Friday, November 18, 2011

Tweed 2012

This is your SAVE THE DATE notice for The Tweed Ride 2012!

September 15th, 2012 is our day… so tell your friends and family (at least the family that you like) that they need to change the dates of any weddings or parties that they have lined up… for that matter, they should hold off on planning for babies within a few days of our ride (note: this is more than 9 months warning, so they could take our ride into consideration).  I mean there aren’t many things that are more exciting than our Tweed Ride, so save the date!


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Wheels of Change – Sue Macy



Wheels of Change; How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom (With a Few Flat Tires Along the Way) by Sue Macy is published by a little known publishing company, National Geographic  (wait, maybe I’ve heard of it a time or two). While most of the readers of this blog probably haven’t  had the opportunity to take a 400 level class on Women in America Since 1870 taught by a PhD specializing in women’s sports history, if they have really followed this blog over the last year they will have already come across most of the revelations in this book. Now saying that, this would be a great book for anyone who is interested in bicycle history! Written mainly for the pre-teen and high school audience, the pictures and style should appeal to everyone even if it's just a refresher.  

 Denver, Colorado, circa 1905

We see old friends like Bloomer, Kopchovsky and Pope (that’s Albert Pope not “The Pope”) Macy covers both the early evolution of the bike, and the Woman’s Rights Movement. This bike also introduces us to many other great members of cycling past. There are great photos of rare bikes like a sidesaddle Penny-Farthing and African American cyclists of the time. This book also gathers together many great quotes. Including my favorite from Charlotte Smith (Brooklyn Eagle, August 20, 1896) “Many a girl has come to her ruin through a spin on a country road”; everyone in rural Northern Michigan knows all about the evil of a country road! And who can blame her or those of a similar mind for worrying about women once they started dressing like men! Oh my! Though I bet those souls are once again rolling over in their graves with the current bicycle chic movement.

 Lady on the right has a sidesaddle bike

Anyway! This is a great book that links the importance of the bicycle to what we consider the modern role of women in our society. It may soft peddle (pun intended) the role of the bicycle in general society, but that is not a detractor for what it offers. We strongly recommend this book.

Seersucker 2012


The Alpena Tweed and Bike Club is proud to announce that we will hold our first Seersucker Ride on June 16th, 2012. The ride will be from 3:30-5:30. We will be posting more details about where we are starting, and stops along the way in the near future, but the basic idea will be similar to our Tweed Rides.

                                                 
This will be a big bicycle weekend in Alpena as the League of Michigan Bicyclists will be holding their Sunrise Bicycle Tour June 14-17th in our area. So not only will we have all the bicycle lovers from our area, but also an influx of bike lovers from all over the state. Keep your eye on our blog or facebook page for updates on our Seersucker Ride, and checkout the League of Michigan Bicyclists site for more information about their ride, and bicycle advocacy.


"A three-day bicycle adventure showcasing the pristine natural beauty of northeast Michigan along the sun-kissed shores of Lake Huron. Each day will feature a different loop tour from Alpena. Highlights include Lake Huron, Wooden Boat Show, Presque Isle Lighthouses (Old and New), Shipwreck Tours and "Seersucker Ride." Join us as the people in Alpena roll out the welcome mat."



Monday, November 14, 2011

Fall Riding


Hopefully you haven’t put your bicycle (or bicycles if you are like me) away for the year. Mid-November is a wonderful time to go for a ride along the 45th parallel. The leaves have changed and mostly fallen, the air is crisp and the riding is great.  If you haven’t been out lately, it may be a time to go for a ride!







Saturday, November 12, 2011

Jour de Fete

As winter sets into Northern Michigan, one of the great things we can all do is watch bike-centric movies.  Now I know there are probably other things that you could be doing, but there aren’t many of them we can really talk about on this blog. I mean if the joke about NASCAR is “look, they’re taking another left!,” writing about riding a trainer or exercise bike would be “wow, their sweating in place!” So we will go with the movies! (Maybe you can park your trainer or exercise bike in front of the tv and be really cool)



The first movie is Jacques Tati’s 1948 Jour de Fete (or The Festival Day/The Big Day). It is a wonderful French comedy about a less than efficient French mailman, who during a Bastille Day celebration figures out that he and his bicycle peddling French counterparts are light years behind the US Postal Service.  Now this film is both black and white (mostly), and subtitled, but if you give this movie a chance you should realize it’s an absolute gem.  First, writer, director and star Jacques Tati is really a silent film master who just happens to be in a film with sound. With physicality, poise and a sense of wonder reminiscent of Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton, Tati’s bicycle is more of a costar than a prop. Tati, as Francois the postman, delivers a performance that mocks the importance of modernity in much the same way as Charlie Chaplin, the other silent film master did in such films as Modern Times.


Though there are many artistic things in this film such as camera work, use of limited color, sound, and narration that could be discussed, we will just dwell on the aspects that deal with the bicycle. There are the classic shticks of mechanical problems such as handle bar and tire twist, the perennial flat tire and trials and tribulations of its repairs. You have the armature out riding the racers in a similar fashion to the iconic scene my generations Pee-wee’s Big Adventure. A runaway bicycle, the humor of trying to learn how to improve bicycle handling skills, to the point that those around just laugh. All things you may see in part in other movies, but seldom as fresh or as funny as in this film.


Tati seems to love the bike in this movie. Though like many of us his character does go through a phase where efficiency and modernity do seem attractive, he still seems to care greatly for his old friend (and who wouldn’t care for a 1938 Peugeot). In the end its tradition and community (two things we like at Alpena Tweed and Bike Club) that are important.  Though I am glad Francois does not deliver my mail, I think he would deliver laughs to anyone who watches this movie.