/tagged/cycling/page/2

Well, the only way I see this happening is in an extended ride north. When I say that I mean a long, terrible, trying trip…
- The Idea of North, by Glenn Gould, 1967

Script work, feature write-up and riding for the first Rapha Continental UK film, shot in Assynt, Scotland. Now on Rapha.cc.

[Short article I wrote about handmade bicycles and NAHBS, Monocle, June 2012]

[Short article I wrote about handmade bicycles and NAHBS, Monocle, June 2012]

[Looping the loop - but with no loop]

[Looping the loop - but with no loop]

[The Collarbone/Dan Craven]
iPad magazine coming soon.

[The Collarbone/Dan Craven]

iPad magazine coming soon.

(Source: thecollarbone)

I interviewed Mark Cavendish for this video for Nike.

[160 kilometres through the Chilterns, 10/12/11]

[160 kilometres through the Chilterns, 10/12/11]

[What would Fausto do? - part of a feature on winter training on Rapha.cc]
Autumn has shaded into winter, but as we approach the year’s hub, the winter solstice, it is light and not warmth that is lacking.
It’s the time of year when thoughts slide inexorably towards the turbo, but it doesn’t have to be like that. For some inspiration, think back to 1946, the year that Fausto Coppi announced his return to the world. Riding La Primavera, he broke away with almost 250 kilometres to go. Ditching his last companions on the Turchino, he soloed to victory, crossing the line 14 minutes ahead of second place.
In preparation for the season opener, he’d ridden 7,000 kilometres, and his training regime included 250-kilometre rides in which he’d arrange for local club riders to attack him remorselessly in the last hundred. Little wonder he made it to San Remo first. For a man who had been a prisoner of war for three years in North Africa, in decent conditions but mostly without a bike, what a release it must have been to get back to riding the cold, slippery roads of northern Italy.
The motivation to get out on the road might be falling but remember: there’s more to life than two hours at a steady 125bpm on the turbo, watching Tour DVDs, like a hamster on a wheel. Gravel and snot, and a cold nose, maybe. But also fresh air in the lungs and, perhaps, a view glimpsed through bare branches, never seen riding that road in summer. Steam rising off your companions’ head as they take their hats off. Tea and cake, or a bacon sarnie, in a noisy, packed cafe.
Think back, to a man imprisoned in the heat, pining for cold solitary kilometres, and get out there on your bike.

[What would Fausto do? - part of a feature on winter training on Rapha.cc]

Autumn has shaded into winter, but as we approach the year’s hub, the winter solstice, it is light and not warmth that is lacking.

It’s the time of year when thoughts slide inexorably towards the turbo, but it doesn’t have to be like that. For some inspiration, think back to 1946, the year that Fausto Coppi announced his return to the world. Riding La Primavera, he broke away with almost 250 kilometres to go. Ditching his last companions on the Turchino, he soloed to victory, crossing the line 14 minutes ahead of second place.

In preparation for the season opener, he’d ridden 7,000 kilometres, and his training regime included 250-kilometre rides in which he’d arrange for local club riders to attack him remorselessly in the last hundred. Little wonder he made it to San Remo first. For a man who had been a prisoner of war for three years in North Africa, in decent conditions but mostly without a bike, what a release it must have been to get back to riding the cold, slippery roads of northern Italy.

The motivation to get out on the road might be falling but remember: there’s more to life than two hours at a steady 125bpm on the turbo, watching Tour DVDs, like a hamster on a wheel. Gravel and snot, and a cold nose, maybe. But also fresh air in the lungs and, perhaps, a view glimpsed through bare branches, never seen riding that road in summer. Steam rising off your companions’ head as they take their hats off. Tea and cake, or a bacon sarnie, in a noisy, packed cafe.

Think back, to a man imprisoned in the heat, pining for cold solitary kilometres, and get out there on your bike.

[“Feeling for feeling for feeling the brakes…” A late-season climb and descent of the col de la Bonette, on Rapha.cc] 

[“Feeling for feeling for feeling the brakes…” A late-season climb and descent of the col de la Bonette, on Rapha.cc

As bike use goes up, accident rates go down

The number of cyclists killed per 100 million kilometres cycled and the
bicycle in different countries:


Holland 1.1 fatalities, 26% bicycle use
Denmark 1.4 fatalities, 19% bicycle use
Germany 1.7 fatalities, 10% bicycle use
United Kingdom 3.6 fatalities, 2% bicycle use
United States 5.8 fatalities, < 1% bicycle use

via


Metaphysics and aesthetics

“I’m not greatly interested in results, frankly, but the metaphysics and aesthetics of cycle racing excite me enormously.”

Graeme Fife, interviewed on PodiumCafe

(Source: podiumcafe.com)

Well, the only way I see this happening is in an extended ride north. When I say that I mean a long, terrible, trying trip…
- The Idea of North, by Glenn Gould, 1967

Script work, feature write-up and riding for the first Rapha Continental UK film, shot in Assynt, Scotland. Now on Rapha.cc.

[Short article I wrote about handmade bicycles and NAHBS, Monocle, June 2012]

[Short article I wrote about handmade bicycles and NAHBS, Monocle, June 2012]

[Contract face]

[Contract face]

[Looping the loop - but with no loop]

[Looping the loop - but with no loop]

[The Collarbone/Dan Craven]
iPad magazine coming soon.

[The Collarbone/Dan Craven]

iPad magazine coming soon.

(Source: thecollarbone)

I interviewed Mark Cavendish for this video for Nike.

via.
[160 kilometres through the Chilterns, 10/12/11]

[160 kilometres through the Chilterns, 10/12/11]

[What would Fausto do? - part of a feature on winter training on Rapha.cc]
Autumn has shaded into winter, but as we approach the year&#8217;s hub, the winter solstice, it is light and not warmth that is lacking.
It’s the time of year when thoughts slide inexorably towards the turbo, but it doesn&#8217;t have to be like that. For some inspiration, think back to 1946, the year that Fausto Coppi announced his return to the world. Riding La Primavera, he broke away with almost 250 kilometres to go. Ditching his last companions on the Turchino, he soloed to victory, crossing the line 14 minutes ahead of second place.
In preparation for the season opener, he&#8217;d ridden 7,000 kilometres, and his training regime included 250-kilometre rides in which he&#8217;d arrange for local club riders to attack him remorselessly in the last hundred. Little wonder he made it to San Remo first. For a man who had been a prisoner of war for three years in North Africa, in decent conditions but mostly without a bike, what a release it must have been to get back to riding the cold, slippery roads of northern Italy.
The motivation to get out on the road might be falling but remember: there’s more to life than two hours at a steady 125bpm on the turbo, watching Tour DVDs, like a hamster on a wheel. Gravel and snot, and a cold nose, maybe. But also fresh air in the lungs and, perhaps, a view glimpsed through bare branches, never seen riding that road in summer. Steam rising off your companions&#8217; head as they take their hats off. Tea and cake, or a bacon sarnie, in a noisy, packed cafe.
Think back, to a man imprisoned in the heat, pining for cold solitary kilometres, and get out there on your bike.

[What would Fausto do? - part of a feature on winter training on Rapha.cc]

Autumn has shaded into winter, but as we approach the year’s hub, the winter solstice, it is light and not warmth that is lacking.

It’s the time of year when thoughts slide inexorably towards the turbo, but it doesn’t have to be like that. For some inspiration, think back to 1946, the year that Fausto Coppi announced his return to the world. Riding La Primavera, he broke away with almost 250 kilometres to go. Ditching his last companions on the Turchino, he soloed to victory, crossing the line 14 minutes ahead of second place.

In preparation for the season opener, he’d ridden 7,000 kilometres, and his training regime included 250-kilometre rides in which he’d arrange for local club riders to attack him remorselessly in the last hundred. Little wonder he made it to San Remo first. For a man who had been a prisoner of war for three years in North Africa, in decent conditions but mostly without a bike, what a release it must have been to get back to riding the cold, slippery roads of northern Italy.

The motivation to get out on the road might be falling but remember: there’s more to life than two hours at a steady 125bpm on the turbo, watching Tour DVDs, like a hamster on a wheel. Gravel and snot, and a cold nose, maybe. But also fresh air in the lungs and, perhaps, a view glimpsed through bare branches, never seen riding that road in summer. Steam rising off your companions’ head as they take their hats off. Tea and cake, or a bacon sarnie, in a noisy, packed cafe.

Think back, to a man imprisoned in the heat, pining for cold solitary kilometres, and get out there on your bike.

[&#8220;Feeling for feeling for feeling the brakes…&#8221; A late-season climb and descent of the col de la Bonette, on Rapha.cc] 

[“Feeling for feeling for feeling the brakes…” A late-season climb and descent of the col de la Bonette, on Rapha.cc

As bike use goes up, accident rates go down

The number of cyclists killed per 100 million kilometres cycled and the
bicycle in different countries:


Holland 1.1 fatalities, 26% bicycle use
Denmark 1.4 fatalities, 19% bicycle use
Germany 1.7 fatalities, 10% bicycle use
United Kingdom 3.6 fatalities, 2% bicycle use
United States 5.8 fatalities, < 1% bicycle use

via


[The Ride and Groom - 30 churches, two mosques and a hairdresser&#8217;s - now on the Rapha blog]

[The Ride and Groom - 30 churches, two mosques and a hairdresser’s - now on the Rapha blog]

Metaphysics and aesthetics

“I’m not greatly interested in results, frankly, but the metaphysics and aesthetics of cycle racing excite me enormously.”

Graeme Fife, interviewed on PodiumCafe

(Source: podiumcafe.com)

Metaphysics and aesthetics

About:

bicycles, pictures, books, picture books, picture books about bicycles.

from @m_xl, author of fixed. also writes on occasion for esquire, grafik, monocle, rapha, road.cc and others.