Monday, October 21, 2013

Wooly-Bully Bike Ride



We have written before about why we like to ride and one of our big reasons for climbing on the saddle and venturing out is for the things we see along the way.  We have written about those big flocks of blackbirds, road kill, cemeteries, and much more.  This spring we will ride along with Tiger Moths but we aren’t so much interested in the adult version of the creature, we like the larval state that is just about everywhere this month: the Wooly Bear Caterpillar.  The things are constantly crossing roads this time of year, oftentimes with little success.  They are easily the most recognized caterpillar in North America.  


The things are famous and can thank Dr. C. H. Curran for their fame.  Old Doc Curran took an expedition in 1948 to learn more about these fuzzy beings.  The expedition set out from his home base of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.  He prepared and packed everything he would need for the arduous scientific journey—of forty miles.  As it turns out he didn’t need to go very far.  He even drove himself—and took his wife along.   

Why he filled up a tank of gas and drove up into the Catskills is anybody’s guess.   He could have simply crossed the street and walked a couple of steps into Central Park.  


Anyway, we all know the Wooly Bear with its black-orange-black segments.  Fairly simple construction these things.  But, the little known fact is that the Wooly Bear has an assortment of 13 distinct and unique black-orange-black segmentations.  The orange middle can vary in width, at least 13 different widths to be exact.   Folklore suggests that the skinnier the orange band across the middle the more severe the winter.  Likewise a fat orange band suggests a mild winter.    


Now, does that orange band predict the winter weather?  No, but isn’t folklore great?  That is how we got cool events like Groundhog Day.   A good method of predicting winter weather is to look at the five-day forecast. 


So why are these slow creatures crossing so many roads and sidewalks?  They are looking for a winter home.  They like to spend the cold weather months behind the bark of trees.  There, if is cold enough, they will actually freeze solid.  When spring comes they thaw and wrap themselves in a cozy cocoon and wait a couple weeks until they emerge as full grown moths.  Not long after that they will become a meal for something father up the food chain.  It seems that most insects, like moths and butterflies, are simply on this Earth to be a food source for other animals.  It's a tough way to make a living.  


The last point we will make here is the fact that Wooly Bears are not made of wool.  The wool is in fact hair and the type of hair places them scientifically in the “bristle” family of bristle caterpillars to which there are a few but none as cool as the Wooly Bear.  

Be sure to visit our website, we have new product and bicycle reviews at www.stickybottleteam.net

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Ride with the Eagles



We're back!  The SBT suffered through six weeks of unpleasantness but no matter, we are back on the bike and on the blog!  Our latest post is here...

The greatest selling American band of all time made a bold move up the music charts this month in 1972.  A quick memory jog may suggest that band to be Aerosmith.  It is not the bad boys form Boston.  Move to the west coast and try again.  The band in question is synonymous with Southern California but its real roots were in Texas.  So much so the band took its name from the mascot of North Texas State University--the Eagles.  (Today the college is North Texas University and they are known as the Mean Green).  

The Eagles founding member, Don Henley was a student at NTSU and hailed from nearby Linden, Texas.  Henley's college garage band realized, like most bands at some point, that the path to success would begin in Los Angeles.  Soon after Henley arrived in Tinseltown he met Glenn Frey and the two shared a common musical interest.  Frey hailed from Detroit and provided some supporting instrumentation to some of Bob Seger's early recordings.  Frey, like Henley, decided that in order live life in the fast lane he would also need to relocate to LA.  Very quickly the newly minted Californians found themselves jamming together as members of Linda Ronstadt's band.   
      

The two men made fast friends with Jackson Brown who had a half-finished song that Frey took a look at and soon found the inspiration needed to complete the work.  The song was "Take it Easy" and it became the first hit single on the Eagles debut album.  The song was a fun look at life with “flat bed Fords,” skirt chasing and “loosening loads.”  The unwitting star of the song became the sleepy town of Winslow, Arizona from the line “standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona.”


At first Winslow was not impressed.  But as the years have moved on the town has embraced its place in rock and roll history.  So much so that Winslow has a city park (Standin’ on a Corner Park) dedicated to “Take it Easy” and a large mural on the corner depicts the “girl, my Lord in a flat bed Ford.”    The town as luck would have it needed the song when the new Interstate 40 bypassed Winslow and travelers took to the major highway in favor of the slow Route 66 which previously moved commerce through town.  It is from the mural that a bike rider can set out on a cool ride.


And there a couple routes to take that will lead riders to some strange stuff.  About one mile out of town is the Homolovi Ruins, a historic site with excellent examples of surviving pueblo construction.  About 43 miles from town is the location of the largest meteor impact site in the United States—the Barrington Crater.  The crater was formed by a meteor approximately 55 yards wide that struck the Earth’s surface with an energy of 10 megatons at a speed of 45,000 miles per hour.  For riders wanting to stretch their legs further Winslow is about 50 miles from the Petrified Forest National Park.     


So, if you find yourself in Winslow, Arizona we hope you have your bicycle and remember, “don’t the sound of your own wheels drive you crazy.”

We have a video of "Take it Easy" on our website at www.stickybottleteam.net




Thursday, August 15, 2013

A Bike Ride of Peace and Music


Havens

At exactly 5:07 pm on August 15 Richie Havens took the stage with guitar in hand.  Havens was an interesting figure in American music.  Part Blackfoot Indian, part West Indies native he was born and bred in Brooklyn, New York.  Havens’ sound was folk with some funk.  On this late afternoon Havens was the first artist to perform at the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair, 44 years ago today.  Havens, like most acts at Woodstock, was asked to plan for a set one hour in length.  He played for nearly three.  To conclude his set he belted out the old spiritual “Motherless Child” which morphed into “Freedom.”  The song was immortalized in the motion picture “Woodstock” and Richie Havens became an international star.  Havens was asked to extend his set because many of the other acts had not arrived having found themselves delayed by massive traffic jams to Max Yasgur’s farm.    Havens’ set was the longest at Woodstock.  Only three other acts played in excess of one hour—Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix (pictured) and a very pregnant Joan Baez.

Woodstock has been noted by many as the crowning achievement of the 1960s.  The three days of “peace and music” is remembered for just that.  Over 400,000 were in attendance with 32 acts performing.  Due to some poor planning and questionable security the concert was open to the public and free.  A number of lawsuits were filed against the Woodstock promoters so the entire three day event lost money.  The motion picture however, was successful and provided the funding necessary to pay off creditors and lawsuits.  

Today the farm field and the stage area are preserved.  The farm has been sold a few times over since 1969 with the current owner erecting the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts.  The center is an outdoor amphitheater with seating for 5,000.  This evening Cheech and Chong will be onstage.  The Zac Brown Band plays live this Saturday at the center.  All of this rock music history makes a great bike ride.

For many years after Woodstock the nearby towns passed laws to prohibit future large gatherings.  Town council members and mayors were tossed out of office for allowing the massive throngs of “hippies” to invade their peaceful Catskill hamlets.  All of that has changed.  The “Woodstock generation” has money now.   Visitors today will find Woodstock themed shops, bed and breakfasts, restaurants, a museum and much more.  Monuments and plaques commemorating the event and its performers can be seen from the saddle.

Michael Lang, one of the four men to create and promote the festival wrote a book, The Road to Woodstock which tells the story of the three days and the efforts the men undertook to make Woodstock happen.  The book is a good read for rock historians.  It was Lang who produced the very successful Miami Pop Festival and it was his experience with that event that made the native New Yorker think a similar festival would work in the Empire State.    

Please visit our website for Joe Cocker’s performance at Woodstock.  See videos at www.stickybottleteam.net.  The website www.bethelwoodscenter.org has museum information and links to regional guidebooks. 

Monday, August 05, 2013

Tour of Utah set to go



The Tour of Utah rolls off beginning August 6.  It is a six stage event drawing some of the top UCI teams.  To be more specific it is the Larry Miller Tour of Utah.  Larry Miller, a rather non-descript name.  Might as well be the Bob Smith or Bill Jones Tour of Utah.  But then again that may be the SBT’s East Coast bias.  While we do blog quite a bit about the West Coast and the entire globe for that matter, we even have the “California Connection” that helps us with blogs, product reviews and was even our man at the AMGEN Tour of California, we have to admit we had never heard of Larry Miller.  


We do know some of the things that the Larry Miller Group owns and manages: Energy Solutions Arena (once upon a time it was the Delta Center), Total Care Auto, and the Utah Jazz.  The Miller Groups also owns the Salt Lake Bees, minor league affiliate of the LA Angels and since 2007 has sponsored the Tour of Utah.  Miller was born and bred in Utah and in his youth was a tremendous athlete which explains his avid interest in owning sports franchises.  He loved hot rods and racing cars.  This led to his first job as an auto parts salesman which led to a series of fast promotions.  Today the Miler Groups owns 41 automobile dealerships in seven western states.  In sum, the Miller Group owns and manages 18 corporations.  


Larry Miller died at the very young age of 64 due to complications from diabetes.  The long battle with the disease led to the amputation of both his legs below the knees and a series of heart attacks.  In life, Miller was concerned with public welfare and the human condition.  He gave generously of his vast fortune till his last days.  The State of Utah has not forgotten its native son and a number of entities bear his name: Larry Miller Campus at Salt Lake Community College, Larry Miller Softball Field, Miller Free Enterprise Center, Miller Motorsports Park and much more.    
  

First held in 2004 the Tour of Utah has grown steadily each year.  The 2013 route is 586 miles with 43,621 vertical feet of climbing.  The tour is really up in the air, 9,600 feet to be exact with the first stage leaving Brian Head at nearly 10,000 feet in the clouds.  Climbs and high altitude are hallmarks of the tour with Stage 3 showcasing a climb to 11,900 feet to Mt. Nebo, the highest point in the Wasatch Mountains.  


Jensie will be riding in Utah!
Some of the usual suspects will be in Utah: BMC Racing Team, Cannondale Pro Cycling, Orica-GreenEdge, Team Garmin Sharp and Radio Shack-Leopard-Trek.  We are happy to see Bissell Pro Cycling, 5-Hour Energy-Kenda and Team Jamis Hagens Berman too.  Keep an eye on the Hincapie Sportswear Development Team, the China-based Champion System Pro Cycling team and the team of MTN Qhubeka from South Africa.  Seven countries have sent teams, should be a great week of cycling.   
   

Fox Sports will have the action but the best way to follow is with the Tour Tracker app.  Download it where you get your apps.  The Sticky Bottle Team will be following the action as well so stay tuned to this blog and website for more information.  As always, please visit our website at www.stickybottleteam.net and follow SBTnetUSA on Twitter.