Riding High
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Zurich Ironman 2008 - Hop, Step Leap
Yes, I agree. It is going to be awful. But the dice are cast, alea jacta est.

So better get ready and set to enjoy the challenge of my first full Ironman.

How did we get to this crazy decision in the first place. Here a quick review of the process.

In a way, it all began at the Sado 210km Round-the-Coast ride with the gang from Half-Fast Cycling. A superbly well-planned trip to the island - thanks to Kelly, Kaz and Magic Mike - and many minor adventures en route (rom finding the best source of carbos on the island, a donut shop, to a wild ride along the fog-bound ridges atop the island) helped all of us enjoy the event despite the monstrous storm conditions that persisted till mid-afternoon when the sun miraculously came out to warm-up the finish line and dry-out the soaked riders. My own event gave me a taste for speed and riding at the front of the pack - the short 80 km sprint to the first rest area on the north coast, with the official escort motorcycle as my guide. Cool, I finished with an average speed of 32km thanks to the strong tailwind coming home and the windless burst through the tunnel.

Fast forward to the next event on the calendar, my first go at the Nojiriko short-course triathlon. Only 3 weeks before the event, however, near disaster struck - in the form of a careless trucking driver running me over in morning rush-hour traffic along the Inokashira Doori. I went down hard on the pavement, but managed a catlike flip to land on my bike, bike flipping harmlessly. Net result: two severely bruised ribs but no need to call in the insurance people Sumie was not so lucky - ony 10 days later, she was hit by a careless motorcycle rider and suffered a black-out and bent bike frame. Enough to knock her out of Nojiriko.

We drove up in several cars with several first-time riders in Team Friend Leopard and had a quick training ride around the 15km lap around the lake. Next morning I braved the cold lake water and managed OK along the 1500 meter swim, got on the bike for a medium fast 45 km and struggled up the first half of the 16 km run, clutching my ribs, but managed the turn and eventually made it to the finish.

That got me motivated for my third go at the Sado International Triathlon. Training was mostly on the bike, three weekends in a row doing double loops on the Aoyama Seven-Hills course. Great, good for the lungs and the legs.

That brought us to Sado where I swam a good 2000 open-ocean leg, swimming wide to stay clear of the pack of zig-zagging freestylers, and got on the biek after a fast T1. Felt good to be well into the pack at that point, and the legs were feeling good. A headwind to the turn at Ryotsu where the find gradually moved aft as we hit the coast road. Passed numerous riders on the way to the hard uphill right at Ogi port, and a steady zig-zag climb up the dread Oginosaka. I did not look at the watch till nearly done with the bike, having kept my eye on the average speed instead. Three kph faster than last year, so I knew I was well positioned for a strong PB.

Another quick T2 to the run, where I soon passed Carbon Ken Aoyama and managed to get Kojima-san in his Leopard team jacket in sight. The halfway turn at 10k and a hint I was doing well from seeing Fabien not far ahead. Never caught Kojima-san and Ken came up from behind, but still a fine effort, breaking 6:30 the way I broke 7:00 last year.

So what did we do in the flush of satisfaction that comes from putting a major race behind us? One by one we got on the internet at the Niigata ferry landing and registered our names for Zurich.

So here we come. Details to follow.

Message from naruhodo1 at 10:47 AM KDT
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
HOLD THE PRESS - NEWS FLASH ON THE WIRES....

 Tokyo, JAPAN  (Cyclewire Intl.)

Sources in Tokyo tonight disclosed that despite rumors to the contrary, the design for the long-awaited Half-Fast Official Team Cycling Jersey is now completed and ready to order.

For details, please set your browser to the following URL: 

http://half-fast.hobby-site.com/jerseys/index.html 

Max 100 per customer.  Note: Some if not all of the profits will be donated to the Half-Fast Tire-Patch and Warm Beer Foundation. (A voice calls out from the middle distance: What profits?.

Here are some close up details of the new jersey design. Love that full-custom attention to detail and that customized detail itself. Note the TY Harbor beer can.

 



 


Message from naruhodo1 at 10:42 PM KDT
Updated: Wednesday, May 2, 2007 10:16 AM KDT
Maydays in May
Well, the pundits were only partly right. Mayday came around after a long three-day break which had balmy summer-like conditions and a spectacular thunderstorm on Saturday with huge temperature drops, massive bolts of lightning and pea-sized hailstones belting out of the sky like some biblical admonition. But Sunday and Monday were nice enough, and people went to the park in full force. 

Our neighborhood park with its two ponds and 2km jogging path is just right - it hardly draws any crowds as it is off the beaten track and just about everyone crams into Inokashira Park with its zoo and market stalls and street musicians. Lots of flower power out there, this season has defied the pundits, April was in fact cooler than average, which kept the floral displays at just the right note of splendor. 

Enjoy.
 

                             
Link to Photo Album Many Maydays These Days  




Message from naruhodo1 at 11:12 AM KDT
Updated: Tuesday, May 1, 2007 4:14 PM KDT
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Hurrah! Tencho wins a ticket to the Hawaii World Championships!


News Flash from Tempe, AZ:

Noted Japanese triathlete Shoji Nakano, a bike-shop owner from Sugiinami-ku in Tokyo, showed his outstanding speed over the challenging course of the Arizona Ironman held on April 15th to win his age-groiup and earn a berth in Hawaii.

Nakano, a perennial podium finisher at the Asia-Pacific Triathlon Championships in recent years, won his age group in Arizona by a commanding one hour over his nearest competitor

Winning the age group earned Nakano his slot at the Ironman World Championships, held every year in Hawaii. In 2006, he won his age group at Ironman New Zealand, a storm-plagued race where the swim leg had to be abandoned. The race was held on Nakano's 65th birthday, March 3, 2006.

Friends and teammates in Tokyo were thrilled to hear of their coach and mentor's success in Tempe. "He's eccentric but iincredibly determined," said one of his neighbors, the owner of a dry-cleaning shop a block down from Nakano's Friend Shokai shop. "He's just an amazing athlete," said Peter Fuchs, a member of Nakano's Leopard Triathlon Team since 2002.



 

Sumie Kawakami, 43, of nearby Musashino City, a western suburb of Tokyo, finished her 3rd official Ironman event with a time of 14:03. "That was the toughest race I've ever done," Kawakami said in an email the evening of the race. "The wind in the desert and dry weather just killed me on the bike," she said, referring to the demanding conditions in the hot Arizona desert near Phoenix.

Members of the Leopard Triathlon team at the Nojiriko Triathlon, July 2, 2006. Nakano is third from the left, Kawakami to his right. She won her age group at Nojiriko. Nakano had to retire with a puncture, his first DNF in 25 years of racing.

Final Race Results:

Bib: 1020 Total time: 13:18:49 Name; NAKANO, SHOJI SUGINAMI WAR TO JPN Age group rank:  1/8 M65-69 2010 Swim rank: 1 1119 Swim time: 1:17:09 T1: 7:58 Bike rank: 1 1050 Bike time: 6:33:05 T2: 5:45 Run rank: 1 1108 Run time: 5:14:54

Bib: 1272 Total time: 14:03:18 Name: KAWAKAMI, SUMIE MUSASHINO TOKYO JPN Age group rank: 35/73 W40-44 2358 Swim rank; 66 1895 Swim time: 1:39:20 T1: 8:37 Bike rank: 39 1495 Bike time: 7:10:34 T2: 7:39 Run rank: 24 890 Run time: 4:57:11

Said recently re-elected Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara in an imaginary press release: "I am proud of these outstanding Tokyo athletes who show great guts and determination at major international sporting events like the Arizona Ironman. We welcome them home with pride and gratitude and hope to host the first ever Tokyo Ironman in 2009."


Message from naruhodo1 at 10:55 AM KDT
Updated: Wednesday, May 2, 2007 10:27 AM KDT
Monday, April 16, 2007
Haneda: Fast Saturday ride - 15 riders take the challenge

Mike has plotted the Haneda route - just a quick 30km run down the Tokyo harborside.

Lots of green in surprising places. The park at the end - overlooking the busy harbor with planes dropping in from above just across from the Haneda runway. Warm but windy. A few flat tires coming and going - the pathways are not swept and full of twigs and road rubbish.

But worth the run out and lunch at TY Harbor brew-pub where our friend Koichi Hama designed the logo.




Good nama, good burgers, and great chili.



Here is the map. (www.bikely.com for those so inclined. )

On the way back, close to Tokyo Tower, John and I found an oddly striking flower garden, at the base of a Sumitomo Fudosan office building. Nice - like Boso or Hokkaido.








Message from naruhodo1 at 11:38 PM KDT
Updated: Monday, April 16, 2007 11:45 PM KDT
Omedeto Gozaimasu Ironmen and women: They both made good time

Wow. Arizona IM is now history. Men's winner crossed the line in 8:21 not the fastest ever but still absolute extraordinary.

My teammates and very special friends, Tencho and Sumie, did well too.

Here are the official results.

 






Message from naruhodo1 at 11:12 PM KDT
Updated: Monday, April 16, 2007 11:13 PM KDT
Sunday, April 8, 2007
By grit and determination: AZ Ironman and TYO Man of Irony


There is something epic in this era of "been there, done that" anomie about the Ironman and the thousands of extraordinary athletes who go out there and test their stamina and willpower to the utmost.



Sure, at the front are the pros, heralded by sponsors, organizers, and specialist magazine editors, but still largely unknown in the world of global megasports. No one in triathlon like Red Sox Superstar Dice-K Matzuzaka certainly - who by the way, like Ichiro and Matsui, is an astonishing athlete who like his senpai has done as much as anyone over the past 60-odd years to narrow the great divide of mutual misunderstanding between America and Japan. (For more on which I highly recommend the books of talented author and sportswriter Bob Whiting (see interview in Metropolis here.)

But I digress as usual.

Next Sunday, Sumie and her coach and mentor, Nakano Shoji (aka Tencho, or Store Master) are going for the guts and glory at the Arizona Ironman. Run, Bike, Swim. It is all being held at Tempe on the outskirts of Phoenix, and the event will be more or less available in real time over the www.ironman.com website.

But by the same token, just for one more "Oh, Peter, gag me with that politics stuff - no more of that guff,  please spare us and tell us more about riding bikes in Japan, OK?" installment in my Tokyo election race saga (Today, btw, is Easter Sunday in certain Euro-centric countries around the world and election day here in Tokyo and other prefectures.

My point here is this. I am starting to warm to this guy.


         
Link to Photo Album Irony Man



Honestly, Shintaro Ishihara has served two nearly flawless terms and has rid the city of smog and has put it back on track to prosperity and a dynamic eruption of new and bold "only in Tokyo" architectural excess. More subways too, and some needed highway extensions. What can you say?

Still to come. Tokyo Olympic bid for 2016 (chances SLIM to be generous), Odaiba or Miyakejima Casino (chances equally slim) and other promises.

The man gets things done. My hat is doffed out of genuine respect. He is a literary man who sometimes misinterprets Dickens but again, he is a cultured man of taste and, let me emphasize AND a sailor too. (For more on sailing in Japanese waters, see my other site here.)

Here are his election promises from his manifesto. They are roadmaps - like the ones for the Phoenix Ironman swim, bike and run courses. Take a look and refer back to this site in April 2010 when the next election comes around for Governor of this Sprawling Megaton-opolis.

Cheers. Rant over and done with. Let's really cheer for the Arizona Ironmen and Ironchicks who are going to be out there next weekend.


 

 




Message from naruhodo1 at 1:36 PM KDT
Updated: Friday, April 13, 2007 10:33 AM KDT
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
OK. I am listening to Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd on "Jazz Samba" (Verve 1962)

 

Yes. That is an incredible album. On classic 12-inch vinyl LP. VINYL? Are you serious Peter, that is raw non-renewable petroleum stock!!! Shock and awe. But it is from 1962 and I am preserving not only the raw material but also the MUSIC itself. Getz and Byrd are awesome, and also FOR ALL YOU iPod and CD swingers. Classic 33rpm vinyl has MORE MUSIC DETAIL than any CD, betcha. Play it on a Time Domain Yoshii 9 set of Minimalist Audio Engine speakers and amp if you don't believe me. And if you REALLY DON'T believe me, bet me. Bet me a bottle of pink Dom Perignon 1995.  You will enjoy losing the bet. This sound fidelity is INCREDIBLE.

And yet here I am, sipping on Bushman's Gully 2004 Cab Sauvignon (bought at Wal-Mart Japan, nasty)  and lo and behold, this comes over the transom. An ALL-POINTS BULLETIN from Major Domo Don Morton at Half-Fast Headquarters. 

What can I do but run it past you all. April 4th by the way is TOMORROW

From Don: Just a reminder that Wednesday, April 4th is our monthly Half-Fast meeting at The Pink Cow (map at: www.thepinkcow.com )
 
Lots of stuff gong on. Mike will offer a presentation about the use of GPS in the pursuit of better biking. How to use a GPS device, how to interface with your computer, GoogleEarth, etc. And lots of other nifty tech stuff. This technology can of course be used in many sports — sailing, hiking, curling, etc.
 
And we will choose from a staggering number of entries for the Half-Fast team jersey (4, 3 of them Mike’s).
 
Those sado-masochists going to Sado in a few weeks are advised to attend, as Kelly and Kaz will be laying out final plans for transportation, lodging, etc.
 
Outstanding pair of cherry blossom rides this weekend. I’m attaching an absolutely great shot of most of us on Sunday that you’re really going to like.
 
And we’ll talk about some upcoming rides in the next few weeks and months (Izu, Miura, Oshima).
 
Starts around 8, but you can get there early to chow down and quaff a few ales.
 
Ja mata.
 
The Don
 090-5813-6721




Message from naruhodo1 at 12:39 AM KDT
Updated: Wednesday, April 4, 2007 12:50 AM KDT
Sunday, April 1, 2007
Bacchanalian ballistic bloom and now .... falling like snowflakes

 

April 1, 2007 - Tokyo

Perfect Sunday weather - warm in the morning, cool in the afternoon brought an estimated 18 million people outdoors today.

The reason?

Cherry blossoms.



 

Tomorrow, the new fiscal year and the new school year start and milllions of students will start new classes, or recent college and HS graduates, new jobs.

The obverse face of Samurai Socialsm is "Club Capitalism." On our 50km training ride we finished at the Yomiuri Gold Club and saw dozens of black chauffer driven limos full of .... capitalist captains and club members. It is the other PERFECT metaphor for the governance of this country.

And you know. NO ONE SEEMS TO MIND.


                 
Link to Photo Album Ballistic Blossoms

 

 


Message from naruhodo1 at 10:00 PM KDT
Updated: Monday, April 2, 2007 12:26 PM KDT
Friday, March 30, 2007
This is STILL a bike-site, so here is some useful info on Tokyo Jitensha-jin Magazine
 



Don't despair the lack of infrastructure spending on better bike-paths and smoother riverine byways and backroads. Despite the ponderous plodding of "Samurai Socialism" as the main organizational princliple of the state since Yoshida Shigeru sat down with his mentors from SCAP and decided the best way to fight the scourge of REAL socialism would be to merge the Liberal and Democratic parties of yore, and lo and behold create a hitherto logically implausible mashup of samurai plus socialism  this place is NOT going to become a Sweden or Denmark any time soon. 
 
The real architect of Sammy-Soc, of course, was none other than Nobu Kishi, who was given a Canada-sized laboratory called Manchuria for his experiment in the 30s but didn't really do all that well until Doug MacArthur unlocked his padded cell door at Sugamo and told him, "if you say you are sorry, we'll give you another chance," which of course they did, and he did. Ipso Facto. Too bad his photogenic grandson is incapable of uttering the word sorry (maybe he should go back and read Kishi's memoirs), but mea culpa has never been a prominent character trait for people of his ilk. People who confuse stature with posture and status with respect.

But I digress.
 
For those with some command of Japanese, there is a nifty source of info on bike ships around town, bike paths, daytrips, detailed maps, and much other USEFUL information in the current issue of TOKYO JITENSHA-JIN magazine. Granted most of this knowledge is shared by Half-Fast riders as a group knowledge base, but sometimes it is easier to have it all between the covers of one magazine.
 
Here are some excerpts - the rather lame looking cover should not discourage you, a route map from Kasai Rinkai up the Arakawa, another version of the popular Half-Fast Miura Peninsula trip, and a page on what seems to be the consensus Best Bike Shop for Roadies in central Tokyo, Narushima Friend.
 

           
Link to Photo Album JitenshaJin  
 
(Click on the thumbnails above - you can then click enlarge and see large size scanned pages which can be printed with the maps etc. Ed) 

Message from naruhodo1 at 12:58 PM KDT
Updated: Friday, March 30, 2007 1:01 PM KDT
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Still Early Days (or The Man Who Would Be King Part 3)

 

The Meterological Agency has had the makings of its Anno Horribile so far in 2007 with nine months left to go, at least half of those promising to be full of monsoon rains or autumn typhoons.

They really blew their luck on sakura season as the evidence below will demonstrate. OK, so they only check a handful of blossoms in their own Agency garden and were able to find a couple that stood in a sunny, warm, protected nook of the garden to be able to announce they were within their plus minus 2 day reference zone - having had to set their early dire predictions back by at least a week.

But let this forecaster boldly state: It is STIL EARLY DAYS for the sakura, for the future, and for the supine voters of Tokyo. There is a certain - pick the one that does not belong in this series - IQ test mentality to this set of photos, but don't mind that. It is Springtime in jolly Tokyo and the man at the helm of this great sprawling metroscopolis wants to serve another term so that he can jet-set around the planet with his troublesome brood of boys. The voters don't seem to mind, and the Opposition parties don't seem to know their way out of a paper bag. Credible opposition? Robert Mugabe has more on a bad hair day. 

But our Guv'na has lived up to at least a handful of his promises - those that he made in person to the Foreign Correspondents Club a few years back when a comedian for governor was already passe and a well-selling author and provocateur with rightwing leanings seemed a better bet. As governor, Shintara Ishihara has delivered on his pledge to reduce the noxious soot and smoke from previously unregulated diesel trucks. Dandy indeed, there is MUCH less soot in the air and on the ground, and I raise my cap in honest thanks.

The other promises - to make life better for foreigners and to reduce the infestation of crows I would have to say are somewhat moot. Foreigners who enjoy the blessings of good fortune and well-stocked expense accounts have definitely found the massive investment in new hotels, offics, mueums and restaurants a plus. For the less wealthy, not much has happened though one could say the new subways do help people get to work faster and home sooner.  But the reality is that most Tokyoites are like most Moscowites - they prefer stability to transparency, efficiency to honesty, and a loaf of bread and a slab of bacon for the soup. The political clubs will have their way anyway, so why not the one who can keep the entire mechanism of governance cllicking over smoothly like a well-oiled 12-cylinder Maybach. Enjoy your Hanami folks.






Message from naruhodo1 at 6:41 PM KDT
Updated: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 11:17 PM KDT
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Man on the Moon, Boy on a Broom: The remarkable truth can now be told
What a marvelous century it was, the 20th Century. 

Some wanted desperately to put a man on the moon

Others wanted equally fervently to put a boy on the throne

Well, as UFO watchers would like to believe - fact IS stranger than fiction. It has just been revealed to this investigator of uncommon events that it IS TRUE. Osamu Tezuka's dream has finally been made into a living breathing reality. There was talk years ago that biologists at the University of Hiroshima had successfully cloned a cow, not Polly but Pekochan. Seven stomachs make cow-cloning harder than human-cloning so work went on, apparently so far unsuccessfully. 

However at rival Yamaguchi University, slaving for decades in virtual anonymity, researchers finally managed to perfect the feat of robotic engineering remarkably similar to Osamu Tezuka's beloved story from the 1950s manga called Tetsuwan Atom, or Astro-Boy to Western audiences. They have done a magnificent job, the boyish features and the stern determination to fight evil shines brightly. What a triumph. 
 
These clips show the until-now previously undisclosed facts, like the X-Files, it can now be shown. Japanese technology is connected to its future and its past.
 


 

 

  



Message from naruhodo1 at 8:05 PM KDT
Updated: Sunday, March 25, 2007 9:31 PM KDT
A brief history of the world (of candy cameras and mobile phones)

 

I have a confession to make (several dozen, but let's focus on just one for now)

All the photos posted on this site - unless taken from websites - no let's make that unless "borrowed" from other websites (I try to always give credit) are snapshots taken with a now bruised and banged up Vodafone G3 cell phone - an aging model that predates the acquisition of Vodafone KK by Masa Son and SoftBank.


But rummaging around a bit, I realized that this would be about the tenth mobile phone handset I have owned in Japan. Like most denizens of this "kohyou-hatsu-bai-chu" inflamed consumer culture (it means, "brand new, so get one of these, it's the hottest thing on the block" I have continued to be sucked into the feature-race for more things, some useful others not, that the industry engineers are cramming into these little gizmos. 

Suffice it to say, my red Toshiba Voda is sadly out of date. But it works, and it takes fine pictures with only a 1.2 megabit camera lens. Dodgy in low-light situations but excels in dwindling light, such as dusk dawn or shadow. It has a great eye for red which is great in this land of vermillion shrines (more on which a few posts back), and does OK too with the rest of the palate, make that palette - but tends to oversoak the shots in high intensity sunlight and sharp contrast - daytime summer light. 

I have my eyes on a new DoCoMo SH703tv model that comes with digital TV, GPS mapping, and the SUICA digital wallet that now allows automatic recharging on train and bus passes. All I hope for now is an on-bike display and an on-bike dynamo to charge this thing while I ride. Not a handicap, and training tool. Easy to remove for races.

Which reminds me: Please have a look at this great new gizmo, invented by some aerospace engineers. It is an accelerometer that essentially serves as a power-meter but WITHOUT having to install extra sensors (Polar) new cranks (STM) or new bottom-brackets (Ergomo). I think it is great EVEN THOUGH power-metering is a delicate art, boy those graphs are ALL OVER THE PLACE.



 

 

 

Nonetheless I urge a look see. Combine THAT with a camera and we are off to the races. Half-distance Ironman is my self-flaggelation of choice (officially known in the medical profession as Ironman 70.3 see website here).

 

 


Message from naruhodo1 at 12:29 PM KDT
Updated: Sunday, March 25, 2007 1:19 PM KDT
Saturday, March 24, 2007
OK. You've seen Anthony Hopkins in the Fastest Indian. Here is your shot at glory

 

Hopkins was magnificent. And grandly overweight. Hardly fit the cowling of the World's Fastest Indian. (See the Sony Pictures Japan website for more info on this quirky but ultimately inspirational real-life adventure story.)

But we don't have to go to Bonneville to enjoy a real modern-day challenge. A boat-ride yes, but not from Newzee to Long Beach washing dishes and fending off the "sailors" just a quick hop from Niigata to Sado.

Why not, let's try it, the oral fixatives would immediately say. (Thanks Sigmund.)

Why on earth should we, the anal retentives would  no doubt respond.  Choose your  own hang-up but hey, islands don't grow on trees, they come attached to tectonic plates.

Let me say this though. Sado is WONDERFUL. I say that from experience, or more accurately "half"an experience. Having done the Sado International Triathlon B Race twice. Or maybe two halves do add up to one?

Make up your own mind. Many Half-Fast racers and touring types are doing this. Why aren' you? Whichever end of the alimentary canal, Sado is worth it. (Fondness for sea-food highly recommended though. Ed)

As always, your faithful correspondent, slowly coming back to his sense. Quo usque tandem abutere, Peter, patienta nostra, the Senator might have said.  Il Platonibus ultre sanitas ventorum, hoc et propter dictatis. 

Tried to post a downloadable PDF copy, but no go on this web-builder set-up. 

Message from naruhodo1 at 11:06 PM KDT
Updated: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:08 PM KDT
Solo Contendere: A couple of roadtrips and now the test question ...

 

Essay Question 3b. Compare and Contrast. These are two locations in Tokyo that are within easy reach of moderately fit riders. Both were done on solo rides by your humble observant in the past several months. Note one is near the water, and the other is near the water. So pray tell what is the difference?

Hint: One is near the end of the passable roadway at the Tama, the other near the end of the passable roadway at Odaiba. Why does one look so much more inviting than the other? Answers to the essay question should be sent to peter@naruhodo1.com and the best essay will receive either or both of a free meal of yakisoba and drinks at Odaiba or onigiri and candy bars at the Tama. Kirin optional.




 


Message from naruhodo1 at 8:57 PM KDT
Updated: Tuesday, April 3, 2007 3:58 PM KDT
OK racing drivers - get ready for a good one: NOJIRIKO 2007

 

I forgot to file my registration on time for the 2006 Nojiriko triathlon but was so taken by the weather, the location and the short course dynamics, that I ended up going along just to cheer. Took my Specialized MTB instead of the Leopard road bike which was both a plus and a minus. Easy on the hills lousy when i got a flat and those MTB tubeless tire patches proved impossible. We were able to hitch a ride to the station from the middle of nowhere, god bless that kindly woman with the little van.

Anyway, Nojiriko is a pearl of a little lake in the Nagano and Niigata northlands, a favoriet of turn of the last century missionaries who came there to remember New England and escape the sultry heat of Edo. The race is a lake swim, a 4 lap ride and a tough 16km run. Not standard at all - for reasons I fail to understand, but the elite turn up nonetheless, and the Leopard team was there in good number as well. Irony strikes like cut glass: Our mentor and tencho, Shoji Nakano busted his spare tubular on practice day, and busted another in the race and had to retire - the FIRST TIME in 25 years that he was unable to finish a triathlon he had entered!!!

Here are just a handful of photos. I plan to go back in 2007 if I can find time. No aerobars allowed on the bike course, and odometers are mandatory. The minshuku with kayak school on the premises is NIRVANA. Spend an extra day up there - Monday after the race and SOOTHE YOUR SOUL. It is easy to ride back to Nagano City to catch the Shinkansen PROVIDED you bring a fix-it kit for flat tires. 

 






 


Message from naruhodo1 at 8:43 PM KDT
Updated: Saturday, March 24, 2007 9:09 PM KDT
Here is a man who may make the trains run on time!! Vote El Dee Pee.

Timid voice of little Taro Watanabe, age 8, saying: "But, Daddy, they already do."

In any case this a completely non-political digression about "making a beautiful country" out of innuendo, cliches and vague promises. Nothing political about that is there.

But in that soon-to-become beautiful country, I would humbly request some attention to the problem of INADEQUATE bike-paths, almost everywhere in the Kanto region, though to be quite honest, on the road down from Utsunomiya there are some patches of adequate bikeway, but interspersed as elsewhere by stretches that are - well, almost lethal

So for all the bluster and bravado, we would humbly request this maximum leader, the Il Duce of Denenchofu, the Beloved Father and Brightest Sun in the Sky to make A BIT MORE EFFORT to make roadways safer for the ultimate in eco-logical transport, the best man and Nature have ever devised, the modern bicycle. (Rah rah, huzzah huzzah!!)

Sermon finished, may the kami-gami and the nippon-no-shinbutsu bless you and have a safe ride home. Beware of mad dogs and cut glass. Urge all your officially registered Nipponjin friends to vole for the LDP. The nominal gratuity I accepted for making this blatant political commercial will go to a good cause I can assure you - an earth-friendly all-carbon Leopard team bike for yours truly to ride and you all to admire. Make mine a Macchia Velli please, hold the sugar.

And as blessed Spring and sakura appoach, DO remember to say a few prayers for the ghosts of Messrs Obuchi and Hashimoto who stepped in the path of the Juggernaut and got their softer parts squeezed in its treads. May they rest in peace and the bloody hand on the wheel remember to listen for those footsteps in the dark. As Dilbert might have said, "I am not anti-authoritarian, I am just anti-idiot." Justice will be served. I've got my own vision of beauty, rest assured. 



 


Message from naruhodo1 at 8:02 PM KDT
Updated: Wednesday, March 28, 2007 12:56 AM KDT
Friday, March 23, 2007
As JFK said in 1963 - Ich bin ein Berliner


OK.


So I  have become a bit of a boring evangelist on the subject of sustainability. A tree-hugger

But hey. I  ride bikes. I sail dinghies. I ski. I keep the car in the garage. I bring a shopping bag to the superidermarket. I rarely print to hard copy. I use the best dryer ever invented - the sun. I buy locally grown produce. I mail my 25 dollars to www.greenseat.com when I fly to offset the emisions.  I work for a high-tech venture developing really low-emissions solid-state LED lighting systems, some of which we want to give away, and co-producing a really cool conference on corporate sustainability design and planning. 

But enough preachiing. Those things just scratch the tip of the consumer lifestyle. I still make too much garbage, forget to turn off the appliances, buy bottled water from Seattle, and get the Asahi Shimbun with all those inserts

 I just want to show a couple of things they are doing over in Europe. We spent a week in Berlin with the kids and among many discoveries such as the fact the city has trees everywhere, beer stops everywhere, bicycle paths everywhere and curry wieners just about everywhere, they also have a couple of other urban innovations. Like Japan and other EU countries, the mailman always rings twice - haha, no he rides his bike, this one with a little bit of energy boost below the saddle-bags, ie. battery power. The other is the rent-a-bike on-the-spot with your credit card system. Good ideas, though somewhat idealistic. In Amsterdam many of the "free" bikes end up in the canal. Another smart idea in Berlin (other than busting down the wall for good riddance) was the notion to use yellow on traffic lights AFTER RED not just before red. That allows drivers to slow but not stop as they approach, saving time and saving fuel and reducing smog from traffic jams and accidents. 

Viele danke. Ich bin auch ein Berliiner, one might be tempted to say.

A Freistadt like no other.

Your humble tourist, N. Cyclo und Pedia




Message from naruhodo1 at 3:41 PM KDT
Updated: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:11 PM KDT
Fun things to do at New Year's in Japan (or anytime)

 



Some invitations are hard to refuse

So when our triathlon mentor, coach and all-around bicycle professional Shoji Nakano asked if I wanted to join the team for the annual Oshogatsu ride up to the lighthouse at Cape Choshi at the easternmost tip of Japan to see the first sunrise of 2007, I knew the answer would be - yes, what kind of saddle salve do you recommend for the butt-blisters etc. 

145 kilometers each way. Up before dawn for roll-call in Ogikubo around 4:30am. A short wait at Boeicho for one member of the party who can't find us. A fantastic ride across Tokyo on empty streets, past the Sumida and the Arakawa into Chiba and from there on almost non-stop to Choshi, just a nice breakfast stop along the way. 

We hit the lighthouse around noon and settle in for a nice slow seafood lunch. From there just 10km to the beachside minshuku where Nakano-san and his Leopard team have come the past 20 odd years. We caught the last rays of the sunset and were up at 6:46 for the hinode next morning. A perfect red fireball rose over the sea this year unencumbered by clouds. We left around nine and reached Nakano Sakaue as the sunlight faded to dusk and were riding in the dark, one foot nearly lame, as we got back to Ogikubo.

Great fun. Of course. Just lucky those tires didn't pop en-route. 15 riders, we only had one puncture the whole 290km. It is amazing to realize that Narita Airport is only halfway there. Some pics of the occasion follow.

Your wry observer of Japanese holiday customs, P. Ta. San. 





Message from naruhodo1 at 3:06 PM KDT
Updated: Sunday, March 25, 2007 11:55 AM KDT
What some people refer to as "Useful Links" others as "FAQs"

Some of the more web-savvy Half-Fasters have joined your humble servant in the iconosphere with nifty little websites that provide links to yet other diligent HTML authors and authorettes. 

Here is one that I can easily recommend in part because it is "part of the Half-Assed (oops Freudian slip) Family of Websites" so without further to-do, ado, or pooh-pooh, here is the link: 

 
Of particular value is the link to Bikely dot com which has a world full of interesting bike routes dutifully mapped and GPSed by their respective authors, and Mike has done a great job of posting some nifty treks in and around Tokyo.With hats off and kudos, here is the site you should try  asap. Talk to Mike at some point about the finer points of selecting a bike-friendly GPS unit.
 
                          http://www.bikely.com/listpaths/srchkey/half-fast/country/122
 
And because I couldn't resist here is another of those amazingly photogenic group portraits - no they DON'T ALWAYS LOOK ALIKE, there are SUBTLE differences in the weather, in the glorious outfits, in the bikes and so on. Nonetheless, as boring as bettle dung to some observers, I will admit.
 
Your humble Vodafone subscriber - Erich Zweisichlenberg 
 


 



Message from naruhodo1 at 2:00 PM KDT
Updated: Friday, March 23, 2007 2:16 PM KDT

Newer | Latest | Older

« March 2010 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31