Stone Temple 8 and Veloswap

20 10 2014

Max Starting the Juniors Race

Max Starting the Juniors Race

My first race of the year.  And last.  Stone Temple 8 is the last hurrah for the mtb season, and I joined up with Johnny P, and Steve P., for the Alchemist Tres Leches.  Stuart filled in for an ill Teo Mateo, and he and Ken joined forces for the Alchemist 10-4 Fat Little Buddy duo.  Mike K. and Darin were riding a duo team as well.  Drew rode solo.  Max rode the Juniors race with the High Schoolers.

Stone Temple 8 is nestled in the IMBA-built trails of Curt Gowdy State in Wyoming.  Rich and Todd, who coach the Laramie and Cheyenne High School teams respectively, put on the race as a farewell to summer and a quaint fundraiser for their High School teams.  The trails of Curt Gowdy are purpose built for mountain biking, and there is a healthy mix of buff, flowy trail and technical, rocky singletrack.  For an 8 hour race, it demanded every ounce of concentration the entire time, or you might find yourself going ass over applebucket, as Stuart found out, twice.

Max started us off with a 3rd place finish in the juniors race, beating high school juniors and seniors.  On the podium, they kept asking how old he was.

“Twelve”

“What?”

“Twelve”

“Twelve?”

“Twelve”

“Where are you from?”

“Boulder”

“Ah, no wonder”

Yes, the wunderkind from Boulder just beat all you teenagers.  I was just glad Max was racing the juniors race, and not ours, or it would have been me he was shaming.

Steve and Stuart went out for our Teams first, being the only ones willing to run the 50 yards of the LeMans start.  Drew had no choice but to run his one-man show.  Last year, the weather was cold and windy. But this year, race day was perfect for riding.  The course is a lot like Buffalo Creek, with swoopy , kitty-litter strewn dirt.  But there was a good bit more technical rock features than Buff Creek.  One particular drop off would send you ass-over-applebucket if you didn’t give it your full attention.

Steve rode his fat bike and crushed the course, logging the best lap time on the team. Drew rode an unbelievable 5 laps of that challenging course.  Steve and Johnny P gave us a little cushion over Stuart and Ken with some really stellar riding.  I went out for the 6th and final lap with a couple of minutes on 10-4 Fat Little buddy, but Ken hunted me down and left me for dead.  We ended up 1.5 minutes behind after all that racing. our teams finished 1-2 on the podium.  Drew finished 3rd in the open solo.  Max finished 3rd for the juniors race.

Great day for all. It was nice to be back on the trail racing again.

Steven on his 29er Fat Bike.

Steven on his 29er Fat Bike. Smiling after a smoking hot first lap.

Stuart coming in from his first lap

Stuart hustling in from his first lap

Max carving the swoopy singletrack

Max carving the swoopy singletrack

Here is Max in 4th place.  He got passed shortly after this pic, but then climbed back onto the podium for the final lap.

Here is Max in 4th place.  the guy behind him is twice his size, literally. He got passed shortly after this pic, but then climbed back onto the podium for the final lap.  

Drew in pit row after lap one.  The rest of us took off our shoes and rested  after each lap.  Drew, kept chugging away, lap after lap.  Huge effort to make it on the podium with some really strong riders in the field.

Drew in pit row after lap one. The rest of us took off our shoes and rested after each lap. Drew, kept chugging away, lap after lap. Huge effort to make it on the podium with some really strong riders in the field.

 

And Veloswap:

Big thanks to Mike S, Grant and Steve P. for helping out at the Alchemist Veloswap Booth on Saturday.  Another successful Veloswap in the books thanks to those guys.

Stay tuned for a couple of Alchemist Team events:  Skills Clinic with Ryan Kohler, Team Ride down in Golden, End-of-year Team night at Mike W’s new office.





Paul’s Most Awesomest Tour du Mont Blanc

18 09 2014

  1. THE FOLLOWING POST IS STRAIGHT FROM THE MIND OF PAUL HOOGE, WHO NOT ONLY COMPLETED THE TOUR DU MONT BLANC (UTMB), BUT CRUSHED IT.  HIS ORIGINAL POST CAN BE FOUND HERE:
    FOR THE SLACKERS TOO LAZY TO CLICK ON THE LINK ABOVE, READ ON.
    Paul Hooge
    Ultra Tour Du Mont Blanc 2014

    Preface 

    I hate race reports, especially my own.  An ultrarunning race report is often ultralong and ultraboring. This one is no different. If you are like me or a veteran ultrarunner here is the Cliff Note, “I started and finished UTMB. For me, it was hard.” 
    If you insist on continuing, here is my report complete with the requisite elements and hyperbole.  The common elements of a race report are cited in parenthesis.

    Background: (So tough you will never “get it” element of story.) 

     

    The Ultra Tour Du Mont Blanc (UTMB), is a single stage 105 mile, (by my Garmin 109 mile) foot race starting in Chamonix, France and circumnavigating Mont Blanc through 3 countries, France, Italy, and Switzerland.  There is 31,500 feet of climbing and equivalent descent. It is widely recognized as one of the most difficult and competitive races of it’s distance in the world.  If there is a single race that represents a World Championship of Ultrarunning most would agree UTMB is it.  UTMB has minimum qualifications with a point system based on certain races completed over the last two years then a lottery. This helps assure a qualified field and some of the better Ultrarunners from 77 countries. If you are one of the “lucky” ones you will finish within the 46 hour limit.

    Trail Runner Magazine summarizes the 2014 race:  “This race started in a downpour that soaked runners and spectators alike to the bone and made a challenging course even tougher. The point is that UTMB is no ordinary 100-miler. It’s not even an ordinary extremely challenging 100-miler. Take one of the toughest courses in the world, with one of the most talented fields in ultrarunning, and add adverse weather and a start time that guarantees you’ll run through the night, and it starts to make sense that seemingly anything can happen at this race – just ask the American men.” (Half of the top US runners dropped). 

    My UTMB. 

    It would be easier for you to run it yourself than have me painfully describe each mile, consequently, I’ve focused on some key points allowing you to fill in the blanks. 

    After qualifying for two years and being turned down, I wired one million dollars to an unknown Swiss Bank account and I was in.  I ran a lot over the preceding year to train for it. Enough to take me to the moon and back something like 12 times, but not really.  I gathered all the required gear excruciatingly measuring every ounce and mortgaged the house to buy gear that saved a few grams. I then boarded a plane for Chamonix, France.


    (Runner faces big adversity element of story.) 

     

    In the month leading up to the race signs of overtraining were taking their toll. I was tired. I started having physical problems such as some serious back pain with radiating numbness and weakness in my legs – not a good sign. The radiation resolved, but the back pain persisted and got worse a week before the race. Also, I was having acute right knee pain that left me hobbling on occasion.  Lastly, I got a cold with a sore throat and cough the day before the race. Normally, I find the best strategy is to ignore pain and just move on, but the importance of firing on all cylinders was essential here. It seemed cheesy and hedging to mention it to anyone. The bottom line is that in a race like this no one cares about your problems, not the mountain, organizers, or racers. They have thier own and those are many. Worse yet, my bride, Robin, who is my secret weapon for finishing any race was unable to join me. After spending all this effort, time, money and announcing to everyone this perceived superhuman thing I was about to do, you can’t avoid varying degrees of trepidation about what the hell you got yourself in to. Robin calmed me down and convinced me to forget about all that and focus on the task at hand.

    (My race was harder than your race element of story.) 

    On August 29th, at 5:30pm, I found myself in Chamonix, France, at the start line with roughly 2434 runners and exactly one billion spectators proudly wearing my Team Alchemist kit. There is a lot of hype, music, cheering. After being dry for the few days preceding the race, like clockwork, 10 minutes before the race start and as if it were giving us the finger, Mont Blanc bent over and unleashed a huge black cloud upon us and a downpour ensued. Thankfully I had carefully selected my gear to keep me warm and dry in the planet’s harshest conditions.  So much so that in an hour I found everything to be completely soaked and twice as heavy. My new race rain strategy now is to dunk all my gear in a bucket of water before the race so I can quickly focus my attention on what I can actually control.

     

    As we ran the flat trail out of Chamonix I got my first taste of a primary theme for the the next two days. Forget that you are in one of the unimaginably scenic places on the planet, your view will be confined to the runners muddy SHOES in front of you. The reports from the elite runners always sound so dreamy: “As I was running down the beautiful valley inspired by the spectacular views I spotted Joe ahead…”  For the rest of us it was almost always a conga line of runners.  If you fell down you were sure to have many Hoka or Soloman (all anyone wore) shoe prints on your back. 
    As we approached the first climb I cowered as suddenly all around me runners brandished their running poles. It looked like the French Revolutionary war.  I was on the battlefield, defenseless with swords flying in every direction.  Hence the second theme of the race, POLES. I never knew that the skinny appendages sprouting from my torso that had become evolutionarily less functional since my legs doubled in size from ultrarunning could be used for much more than squirting a GU into my mouth.  The poles foreshadowed what was to become two days of dozens of near misses and several hits along with the constant intimidating clacking of these weapons around you.
    As we began to descend the first climb it was a mud wrestling match of epic proportions. By the bottom there was carnage of mud covered runners everywhere.  Having no poles I saw my opportunity to pass in the form of some thick green grass just off the mud chute trail. Smirking at the other tools, alone, I sprung into action and planted my size 14 ski shoes onto the steep grade at full speed.  I quickly discovered this might as well been green ice. What happened next is hard to imagine and harder to admit.  I went down so forcefully on my ass that I completely popped back up into a midair running position, legs flailing, searching for solid ground and my backside hurting worse than I can remember since the paddling from my third grade teacher, Mrs. Vogt, that left me standing for a couple days. I worried that I had just injured myself out of the race in the first 10 miles. Bruised and deflated I returned to my position in the mud with the others. 

    And so goes the third primary theme for the race, MUD, frequent, slippery, sticky, mud.  You would try to step around it, but inevitably, like running barefoot in a dog park, you where going to end up ankle deep in it. For two nights and days I ran in wet socks bathed in mud. I imagined myself getting trench-foot and at the final aid station undergoing amputation WW1 style.

    Fantastic start Paul!  After completing the first 10 miles and the easiest climb of the day, I was wrecked. For the next 35 hours it was to be, shoes, mud, poles, pain, shoes, mud, poles, pain…

    The climbs were straight up and endless.  You looked up, fooled by a mirage of stars, only to realize it was runners headlamps.  I was not used to how serious the Europeans were with ultrarunning. No talking, even with each other.  I would try some small talk and get a blank stare and it wasn’t the language barrier. At the finish this was quite different as cheerful finishers patted me on the back and engaged me in conversation.


    The last climb was a 3000 foot very cruel joke up a cliff.  It was foggy and dark, but two clues gave it away, one was that I was having to use my hands frequently and the other being you could see the faint street lights directly below you.

     

    There were a couple of brief exciting moments worth mentioning such as being slapped on the butt by cute French girls on two occasions after scanning my number at a checkpoint. The crowds in the towns were amazing and really lifted your spirits. The race aid stations, organization and support was unprecedented in any other ultrarunning race I have seen. Oh, and the best part, the last 10 miles…

     

    (Runner overcomes adversity element of story.) 

     

     

    Normally a fast descender, I had spent the last 35 hours stepping aside every few minutes on the downhill while many others descended obscenely fast (for this race distance). It was that or risk getting pushed aside or impaled with a pole, both of which happened. I would pass many of them on the uphill only to be passed again. A fire had been building up in me for two days until suddenly I could not stop my legs from taking off and leaving my brain behind.  Subconsciously, I guess I wanted to send a message to the other racers, and as childish as it was, it felt so good. I started blasting through groups of runners that had tormented me for two days. No solid contact, but they felt the brush of my clothing or the wind. Some yelled out as I flew by them, cheers or cursing, probably both, I couldn’t tell. Some tried to chase me, but I was feeling so energized that anyone that could catch me had long finished. I had started around 800th place and had slowly moved up the field but remained in the same relative position, around 500, for the second day. In the last 10 miles I ran faster than 98% of the starters and passed over 100 in the process. In retrospect I’m lucky I did not injury myself and blow my finish, but I really quit caring about my body after the first day. 

     

    (False modesty element of story.) 

     

    In a a race of 2434 of some of the toughest experienced ultrarunners alive, this nothing special poleless old man with an aching back, hobbled knee, sore throat and cough, somehow shows up at the finish line in the top 15% of starters with a time of 36 hours 55 minutes, over 9 hours ahead of the cutoff and a grin bigger than Mont Blanc.

    An ultrathanks to my Wife for being the one that really made this dream a reality. She reposted my status on line and support me from home the entire distance. Also, thanks to friends and family that really went out of their way to show support and if for nothing more than my personal embarrassment added an element of motivation that I essentially needed to finish. 

    (In all seriousness.)  

    I can’t hide the pride that I finished this, but really, I know I’m no superman and this is just a race. Success has no universal standard. It is different and relative for us all and we decide what that is.  Thanks for reading about my success and congratulations on your successes this year as well! 

    Paul Hooge

    Boulder, CO





Hey LADIEEEEES!!!!!!

16 09 2014

WARNING!  IF YOU ARE EASILY OFFENDED, HAVE A SENSITIVE VISUAL PALATE, OR HAVE EVEN THE REMOTEST VINDICTIVE BONE IN YOUR BODY, DO NOT READ BEYOND

 

 

 

 

 

                             HERE

————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

 

 

As per Mike W’s vote, we are proud to introduce the 2015 Alchemist Women’s Team Kit!

image (4)

Alchemist Ladies collection 2015. We put the Toe in Cameltoe. 

 

Look out for Paul’s amazing story about the UTMB in the next issue.  Equally entertaining as this one, with only a fraction of the offensive material.





Hall of Fame, Incredible Feats of Heroics, and Very Brief Summer Recap

1 09 2014

mbhof2014

Ok, I’ve been remiss. I’ve blogged about zero times since the spring.  Many awesome things happened over the summer, and I have essentially ignored them all (as far as the blog goes).  But hard to ignore our very own Jenn Dice being inducted into the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame.   This crowning  jewel still only being the second most spectacular thing to happen to Dice this summer.  The first being her nuptial festivities in Crested Butte to fellow Alchemist Team Rider, Stuart “Disco” Walsworth.  I’ve been campaigning for a name change to Jenn Disco Dice, but no dice.  Strong work JD. What are you going to do for an encore next summer?

A couple more things to rattle off:

  1. Congrats to Paul Hooge for going toe-to-toe with 3000 of the world’s best ultra-runners at the Ultra-Trail du Monte Blanc (UTMB) in France.  170k, over 9000m of climbing.  He passed about 150 runners in the last 20 miles to finish amongst the fastest and complete one of the hardest endurance races on Earth.  I’m hoping he does a write up that I can share on the blog.  Some of his stories from the race are epic, and hilarious.
  2. Congrats to Sean Bender for literally saving the life of a downed pro cyclist during the US Pro Challenge.  He was in the caravan following the race from Boulder to Golden when a racer plowed into a stopped vehicle.  Sean quickly jumped out of his medical car and went to the cyclist’s aid.  From his description, it was a bloody disaster, but he managed to intubate and stabilize the fellow despite being bathed in blood himself.  You are a hero, Dr. Bender.

Apologies and Thank You to all the Team members who’ve flown the colors and represented the Team without recognition on this delinquent blog.  You deserve better, like a venue that has more than two followers.

ER Boards next week.  Time to start studying.





Sub 5 Hour Centurypalooza

25 05 2014

Looking tired but satisfied.

Alchemist Sub-5 Train

 

Here’s why I love our Team.  Guys like Mike W. getting an impromptu train of riders together to throw down a sub-5 hour Century.  Using Strava to map a 100 mile course through the northern territories of Boulder (and obeying all traffic laws as Team members are expected to do),  the Alchemist train cranked out the sub-5 Century with 20 minutes to spare.  http://www.strava.com/activities/145093205

Strong work, fellas.

Mike’s account:

“A few years ago, I tried to get a group of friends together to ride a local charity road century.  No interest.  I asked again about 2 weeks before the event, again with no luck.  Finally, I sent the invite out a third time, and asked if anyone else thought it might be fun to try and finish in less than 5 hours. Suddenly, the compete lack of interest grew into a force 10-strong looking to work as a team to complete the challenge.
We stayed together (mostly—this was a 2500+ person ride, after all), and all managed to complete the task with an average speed of 20mph.  We had a great time and agreed that it was really fun, not only to work together to fight the wind, but also to care where the rest of the crew was.
The glow of the experience wore off quickly when I saw my GPS data afterwards and realized that, while we rode for 4:50-something, when you factored in the time we spent filling bottles and going to the bathroom, it was an additional 20+ minutes.  Challenge met?  I think NOT!
Fast forward to an early endurance ride with longtime Alchemist hard man, Ken Kreidl.  As we chatted over the long day, I shared the story above.  By the end of that ride, we were committed to an Alchemist team effort to accomplish the goal — this time focusing on elapsed time INCLUDING stops.
Today was the day.  Here are a few pics of the post-ride celebratory beer:
(make sure you include the one with Gene, I don’t think he accomplished the sub 5 goal, but he rode hard and was quick to crack a joke when it was sorely needed!)
Sure, it wasn’t all grins and giggles.  A few of us battled early season fitness (or lack thereof). We even lost 2 to flat tires.  Since many of us ride more MTB miles than pavement these days, we struggled a bit with some basic road strategies around how to share working and drafting.  We figured it out eventually, but by mile 85 or so, all bets were off.  One dedicated Alchemist MTB’er, Rob Sharp (who dislikes skinny tires so much he sold his road bike), pulled us pretty much the whole way home.  Thankfully, his dad loaned him a bike (and even joined us for part of the ride). Rob had little trouble awakening his skinny tire skills.
All in all, this was a great day on a bike.  Like the 18/24hr MTB races, there’s something really fun about working together as a team.  Charlie Cooper (works with Jenn Dice @ People for Bikes) kept saying how cool it was to ride hard just for fun, with a collective goal, not for an event placing or race win.  Tim Preston (head bean counter at Excel Sports and age 67!) rides a ton. While he’s a man of few words, he said multiple times how thrilled he was to be invited, and how cool he thought this was.  Mike Swanson is a cool guy, super chill, super strong.  Glad to have gotten to know him better.  Ariel would have been a valuable asset, but he was victim #1 of the flat tire-riddled first lap.  Ken and Rob, meh.  I ride with those dorks all the time.  I’m a huge fan and will ride with them whenever/wherever.”
Good stuff, Mike.  I’m hoping to be able to join one of these adventures before the summer is over.




Sean B. on TV, Marital Bliss at the Firebird, and Flag in a Pink cast

18 05 2014

Sean B. is not only a Team Alchemist rider and ER doc, but he is a TV star.  Check it:

John B. and Michele B. went over to Eagle County to race Mike Mac’s Firebird (for which Alchemist did the T-shirts). What normally would have been a fun, flowy track was turned into a fun, bumpy track by cows that were allowed to graze after the recent snow storm. But no worries, Marital Bliss pulled off another podium finish. Michele finished 2nd in the women’s open SS, and John finished 8th in the amatuer open.

Michele on the Podium

Michele on the Podium

 

Got the pink cast off on Friday.   Went up Flag to the amphitheater on Wednesday.  Today, went to the top with Lindsey, Ariel, Russ, and Jerry.  Lindsey wouldn’t let me stand on the pedals, so I just crept up in granny.   But it still felt good.

Pink Cast on Flag

Pink Cast on Flag





18 Hours of Fruita

9 05 2014

Mike dusty and tired after 18 hours of Fruita

Mike W. dusty and tired after 18 hours of Fruita

Mike W., Rich, Rick, Greg and Laurie were in Fruita last weekend choking down dust and tearing up the 18 Hours of Fruita course.  Here’s Mike’s account:

“Well, at least we had a ton of fun!  The race was a comedy of errors — viruses that led to barfing, bike lights that failed, double flatting, you name it — it all happened.  We ended up 16th but if those fails hadn’t piled on, we would have been in range of the top 5 again.

Jeff, I never managed to get the crew together for a team photo in the kits, my apologies.  The combination of heat & dust meant that the minute folks finished their efforts, they were off to wash up.  The shot I missed and would have loved to have was the one where just as Rich was leaving for his 8a-ish lap he asked me to grab him a burrito that he could eat once he got back.  Apparently he was thinking about that burrito the whole time he was out — as soon as he got back, he inhaled the thing in like 3 bites.  While still wearing his dusty riding gloves, glasses, helmet, and riding shoes.  He slipped on that lap and was completely covered in dust from head to toe.

Here’s what he looked like a moment or two later:

Rich after a hot lap, burrito, and a breath of air.

Rich after a hot lap, burrito, and a breath of air.





Laurie did her best but spent too much time stopping to let any/ everyone pass.  We got to hang out with her a bit, but she was bound & determined to stay self reliant despite my many offers to help…  Here she is at the finish:

Laurie after completing 18 Hours of Fruita

Laurie after completing 18 Hours of Fruita. Solo. This was on the heals of a 200k and 400k in Cali.  She’s a bit nuts





I am simultaneously in awe of Drew’s incredible result from last year (he managed an additional lap solo vs our team total) and searching for reasons how that could have happened?  Sure they added some length to the course & not just additional trail, but twisty/ turny sandy slow sections to boot.  I’ve already emailed Drew my additional respects and tried to avoid the long list of excuses.”

Here are a few more shots:

Rick after a long night of barfing.  But hey, sun's out, guns out!

Rick after a long night of barfing. But hey, sun’s out, guns out!

Dirty, dirty.

Dirty, dirty.





The Evolution of Activewear ends with Alchemist

1 05 2014

Go get your culture on and ride up the Hill to the Boulder History Museum, where the 2013 Camo Team Kit is on exhibit with the likes of the Sochi Olympic snowboard suit! The “Evolution of Activewear” exhibit starts with plaid Woolrich hiking apparel from the mid-1800’s and traces the activewear textile industry to the most recent developments in Lycra (yeah, recycled Blackboxx!) and chamois technology (yeah, EIT!). The plaid snowboard suit courtesy of bronze medalist Boulderite Alex Diebold is pretty cool to see, too. The History Museum is super kiddo friendly, with an exploration room full of crafting materials. It’s definitely worth the trip!

Image

Sochi Team Snowboard Jacket and Pants

Image

The kid loved it.

Image

SO evolved!





Alchemist Featured at the Boulder History Museum!

1 05 2014

Alchemist Featured at the Boulder History Museum!

The 2013 Alchemist kit, not so camouflaged in the Boulder History Museum’s latest exhibit, “The Evolution of Activewear.”





Blissful Whiskey 50 and Fruita Trail Video

1 05 2014

Cold, rain, mud, flat tires, and muddy snot couldn't stop the Bliss train from delivering.  Here is John getting a hand up from one of the intrepid volunteers.

Cold, rain, mud, flat tires, and muddy snot couldn’t stop the Bliss train from delivering. Here is John getting a bacon hand-up from one of the intrepid volunteers.  Photo “borrowed” from Mountain Flyer Magazine.

Marital Bliss went down to the Whiskey 50 in AZ last weekend.  It was not typical Arizona weather.   John B.’s narrative:

“In one sentence, it was a 50 mile cyclocross race — rain, sleet, hail and snow for all but 4 miles of the 50 mile race — oh, and 40 mph gusts on the one sunny climb section. Racers were abandoning everywhere; at each aid station there were people shivering uncontrollably and wrapped in blankets. 100’s DNF’d. But Team Bliss, nothing if not stubborn, persevered and finished. 

Michele B. rocking the SS podium.  Her time would have won the open masters division.  Boom!

Michele B. rocking the SS podium. Her time would have won the open masters division. Boom!

Michele took 3rd in the Womens SS with a 5:46 and would have won Womens Masters with her time as well. She also put the hurt on quite a number of male single speeders. I raced in the 45+ and finished 22nd out of 86 with a 5:01, one flat (that I almost cried trying to fix) and fingers that as I write this are still numb.

Here are a few pics, videos and stories of the most epic day they have ever witnessed at the Whiskey 50…

Holding hardware and the incomparable, Larry Grossman, in her arms

Holding hardware and the incomparable, Larry Grossman, in her arms

j”
Chris Castillian wore a Go Pro so I could get a little taste of the Fruita trails this past weekend. Check it.
Disco Stu and the Bachelor Posse.

Disco Stu and the Bachelor Posse.

 

Disco Stu and the Bachelor Boys in Fruita from jeff wu on Vimeo.





Ridgeline Rampage and Fruita Bachelor Party

27 04 2014

Michele rode her SS to v-i-c-t-o-r-y in the first RME race of the season.

Michele rode her SS to v-i-c-t-o-r-y in the first RME race of the season.  Way to go, M!

The first RME race of the season is in the books.  Had a good Alchemist turnout.  Racers included:

Michele Bliss (won SS class), John Bliss, John Harness (Third SS XC course), Noel Culberson, Russ Overy, Joseph McNearney, Ariel Solomon, John Lien,  and Kathleen Scholes (rides for Dirt Divas, but friend of Alchemist. It was her first mtb race ever.)

Congrats to all the Alchemist racers.  Great riding!

This weekend is Disco Stu’s bachelor weekend.  Vegas?  No.  Fruita?  Yes!  Ken and Steve M. heard the strippers in F-town are the bomb.  But as it turns out, the only thing in Fruita to ogle are the miles and miles of super hot single track.   They are, to say the least,  fun and curvy.  Well, that’s what I hear.

My view of the trails in Fruita.  Ah, the humanity.

My view of the trails in Fruita. Ah, the humanity.

And lastly, a free pair of Alchemist wool Team socks for the first person to identify what is in the picture below.

Ouch

Ouch

 





Spring is here!

19 04 2014

Ah, Alchemist blog followers.  All two of you.  It’s been too long.  Spring is here, and it’s time to rejuvenate the blog.  On a night shift now, so excuse the elementary prose.

So much has happened since the fall: New Alchemist Team member Beckett Saotian Wu rocked the Boulder scene on February 12.  The kid has sprinter thighs.  For real.

Straight outta Boulder and his momma's womb.  Holla!

Straight outta Boulder and his momma’s womb. Holla!

Alchemist Team night at Mike W’s swank office, new Team Kit for 2014 with high vis printing, photos to share, races to report.  And one busted Achilles to commiserate.  Gawd, I looooove basketball.  But she is a cruel mistress.  Surgery on the Achilles last week.  In a cast now.  I’ll be sitting this season out.

That big hunk in the pick-ups that looks like bone.  That's my scarred/calcified tendon.  It wasn't a matter of "if", it was a matter of "when".

That big hunk in the pick-ups that looks like bone. That’s my scarred/calcified/destroyed tendon. It wasn’t a matter of “if”, it was a matter of “when”.

So much to report, but too little time to get it all out there.  Here’s some highlights from around the Team:

Drew, Jon, Toni, and Deb did White Rim last week.  Look for Jon’s write up coming soon.

fat bike. skinny set up.  Check out the 2014 Team kit. Highlighter green and carbon watermark print.  Sexy.

fat bike. skinny set up. Check out the 2014 Team kit. Highlighter green and carbon watermark print. Sexy.

Alchemist Junior Team rocked Moab this past weekend as well.  They make the kit look so cool.

Max, Luke, and Ruthie stylin  the Team kit and rocking Moab.

Max, Luke, and Ruthie stylin the Team kit in Moab.  If you think they look amazing, you should see them ride.  These kids are already lapping us. 

Tim, South Korea’s cycling ambassador  and friend of Alchemist, sent this pic.  His HRR teammate went down to Cape Argas in South Africa to collect some hardware.

HRR beating up on the competition at Cape Argas

HRR beating up on the competition at Cape Argas

Better see some patients now.

 

 








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