Saturday, November 29, 2008

I have a dream

February is a great time to see over 800 species of birds in Ethiopia, 21 of them can be seen no where else in the world. One of them The Nechisar Nightjar has never been seen alive. Ever.

We had plenty of nightjars in Zambia, they were black and white and grew really long primary feather when they were mating. Very pretty but unfortunately for them they liked to sit in the middle of bush roads at twilight and play chicken with landcruisers.

On Feb 20th we have a rest day at Arba Minch, Ethiopia. Arba Minch is located very near the Nechisar National Park. Coincidence or Destiny?

Procrastination

My roof may still leak and my office isn't painted, but in my defense... OK, I really don't have a defense, but isn't that picture hilarious?

Feels like finals week. I'm geeking on how well I can plan and document my trip on google maps (turn the wiki and photo layers on and it's like holy @!%$). I've got a big list of stuff to do before I leave.

Of course I'm doing the stuff I want to do, not the stuff I should be doing. The night before I left for Zambia I was on my hands and knees at 3 am trying to finish tiling my kitchen. I finished it, but to this day there is one mismatched tile in the middle of my floor. I was so bleary eyed and frantic I didn't notice it until it was too late to remove easily and I was too tired to care. I kind of like it though.

I don't know why I'm this way. I don' t know if it's immaturity, or selfishness or what but if I'm not in the mood to do something I just don't do it. If the mood strikes me though - watch out - I'm so productive I could hurt a sucka. I think that's what I would say in my defense. Just like with cycling, it's all about efficiency. Why do a task when I know I'm not going to be at my most productive doing it. Besides, if I was painting my kitchen right now I wouldn't know that there is a giant Unfinished Obelisk lying in the desert somewhere south of Aswan. How cool is that?

Thursday, November 27, 2008

What next?

So everyone wants to know how long I'll be gone. It's a question I don't have an easy answer for. I'd like to come back at the end of the summer, remodel my brothers bath, see you guys, and race a bit (for Atomic, of course). But there are several options:

The tiring option:
Jan 10th - May 09th 2009 - TdA, Visit Zambia, fly to Paris, May 31 to July 18 - Orient Express, back to Paris watch TdF, July 26th - Nov 12th 2009 - Silk Route, Dec 2009 Fly to Charlotte, Jan - May 2010 TdA again. July - Dec 2010 Vuelta Sudamerica.

That's way to much travel, but possible. I thought I'd only be in the Peace Corps for a year and look how that turned out.

The less tiring option:
I could always cut option 1 short and come home in August, work for the winter and head back to Africa in 2010. This option may or may not involve me selling the house and moving to Charlotte.

A likely option:
Jan - May 09 TdA, Visit Zambia, fly home in June, Remodel my bro's bath, July 20th - Dec 10th Vuelta Sudamerica, Jan 2010 - TdA again.

That's still a lot of travel but I get a few weeks at home in between tours. Nice.

My least Favorite Option:
Jan to May 2009 TdA, hate it, or they hate me, visit Zambia, stop in Paris to watch the TdF, come home and figure out something else to do. Most likely sell the house and move to Charlotte. Start the business up there and flip houses with my brother until I have enough passive income to try something like this again.

It's my least favorite because I really want this job to work out. I certainly could not complain about getting to travel in Africa, visit old friends in Zambia, watch the TdF and be home in time for my brother's birthday. Moving to Charlotte and spending more time with my brother and sister would be awesome.

Long Term
Ideally, after I've done all the tours with TdA, I'd like to settle in and focus only on Africa. I'd like to help build support structures for the tour that can be run by locals and that locals can profit from. I'd like to expand the aid component of the tour and develop relationships with other organizations like, BikeTown Africa, Kiva, and others. I'd like to figure out how to have tour participants be hosted by local communities, instead of us camping isolated and by ourselves. I'd like to try and not to have to use giant overland vehicles to support the tour.

These are huge challenges and I will certainly not understand how to address them in the first 4 months. So first I've got to get the first tour under my belt, watch and listen and see how things go.

...I gotz more ports then a wine sto do...


My brother is telling me to buy some STX. I was kind of on the fence and then this popped in my reader and gave me a warm fuzzy about Seagate. It's all the turkey I needed this thanksgiving.
After that all I needed was a fresh salad.

STX or SNDK ? Any thoughts?

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Neat Idea

Personal Analytics helps you track your life using feed aggregators and services like twitter. I wonder if you could use it to correlate your general happiness level with the amount of time you spend on your bike?

Not my cup of tea but certainly a great tool for the data geeks out there.

Monday, November 24, 2008

I need your advice

Click here for an informative news story from the BBC about why aid to Africa has not helped make significant improvements. I believe one of the best ways to avoid the problems associated with donor aid is microfinance. And a great way to provide micro loans to deserving people is to work with these guys.

The company I work for, Tour D' Afrique, currently has a small aid component that I hope to help grow over the next few years. They are a pretty progressive bunch:

This year they are trying to be carbon neutral by supporting an Ethiopian group that plants trees. The TdA will sponsor 5000 trees this year. The volunteer organization that facilitates the tree planting is called DevXchange. Reading about them on their website it seems to me they have their heads and hearts in the right place.

The TdA also believes stongly in promoting bike use, in having a positive impact on the towns and villages they travel through, and in helping the participants in the tour filter their experiences to better understand the economic, social, political and cultural complexities of the countries they visit.

Many of the tour's participants raise money to support the Tour d' Afrique Foundation or a charity of their choice. Since 2002 the TdA and its riders have donated 700 bikes to health clubs in Africa and raised over 3/4 of a million dollars for various charities. That's nothing compared to a Christian Childrens Fund or World Vision but the impact is much more focused and personal. I think this make it better.


I'm Soliciting your Advice:
Especially from those of you who have or do live in Africa. I would like to explore the possibiltiy of supporting a couple of groups next year. Please send me the contact info of groups or individuals you think could beniefit from a relationship with TdA foundation. I would like to visit them this year in the hopes of developing a relationship with next years tour.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Providence




Dropped by Joe's today on my way back from the cross race, which was great btw, awesome course and tasty cupcakes. I was in a particularly good mood cause the weather was nice and I was riding my bike for the first time in a while and I had just gotten to see a lot of folks I haven't seen since I last rode my bike. I had asked Joe to order me a seatpost and I was sure he had forgotten to, which he had. Of course I don't mind, if I had wanted it sooner I would have reminded him sooner. I was just happy that it was sunny and I had gotten away from drywalling my office long enough to check out the cx race and visit Joe.

While in the shop I mentioned to Joe my debate over which pedals to bring on the trip and that Jim Smart has just offered to give me some powerstraps, which has pushed me closer to choosing flat pedals. Hearing this Joe looks me in the eye and says "I have some pedals I will sell you." And he stresses the word you. Like he will sell them to me and only me, or at the very least only to someone who will appreciate them and get as much use out of them as I will. Now I'm having an even better day cause I'm intrigued by the offer and feeling blessed by Joe's goodwill.

So Joe walks to the back of the shop and rummages around behind those new metal shelves by the back door. "These are acutally my pedals but they're exactly what you need" he mumbles as he turns, walks to the counter and sets down on the glass a pair of Suntour XC pro pedals with toe clips. One clip has a black leather strap, the other has a pink cloth strap. They are well worn, turn smooth as butter and are beautiful as a thing can get.

Hurdles

So I got my Sudanese Visa this week. Only took 3 weeks to get, which is a relief. It's very disconcerting to mail your passport along with $150 to the embassy of a country that, let's face it, has not overly impressed anyone with their ability to govern. But everything went smooth. Just goes to show you.

Now all I need is my Ethiopian Visa. I can't apply for it until after Thanksgiving because the visa is only good for 3 months and I won't be entering Ethiopia until February 3rd and leaving on Feb 24th. If I apply now it will expire before I get out of the country.

After that there is really nothing left to do except finish a 5 week bath remodel in 3 weeks, fix my roof, stop my basement from flooding, finish remodeling my own bath, finish remodeling my office, paint my kitchen, kitchen cabinets and living room, rent my house, schedule online bill payments so everything gets paid while I'm gone, put a new drive train on the poprad, say good bye to friends, pack up all my belongings for storage, pack for the trip, drive my truck and trailer to Charlotte (brother's house), celebrate xmas, drive ot DC to celebrate New Years, and Fly to Cairo. Oh, and before all that, I need to get my biz takes done.

No problem.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Gear

Note: This post turned out to be me thinking out loud, kind of willy nilly. Some people might find some of it useful or interesting, but I would guess not many. I started this post mostly cause I wanted an excuse to post a picture of the police sniper bike above. Mission Accomplished. Read on at your own peril.

What to bring. Hmmm. 7000 miles, 10 days in hotel, 90 days camping, Touring S. Africa and Zambia afterwards. Maybe going on to ride from Paris to Bejing after that. A few criteria come to mind:
1) Utility - everything needs to have more than one use
2) Cost - almost anything I bring could be ruined or broken
3) Durability - I'd rather it didn't get ruined or break
4)

Here's the list:
Bike:
Poprad with 32 hole open pros and ultegra hubs. Nitto seatpost, thompson stem, alum bar and Ultegra group. Some really cool Specialized touring tires - 38 mm with a ton of tread. Negetive tread design and inflatable to 85 psi. They are folding but weigh a ton. My goal is zero flat tires on the trip and these babies are my secret weapon. I'm gonna bring an extra set of tires, jsut dome 32mm michelin mud2's, they pack pretty small and it might be nice to have a more fun set up every once in a while.

The real big bike question for me is pedals. If I bring clipless pedals I have to bring special shoes. Plus that's two things that can't be replaced if they break. But is riding 80 miles a day on flat pedals, especially with loaded panniers, a good idea? I don't know, I've never tried it.

Spare parts: I'm counting on most people to bring way to many spare parts and be able to buy them before they fly home.
2 tubes, 1 patch kits - TdA recommends 5 patch kits and 5 spare tubes - WTF?
Spare Tires - two 32 mm CX tires
1 brake and 1 gear cable.
extra spokes
brake pads - 3 pair
tool kit and pump
I'm thinking about bringing a rear thumbshifter or bar end shifter. Just in case the STI goes wonky on me.
bike lock, it's actually a snowboard lock
Extra saddle. Learned my lesson at Fools Gold.
extra bar tape
extra cycle computer - I guess these get stolen by kids a lot. makes sense.
bell - omage to cliffy,

Clothes - yep I'm bringing clothes. I'm pretty sure they sell clothes in Africa so I'm not that worried about it. Some cold weather clothes and some hot weather clothes. 2 or 3 sets. Of course clothes do present a real opportunity to show people you don't know too well how cool you are. I think I can accomplish this with my "Evolution Kills" and "I feel Pretty" tshirts. There appropirately sacastic and obscure. They really shout "I'm smarter than you but at least I have a sense of humor about it". I am definitely bringing my Joes Tshirt and of course my Atomic Jersey. Again the big issue is shoes. Also whether or not to bring lycra bike shorts or just wear regular shorts, it's that whole utility thing. Plus I look funny enough just being a white guy riding his bike thru africa, do I really need a superhero outfit to add to the spectacle? The upside is they don't take up much room and my regular shorts don't smell like ass at the end of the day. I guess I'll bring a couple pair

I am also debating whether or not to wear a helmet. Riding on dirt roads with no real extreme "hey y'all watch this" opportunities I'm not sure it's needed. I'm sure it's required as a matter of policy but... I just hate to lug it over there and not use it. I never used one in the peace corps and they threatened to thow you out if you got caught without it.

Camping,
Tent, sleeping bag, bag liner, foam pad, Head lamp, bowl, spoon, cup, tent stake hammer, 8 ft of rope, groudn cloth - all the usual stuff. Thought about tarping it to save space and wt. but then I thought - mozzies and snakes and scorpians... oh my.

misc.
ipod with Swahili, Spanish and French audio lessons that I will probably never listen to, and some music and podcasts, I wish I hadn't sold my freakin shortwave on ebay last year.
Camera and extra storage cards.
two books - Africa, Biography of a Continent and Shock Doctrine by Naomie Cline.
medical stuff: immodium, contacts, advil, chamois creme, sunscreen, salt pills, larium (maybe),
misc toiletries of course.

I bagged the idea of carrying Binos and a bird book, I'm just gonna make up a bunch of cool birds to tell Cliff I saw. Cliff if you want I can just give you the list in advance and save some time. I am gonna carry a 8x21 monocular that I've had laying around for a while.

What to carry it all in?
Airlines want to charge you for everything bigger than a fanny pack and any luggage I bring has to be carried with me on the trip. So I'm thinking about filling my panniers and then putting them in a cheap cloth bag I can give away or pack. Bike goes in a cardboard box. I'm not sure if I can fit a bike with front and rear racks in a biek box but I will soon find out. I have front and rear panniers but I'm thinking about only using teh front, maybe I should just get off my butt and load the panniers to see how much room there is.... yep.

Free Range Chicken




38 days til I leave Tallahassee. 45 days until I leave the country. If things go the way I want I may not return for a while, if ever. But things don't always go the way I want.

I'm not terribly happy to be leaving friends and a community that I love behind but for a while now I've been wrestling with the idea that I need to be doing something else with my life and since that something has not come to me I must go in search of it.

Over the next 45 days I'll try use this blog to document my preparations for, and thoughts about, the Tour d" Afrique . After that I'll use it to share my experiences as I travel from Cairo to Capetown by bike.