Saturday, November 15, 2014

Gear Heads and Loose Links: The Ukiah Bicycle Kitchen


Jay working on the Terry bike at the UBK
I've loved bikes since I was a kid. I remember my Bridgestone, the bike of my adolescence.  I rode that bike everywhere.  Almost daily, I rode to Patrick's Point and back. I would cruise through the roads of the park, sometimes locking my bike at the top of the stairs and running down to Agate Beach and back.  I delighted to catch up with touring cyclists and talk with them about their adventures.     Long I have dreamed of having my own cycling adventures, beyond mere day trips. Soon, in the next couple years, I will be writing blog posts for our cross-country tour....

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1983, Emily and Bridgestone Sirius

After Bridgestone, I had a grey Shogun, which was an actual touring bike. Shogun met an untimely end coming down the hill into Ferndale.  The year was 1992, and Shogun's demise led to the Red Trek 1100 road bike, which is still my bike.  I can't fathom the number of miles I've put on Trek over the years.  Still going strong, Trek is a great commuter bike for this hammer head.  However, for real touring, I need to upgrade.   I've been dreaming of a Bruce Gordon bike.  These are the bikes that cyclists ride across the steppes of Asia and the savannahs of Africa on, because they can be repaired anywhere with simple tools.  What I'd like to get is the Rock & Road Tour bike, but the custom one, which is built just for me, my measurements, my quirky unique body.  I'll be saving for a while!  

Trek, at the end of the 60-mile Tour of the Unknown Coast in Humboldt, 2012.

Meanwhile, I'm putting a lot of regular miles on Trek.   Recently, I booked it from the horses, up by Mendocino lake, to my ESL class, at the Temple of Ten-thousand Buddhas.   A bit over 9 miles, in traffic, in 39:33.  Not a scorching time, but boy was that fun!  Map here.  I had budgeted 45 minutes, so I was stoked.  

In Ukiah, there is the Ukiah Bicycle Kitchen- the UBK. This is where people cook up bikes.  :)  A place where everyone can go to get help with maintaining their bicycles.  I connected with them through Jay, and the regular work sessions have been such a treat. I get to work on bikes with other people who like to work on bikes. Win!   People donate bicycles to the UBK, and we fix them up to sell, thus raising money to purchase more tools for the kitchen to use.  Besides the work sessions, the UBK is at most Farmer's Markets on Saturdays in Ukiah, where you'll see people young and old bring their bikes with issues. They roll away, smiling again.

At the work sessions,  Jay and I spent many hours working on the infamous "Rose Schwinn" which needed most everything replaced.  It was a beauty of a bike, though, with matching fenders. Many times, during the course of our rehab, we'd wonder if it was worth it. The odd wheel size that needed the odd tire size... the internal rear hub that needed an overhaul... Then everyone would gather around, oogle at its pretty frame, and dig in again. Andrew was so diligent about tracking down parts.  When it was all done, it was one of the first bikes to go at the end of summer sale. 


The Rose Schwinn, ready for sale.
Emily and Jay work on the Rose Schwinn.
More recently, I've been rehabbing a Univega. Started out with new cables for brakes and shifters, new handlebars, then a new chain, but first the freewheel had to be cleaned, and then the derailers, and then the wheel hubs needed to be repacked.   It was then that the bottom bracket seemed rather sticky, and dismantling it revealed big pits in the races, as well as a bent spindle. So, Andrew ordered the bottom bracket after I took measurements and found it in the catalog.  When it arrived, I got to use the torque wrench when putting it back together! So cool.
 
Emily discovers the torque wrench!
 After it was all back in one piece, a trial ride revealed some weirdness with the front forks.  The handlebars were wonky. 

Devin test-drives the Univega.  "Steering feels like a gyroscope!"  Hence the dismantling of the headset.

Pico and Devin took the stem apart, and when I went to put it back together, I noticed a lot of rust and hardened grease on the stem and wedge nut. So I took the whole headset apart, cleaned it, and put it together. Like silk it is!   The only thing the bike needs now is a new seat post and it is good to roll. 

Univega, waiting for a seat post....

Every two weeks or so, I get to head to the UBK, put on a pair of blue gloves, and become a grease monkey for a few hours and hang out with a bunch of bike nuts (the metal kind as well as the human kind). Pretty cool.  

Andrew works with UBK interns at the Farmer's Market.
Pico and Devin working on bikes.
Emily explaining some bike mechanical issue to Pico....

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Beauty in Belize

It's been over a week since I returned from Belize. I am now able to contemplate some of the beauty and wonder I found in Belize, though I am not yet ready to process and share the darker side. It's percolating in a post about the Unseen. 

Entrance of Cahal Pech Resort.
At the hotel where we were staying, the Cahal Pech Resort, flowers abounded.  Here is a photo collage of some of the best beautiful images.....


In the morning, the trees would drop coconuts.  Here's one, looking like a fuzzy flower.

Hibiscus

Fragrant fragrant flower.



Hibiscus flower
Ginger Flower.


Branch of bananas with flower at end.

A banana flower!
View of San Ignacio from our cabin.


The teredactyl sprays water into the pool during the hot months.  Right now it just looks like it is smoking a cigarette!

Everywhere, people use Y branches to make fences, screens, and coverings. 


Plumeria



View at sunset. Surreally beautiful.

Friday, October 24, 2014

The Belize Zoo Tour

At the end of my week in Belize (more on that to follow in future posts), I arranged a trip to the Belize Zoo on our way back to the airport.  I was in Belize for work, so this was one of my only "touristy" adventures, besides my trip to the Saturday Market (Mercado) and the Mayan ruins right next door to our hotel.     

The Belize Zoo was an important visit for me because Jay and I both read The Last Flight of the Scarlet Macaw, which is about Sharon Matola's fight against a dam.  Sharon is the woman who created the Belize Zoo, so the book includes a lot of information about the zoo and the collection of native Belizian animals that live in the zoo. Each animal has a story of rescue, and each animal would not be alive if it weren't for the zoo and Sharon's efforts. Sharon's right-hand-man at the Zoo is Tony, and he was our tour guide!!!   Here is a Lonely Planet review of the zoo:  Belize Zoo Background. The zoo exceeded my expectations.  What follows is a virtual tour of the zoo. Enjoy!!



A little shrine of books....


The whole zoo is in the jungle.   I think that's why the animals are so happy. They live in their jungle, with its temperature, moisture, sounds, smells. They are home.














The Zoo Education Center










West Indian Manatee skeleton.


Balboa the 10-year-old Boa Constrictor
Tony headed to get the little boa.....

I meet Balboa.


Balboa is beautiful and wonderful.  He wrapped my wrist like a bracelet with his tail.



The King Vulture


The vulture is in there somewhere....


Just had to go around the corner. There he/she is!
Hello King Vulture!
Follow the Paths, the Myriad Paths....
The path into the zoo....


Throughout the zoo, hand painted signs abound.  Many rhyme. All are educational.
 The Kinkajou


Lured out with a banana....  This mammal is nocturnal.



 Poem About Hurricane Richard.....





















The Belize White-Tailed Deer
Yes, the deer really stay in this short fence.   That makes me think they are very happy.
The male deer was sterilized the wrong time of year, and its horns grow like this as a result....
Tapirs!  Central American Tapirs!!




April the Tapir's skeleton.


April lived a long life. One of the longest lived Tapir's in captivity.


Tapirs are related to Rhinos and Horses.


Tempting a tapir with a tapered carrot....


Tapir tenderly takes the carrot.
Tapir munching carrot in background....
Story of the baby tapir, adopted by a Belize Zoo tapir mom.
Adopted tapir on the left, good mom tapir on the right.  Tapirs have great prehensile noses. They remind me of Berhwood and Giovanna!
 Blue Crown Mot-Mot







Check out the way cool bob of a blue tail!
  Ornate Hawk Eagle



Talk about a regal bird.....

Black Spider Monkey Family



Tony talking about spider monkeys.




Far in the tree, see the monkeys?


Posing for pictures.


They came close for treats.

Moving through the jungle....Walk this way....



Pathway to the next area. The whole place is a jungle....



Scarlet Macaws










Facts about the Dam that flooded Macaw nesting grounds.







Turtles and Crocodiles...


Pathway to the pond and turtles.....



Tony sprinkled some dog kibble in the pond, and suddenly there were many turtles!!!




Pathways Through the Jungle....


Where to next?
Pacas
Didn't get to see the Pacas. They must have been sleeping, too!

The Keel Billed Toucan



A chair to sit and watch the toucans.


Posing pair.


Feeding Raisins to Toucans!
 The Aracaris (Belizian Toucan)




Feeding the Aracaris a raisin!


Yum, yum.
Ocelot, the Small Spotted Cat




Tony leading the way to the Ocelot.
 


Tree near Ocelot, with vine winding up the trunk. Way cool.




From above.  This ocelot is about 2 years old, and will be about 30 pounds when full grown.


Growling loudly, it's this cat's purr.  More chicken?
 Black Howler Monkeys



 


Family in the distance.


Coming down for a treat.


Mama with baby, very new baby, hanging on.


We howler monkeys deserve our name!  Hey!  Of the six species of howlers, ours is the most rare!  What do we like to eat?  Leaves, leaves, leaves. Just leave us leaves!

Puma "Red Tiger"




Coming through the brush to see Tony.


Looking at the chicken that accidently landed on the electric fence. Weighing the options...  Tony flicked it off with a stick before he launched.


Check out the paws!
 Collared Pecccaries



herd sleeping in the distance.


Herd going for the scattered treats.


Look our for the newborns!!  Two 2-day-old baby peccaries in amongst the adults.


Can not get enough of these peccaries!  Way cute. Both babies are in this picture.
 Pathways and Signs....
Where should we go next?



 Agouti, the Belize Rabbit
The agoutis were sleeping....
 Lucky Boy the Black Jaguar


Lucky's Story.  A very lucky jaguar, indeed.


Doing the "high 5" for chicken.


Looking sleek and regal. This is a special cage we are in, that is next to Lucky Boy's pen.


Chewing Chicken.
Japanese Lantern Flower
So beautiful, hanging in the path.  We wondered, what is this flower?


Ah, of course, there's a sign!




























Runt the Ambassador Toucan




Runt eyes the raisin with his one good eye.


Posing while chewing.


Posing with Runt, who is eyeing for another raisin....
 The Margay was sleeping.....



Tayra the Bushdog


The bushdog is related to the weasel.
 

Junior Buddy the Jaguar




Junior Buddy looking for chicken.


Born to a rescued mom, who then rejected him, Junior was raised in captivity by the Belize Zoo.


Jaguar food

Junior Buddy's story.....

Junior Buddy's mom and friend jaguar.


Junior following Tony.
 Harpy Eagles!!!!












Panama the Harpy Eagle







 Great Curassow




 Common Black Hawk


Was not able to see this hawk....
 
Coatimundi, the Tree Sausages....


There it is snuggled in the crook of a tree.


Once you know what to look for, they are everywhere!


Here's a rare blond coatamundi, sleeping on the ground. A ground sausage!
 Barn Owls


There they are, looking like bats in their cave.
 Spotted Owls


We've been "eyed" by the owl....
 Mottled Owl

This owl was hiding too well for us!

 Yellow Headed Amazon Parrots


Like the parrot, Lelu, that Pat and I used to babysit long, long ago....








 That concludes our tour!  

I signed the guest book!