OBRA photo
View Aug 2004 Archives [Previous] [Next]
Subject: Pres Bush and Sen Kerry duel it out on bikes.
Date: 08/01/2004 04:10 AM
From: chr-@thinairad.com

Here is an interesting read from the New York Times. It seems Pres Bush and
Sen Kerry are both avid bike riders.
I pasted the whole article since you need a log-in account to read the only
line news paper

Chris "Gun" Browning


Culture Wars, on Two Wheels
By CHARLES McGRATH

Published: August 1, 2004


NE of the many differences separating John Kerry and George W. Bush is their
choice of bicycle - not an especially presidential mode of transport, one
might think, except that these are not ordinary bikes.

Mr. Kerry reportedly pedals an $8,000 Serotta Ottrott, as high-tech and
skittish as a sports car. It is made of space-age carbon tubing and comes
equipped with the patented ST rear triangle, whatever that is.

Advertisement


Mr. Bush pumps away (often emitting low "hrrr, hrrr, hrrr" grunts, according
to an Associated Press article last week) on a $3,000 Trek Fuel 98. It, too,
is made of carbon tubing, but unlike the Kerry machine, it has shock
absorbers fore and aft. That's because it's meant to go off-road. If Mr.
Kerry's bike is a Ferrari, Mr. Bush's is a Land Rover. Mr. Kerry rides on
the flat, more or less, and usually on paved surfaces.

Mr. Bush likes to ride up into the hills of his Texas ranch and then come
flying down. To put it another way, Mr. Kerry is more nearly like Greg
LeMond, Mr. Bush more like Evel Knievel.

What this says about their political philosophies is best left to the
analysts and the pundits. But a study posted recently on a New Zealand
biking Web site suggests that downhill mountain-bike riders, like Mr. Bush,
score considerably higher than cross-country riders on something called the
Sensation Seeking Scale. (Road riders, like Mr. Kerry, are comparative
wussies when it comes to sensation seeking.) Downhill riders are also more
likely to drive a car too fast, and to have had a brush with the law.

Of course they also get hurt more often. According to Tim Blumenthal, the
executive director of the International Mountain Bicycling Association,
"minor cuts and scratches are pretty common in our sport."

As far as we know, Mr. Kerry has fallen only once recently, after skidding
on a patch of sand last May. On the other hand, Mr. Bush has tumbled twice
in the last two months - and that's not counting the time in June of last
year he fell over the handlebars of his father's Segway scooter, because he
had forgotten to turn it on.

Mr. Blumenthal said that some of the worst mountain bike spills happen at
slow speeds and are not necessarily the result of reckless driving. "I
believe the president could benefit from an hour or two with a top mountain
biker who could give him a few tips," Mr. Blumenthal added. "They say that
once you learn how to ride a bike you never forget, but there are a few
little technical things the president could probably learn."

On his most recent crash, last week, Mr. Bush executed what is known as an
"endo" in mountain bike parlance - a sort of reverse wheelie, in which the
rear tire lifts in the air and the rider sails over the front. Mr. Bush
landed with the bike on top of him but was unhurt except for a cut on his
knee. The last time, in May, he scraped his face, hand and both knees.

At least he didn't hurt his liver, a particularly vulnerable area for
mountain bikers, according to The Lancet, the medical journal, which has
discovered that during a fall, the handlebars frequently slam into the
rider's right side, causing internal bleeding.

The origins of mountain biking are unrecorded. The sport probably began the
first time some nut case took a two-wheeler off the road and went careering
down a too-steep hill.

The advent of the balloon tire in the 1930's made the experience less
bone-shaking, but the finer points of mountain bikes and mountain biking
were not developed until the mid-1970's, when cyclists in Marin County,
Calif., began racing down Mount Tamalpais.

 From the beginning the sport has manifested a certain daredevil quality, and in some circles, it is fashionable for mountain bikers to brag about their
mishaps. Many of them are recorded on the Crash 'N' Burn message board at
the mountain bike Web site www.dirtworld.com - a remarkably upbeat catalog
of road rash, concussions, and broken legs, collarbones and teeth.

The more interesting recent posts include ones from a guy who made a wide
turn onto a highway and was smacked by a dump truck; from someone whose
brakes melted during a 100K race; and from a rider who wiped out while
attempting a wheelie drop off of a loading dock.

The palm, however, goes to a fellow who slid off a curve, deposited a lot of
skin on some sharp golf ball-sized rocks and then dropped 40 feet into a
river, where he found himself in Class IV whitewater rapids. Final E.R.
total: broken ankle (requiring two steel screws), broken ribs, cracked
skull, fractured wrist and missing fingernail.

Mr. Blumenthal said the crash-and-burn aspect of mountain biking is
frequently overemphasized, but admitted that a certain element of surprise
is part of the sport's appeal.

"It clears your head," he said. "In modern society, there are few
opportunities to be spontaneous or adventurous. It's not like we're going to
be running from a wild boar or anything. But in mountain biking, there's
always the chance to have something go wrong. It's fun."
	
View Mailing Lists | Subscribe | Subscription Options | New Post | View Archives
Contact Us
Copyright © 2009 Oregon Bicycle Racing Association