Archive for the ‘Cascade Presentation Series’ Category

The Way Bobby Sees It

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011 by

The Way Bobby Sees It
Friday, July 15, 7 p.m.
REI – Seattle store

Bobby McMullen is a legally blind downhill mountain bike racer. He has a guide who rides in front of him to shout out turns and obstacles, and from what I’ve heard from people who have ridden with him he’s not only an incredibly talented rider, but more aggressive than many who have the benefit of seeing the obstacles coming up on them.

Bobby lives in California and will be in town on Friday, July 15 on his way up to Crankworx, so this is is a pretty rare opportunity to meet him in person. We’ll also be showing a film about Bobby’s preparation for and competition in the 2007 Downieville Classic Mountain Bike Race, a 17-mile course said to be the country’s most challenging downhill race.

We’re putting this on in partnership with Outdoors for All and Evergreen Mountain Bike Alliance. Let me know if you’d like more info. What this guy does is so incredible that I can’t imagine anyone who shows up not being completely amazed by it. People can pre-purchase tickets online at Brown Paper Tickets.

With My Own Two Wheels at REI tonight

Thursday, June 16th, 2011 by

Thursday, June 16, 7 p.m.
Doors open at 6:15 p.m.
REI Seattle, 222 Yale Ave. N

Tickets are available in advance through
Brown Paper Tickets
Cascade members: $5
General public: $7

Looking for something fun to do tonight? Come check out With My Own Two Wheels at REI Seattle. This incredible documentary follows five stories of people around the world whose lives have been changed through their relationship with the bicycle. Curious about what to expect? Check out the trailer and watch an award winning short featuring Bharati, one of the characters in the full-length film. If you love your bike and what to learn more about how it can change a life, don’t miss this film!

With My Own Two Wheels Trailer from Jacob SB on Vimeo.

Cycling the monster climbs of the Eastern Sierra

Friday, January 28th, 2011 by

Although the big climbs in France, Italy and Spain are on the hit lists for most avid cyclists, there is no need to go all the way to Europe to satisfy your urge to pedal uphill. We have comparable climbs right here in the United States!

The Owens Valley is a remarkable place in what feels like the middle of nowhere–east of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and west of the White Mountains, about 200 miles south of Reno and 270 miles north of Las Vegas. The valley floor is at about 4,000′ elevation with paved roads leading out of it that top out above 10,000′, surrounded by 14,000’+ peaks.

During late September 2010, High Performance Cycling Team co-managers Tom Meloy and David Longdon spent a week cycling “the best” of these roads, which can dish up more than 6,000′ of climbing on climbs up to 22 miles long.

These huge climbs start in a landscape dominated by sagebrush and expansive views and pass through the sub-alpine before finishing in rugged alpine country.

The big famous climbs in Europe are considered the benchmarks for comparison by most cyclists. But flying to Europe for a cycling trip is a relatively expensive and arduous adventure.

The massive climbs of the Eastern Sierras are comparable to the longest and hardest paved climbs in Europe. A simple road trip to this remote area provides a superb cycling vacation without the hassle of taking your bike apart and flying overseas. The cost is quite reasonable and you don’t have to endure a personal TSA pat down. Food and lodging are inexpensive in the small remote towns of the Eastern Sierras.

This presentation will feature photos and video of these climbs, as well as a discussion of how the Eastern Sierra climbs compare to the famous hard climbs of the Tour de France and Giro de Italia.

How hard are the Eastern Sierra climbs? Plenty hard! As a matter of fact, we feel that several of these climbs are harder than anything Europe can throw at you. Tom and David will show you why.

Cascade Presents:
Cycling the Monster Climbs of the Eastern Sierra

with David Longdon and Tom Meloy
Tuesday, Feb. 8, 7 p.m.
REI Seattle

Curious about riding with the High Performance Cycling group? Come to the season kick-off, on Saturday, Feb. 8 at Cycle U in West Seattle.

Any port in a storm

Thursday, January 6th, 2011 by

Amazing, scenic, low-trafficked roads. Vineyards as far as the eye can see. Wild, dramatic coastline and glacial valleys. Ancient cities paved in cobblestone.

All of the above packed into a country the size of Indiana. Which is why Willie Weir and wife Kat Marriner cycled across that country not once, but six times.

Sound like a place you’d like to tour by bicycle?

Then you’d be booking a ticket to Portugal. But first, you should attend Willie Weir’s upcoming presentation at the Seattle REI—Any Port in a Storm: Cycling and Wild Camping Through Portugal.

In crisscrossing this bicycle-friendly country, Willie and Kat consumed large quantities of port, wine and cheese, and lived to tell the tale. And they didn’t break the bank either. Well, they dented it a bit, but compared to any other European adventure, it was a steal.

And it wasn’t just touristy bits. They were accosted by a herd of sheep, frightened out of their minds by a still unknown beast and almost blown off a dune into the Atlantic.

But even if you never plan to set foot (or tire) in Portugal, you’ll want to come out and be entertained and inspired by the stunning images and storytelling of the man that many people assume hasn’t worked a day in his life.

So grab your kids and your armchair travel-loving uncle. Get to REI early and reserve a seat.

CASCADE PRESENTS:

Any Port in a Storm:
Cycling and Wild Camping Through Portugal with Willie Weir

Tuesday, Jan. 11, 7 p.m.
Doors open at 6:30 p.m.
REI Seattle, 222 Yale Ave N
Member tickets: $5
Non-member tickets: $7
Buy tickets online

Wine connection

Monday, December 13th, 2010 by

This post, written by Willie Weir, first appeared on his blog, Yellow Tent Adventures, in Oct. 2010, and also on KUOW. We publish it here as a sort of ‘wine tasting.’ Take a moment to drink in this colorful story of northern Portugal, the wine of the people, and the world’s single best grape. Then join Cascade at the Seattle Flagship REI on Jan. 11, 2011 at 7 p.m., where Willie will further regale us with stories about bike travels through Portugal with his wife Kat this year.

A bottle of wine.

We go to the store. We peruse the shelves. Check out the variety, the vintage, the price. We buy it. We open it. We drink it.

Our time in northern Portugal has changed that. There is a connection to the contents of that bottle that will ever change how we experience it.

Late one evening high above the Douro River a voice called out. It was hard to find the person attached to that voice amongst the vast rows of grapes. But a cap and a smile and a wave drew our attention to an old man and a little black dog. 

Within minutes he had clipped off bunches of no less than seven varieties of grapes and displayed them for us to try. He was giddy with excitement over sharing his harvest with two cycling strangers. Tiny almost clear grapes. Light green grapes the size of your thumb. Others the color of a rose petal. They were all sweet and delicious, but one dark blue/purple grape was the single best grape I’ve ever tasted. It was earthy and robust and complex. It didn’t need to be made into wine. It had already achieved greatness.

We camped next to those grape vines and watched the sunrise light up thousands of acres of vineyards in the Douro valley.

Most of the grapes have been harvested in the lower elevations, but higher up, two to three thousand feet, the harvest has been in full swing.

One of our first encounters was west of the city of Braganca. It was a small field. The owner, we assumed, a young man with frosted hair and clean hands was overseeing the picking. He seemed uninterested in the traveling cyclists. But the moment we asked him about his land he came to life and was delighted to answer our questions.

The workers, a group of twenty men and women, ranging in age from 18 to 50, were hunched over with hand pruners, chatting and laughing as they clipped the grapes. They filled smaller plastic baskets that were dumped into larger baskets, where burly men then hoisted and dumped them into the metal containers on an old tractor trailer.

The owner filled one of our water bottles with last year’s wine. These grapes wouldn’t make it into a bottle with a label at the market or wine store. This was wine of the people. Stored in huge glass bottles protected by a woven plastic mesh.

Do you want to try? The owner asked. He handed me a pair of clippers.

Why not? For the next fifteen minutes I clipped away. He said I was very good. Very fast. Of course, everyone around me had already been working for seven hours.

They would be paid 14 Euro for a full day’s work.

The tractor driver, a ruddy-faced, barrel-chested man with a beaming smile, pointed to a crate of grapes and insisted that we take them all. I’m not sure how he expected us to pack 25 pounds of grapes on to our bikes.

We thanked the land owner and the workers for their time and gifts. I reached up to shake the hand of one of the men on top of the large metal containers heaped with grapes. His hands being dirty, he offered me his elbow.

Cheers!

I shook my head and grabbed his hand. It was sticky with the mixture of soil and sweat and grape juice. He laughed and squeezed hard.

The wine of the people that we drank from our water bottle was not subtle or refined or worthy of a rating.

It was tangy and a bit sour.

But it was wine with a story and a handshake.

And we loved it.