Monday, January 31, 2011

I can rub off on someone and have them too make poor choices!

SO I just got an email, my best friend in the world is influenced by me I guess.  While he is off working in the finical district of Boston, and now owns a big house and has a child, he also took the plunge, went on EBay and bid on a 1920s – 30s Iver Johnson bicycle!  And he won, and he had a OH CRAP WHAT HAVE I DONE moment.  I am glad to see after 27 years of friendship Geoff is still the guy I spent so much time with growing up and he CAN make poor decisions!  I look forward to seeing what happens with his newest steed!  Congrats Geoff! 


Sunday, January 30, 2011

Giving an old bicycle a second life

So where do I begin. As many of you are aware I have been some type of cyclist thru most of my life. Beginning on a BMX bicycle as a child, this progressed to BMX racing. That became a family affair with Jake and I which became a love for time spent on two wheels. The thrill of BMX with jumps and competition was what Jake and I desired at our younger ages. However as I grew older I bought other bicycles, and since the age of 14 they were always purchased with my own money.


Funny thing is I can remember every bicycle I have ever owned, yet I can not remember what I ate for breakfast on Thursday. I began with a chrome bicycle that had red handlebars. I believe it was a Columbia. I remember it was a hand me down from my cousin Peter who was a couple years older. He had just gotten a new bicycle and I remember the look of his new bike and what mushroom grips felt like for the first time. I then got a bicycle called a Sigma complete with white disc covers on the rims. In a later post I will relive all the bicycles of years past but its 10:40pm and I have work tomorrow.

So bicycles always have held a special place in my life. They have provided me transportation, they have provided me competition, they provided me a way to make money on my first job as a paper boy with the Patriot Ledger, and brought me to establishing a mountain bike club in high school, and even riding my bicycle at 9pm along the Cape Cod Canal during my junior year at Mass Maritime because I just couldn’t stand to look at any more study materials, and I wanted to clear my head.

Bicycles have given me some great opportunities where ever I have lived or traveled to. Yet after I left for Kuwait for the year in 2004, my cycling diminished. I went from riding quite often and being in good shape while living in Tucson, to someone who didn’t touch a bicycle for almost 3 years. My riding lately has been off and on, but mostly off. I can go MONTHS without touching a bicycle, when 12 years ago I couldn’t go 3 days without hammering out a ride of 20 miles just for fun on my own. I felt like it kept me normal, like the juices in my head needed that stimulation or severe depression would set in.

So in late 2009 I went to an antique store, which some people know I have a soft spot for, and it was an older store, in a house setting, with a loft, and just hundreds of things to look at, all from the 1930s and 1940s. Most people see it as crap, I am faciinated by it all. And then there was this rusted bicycle in the corner of the shop, and as I got closer to it, and wiped off some of the dust I just started seeing how so many things have changed since a bike of this age, yet so many of the basic principals are the same. The details of this era bike reallu generated a lot of interest within me. How my mind works is that if something is of interest to me I normally go and research it online until I develop a more healthy appetite for whatever it is that made me salivate.

So I went home, and typed in things like “vintage bike” or “antique bicycle” into the search engine box on a website like EBay or Craigslist to see what kind of results would be generated. Then, especially on EBay, these two words opened a different universe where I became fascinated. I read blogs, I read forums, I read about restorations, and watched videos on youtube. That night I went to bed at 1:30 in the morning and yes it was a week night, however because I was enjoining everything I was reading and seeing I just kept looking deeper into it all. I ended up buying one of these bikes on a whim. It was a rusted, needs TLC, Schwinn Black Phantom that a gentleman has just began restoring in Minnesota; however I think he either lost interest or needed money. It turned out it was a 1953 manufacturer date based on the serial number. The Black Phantom was a Cadillac of bicycles at the time. I rode the bike to work one day, before any restoration was done. It was rusted, but the wheels spun and the coaster brake seemed to work. I rode it downhill, from the Courthouse neighborhood of Arlington into Rosslyn. For those of you familiar with the area, you know it’s all downhill into Rosslyn and lest just say, a 30 year old on an almost 60 year old bike looking like Pee Wee Herman in his suit with his work badge flapping in the breeze must have been a sight. I passed a bus one day, and I felt empowered. The bike while an eye sore, yet rode like a dream. The front springer fork and the springs in the saddle made for quite the smooth ride.

When I had the ride, downhill, passing cars, on this single speed bicycle I realized I wanted to bring it back to its splendor. I found a young guy named Len in Manassas Park at Figure Engineering http://figurefinishing.com who does bead blasting and powder coating. He usually works on motorcycles but had done a couple bicycle frames in the past. I brought the bike by him and he loved the idea. He talked about the complications of doing the different colors, and would have to do the trim by hand, but he accepted the challenge. The finished product I was very happy with. Len did a hell of a job and had the bike on display on his wall and pictures on his website. I brought the several boxes of parts (you don’t realize how many parts a bicycle like this has until you break it down and have each part blasted and then painted) to Ron at Wheel Nuts Bike Shop http://www.wheelnuts.net in Old Town. Ron Taylor and his team of skilled mechanics accepted this challenge too. Between Ron’s knowledge of assembling some of the reproduction Black Phantoms Schwinn produced more than 10 years ago and their perusing on the internet and research, they put her together flawlessly.

Like any bicycle I have ever owned, I named her. “Mamie” she is named after the first lady at the time of her production, January 20, 1953 – January 20, 1961 Mamie Eisenhower was the woman of the USA. Between her dominance of the public eye and the nickname for the USS Massachusetts battleship, I felt it was an appropriate name for this more than 50 lbs of Chicago made steel. To date Mamie has been ridden only three times, all three to National Harbor over the Woodrow Wilson Bridge.

The feeling of riding a bicycle that someone enjoyed more than 50 years before is an empowering feeling. For a brief moment you can picture the world around you in black and white. And it must have done something because I found myself looking into other bikes once Mamie was completed. The next blog entry will explain my next purchase, which began with a winning bid on EBay and a drive after work to York, PA to meet a sketchy man wearing a Hawaiian shirt in a Burger King Parking lot as he pulled a bicycle out of his filthy cluttered van that reeked of marijuana. Thanks for reading.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Keep the wheels turning

Bill Moulds was recommended by Ron at Wheel Nuts Bike Shop when I approached him with the old rusted vintage bike dilemma.  He explained how we were fortunate to live in an area with one of the better wheel experts in the area akso resided. Considering it is after 11:30pm after a very long drill weekend I will post a few pictures and then explain myself in greater detail later in the week.  Cheers.  And check out the amazing work of a genuine guy who has a passion for building wheels.  Bill Moulds
The rear hub of a now built wheel to the vintage bicycle.  The hub was rusted and painted when I dropped it off and never had any idea that there was any type of writing on the hub itself.  What a surprise. 
This is the lineup of the 2 front wheels and 2 rear wheels I had on Jan 3, 2011 when I met Bill for the first time and sat down to discusss my dilema and have him explain the options. 
The lineup of wheels I picked up today, January 23, 2011 from Bill's Shop.  The rear hub was cleaned and reused to make the wheel to the far right.  The two existing front hubs were not not possible to make into usable wheels. 
An oild cap, on a hub?  Yeah it was common in this era.  While I have not done enough reserach to see what year this hub / bicycle are fron here is a 1936 New Departure Hub Model D specs sheet I found online. 
One of the steel clad wooden rims that was found unuseable from the old bicycle with the spokes removed and the hub was then cleaned up had a complete overhaul and now is attached to a 21st century rim and spokes.   

Sunday, January 9, 2011

On the brink of the first full work week of 2011

So as I stare the first full week of 2011 in the face, being a Sunday evening now, I think back to what has happened in the last week. Besides thinking I was going to be writing this blog a lot more, which it hasn’t happened yet. It’s been crazy in the world for sure this last week. A week usually filled with people joining gyms and counting calories was a tad different. It started with hundreds of birds dropping dead from the sky in Arkansas. Then it happened in Louisiana. Then an estimated two million fish died along the rivers in Maryland. Then in Omaha, Nebraska, a high school senior decided to shoot the principal and assistant principal of his school, using his fathers gun (who is an Omaha detective, who is a close friend of my friends in Nebraska) and then just yesterday a 40 year old Congresswoman is shot point blank in the head by someone and 6 others are killed at a “Congress on the Corner” at a Safeway parking lot in Tucson, AZ. So here I was two of the largest news stories of the year so far in Nebraska and Tucson looking at very familiar backgrounds on CNN and other National news media.


As of yesterday morning I have purchased a new camera. I have purchased a Nikon D90 with an additional 18-200mm lens. I did so at Ritz Camera in Old Town Alexandria. Well I did so with the help of my credit card, photography equipment is very expensive and I really don’t have a couple grand burning a hole in my pocket. With the purchase Ritz has a multitude of classes I can take and which I plan on taking to gain even more knowledge and hopefully I can help pay for the camera thru work I do with it. Atleast that’s the plan. Ambitious is my middle name. Well its really James but ambitious sounds cooler.

Above is the photo from 2005 I took in Kuwait during a sandstorm
My “art” side is something that wants to come out, with the last camera I only entered one contest for the EPA on their Earth Day poster and I got a picture published on the Patriot Ledger website of Layla walking Goliath along the beach in Manomet. It was one of the first photographs I took with the new camera. Prior to that, with my last point and shoot camera, I had a photo that was on display in a traveling art show displaying Images from the War in Iraq called Reconnect US. Then the images were on display at the Pawtucket Armory for quite some time. I donated the framed photo for an auction where I chose the proceeds for its sale would go to the Special Olympics of Massachusetts. Yesterday my first photographs were in Annapolis, MD outside the US Naval Academy.
Photo of Layla and Golaith one of the first pictures I took with my Nikon D40X on March 18, 2008 that was displayed on the Patriot Ledger website. 
I love photography, and have enjoyed all the photos that my Nikon D40X has provided me over the last couple years. I look forward to getting to know the camera better than any other one I had used. I think having a creative outlet is essential in what people consider success. My brother plays his music; my father is going to dabble in his stained glass once again, and The Warden yanks on the penny slots until her heart is content at Twin River Casino.

I have run twice with my friend Melody this week. What began as a handshake at a Old Town Tri Club meeting had me working with her as she is a realtor and we have quite a bit in common. This week gave us a chance to run together twice which is something that hasn’t happened in quite some time. I haven’t run twice in the same week with someone since living in Plymouth. Hopefully this is a step in the right direction as to

Last night Danielle and I attended a Navy basketball game. We have the common thread of loving collegiate sports and really have no allegiance just love good competition. I had looked at tickets for Georgetown games or University of Maryland but it is insane how much people wanted for tickets to nosebleed seats on Craigslist. I decided to look into Navy and it was an awesome desiccation. We sat in the front row with a couple great couples in their 70’s they were a trip and one of the guys was a former player for the Midshipmen many moons ago. They also honored the 1986 NCAA Elite 8 team for the Midshipmen which included David Robinson. I have been a fan of him since he went to Navy and no one has been classier in the Pro Sports arena over his entire career. It was a thrill to see him up close.

The rest of the night tonight I am trying to hash out my race calendar for 2011 as the bound planner I have for the year begins to get full pages. I will post as soon as I am done.

My last bit of writing is for my sister Alicia. She is due any day now with her 4th installment of a child. A boy it has been confirmed, Danny and she are quite eager to see the latest arrival. I ask for well wishes as she has entered the final stages of pregnancy and hope for health and happiness for the entire family. I am very excited to see what the bundle of joy will be like and he will be in my thoughts tonight. Have I ever mentioned how much I love being an Uncle? Goodnight all.