Mountain

Moab Thaw Kicks Off 2015 Season

by editors on February 26, 2015

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One of our favorite Moab bike shops, Poison Spyder Bicycles, is the title sponsor of Moab Thaw 2015. What is Thaw? It’s an early spring celebration to kick off another season of Moab mountain biking and it goes down March 6- 8, 2015.

Every year, we get together and shake the cold with a fun mountain biking event we call “Thaw”. Join us for rides, skills clinics, food, demos and of course parties! . . . Thaw is a great way to shake off winter and get your legs moving again with fun, friends, and great Moab riding.

The event features meet-ups, rides, parties, and demo ops of the latest gear from Shimano, Pivot, Ibis, Niner, Trek, SRAM, Kona and many more. Click here for the full schedule.

With nighttime lows for the weekend scheduled to be in the low 20s to 30s and highs during the days in 40s we’re not sure that “thaw” is the right word . But one thing is for certain — on this trip you won’t have another near death heat stroke experience on the Moab Brand Trails.

For all the details call (800) 635-1792 or just click the link.

[Link: Moab Thaw]

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Untapped: Pure Maple Syrup Energy

by editors on February 17, 2015

The logic makes sense: if you’re just going to squeeze some goo into your mouth, why not squeeze some 100 percent pure Vermont Maple Syrup in? It’s got all the goods, tastes great, and grows in trees. And Ted King backs it, too. Untapped packages just that product. Click the link for more info.

[Link: Untapped]

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SoCal’s Quick N’ Dirty Kicks Off Feb 22

by editors on February 13, 2015

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In SoCal and want to race your MTB next week (February 22, 2015)? The Quick n Dirty Series is the best fun race in Southern California. Here’s what’s up:

We’re just a little over a week away to the 2015 Quick n’ Dirty season and couldn’t be more excited to bring you a whole year’s worth of great racing at wonderful venues. . . . Our inaugural event this season will be held at historic Balboa Park just outside of downtown San Diego on Sunday February 22 and promises to give the racers a challenging, fun course that will even include racing across the famous Balboa Park velodrome. Racers of all ages and abilities are encouraged to come out and race with us and we’ll even be kicking off the day with a kids race! It’s fun for the whole family!

Truth. Click the link for more info.

[Link: Quick n Dirty]

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Yes, We Want To Ride The PCT

by editors on January 21, 2015

Pctslides

We firmly believe that any trail open to horses should be open to mountain bikes. Period. And we’re sick of elitist equestrian interests trying to keep these trails closed to bikes. The good news is we’re not alone when it comes to the world famous Pacific Crest Trail, according to a story in the Reno Gazette-Journal.

The Pacific Crest Trail Reassessment Initiative [wants] to reverse decades of U.S. Forest Service policy that limits the high-elevation trail to hiking and equestrian use. They’re particularly interested in sections of trail that could be ridden as links between myriad biking trail networks throughout the Sierra Nevada.

We couldn’t agree more. If you’re interested in helping to open more wilderness trails to mountain biking (especially in the west) then please click the link for more info.

[Link: Sharing the PCT via Reno Gazette-Journal]

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Alcohol Is Performance Poison

by editors on January 20, 2015

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According to a study in Northwestern Medicine people tend to drink more alcohol on the days they’ve exercised, and according to a story Outsideonline.com that’s a bad thing. In fact, alcohol is a bad thing for athletes all the way around.

If you still think a post-race beer isn’t a bad idea, consider this: alcohol interferes with your muscles’ post-workout rebuilding process by reducing protein synthesis. “So not only does alcohol interfere with recovery of muscle damage and injury,” says Barnes, “it also reduces the processes responsible for building muscle.”

Beer works great for getting you fat and keeping you on the couch. For anything else, there’s water. Click the link for even more reasons why.

[Link: OutsideOnline.com]

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If You Must Get Fat Pivot Has The Bike

by editors on January 13, 2015

Les Morefat

We’d never get fat, but if we did we have to admit that we’d roll a Pivot LES Fat because it looks like the most badass hardtail fat bike we’ve ever seen.

The LES Fat is RockShox Bluto compatible and includes a Pivot designed carbon fork with 150mm dropout spacing – one wheelset will work with both options. 2x and 1x gearing compatibility makes the LES Fat an ideal choice in any terrain, and the LES Fat rear spacing is 197mm with an ergo-friendly low Q-factor design when built with the Pivot/E-Thirteen co-designed fat bike crankset. The Pivot Cable Port System makes internal routing simple to install and maintain via large, easy to access ports and interchangeable covers. Easily switch between a variety of cable routing options for the cleanest installation. Additional details include integrated rear rack mounts, internal dropper post routing and 3 water bottle mounts – making the LES Fat the perfect choice for any big tire adventure.

And to see what’s possible on the LES Fat, click here for a video demo from Aaron Chase. For the official word from Pivot, please follow the jump. [click to continue…]

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Cyclepassion Calendar Works Up A Sweat

by editors on December 18, 2014

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Pivot Mach 429SL Lightens Up

by editors on December 12, 2014

Pivot 429 2015
Pivot’s full suspension cross country bike the Mach 429 just keeps getting better and better. The latest version (Mach29SL) is half a pound lighter and features Shimano Di2 compatibility. But there’s more:

Pivot has dropped over 226g via the use of leading-edge carbon fiber and our proprietary hollow-core, internal-molding process with optimized composite materials and lay-up structure, making the Mach 429SL the lightest, stiffest 29er with the best power transfer available. . . The Pivot Mach 429SL Carbon is only the second fully Di2 integrated mountain bike (the first is Pivot’s Mach 4 Carbon). Featuring our innovative Cable Port System, internal routing is easy to install and maintain with large, easy-to-access ports and interchangeable covers for the cleanest installation of wires, batteries and cables.

We’re not going to argue. For more info (and photos) follow the jump.

[click to continue…]

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Revenge of the Curly Wurly Bars

by editors on December 10, 2014

This makes about as much sense as most cross videos. But yeah, Chris Akrigg is pretty good on a bike and could probably do just as well on a kid’s bike with training wheels. There, we just put it out for his next challenge. Training wheel cross? You listening Mr. Akrigg?

[Link via Vital MTB]

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Roll All Day With Perfect Bar

by editors on December 10, 2014

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While some soft drink companies may want you to think differently, all athletes know that you’re only as good as the food you put in your body. Next time you head out for an all-day roll, try slipping a Perfect Bar in your pocket. The all-natural, gluten free, and non-GMO snack bars are loaded with good stuff without a single bit of refined sugar. It’s a difference you’ll noticed from the first bite.

The bars are available in seven flavors including: lite cranberry crunch, lite almond acai, carob chip, fruit and nut, peanut butter, almond butter, and vegan almond coconut. And, while each has a slightly different flavor profile with the exception of the lite flavors, all of them pack in about 300 calories. The aforementioned lite cranberry crunch and lite almond acai use puffed crisp rice to keep the calorie count in the 200 range. In addition, more than twenty superfoods such as kale, spinach, celery and others are hiding inside the bar in a powdered form.

With all that inside, it’d be easy for the bars to taste like a dirty CX racer smells, but luckily they don’t. Instead, the bars taste like fresh peanut butter or almond butter mixed with a little honey and milk—because aside from all those ground up superfoods that’s basically what they are. Though we would have liked to see one or two flavors of the bars sporting a influx of oats for a slower-release of carbohydrates on a sustained effort, for the most part the Perfect Bar really was just that. Sure they seem simple, but after a few weeks of eating a Perfect Bar for lunch you’ll be hard pressed to go back to any pre-packaged energy bar that you’ve eaten in the past. You can find them online for about $20 for a box of 8 (or 20 bite-sized minis) at shop.perfectbar.com or in the refrigerated aisle of your local health food grocer (and occasionally even Costco).

[Link: Perfect Bar]

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