Monthly Archives: January 2008

First day back on the bike!

After a really long 5 months, today was my first day back on the bike.  I went down to Waterman indoor MX track today, on my own.  Scott already talked about that place in one of his posts, but nonetheless I will talk more about it.  It is actually a kind of crummy little place.  The lighting sucks, the air quality is rank, and the dirt is beat but it is riding in January.  I rode!  My knee was great.  I did not fall down, so I cannot confirm how good or bad it is when that happens, but for riding it was great.  I can stand, sit, put my foot down in a turn, jump etc…  I am so stoked.

Speaking of stoked, today was my first time back on a Suzuki in over 20 years.  20 years.  No kidding.  My last Suzuki dirt bike was an RM 125 in about 1980.  The RM 250, built up as a GNCC bike, is an absolute weapon.  That bike kicks ass!  It handles well, it is light, it starts every time you stab it.  It just absolutely rocks. 

The bike was a little bit too peaky today, but it was only like 25 degrees at the track.  When things warm up, we can tone down that peaky feeling with jetting changes.  Other than that, I do not have anything bad to say about my new mount at all.  I love it. 

It was cold in the warehouse today, and of course there were about 4 four strokes that just would not start.  What has the world come to, when we gave up such a great bike for something with valves floating around inside there.  Call me a stick in the mud, but I am just so glad to be riding a 2 stroke. 

It is just 37 days till the first race.  I wish it was next weekend. 

Joe

1st mountain bike ride

I am down in Dallas for a dealer meeting, and a short visit to my brothers house.

Yesterday, I got out for a 1 hour mountain bike ride.  I went out to the local trails when I got here, where the Trek demo truck was doing a demo for the local dealers.  I spoke with a bunch of riders, helped change some pedals etc…  When it was all winding down, David and I went out for a little loop ourselves.  I grabbed a Fuel EX, and switched the brakes and the pedals and we headed out.

I was a little bit nervous about the whole thing.  I have not ridden outside at all since my knee injury.  I have spent a bunch of hours on the trainer at this point, but of course there is not much risk of falling down or having to dab your foot to the ground on the trainer.  I was really tentative at first.  My timing was completely off, and I could feel my knee when I had to power the front wheel over and obstacle or when I had to put English into the bike etc… 

But, during the course of the hour I got more and more confident.  Confident enough that I was pushing around corners, wheelie dropping ledges and bunny hopping rocks/logs etc…  I pushed hard enough that I washed the front end in a turn, and had to do a major correction to avoid going down.  I still did not have to put my foot down to correct a fall, but I am much more confident now.  I even had to clip out quickly when following David up a climb that he did not make, no issues. 

My timing is still way off, and I suppose the first time I do have to dab – it will be scary.  But, I am even more confident now. 

I cannot wait to get my knee braces and get out on the motorcycle.

Joe

race bikes are here!

Joe and I teamed up on collecting the race bikes today.  Joe drove a few hours down into Illinois for one and I drove to southern Wisconsin to pick up the other.  We’re 100% for bikes at this point which is something Joe and I have been looking forward to for a long time.

Hold on.  Let me back up and explain a few things.  Our title sponsor, Vesrah Suzuki, made these bikes and a tons of other race support a reality.  Mark Junge and his wife Nancy run the Vesrah Suzuki endurance road race team.  Mark’s program competes in the WERA series where they are 6x national champions.  They are also avid bicycle riders so we have lots in common (Joe and I work at Trek Bicycles).  My wife coaches Mark and Nancy and we all do road and mountain bike rides together when the weather permits.

Ok, back to today.  Rumor is that RM250s are nearly extinct.  2008 bikes are very hard to come by and a future for new RMs might not exist.  But the RM platform has been the same, race-proven race machine for several years so Joe and I didn’t care if we were on older bikes or not.  The only thing that matters to us is that the bikes are new enough to qualify for Suzuki contingencies. 

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Mark works with a big Suzuki dealer in Illinois.  Through that dealer Mark found the two bikes Joe and I picked up today.  They are both brand new brand new 2007 RM250s..

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There is nothing like a new motorcycle.

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Joe hasn’t had a Suzuki in his garage since last century.  He’s pretty stoked to be back on a yellow bike.

 Now what?  We have just more than a month to prep and test both bikes.  Although both bikes are the same, I gravitated towards the one I drove to get and claimed it as my race bike.  My bike and I started the bonding process (we will struggle through the thick and thin of GNCC competition very soon so I want to be one with my ride).  In stock trim, no gas, we weighed both bikes – mine was 220lbs and Joe’s was 221 (his had a splash of fuel in the tank).  There isn’t any reason to weigh the bikes other than Joe and come from the bicycle world where weight really matters.  The level we are at in the moto world doesn’t allow much room for weight conservation.

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We stripped the suspension off the bikes to box up and send back to Factory Connection.  Then we pulled the stock plastic and set it aside for safe keeping.  We’ll sell or give these bikes back to Vesrah some day.  Cycra has helped us out with great aftermarket plastic so that will eventually be mounted up.

I’ve got tons of other stuff to install, too.  An hour meter, flywheel weight, Vortex bars and drivetrain, big tank, pipe, etc.  I’ll also grease all bearings and torque all major bolts in the build up process.  Lots to do so stay tuned!

getting closer – still

Every day the calendar turns over another day.  Every day, the Florida sand whoops get a little bit closer.

Things moved really quickly this week.  This was week 4 in my training program that Mary Daubert did up for me.  It was a super hard week.  2 a day workouts every day except Thursday, which was just one workout, but that one workout was a really hard trainer workout in the morning.   Today (Saturday) was actually a 2 hour trainer workout.  It was my first volume day toward the season.

This week, we had 4 IMS tanks show up and 4 FMF Fatty pipes arrive.  That pretty much completes all of the parts that we need for our bikes.  We are still waiting for AJ at Victory Graphics to finish  up our graphics, and the rest of our seasons worth of plastic from Cycra, but in general all of our stuff for bikes and riders is here.

We are almost done with the van as well.  We just have the huge lock for the back doors, some bars for the windows in the back, cruise control and finish up the stereo – then the van will be complete.

Today we had to go and pick up our 2 race bikes.  I had to run down to Illinois to pick up one, and Scott had to pick up one here in Wisconsin.  I have this love/hate relationship with Illinois.  I don’t understand the place.  It always appears flat and desolate to me.  The place is a study in contradictions.  Bill Gusse puts on really good races, but I don’t understand why no one down there uses electronic scoring.  Writing on the top of fenders seems so archaic and unreliable.  When you are from Wisconsin, you develop this almost innate mistrust of everything Illinois.  It is irrational I know, but just sort of comes with living here.  We are cheese heads, and they are fibs.  In reality, almost everyone that I meet from Illinois, I find that I like.  But, in the end the place just seems so – flat, yet when you do a race there it will always have a really big hill included somehow.

Anyway, 2 virgin new bikes are here to be built in race bikes.   The suspension was stripped off today to be sent back on Monday to Factory Connection.  Everything  else will go back together the weekend after next when the suspension is back.

photos to come!

Joe

D16 Awards Banquet

The District 16 Awards Banquet was last night in Two Rivers, WI.  Actually, the banquet was for D16 Hare Scramble bike and quad racers and did not include the hillclimb, trials, MX or other moto disciplines.   Even without all the other district racers attending this banquet we were 150+ people strong.  That”s a lot of mashed potatoes.

My wife, son and I made the 2-hour trek north in some threatening weather and Green Bay Packer traffic.  No problems for us though and we made an easy plan of it by spending the night in the hotel adjoining the banquet hall. 

Rick Anschutz is the D16 HS series promoter and banquet organizer.  He’s been the one behind all of the races Joe and I have done over the past several years.  His efforts are greatly appreciated and this awards banquet is testimony to his success as a champion of the sport.

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My friend AJ at VCGhelped out with #1 plates for all the class winners.  I heard envious comments from second place finishers throughout the evening so I’m guessing they were a success.  Thanks AJ!

I won the overall title for the bikes in D16 in 2007.  I got to stand at the front of the room with my AA peers and hold a huge trophy and the #1 plate.  That felt good.

It had been since the last race in October since I had seen the racers and friends Joe and I have in D16.  After the awards we all reminisced on the 2007 season, shared current events from our home lives and explained our 2008 race plans.  That Joe and I are tackling the GNCC series this year was big news at the banquet.  Several people wished us luck.  Thanks all – we’ll do our best.

prepared – I hope

I am certain there will be other riders in my class who will have more talent than I. I am also certain there will be other riders in my class who will have better fitness than I. After all, the guys in Florida and places like that are able to ride and race already. As I write this in my kitchen here in Wisconsin, I am looking out the window at another snow day. This winter has turned out to be a real winter here. But, I am feeling pretty good about my training. Good enough that I am pretty certain there are not going to be many people in my class that are going to show up as prepared overall as I feel I am.

This weeks training volume was pretty good.

- swimming = 2 hours

- cycling = 3.5 hours

- gym workouts = 2 hours

- rowing machine = 1 hour

- stretching = 1 hour

Of course those times were broken up into smaller chunks each. But, the volume for January is feeling pretty good. I could break those out into training heart rate percentages also, but I won’t bore you with that. Mary has an even harder pile of workouts prescribed for me for next week. Not necessarily more volume, but more time at high intensities for sure. Scary!

Tomorrow I will finish up the build of my practice bike. The specs in my bike page are pretty accurate. I will probably update my bike photo as well. My practice bike is not real pretty, because of the used plastic, mismatched wheels etc… But, it represents something much closer to a race bike than the Ricky Carmichael bike that I am showing now.

The unfortunate news that I got this week, is that it looks like this will be the last year for the 2stroke with Suzuki. That is a shame. I certainly do not have anything against Suzuki’s 4 strokes, in fact they are pretty sweet, but I really really prefer a 2stroke. If I was David Knight, it probably would not matter. But if you notice, the other guys at the pro level seem to favor the 2stroke for GNCC type racing (Juha, Barry Hawk, Charlie Mullins, Jimmy Jarret etc…) I have raced 4strokes in HS races, and depending on the course they are not bad. But as soon as you get into the technical sections or there is mud, the 2 stroke is much better.

Originally I marveled at Justin Williamson and his recovery after knee surgery. I still do. But, I find myself in similar shoes. I am over 3 months now from my surgery, and my knee feels great. I am pushing it hard in training, but careful. I will start on the motorcycle at the end of this month. I truly feel that it will be ready in Florida. We will see.

Check back next weekend and I will show off my bike etc…

Just 52 days till the Florida GNCC now!

Joe

58 days!

Wow!  Only 58 days till the first GNCC race.  I cannot believe it.  Christmas has come and gone, New Years is a week over.  January is here, winter is upon us and in no time Scott and I will be heading south to start the season.

I watched the first Supercross race this morning (Tivo is a great thing).  Whenever you see a muddy supercross race it makes you stand up and take note.  The first thing I find myself noting is how much easier it would probably be to do that muddy SX race on a 2-stroke.  Oh well.

My practice bike, which may end up being my early season race bike, is almost completely together.  My suspension made it back from Factory Connection, resplendent with great big works looking stickers and all.  The bike is mostly built back up, just waiting for a couple of frame guards and a couple of other small things.  Soon it will be ready to be thrashed.  I will be ready to starting thrashing it on January 26.

Hopefully our second bikes will be here before we leave to head south and start racing.  Scott only has his race bike from last year.  That was meant to be his practice bike this year, and a new one would be built up for the race season.   I am sure they will be here soon, and we will do a long weekend scramble to get everything ready for heading south.

We spent this past weekend working on the van.  We got most everything figured out for spending the better part of this spring/summer/fall in the van.  The bike area is coming together with the creature comfort area still to go.  I will let Scott fill us all in on that progress though.

My knee is fantastic.  Tomorrow is brace fitting day at the physical therapy office.  Not much else to report with the knee.  It is not hindering my training or my fitness in any way now.  Once my brace for riding my moto is here (should be about the 22nd), I will even be able to ride.

More stuff for bikes will be showing up this week.  We should feel final proofs of graphics this week, and then we should be able to get photo’s of our bikes posted here and on the teams website.

Check back next week,

Joe

1st of the New Year

I spent most of December working through a few nagging injuries. I had a sore shoulder joint for 6+ months after taking a spill during a practice day.  That’s finally gone.  I also had a strained hamstring that bugged me from time to time but that’s finally mended.  Bottom line is that I am getting old.  It takes longer to heal up.

But now it’s time to get back in the swing of things.  I’ve been holding off until the first of the year.  I get fit pretty quickly so its best for me to lay low until I can see the light at the end of the tunnel.  With the opening GNCC round in Florida just eight weeks away, I’m starting to see some light.  But because I get fit quickly I also lose fitness quickly.  I also tend to over do it so by shortening the time I train hard before the first race I hope to be  fit and motivated at the right time. 

I’ll be in the pool tomorrow.  I swim worse than Joe.  But I could care less about how it looks.  The more I splash in the pool the harder I am working.  It’s 45 minutes of time well spent for me.  Swimming is in the top three things that help me feel more fit when on the moto.  The other two are rowing and winching up a weight with a dowel.

Joe is right about the winter here.  It seems like we have had a ton of snow and cold so riding motos outside is a whole other world away.  The cold and snow will be hard to bear over the next two months.

I didn’t get any warm clothes for working in the garage like Joe did.  I have a heated garage instead.  I did spend a ton of money on a gift for my self in buying a OE cruise control kit for the van.  There’s probably no way I will every get the money back when I eventually sell the thing but it might make those day-long drives to races down south a little more bearable.  I haven’t had a car without cruise in a long time and sure do miss it. 

Sent my suspension from the 2007 RM back to Factory Connectionlast week.  They turn stuff around so fast I might see it back this week.  The fork and shock had about 75 hours of riding and racing on it so I suspect it was pretty much clapped out.  I never felt them go bad, if it did, but they had the original seals and bushings from when FC tuned them a year ago.  No leaks or oddities to speak of during the past year of racing so that was good.  I’m curious if I will be able to feel a difference when we ride at Waterman in a few weeks.

We should see graphics come from VCG soon.  That’s when the bikes feel like they mean something.  Fresh plastic and shiny decal kits – good stuff.  We’ll post photos when we get set up.