win! adventurecycling.org/joy ADVENTURE CYCLING CORPORATE MEMBERS Adventure Cycling’s business partners play a significant role in the success of our nonprofit organization. Our Corporate Membership Program is designed to spotlight these key supporters. Corporate Members are companies that believe in what we do and wish to provide additional assistance TITANIUM through a higher level of support. These corporate membership funds go toward special projects and the creation of new programs. To learn more about how your business can become a corporate supporter of Adventure Cycling, go to adventurecycling.org/corporate or call (800) 755-2453. GOLD VeloORANGE SILVER BRONZE Ciclismo Classico DKKD Staffing www.TwoKnobbyTires.com 40 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 Cumberland Trail Connection Companions Wanted AROUND THE WORLD I’m looking to see if anyone is interested in an around-the-world bike trip. I would love to put together a trip with mostly cycling but possibly add off-bike activities such as canoeing/kayaking and hiking. No set routes in mind, except I would like to do the Pan-American Highway and start from Alaska, but I’m flexible. I’m restless and need to get out on the road. I’m a 28-year-old male, will be mostly camping, and generally keeping costs minimal. Please send an email if interested or if you have any ideas. mcgee073@d.umn.edu PERTH TO SYDNEY Wildflowers and Wombats Tour, a 4,000-kilometer, two-month trip from Perth to Sydney, August 10-October 10, 2014. I will be trying to average 100 kilometers per day and take a couple days off per week (the first week or two will be shorter). I’m a 52-year-old Australian guy with more than 20 long distance cycle tours done already. I’m planning to start the trip on the Munda Biddi Trail from Mundaring to Albany then continue across the Nullabor to South Australia and New South Wales. The first part of this trip is off road so a mountain bike or larger-tired touring bike will be best. This is a self-supporting tour and you will need to carry your own camping gear, food, and water. I can give you advice and mechanical assistance in this area if you have not toured before. troppojeff@ gmail.com CROSS COUNTRY We plan on leaving in late August or September 1, 2014, from San Francisco to cycle the Western Express and TransAmerica Trail to Virginia. We’re looking for someone to ride part or all of route with us. We’re hoping to ride 75 to 125 miles each day with rest days thrown in. tonykampmann@yahoo.com TRANSAMERICA 64-year-old woman, young at heart and healthy with lots of endurance, looking to join group or individual to do the TransAm. I can leave August 1, or after. 60-plus miles per day, self-contained with some hotels. Excited for fun exploring the U.S. janet-long@att.net PORTUGAL IN THE FALL Starting in Santiago, Spain, south through Portugal to the southern coast. Camping and self supported. 52-yearold fit female meandering 40 to 50 miles a day. obinjatoo@yahoo.com FATHER-SON EUROPE SUMMER RIDE I have been touring in Europe for 20 years and last year brought my eight-year-old son with me on our tandem. I’m looking for another father-andson team who can ride at least 30 miles mostly on bike trails in Europe. Must be patient to be spending several hours a day riding. August 14-28 ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG Providing partners for tours, domestic and abroad, since 1978 in Germany (mostly), Luxembourg, and France. I’m the author of popular European touring guide: Cycling Along Europe’s Rivers: Bicycle Touring Made Easy and Affordable. web@michaellyon.com THE BALKANS I’m an experienced cyclotourist and Russian speaker looking for another intrepid cyclist (mid-30s plus) for a three-week tour through Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. I’m planning to fly to Milan, Italy, in mid-September then departing in early October. Will average 40 to 45 miles a day with overnights in B&Bs and sobe. I prefer a DC-area resident so we can get acquainted prior to the trip. slavabogu2000-kniga@yahoo.com GREAT DIVIDE Looking for a few riders to enjoy the ride from Banff, Alberta, to Mexico. Leaving Banff the last week of August to finish in late September. If interested, email Merv. boxmervin@comcast.net GREAT DIVIDE Experienced and adventurous fit female cyclotourist/hiker seeking optimistic companions to join me on self-contained bike journey on the Idaho Hot Springs/Great Divide Route for three to five weeks leaving in July/ August 2014. Flexible about route, dates, mileage, “must-sees,” and “must-dos.” Prefer mostly camping, own cooking, and rare restaurants. Please contact me if interested or for more information. I reside in Colorado. soulstice21@gmail.com HOT SPRINGS MOUNTAIN BIKE ROUTE At 62, I have just left the small solar business I started in 1997 and a long tour is how I’ll celebrate. My target is to ride the new Idaho Hot Springs Mountain Bike Route. I expect to ride out of Boise around July 27 or 28. I’m seeking companions to provide mutual support and safety on one or more of the singletrack sections. I’m in good shape and not in a hurry. Last summer, I rode from Durango, Colorado, to Moab, Utah, via the San Juan Huts system with my 15-yearold son, and my last long (3,700-mile) tour was in 1976. Dates, routes, and plans are all subject to change as opportunities present themselves. Call Allan at (505) 780-2738 or email. als@sindelarsolar.com COSTA RICA 2015 A group of up to 15 riders plan a two-week trip from the Caribbean to the Pacific in January 2015. Van supported, 30 miles per day, hotel stays. Estimated cost $1,600 plus food and hotel. Email for more information. We are TransAm veterans (2013). wweidemann@aol.com CLIMATE RIDE/ TRIRI SEPTEMBER ESCAPADE I’m seeking company for a Climate Ride Independent Challenge. If you’re within an approximate 80-kilometer/50 mile-radius of Waukegan, Illinois, I’d love to have company for all or part of a late-season round trip from the Waukegan vicinity to Camby, Indiana, starting September 8, 2014, for the Touring Ride in Rural Indiana September Escapade (TRIRI SE), which runs September 14-19. I’ll ride about 100 kilometers/62 miles per day, self-supported and self-contained, using hotels and camping. I’m also allowing for at least two rest days before and after TRIRI SE. asparagus2006-biking@yahoo.com LOOP OUT OF LAS VEGAS I’m 73, an experienced touring cyclist looking for one or more riding partners. My plan is to leave Las Vegas, bike through Reno on the way to Portland, Oregon. Back south along the coast to San Jose, then through Yosemite and Death Valley back to Vegas. Rest days as needed, plus a few days in Portland. 50 to 100 miles daily, camping as required; otherwise motels. Thinking of a late July/early August departure. 2,450 miles total — about 30 riding days. My wife isn’t comfortable about my riding solo, especially when it’ll be pretty hot. I can deal with heat, but would like the security of a riding partner or partners. stvbarsby@gmail.com BRAZIL TO PERU Interoceanic Highway. Come join me in this new South American epic trip from São Paulo, Brazil, to Cusco, and Lima, Peru, a journey of over 3,000 miles across plains, through the Amazon basin, and over the Andes. Leave late summer 2015 during their dry season. Hoping to finish within 60 days. Highway recently completed to provide first real road from the Amazon to Peru. cjchapman19@comcast.net GRAND CANYON TO AUSTIN September 2014. I’m a 33-year-old male experienced cycle commuter but fairly new to touring. I’m planning to ride from Cedar City, Utah, to Austin, Texas, this fall using the Grand Canyon Connector and Southern Tier routes. Looking for anyone who wants to join me on an epic adventure through what I consider the most beautiful part of our country. No real timetable for how long it will take but I plan on carrying a lot of weight (extra water through the desert), so anywhere from 40 to 70 miles a day (on average) sounds reasonable. pete999444@gmail.com Adventure Cycling Association assumes, but cannot verify, that the persons above are truthfully representing themselves. Ads are free to Adventure Cycling members. You can see more ads and post them at adventurecycling.org/adventure-cyclist/ companions-wanted or send them to Adventure Cyclist, P.O. Box 8308, Missoula, MT 59807. 41 Road Test TERN ECLIPSE S18 BY NICK LEGAN ➺ NOT ALL ADVENTURE riding takes place on remote or desolate roads. Although most of us conjure images of a winding tarmac heaven or a beautiful ribbon of dirt when the word comes up, many of us actually live in urban areas. So while the bliss of conquering a mountain pass is satisfying, sometimes the flow of riding in traffic can get the endorphins coursing through your veins in a short 20-minute ride. For those in the especially cramped quarters of a major metropolis, cycling is a great transportation solution. A folding bicycle can help justify a designated commuter/grocery-getter machine if you happen to pay through the nose for the square footage in which you reside. It’s also easier on the other end of your commute, making it possible to take your bike into your office instead of relying on the best that the lock industry offers to ensure your bike’s safety. BACKGROUND Tern made a splash in the world of folding bikes several years ago. In fact this is only the company’s third model year. Of course, Tern is by no means the only folding bike manufacturer. Moulton, Bike Friday, Dahon, and Brompton are all players in the folding bike market. While Bike Friday produces mostly made-to-order travel bikes, Brompton goes after the tweed set and Moulton has a cult status 42 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 in some circles. Dahon is also very popular and has a large variety of models. Tern pushes an edgier take on folding bikes. Ride quality and style are Tern’s primary focus with folded size a third priority. ÜBER COMMUTER/LIMITED TOURER As a commuting bike, the Eclipse S18 ticks every box this reviewer has when considering an urban bicycle. Fenders? Yep. Lights? Check. Racks? You bet. Reliable tires? Affirmative. How about a kickstand? Why not! In fact, what’s most impressive about the Eclipse S18 is how thoroughly Tern has anticipated the needs of a commuting cyclist. They’ve even included a comfy set of Ergon grips with integrated bar-ends and a pump that’s hidden in the seatpost. Essentially you just need to add a rider, perhaps a pannier and a spare tube to the mix and you’re set. As a touring bike, the Tern has serious potential but only for certain riders. I like a bike with more cockpit adjustability for long rides. I’m a fairly average 5-feet, 10-inches tall, but with a background in racing I like bikes a bit longer than many do. With only one size on offer, the Tern will either fit you or it won’t. And if it doesn’t, you don’t have many options to make it fit. Because of the folding stem/handlebar mast, bar height and reach is limited. That said, the Andros stem fitted to the Eclipse S18 is really slick. I couldn’t stop playing with it when the bike first arrived. It allows for height, reach, and bar-angle adjustment with the flip of a latch and two levers. The Biologic Pump Post 2.0 seatpost allows for an incredible range of height adjustment so the Tern should easily fit even fairly short riders. It’s on the taller end of the spectrum that riders will start to disagree with the ergonomics of the Tern because the reach from saddle to bar is fairly short. The front and rear racks are sturdy SPECIFICATIONS TERN ECLIPSE S18 Price: $2,100 (as reviewed) Sizes available: one size Weight: 34.8 pounds (with quick release pedals) TEST BIKE MEASUREMENTS 1. Distance: Seatpost to Handlebar: Min: 22.4 in Max: 28.7 in 2. Distance: Saddle to Pedal: Min: 31.3 in Max: 41.3 in 3. Suggested Rider: 4’10” – 6’5” 4. Max Rider Weight: 254 lb. 5. Folding Size: 16.5 in x 35 in x 29.9 in 6. Folding Time: 10 seconds 7. Frame: 7005-AL with patented OCL Joint and Double Truss 8. Fork: Aluminum 6061 with rack and fender mounts 9. Rims: Kinetix Comp 10. Hubs: BioLogic Joule 3 dynamo disc (front), Kinetix Pro, sealed cartridge bearings, disc (rear) 20. Stem: Andros 3Djust 21. Handlebar: Kinetix Pro, double-butted 7050-AL 22. Headset: Flux Pro 23. Saddle: BioLogic Phia 11. Tires: Schwalbe Big Apple GEARING IN INCHES 12. Bottom bracket: Cartridge, sealed bearings 11109.1 74.2 13. Crankset: FSA Vero compact, 50/34T 12100.0 68.0 14. Cassette: Shimano 9 spd, 11-32T 1675.0 51.0 15. Brake levers: Avid FR5 2157.1 38.9 16. Shift levers: SRAM trigger, 2 x 9 spd 17. Brake calipers: Avid BB7 cable-actuated discs 18. Pedals: MKS EZY QR 19. Seat post: BioLogic PostPump 2.0 5034 1485.7 58.3 1866.7 45.3 2450.0 34.0 2842.9 29.1 3237.5 25.5 Contact: Tern Bicycles, ternbicycles.com models and I wouldn’t hesitate to use them for an extended tour. In fact, because of the small wheel size, the center of gravity of the bike is extremely low, making for great stability. As for gearing, consider the effect of the small wheels before scoffing at the double chainring setup on the Tern. The gearing is definitely biased toward the hill-crawler side of the spectrum, meaning that a loaded bike would still make for miles of smiles. Although I’m more accustomed to Shimano shifters, the SRAM X7 mountain bike thumb shifters and their associated derailers shifted well both on the FSA crank and rear SRAM cassette. The stoppers on the Eclipse S18 are Avid BB7 mechanical disc brakes, a personal favorite thanks to the easy setup, adjustability, and reliability. While they don’t self-adjust for pad wear like a set of hydraulic disc brakes, mechanical disc brakes certainly have a place in the world. Many long-distance riders prefer them because they are field serviceable. Other nice component selections include the dynamo front hub that powers front and rear lights. This is a very reliable route to take as it means you’ll never have to worry about charging your lights. Schwalbe’s Big Apple tires roll extremely well while providing excellent puncture resistance. One small miss for this reviewer were the stock pedals. The quill-style platforms have the added value that they are removable without tools, but the shape of them left me wanting something more substantial. This may be nitpicky, as it’s easily remedied and the stock pedals do help in tight spaces or when you’re storing your bike on a boat, in a car, or a tiny apartment. RIDE QUALITY With the Eclispe S18, Tern nailed its design priorities of “a big ride” and an attractive bicycle. The Tern rode exceptionally well with neutral handling, even with a pannier or two on board. At times I would forget that I was riding smaller wheels. CONTINUED ON PAGE 45 ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG 43 Life Member Profile Catherine Walker and David Fuqua STORY BY ALEX STRICKLAND ➺ WHEN Catherine Walker met “WHEN YOU’RE ACTUALLY ON THE ROAD PEDALING, YOU DON’T TALK MUCH. I LIKE THE ALONENESS OF RIDING, BEING ALONE TOGETHER. BUT IN CAMP, IT’S ‘TELL ME ABOUT YOUR DAY’ AND ‘WHAT DID YOU NOTICE?’” 44 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 her future husband, David Fuqua, in 1994, she hadn’t been on a bike in years. Sure, there was the old Peugot in college to get around the University of Washington’s sprawling campus and some tandem racing with a former flame, but as with so many bike-mad kids, two-wheeled travel had fallen by the wayside with the arrival of a driver’s license and the prom. So when David, an avid cyclist, suggested the two ride across Washington as part of an American Lung Association group not long after they met, there was lots to do. “It was my first touring ride, and it was across the state,” Walker said. “Luckily, David had done lots of longer rides like RamRod (Ride Around Mount Rainier in One Day) and was diligent about training, so he got us trained up.” The couple was married two years later and began amassing a resumé of cycling trips that included Adventure Cycling-led tours and then, in 2004, a ride across the country from Seattle to Washington, DC, to celebrate Catherine’s 50th birthday. “It was a paradox,” Catherine said about riding from coast to coast. “There’s this relatively slow mode of travel on the bike. And yet we did it in 48 days — with quite a few 100-mile days — so it’s not like you have a lot of time to sightsee.” The cross-country ride, like the couple’s other regional tours, was done as part of a group, which allowed David and Catherine to enjoy the trip support and camaraderie around camp that they most relish about bicycle travel. “We like to be out there with other people,” Catherine said. “When you’re actually on the road pedaling, you don’t talk much. I like the aloneness of the riding, being alone together. But in the camp it’s ‘Tell me about your day’ and ‘What did you notice?’” Over the years, Catherine and David have noticed plenty and collected fond memories from their many rides, including the one that prompted them to join Adventure Cycling back in 1995. “We joined to go on a Great Divide trip through Montana in the fall of ’95, and at the time we were building a house here in Seattle,” Catherine said. “My clearest memory is pulling into these tiny towns and searching for the nearest pay phone to call the architect and the contractor because there was always something going on.” With that introduction — assisted by David’s familiarity with the organization from riding across the country in 1987 when it was still Bikecentennial — Catherine’s relationship with Adventure Cycling only grew over the years. First, she PHOTOGR APH COURTESY OF DAVID FUQUA REI exec and furniture maker still finding time for the ‘magic’ of tours LIFE MEMBERSHIP A lifetime of benefits and long-term support for bicycle travel. Of course, with only one size offered, the geometry isn’t optimized for riders both big and small. But the Tern delivers good, middle-of-the-road handling that made evading potholes easy without requiring constant rider input to keep the bike on a heading. Thanks to the wide tires, the ride was nice and smooth. If you want a racier feel, narrower tires would help, but that would be missing the point of this bike. It’s meant to be robust — a sort of apocalypse bike for the urban jungle. GREG SIPLE Funds from the Life Membership program are put into a special account to provide long-term support for Adventure Cycling Association. In the past, these funds have helped us purchase and update our headquarters building, saving us thousands of dollars in interest payments. If bicycle travel is an important part of your life, please consider making a lifetime commitment by joining as an Adventure Cycling Life Member. To find out more, visit adventurecycling.org/membership or give Julie Huck a call at (800) 755-2453 x 214. Thanks to these new life members who joined with their support since March: • Bruce D Adams Jr., Stockton, CA • Michele Baber, West Chester, OH • Michael Barry & Jessica Mattia-Barry, Tucson, AZ • Ken Berger, Cincinnati, OH • Glenn & Donna Boutilier, Cincinnati, OH • Jeff Crouse, APO, AE • Kim D’auria-Vazira, DPO, AE • Mike Dillon, Los Gatos, CA • William M Doumas, Tucson, AZ joined the board of directors for Recreation Equipment, Inc. (REI) with Angel Rodriguez, who also served on the Adventure Cycling board. Then she and David signed up for tour after tour, traveling through the red rock canyons of Utah and mountains of Montana. They always found time for a trip or two each year despite increasing demands on their schedules, which were brought on in part by Catherine’s position as senior vice president and general counsel at REI. As the years and the trips grew in number, Catherine and David became interested in life membership with Adventure Cycling. “I’m a joiner. If I like an organization and believe in it, I might as well support it at a leadership level,” Catherine said. “Besides, it’s one less thing to remember each year! Plus there’s the low-hassle factor. We don’t have to worry about renewing,” she said. That gives the couple more time to dream up future trips ranging from riding Europe for the first time ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG CONTINUED FROM PAGE 43 TERN ECLIPSE S18 CONCLUSION • Maryanne Gallagher, Gill, MA • Langston J Goree, New York, NY • Sigrid C. Haines, Gaithersburg, MD • John & Sarah Holman, Morristown, NJ • Krrish Jiwan, Pharr, TX • John Mielnik, Roselle, IL • Zane Jenkins Siple, Lolo, MT • David A. Waters, Milwaukee, WI — “France, Italy, or Mallorca” — to simply committing to at least one tour each year with Adventure Cycling. The couple also talks about making another cross-country trip, this time at a leisurely pace and with the flexibility to rent a car or take a train through sections they decide not to ride. “No plans, no schedule, nothing,” she said. Regardless of their route, it’s unlikely you’ll see Catherine and David pulling their bikes up to a hotel anytime soon. They prefer the communal atmosphere of camping to the indoor amenities — and isolation — of a hotel room. “Even though we’re older now and it’s getting harder to sleep on the ground, it’s hard to imagine going to hotels,” Catherine said. “We’d miss that community piece of touring — hanging out and getting to know each other in a little village of tents. There’s something really magical about that.” Alex Strickland is Adventure Cyclist’s Managing Editor. As a commuter bike, especially for someone with limited space at home or at the office, the Tern Eclipse S18 is an exceptional machine. It’s ready to roll right off the showroom floor. At $2,100 the S18 isn’t inexpensive, but consider that you’re buying a fully equipped bike. Brand-name accessories like the dynamo-powered lights, racks, fenders, an integrated pump, Ergon grips, Schwalbe tires, etc., don’t come cheap. The Tern is a better tool for the urban warrior than for the backroad meanderer though. Its somewhat limiting size will keep some touring cyclists from using it on multi-day jaunts. Another detail that limits the range of the bike is the single water bottle cage mount. More to the urban assault point, the low-key gray paint, mostly black running gear, and the gray colormatched 24-inch rims kept me flying under the radar, nice for urban settings where flash can lead to theft. I quite like the aesthetics of the Tern. This bike is best suited for riders under six feet tall or those who like an especially upright position and are looking for a ready-made commuter bike to squeeze into their apartment. As such, the Eclipse S18 is sure to please. Nick Legan lives in Boulder, Colorado, but firmly believes that adventure is a state of mind and has little to do with geography. As a former pro cycling team mechanic, he’s seen parking lots the world over and a few great roads along the way. 45 RATE: Marketplace ads start at $195 per issue. For rate information, please please contact Rick Bruner. Phone/fax: (509) 493-4930, Email: advertising@adventurecycling.org. Market Place Adventure Cyclist loves see me wear ® ™ “One of the hottest items in the touring” world is the H-Bar.” Topanga Creek Bicycles PRESCRIPTION CYCLING GLASSES $20 OFF + FREE SHIPPING USE CODE: ADVCYCLING In a recent issue the reviewer enthused: Jon, Scotland LIGHT ADJUSTING • PROGRESSIVES • BIFOCALS INTERCHANGEABLE LENSES Chris, California WWW.SPORTRX.COM • 1-888-831-5817 Not valid on prior purchases and cannot be combined with any other offers or discounts. Offer valid on prescription orders of $199 or more. Offer excludes Maui Jim. Offer expires 12/31/14. Free Shipping applies to orders placed in the U.S. Product will be shipped via UPS Ground. Mike, Chile (en route to Alaska) They may look unconventional but the bottom line is H-bars® deliver better handling and more comfort than any other handlebar. They are the most functional option for touring – on road or off. A superb variety of hand positions, excellent luggage and accessory options and a great riding position provide safe, comfortable control – mile after mile. You might want to try them. Pure bicycles | All-day-long comfort | On-road and off Est. 2002 Jones Bikes.com Jones_AC_JULYISSUE_2014_v1.indd 1 46 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 21/05/2014 23:50 “...the perfect fit.” “The construction is high quality” “But now that I realize how much more visible I am...I almost always don my See Me Wear...” “Recently I met a friend to go for a road ride… I rolled up wearing my See Me Wear… my friend said, Hey,…I could see you coming from a mile Rachel Stevens away. Success!” See me wear is the brightest, highest visibility cycling clothing you can wear with true fluorescent dyes. • Available in short & long sleeve jerseys and light windbreakers. • Superior quality, 100% made in the USA, now and forever. Fully guaranteed and comparable to much higher priced jerseys. See the complete Adventure Cyclist review and order at: www.seemewear.com America by Bicycle, Inc. 20 t h Season ! with the Coast ! e d i to Co t Leader R as Cross Country Challenge May 31st - July 22nd, 2014 - 3,850 mi CA to NH Across America North June 15th - Aug. 4th, 2014 - 3,680 mi OR to NH Ride the East Aug. 9th - Sept. 3rd, 2014 - 1,675 mi NH to FL Shenandoah-Blue Ridge Ramble Aug. 16th - Aug. 28th, 2014 - 690 mi VA Ride the West Sept. 6th - Sept. 29th, 2014 - 1,410 mi OR to CA Maine Foliage Tour Oct. 5th - Oct. 10th, 2014 - 226 mi Maine Fall Foliage Classic Oct. 11th - Oct. 18th, 2014 - 310 mi ME, NH, MA www.abbike.com 888-797-7057 ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG continued next page 47 Market Place continued CONTINUED FROM PAGE 36 THE MYSTERY OF MIKE RUST unsolved cases. “I’m sure statistically almost everyone is a good person. We don’t want to give the county a bad name,” Ward said. “But, yeah, you could get killed. It happens. That area is the perfect place to hide a body. People from out of the area go there to hide bodies. There are hundreds of miles of back roads with hardly any people or law and lots of mine shafts.” Covering about 4,000 square miles, the San Luis Valley has only about 6,000 residents in eight small communities and just eight law enforcement officers, according to Ward. “The law doesn’t have the resources whatsoever to cover an area that size,” Ward said. Ward talked to some of the law enforcement officers who described driving, “running lights,” for 45 minutes before they get to the scene of a shooting or domestic violence, and when they get there, they’re alone. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 19 ROAD TEST - AZUB SIX distracting noises from Azub’s chain management system. If you’re just getting into recumbents, the Six isn’t a bad choice for a first bike. The riding position isn’t too extreme, the bottom bracket is pretty much even with the seat height, and the seat isn’t as laid back as a high-performance bike. Low-speed handling is also outstanding and very user friendly. This is very important on a touring bike that may be trundling up mountain roads with a full load at little more than walking pace. The Six’s performance won’t disappoint more veteran riders either. This is by no means a racer, but the stiff frame and hardshell seat minimize any power loss and help this Azub fly along. If you order it with just the rear rack and use some faster tires, it would fit right in on weekend group rides. I was obviously quite impressed with the Six, but of course no bike is perfect. When Azub first started 48 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 “There’s no backup. That’s another 45 minutes away,” Ward said. “There has been criticism for not attacking these problems, but they don’t have the resources to do it.” Paul Rust said he never stops thinking about his brother’s disappearance, but “it doesn’t run my life, I’m not obsessed by it.” Paul said his brother has friends who have vowed to never stop searching, but he believes the case will only be solved if someone’s conscience forces them to talk. “If we were going to find him, the bones would have surfaced by now,” Paul said. In the meantime, Paul remembers the “great soul” his brother was. “He was somebody you would have wanted to cross the country with 100 or 200 years ago in a wagon,” he said. “Lewis and Clark would have liked to have had him along for the trip.” Dan D’Ambrosio is a staff writer covering business for the Burlington Free Press in Burlington, Vermont. making a name for themselves, it was as a lower-cost alternative to other hard-core touring recumbents from companies such as HPVelotechnik. This is no longer the case. The Six starts out at $3,000 but almost no one orders it that way. I spoke to a few dealers and more common configurations cost somewhere in range of $3,500 to 4,000. You can easily drop five or six grand on one if you go crazy with options. Spending that much on your bike may be worth it in the long run, but it can really cut into your travel budget. That said, you are buying a bit more personality. The Azub Six isn’t only one of the most capable touring recumbents in the world, it is also endlessly customizable, comes from a great company with incredible knowledge, and is rare enough that you’re not likely to encounter another one. Bryan Ball is the managing editor of ’BentRider Online (bentrideronline.com). Classified Ads RATE: $115 for the first 30 words, $2 for each additional word. For more information, please contact Rick Bruner at phone/fax: (509) 493-4930, email: advertising@adventurecycling.org. ACCOMMODATIONS WHITEFISH BIKE RETREAT NEW Hostel-Style Lodging located in Whitefish, Montana on the Great Divide, Northern Tier, and Great Parks Adventure Cycling Routes. Lodging options starting at $45/night. Camping Available. Shuttles Available. A Place Created For Cyclists By Cyclists! 406-2600274, www.whitefishbikeretreat.com. BICYCLE TOURING GEAR THETOURINGSTORE.COM Buy Expedition Quality Panniers, Racks, & Bicycle Touring Gear at Great Prices! See Ortlieb, Tubus, Lone Peak, and More! Questions? Call Wayne Toll Free at (800) 747-0588, Email us at wayne@thetouringstore. com, or visit us at www.TheTouringStore.com. BIKEBAGSHOP.COM The largest selection of Bike Bags & Bike Racks — by Ortlieb, Vaude, Lone Peak, Tubus, Old Man Mountain & More! BikeTrailerShop.com The largest selection of Bike Cargo Trailers by BOB, Burley, Extrawheel, Wandertec & More! 1-800-717-2596. Q-CADDY BICYCLE CUE SHEET HOLDER Holds directions or maps. Great for touring, bicycle vacations, or rides with cue sheets. Buy online at: www.highwheelsolutions.com. BIKE SHOPS 16TH ANNUAL TANDEM WEEKEND Sept 5-6-7, 2014 Hopewell Valley, NJ. Limited to 70 couples. tandemseast@gmail.com, 856-451-5104. For more info, www.tandemseast.com. ARRIVING BY BIKE Eugene, Oregon’s Urban Cycling Outfitters. Gear, guidance and enthusiasm to support your life-biking. Basil, Ortlieb, Tubus, Detours, Showers Pass, Ibex and Endura plus loads of fenders, lights, reflectives, tools and Brooks saddles. Xtracycles! 2705 Willamette St., 541.484.5410, adventure@arrivingbybike.com FOOD TONASKET NATURAL FOODS — For you riders on the Northern Tier route and Okanogan Valley make sure to stop at the Tonasket Natural Foods Co-op for all natural and organic food, produce, coffee. Great lunches at our deli. Free wifi, 21 W. 4th St. Tonasket, WA (509) 486-4188, www. tonasketcoop.com. INTERNATIONAL TOURS BICYCLE TOURS WORLDWIDE — BIKETOURSDIRECT 450 tours in 70 countries. Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania, and the Americas for all ability levels and budgets. From medieval European villages and river routes to mountain biking in Africa and exploring the landscapes of Asia. Guided and self-guided tours with local operators from $550/week. 877-462-2423, www. biketoursdirect.com, info@biketoursdirect.com. ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG HOLLAND – DISCOVER THE HIDDEN GEMS Scenic and safe biking in the cyclist’s paradise! Local expertise for routes and accommodation. Excellent equipment. Recreational, road and e-bike tours. Varied tour program and tailor-made options. www.hollandbiketours.com. CROATIA BY BIKE AND BOAT This is absolutely the only way to find the heart of this diverse and poetic country. We will tour through the towns of Split, Hvar, Stari Grad, and Korcula — towns that include two UNESCO World Heritage Sites, so named for their impeccable preservation, historic value, and stunning beauty. Each evening we make our way back to our private boat, which is outfitted with all the necessary comforts, and begin our journey to the next stunning vista, perhaps stopping enroute for a dip in the sparkling clear water. Contact our office for more details. Toll free phone: 877-777-5699. Email us at dana@pedalandseaadventures.com, or visit our website: www.pedalandseaadventures.com. TOPBICYCLE TOURS IN CENTRAL EUROPE — 7to 10-day self-guided and guided cycling vacations. We are a specialist for bike tours in Central Europe since 1996. We concentrate only on the countries where we live: Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, Germany, and Poland. Visit and ride between the beautiful cities of Vienna, Prague, Budapest, Krakow, Salzburg, Dresden, and Passau. Carefully planned self-guided tours. Small guided groups with local knowledgeable guides. We can customize our tours according to your wishes. Quality bike rental available. www.topbicycle. com. info@topbicycle.com. SELF-GUIDED CYCLING TRIPS IN ITALY AND FRANCE We’ve planned the route — you just need to pick your preferred location and dates. Ride with us on the best rental bikes in Europe, follow our easy and detailed route notes, sleep in cozy hotels, and we’ll even take care of the luggage. www.bikerentalsplus.com. CYCLE ACROSS AUSTRALIA Bicycle the Australian outback and along the Great Ocean Road. From Darwin to Sydney on the TransOceania, starting this fall. (416) 364-8255 or tourdafrique.com. PEDAL AND SEA ADVENTURES We’re a personable travel company offering creative cycling and multi-sport adventures in many of the world’s best places, including Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, P.E.I., Croatia, Italy, Greece, Norway, and Ireland. Guided and self-guided. Van-supported. Friendly guides. Charming inns. Custom groups anytime. Over 70% return clientele since 2005! Toll Free Phone: 877-777-5699. Please email us at dana@ pedalandseaadventures.com or visit our website: www.pedalandseaadventures.com. FREEWHEELING ADVENTURES. SMALL GROUPS & PRIVATE TRIPS Guided & SelfGuided. 27 years of extraordinary active trips. Famous and unusual rides in Canada, Iceland, Europe, Israel, Central America. Choose from hills and distances, or flat and relaxed. 800672-0775; www.freewheeling.ca; bicycle@ freewheeling.ca. NORTH AMERICAN TOURS & EVENTS HISTORICAL TRAILS CYCLING Join us on the Oregon Trail, Natchez Trace, and Oregon Coast in 2014, our 21st season of Historical Trails Touring. Ride in the wake of our ancestors and discover the history that preceded us all. Fully supported tours on America’s picturesque back roads, with friendly experienced staff, mechanics, delicious local cuisine and fine dining; motel lodging tours and camping tours. www.historicaltrailscycling. com, 402-499-0874. PAC TOUR Ride Across America Fast. Join Transcontinental Record Holders Lon Haldeman & Susan Notorangelo for your cycling adventures from 7 to 30 days. Specializing in Training Camps, Historic Route 66, Rural Wisconsin, Eastern Mountains, Peru, Africa, and over 80 cross-country events since 1981. PAC Tour: www. pactour.com, 262-736-2453. WOMEN ONLY BIKE TOURS For all ages and abilities. Fully supported, inn-to-inn, bike path & road tours. Cross-country, National Parks, Europe & more. Bicycle workshops, wine tasting, yoga. Call for free catalog. 800-247-1444, www. womantours.com. CANDISC The “Flyway Byway” Tour will cycle the unspoiled Missouri River and prairie pothole region where teeming flocks of waterfowl have gathered for untold centuries. In Steele, stand beside the world’s largest Sandhill Crane rising 40 feet high on the prairie. Experience North Dakota’s unique German-Russian Heritage including the nationally historic beautiful Gothicstyle St. Mary’s Church and Iron Cross Cemetery at Hague and the breathtaking early-1900s church of Saints Peter and Paul in Strasburg. Plan to explore legendary Fort Mandan where Lewis and Clark met Sakakawea, their Indian guide to the Pacific. Take time in Washburn for the world class Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center. parkrec. nd.gov/activities/candisc.html, ndfm@restel. com, 800-799-4242. AMERICA BY BICYCLE, INC. Your full service bicycle touring leader. Choose from 38 tours ranging from 5 to 52 days. Let us take you on your dream ride Coast to Coast! abbike.com. 888-7977057. FREE CATALOG. continued next page 49 Classified Ads continued TIMBERLINE ADVENTURES Fully supported bicycling & hiking adventure vacations with an organization whose sole focus for 31 years is extraordinary adventure throughout western U.S. & Canada. Website: www.timbertours.com, Email: timber@earth net.net, Phone: 800-417-2453. CROSSROADS CYCLING ADVENTURES The long-distance specialists! Come ride with Tracy Leiner owner, cyclist, and tour director. Tracy travels with every group, every day! Small groups, personal attention, business-class hotels and meals. Luggage delivered to your hotel room and A/C turned on BEFORE you arrive! Extensive pre-trip support including training plan, telephone consultations, and rider/staff email introductions. Ride coast to coast or split the tour into multiple segments. Celebrating 18 years of excellence. Rider references available (800) 971-2453, www.crossroadscycling.com. VACATION BICYCLING Let’s bike in style together. Join us for fun, beautiful and unforgettable 7-day bicycle tours from $1099. Fully supported, hotels, food & SAG in GA: Silver Comet Trail; SC: Charleston; NV: Las Vegas & Red Rock; FL: Florida Keys; MA: Martha’s Vineyard; NC: Outer Banks; TX: San Antonio & Austin; & HI: Maui. Come join us! 706-363-0341 or 800490-2173 or www.VacationBicycling.com. CLASSIC ADVENTURES Bicycling Vacations since 1979. Full route support, experienced guides, gourmet cuisine. Austria, France, Greece/ Crete, Germany, Lake Constance, Quebec, Vermont, Mississippi-Natchez Trace, Texas Hill Country, NY Finger Lakes, Historic Erie Canal, Coast to Coast. Free Catalog (800) 777-8090 www.classicadventures.com. CYCLE AMERICA® Enjoy a Fully Supported Cycling Vacation this Summer. Ride Seattle to Boston on an epic Coast-to-Coast tour or explore America’s treasures on our series of National Park trips. First-Rate Support, Great Routes and Good Friends! Let Us Help You Plan Your Next Fun and Affordable Adventure. 800-245-3263. www. CycleAmerica.com. COAST 2 COAST Hassle-free closely following Southern Tier averaging 63 miles per day. Fully supported including freshly-prepared greattasting meals, and a mechanic. You dip your rear wheel into the Pacific and your front wheel into the Atlantic, we will do everything in between. We even do your dirty laundry! March 6 - April 27, 2015. BubbasPamperedPedalers.com or BikerBubba@aol.com. 23RD ANNUAL OATBRAN One Awesome Tour Bike Ride Across Nevada, Sept. 21-27. 2014. “America’s Loneliest Bike Tour” is a fully supported motel-style tour across US Hwy 50, 420 miles, border to border, from Lake Tahoe to the Great Basin National Park. Limited to 50 riders. For more info: BiketheWest.com. 50 ADVENTURE CYCLIST JULY 2 014 CYCLE NORTH CAROLINA MOUNTAIN RIDE (August 2-3, 2014) Lake Lure, NC — Join us for the Inaugural CNC Mountain Ride and enjoy lakeside camping and cycling on scenic country roads in the North Carolina Mountains. Register for 1 or 2 days. Various loop rides of differing mileage. Additional lodging options are available. Fully supported with SAG support and rest stops. cyclenc@ncsports.org, www.ncsports.org. BIKE THE KATY TRAIL The longest rail trail in the country. August 31-September 6, 2014. All-inclusive luxurious seven day/six night tour staying at quaint B&Bs and Historic Hotels. Complete details from BubbasPampered Pedalers.com. CAROLINA TAILWINDS Choose between FLAT and easy or HILLY and challenging destinations throughout SC, NC, VA, MD, TN and NY. All tours feature country inns and the finest local cuisine. We have hammered out the details so that you can hammer out the miles. Browse our tours at www.CarolinaTailwinds.com and give us a call at 888-251-3206. MASS BIKEPIKE TOUR August 7-10, 2014 — Not just a ride, it’s a Celebration of Cycling in Massachusetts. Spectacular, arrowed routes, quaint towns, museums, history and local culture. Most meals, SAG, refreshment stops, maps, cue sheets. Find out why we’re “The Friendliest Ride in the East.” www.MassBikePike.org or 617 710-1832. SEPTEMBER ESCAPADE TRIRI September 14-19, 2014. Scenic, historic tour of south central Indiana with inn or camping overnights at Indiana State Parks, two layover days, and ten catered meals. Contact: 812-333-8176; triri@triri. org or www.triri.org. SOCKEYE CYCLE CO. Alaska Bicycle Tours, Rentals, Sales, Service. POB 829, 24 Portage St. Haines, AK 99827-0829, TF 877-292-4154, 907-766-2869, Fax 907-766-2851, 381 Fifth Ave. Skagway, AK (May – Sept) 907-983-2851. www. cyclealaska.com. YELLOWSTONE TO GLACIER Cycle 6 days and 424 miles on the 10th Annual Park-2Park Montana fully-supported ride from West Yellowstone to West Glacier including all meals, SAG, and mechanic. Spectacular vistas and climbs. www.park2parkmontana.org. BIKE-OHIO.COM Bicycle vacations and tours in Ohio. Each month from June through September, we offer four day hotel vacations. We visit geography, attractions, and festivals that make Ohio unique. FLORIDA KEYS HOTEL TRIP Fully supported, outstanding hotel accommodations, DoubleTree by Hilton, Holiday Inn Express, Hampton Inn. 6-day trip December 7-13 2014. Key Largo to Key West & back. Stunning beach scenery, great meals, 2 layover days in Key West. Only $950.00. www.floridakeysbikeride.com, 847-309-4740, kennethjgoldman@yahoo.com. BICYCLE RIDE ACROSS GEORGIA (BRAG) 23rd annual Georgia BikeFest, Columbus, GA, October 10-12, 2014. WinterRide, Feb. 17-22, 2015, St. Marys, GA. Great fun for families and groups. Various mileage options. 770-498-5153, Info@brag.org, www.brag.org. FLORIDA KEYS The ultimate Bicycle Vacation. Bike the entire key system, down and back. Fully-supported including breakfasts and most dinners. Beautiful sunsets. Swim with the dolphins. Snorkel. Dive. The Seven Mile Bridge just might be the most beautiful seven miles you will ever bike. November 1 - 8, 2014. Details from BubbasPamperedPedalers.com or BikerBubba@aol.com. It’s just not a bicycle tour, it’s a Keys EXPERIENCE … It’s all GOOD!! THE GREAT ALLEGHENY PASSAGE AND C&O CANAL 334.5 continuous trail miles from Pittsburgh to DC; custom or group tours; includes B&Bs, inns, excellent meals, luggage shuttle, full SAG support, vehicle or people and gear shuttle; attractions including Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater, Antietam battlefield plus so much more ... Call Trail Gail at 301-722-4887 240-7277039 or www.mountainsidebiketours.net “You Pedal, We Pamper.” CYCLE NORTH CAROLINA 16th Annual “Mountains to Coast” (September 27 – October 4). Cycle 450 plus miles while experiencing the North Carolina countryside on scenic back roads amidst beautiful fall colors. Explore quaint towns, visit famous State Parks, Historic Sites, wineries, and more. Fully supported with SAG Support and rest stops. Various registration options available. cyclenc@ncsports.org, www.ncsports.org. FAMILY FUN, ERIE CANAL / NIAGARA FALLS July 6-13 — Introduce your family to self-contained touring! Travel the beautiful Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail and nearby roadways, to the edge of world-famous Niagara Falls carrying all of our camping gear, personal supplies, and group gear on our bicycles, without a support vehicle. www.adventurecycling.org/ tours. WISCONSIN BACKROADS HOTEL TOURS Fully supported affordable 5-7 day bicycling vacations. $590 includes HOTELS w/indoor pools-whirlpools, buffet dinners, food stops, & emergency support. Quiet, scenic, all paved back roads. NORTHWOODS, DOOR COUNTY, Spring Green, New Glarus, & more. Celebrating our 30th year. www.pedalacrosswisconsin.com, 847707-6888, 847-309-4740, drjpedal@sbcglobal.net. OREGON COAST LOOP August 16- 22, 2014. After gathering near the bicycle-friendly town of Eugene, we’ll head north, cycling through vineyards and orchards. We’ll continue down the craggy coastline, camping near the beach, and watching waves break against lighthouses — and we’ll almost definitely catch site of a few sea lions. Our group will also visit the coastal towns of Lincoln City, Newport, Yachats, and Florence, each with its own unique flavor. www.adventurecycling.org/tours. Open Road Gallery No. 3830 Recumbent Remedy PHOTOGRAPH BY GREG SIPLE STORY BY GAGE POORE ➺ LOW ON FUNDS and having just graduated from the University of Cincinnati, David and Bethany Hoffman found themselves willing but unable to participate in Bikecentennial’s crosscountry ride during the summer of 1976 — and instead saved for a move across the country to Grand Junction, Colorado, later that autumn. It was another 24 years before Bethany and David were able to participate in a multi-day bike tour. “I believe it was Bethany who re-kindled the cycling spirit in our household,” David wrote. “She came home one day and announced the desire to sign up for the Bicycle Tour of Colorado. I did the 500 miles on a borrowed bike and we did it every subsequent year for five or six years.” Their pursuit of adventures grew along with the collection of bicycles and touring gear in their garage, and in 2002 they rode 1,500 miles from Jackson, Wyoming, to Cleveland, Ohio, with their children Ben and Lillian, who were on the cusp of leaving the family nest. “As that trip wore on,” David wrote, “I realized that I would need to find an alternative for myself if I was to cycle into my 70s and beyond. My shoulders and neck became more of an issue as the ride progressed, so I looked into recumbent bikes when we returned to Colorado. I was intrigued with the novelty and the engineering of the recumbent bikes.” Eventually, he decided on a RANS Stratus, and Bethany followed suit. The couple visited Adventure Cycling in June of 2011 on a tour from Burlington, Washington, to their home in Colorado. They experienced extreme late-spring rain and snow along with the physical and mental trials of long-distance bicycle travel but had a wonderful trip overall. Regarding their bicycles, Bethany wrote, “This time, we’re on recumbents, slow uphill but a gas down! We’re so fortunate to be traveling the West for this month; wildlife, mountains, making memories as we go.” From Adventure Cycling’s National Bicycle Touring Portrait Collection. © 2014 Adventure Cycling Association. ADVENTURECYCLING.ORG Bring the Bicycle Eclectic traveling portrait exhibition to your town. Contact Greg Siple for more information: gsiple@ adventurecycling. org See more portraits at adventurecycling. org/gspg 51 Non-profit Adventure Cycling Association U.S. POSTAGE PAID P.O. Box 8308 Missoula, Montana 59807-8308 Adventure Cycling Association America’s Bicycle Travel Experts · · · maps tours gear resources Questions? 800.755.2453 www.adventurecycling.org North America Europe 400+ TOURS 70+ COUNTRIES 1 WEBSITE South America Find your next adventure on biketoursdirect.com. Africa Representing local bike tour companies worldwide 423.756.8907 · 877.462.2423 info@biketoursdirect.com WE’RE EXCITED TO ANNOUNCE… WILL SOON BE Asia Australia