HNF for some backcountry flavor
after riding the BCSP flow-coaster
a campout with some VBR too
acronymed southern IN MTB
weekend away from the prairie
April 13, 2012
HNF for some backcountry flavor
after riding the BCSP flow-coaster
a campout with some VBR too
acronymed southern IN MTB
weekend away from the prairie
April 4, 2012
For local trail riding, I’ve lately been using a fanny pack I picked up a couple shakes of lamb’s tail shy of twenty mtbing years ago. I strap it around my waist to hold a few things while out for an hour or so spin, sometimes when on the road too.
Remember back when fanny packs were used to hold keys, granola bars, a multi-tool, a patch kit and some cash? I never was one for stuffing things in jersey back pockets.
It was a few weeks back when I had one of those “ah-hah” moments: fanny pack. I went up to the attic and dug it out of a box. I got tired of strapping on a hydration pack for post-work unwinding. It didn’t seem necessary. I figured that if I had a major mechanical, I could walk, as my local after-office rides aren’t typically more than a twenty minute or maybe a one hour stroll from the car or house.
Anyway…I’m bringin’ back the fanny pack:
purty purple phlox
trail riding, nice april eve
post-ride beverage
cheers!
March 30, 2012
Cutters use a cane knife like a big heavy machete. Because the long blades are honed to a single edge as sharp as sawgrass, the work is dangerous and accidents are common, especialy among the drinkers but also among the green hands, older men, and those exhausted. They go bleary.
I stop at a pulperia and asked the men standing under the overhanging roof if the road to my right will take me back into Turrialba.
“Yes, that is the way back into town.”
“Taking a break from cutting? Is it difficult to work in the rain?”
“We can work in any weather. We’re not working today because they haven’t paid us.”
“They haven’t paid you? Why not?
“They said they will have our money tomorrow, so we told them we will not work until tomorrow then.”
The veterans rig themselves crude shin guards or hide leggings, having hacked an ankle or sliced off toes one time or another, often their own but sometimes those of the man beside them. When a cutter working tired or too fast stoops to grab a clump for chopping, his sweat-filled eye, sometimes an eardrum, can be pierced by a leaf tip, hard as any spine. In this humid climate, there is a heat collapse; sore backs go with the job. Every little while, the heel of one hand pressed into the lower back to ease those muscles. –Peter Matthiesen, Shadow Country
“I’ve heard that a lot of Nicaraguans come down to cut the cane. Is that true?”
“Oh yes. We’re all from around here, but we work with a lot of men from Nicaragua. They need work too.”
“I need to get back into town. I hope they do pay you tomorrow.”
“Go on down that road and you’ll be back in town within twenyt minutes on your bike.”
“Thank you. Take care of yourselves.”
“Que le vaya bien.”
With United States American ease, I roll away, luxuriously.