Archive for the ‘Beijing’ Category

Early Morning Miaofengshan Road Bike Ride

Freitag, Mai 7th, 2010

Shannon Ricky and I said we meet for an early morning road bike ride all the way up North-West to Miaofeng Mountain. We had a 5:30 am meeting point just at the famous Beijing Hotel. I had luck because I found an electric bike rider that was riding at 30 km/h that I could draft behind all the way to the meeting point. Shortly before our meeting point I noticed a road cyclist standing on the sidewalk. My first thought was “great to see Chinese people in lycra this early on a weekday”. My second thought was “was that maybe Shannon? Maybe he does not know where the Beijing Hotel is”. And then by the time I thought my 3rd thought I was almost at the meeting point. Shannon came after a while and was unhappy that I passed him without stopping to help with his flat tire. Both me and Ricky gave him our pumps. Mine is the kind where you need to turn the inside of the head around if you switch from American to French valves. Well it is probably not the best thing to do early in the morning standing right over a sewage grid. Well the obvious happened, I dropped the pump head and it nicely rolled into the slits and dropped into the sewage water.

Early morning tire pumping

After a long flat ride as a peloton I suddenly hit a rock a got a pinch flat. Now that my pump had no head anymore and Ricky’s wasn’t working Shannon helped me pump up the new inner tube. But with his pump he broke my inner tube valve. So I took off the new now broken tube and patched the original inner tube and put it back. Then it was not far to the foot of the Miaofengshan where we split up so that each of us could try to beat their own best time. I was already feeling quite tired so I only did the 13km uphill ride from the gate to the village.

Miaofeng Mountain Bike Ride

Cycling up Miaofeng Shan North-West of Beijing

Shannon and Richy continued the additional 6 km continuous uphill to the temple at the top. It was quite windy on the mountain and I was happy when they both came back.

Ricky in the Miaofengshan Village

Shannon cycling back to Beijing from Miaofengshan

As we approached Beijing city the traffic started getting worse and worse. And what I find annoying is all the cars parked and driving in the bike lane. Like here, this picture shows a pure bike lane, but it has people parked on the left and right side plus cars riding in the center. Where should the cyclists ride their bike?

Cars parked and driving in the huge bike lane

Or here in this picture the white line on the left divides the car lane from the bike lane. But the cars are all jammed up and standing in the bicycle path. No cyclist can ride through this mess. So it was even worse that after today’s 130km bike ride that Shannon insisted that we try out the route for tonight’s STC ride and we had to squeeze ourselves through the city traffic jams.

Beijing City Traffic illegally in the Bicycle Lanes

Beijing Fixed Gear Bike Ride

Donnerstag, Mai 6th, 2010

I am so happy that I had time for a fixed gear bike ride tonight. Because it is seldom that I can just leave the shop at 7:30pm. What a great feeling to ride with the group.

Beijing fixed gear ride

Beijing fixie riders

The route we took was really easy and with not too much traffic. It is nice to ride along the Changan Boulevard towards the West and then along the second ring road over to the Place (Dongdaqiao Lu). Anthony mapped out that route:

Fixed gear ride map

Riding on Changan Boulevard

I am happy to see Chinese girls become regulars on these rides.

Chinese Fixie Girls

We had again some new people that just started riding, so we stopped at the Fuxingmen rainbow to wait for the others.

Beijing fixed at Fuxingmen rainbow

I took some more pictures and uploaded them to a webalbum.

Riding at night in Beijing on Fixed Gear Bicycles

Fixed Gear Bikes at the Place

Road Bike Conversion

Donnerstag, Mai 6th, 2010

Elaine came back from the USA and brought back the steel road bike of her best friend. She was so excited to start to convert her bicycle to fixed gear. Of course that means stripping everything off the bike.

Road bike for conversion to fixed gear

After a while Elaine had the blank frame and was still really happy.

Elaine with her road bike frame

But then the problems started. For example with the bottom bracket. Elaine’s mood slowly dampened.

During the day other fixed gear riders came to the shop. For example one Chinese guy that just bought this hand built beautiful Nagasawa frame from Japan and then unfortunately had a crash crushing the tubes near the head tube.

Beautiful Nagasawa Frame

We also finished a Natooke bicycle for a new Chinese fixed gear rider which is a friend of Xiao Shu.

Natooke White Modolo Track Bike

This morning I had an interview from the Chinese magazine called „Villas Life„. They are interested in bikes. Not only fixed gear but also recumbent bikes that are not so popular yet in China.

Natooke Fixies

Mittwoch, Mai 5th, 2010

More Natooke fixed gear bikes. It is getting busy here at this unique Beijing bicycle shop. Chris seems happy to have his new bike.

Urban fixed gear bike from Natooke

Then my friend and bike performer Zhou Chang Chun came by to say hi before he had to go to the train station to go back to his hometown in Dongbei.

Chinese bike performer

And then later that night I finished putting together Julius bike. He did not mind to have a beer before the final adjustments were done. But we need to find a fridge now that the weather is getting warmer so that we actually have cold beer.

Julius’ fixed gear bicycle

But he was also happy to ride away down the Wudaoying hutong.

Wudaoying hutong and a fixed gear rider

Beijing TV on Cycling being Green

Mittwoch, Mai 5th, 2010

Wang Ying from Beijing TV came to my shop to interview me because she is the host for a show on environment and green topics. Of course in front of the rolling camera she said that she does not bike and would never want to cycle herself. The cameraman then stopped the camera and said she cannot say that so we re-did that part of the interview. Even though her job is to host this show on green topics but she was really offended when the cameraman proposed to buy her re-usable chopsticks because she said she is not such an environmental person. She does not care about green. But she is doing that program. She should change her job. I love TV.

Flying Banana for Huang

Dienstag, Mai 4th, 2010

The Natooke bike shop was quite full today on the first working day after the May holiday. Dongdong came by to gt inspiration for the colors of her bike while others were working on their bike.

Natooke bike and juggling shop

Huang Xiao Dong came together with 2 fixed gear friends to buy a bike. Everbody was helping getting the bike built up as fast as possible.

Huang watching the work on his new bike

He is a BMX rider and chose to have no brake and no cages or strap on the pedals becausehe says he can stop without all that.

Huang without brake nor cages and straps

He had chosen the sunflower yellow steel (chromoly) Flying Banana track bike. I think it looks great in this simplicity and with the matching yelow Oury grips.

Sunflower Flying Banana Steel Track Frame

Beautiful Natooke Flying Banana

Beijing Fixed Gear Bike Flat

Sonntag, Mai 2nd, 2010

Today the shop was officially closed but I decided to set the meet up for the Beijing Fixed Gear bike ride to be at Natooke. So I went a little bit in advance and had to help someone with his bike. A few guys came to my shop for the ride and when I called the others that were at the Mess shop they said they do not want to ride but just go to the Place. We decided to go for a ride and started heading out West along the canal.

Bike ride along the canal

But then Richard got a flat tire. Only Roger had tire levers, but the damn outer tire just did not want to go off.

Richard fighting the damn bike tire

I was just about to leave to go back to the Natooke shop to get tire levers and a spare inner tube when Ricky suddenly said that he also has a flat tire.

Second flat tire

I anyway cycled back to the shop and got the tire levers and cycled back to the place along the canal. At this moment they had already gotten the tires off and had patched the tubes. After the repair we decided to meet the other fixed gear riders at the Place but we dropped by my shop where Richard asked to have his back tire changed. So I spent some more time in the shop.With only a few remaining people we cycled to Chaoyang district to the huge screen at the Place to ind that the others were about to leave to go to a nearby bike shop to get a back tire changed.

Ready to leave the Place

Paul was still practicing the no handed track stand on his fixed gear bicycle.

No handed track stand on fixie

But then they decided we could also go to my shop and have it changed there. So I again (for the 4th time today) rode to my shop. I was more busy with the flat tires than riding. But the short ride was still nice in the late afternoon sun.

Beijing Fixed Gear Ride

Riding past construction sites in Beijing

Afternoon sun on fixed gear bicycles

Natooke White Beauty Flying Banana

Donnerstag, April 29th, 2010

Unfortunately I was not there when Arrigo came to pick up his Flying Banana track bike named „The White Beauty“ that we had put together in Natooke. It is just so beautiful!

Natooke White Beauty Track Bike

Beautiful Curves on this Natooke Flying Banana

Natooke Booth at China Cycle Exhibition in Shanghai

Dienstag, April 27th, 2010

First day of the 2010 China Cycle Exhibition. I was astonished to see so many exhibitors getting in early in the morning. We actually had to wait a while in the crowd until we finally got in.

Exhibitors at Shanghai Exhibition Center

Our booth sidewalls had moved over night so we bought more tape to stick them back up. And here are many pictures of our first own Natooke shop booth with the booth chics and booth man:

Natooke Booth Left Side and the Booth Chics

Natooke Booth Back Side and the Booth Chic and Booth Man

Natooke Booth Right Side and the Booth Chics

Our booth was different than most booths. We wanted the people to interact with us. So we had the walls covered with some of the many newspaper and magazine articles about my Natooke store, the Respro anti-pollution masks and hump backpack covers, the Beijing fixed gear bicycle group, the STC cycling initiative and my trick bike performances.

Natooke Shop Booth at Chine Cycle Exhibition

Respro Masks at the China Cycle Exhibition

Natooke Bicycle Booth at Shanghai China Cycle

Bamboo Bike at Natooke booth

We would have liked to display more bikes but it would have been hard to transport them to Shanghai by train. So we decided only to take the bamboo bike made by my friend Zack Jiang. Bamboo is a green alternative to metal. This bamboo bike is made in the same geometry as my trick bike. Zack made it to prove that his bamboo bikes are really stable and do not brake even if I do my extreme bicycle tricks on this bamboo bike. The bike got quite some attention at the booth.

Bamboo Bike Attracting People

Of course I also met friends like Zhou Chang Chun who does some Chinese style bike tricks.

Bicycle Friend Zhou

As well as a cyclist friend from Tianjin called Baihua working in a newly started outer tire company that tries to look like CST brand.

Cyclist Friend Baihua

I performed bicycle tricks 2 times today on the bamboo bike. I made a webalbum with more pictures. But here are just a few.

Ines Bike Trick Performance

Bicycle Stunts by Ines in Shanghai

It was nice how easy it was to draw a crowd. And also people video taping that all said they have never seen anything like this.

Ines Brunn Cycling Show at China Cycle

Right after each show I got swamped with people. It was really fun. A lot were not believing that it was a real bamboo bike.

Ines Posing for Pictures after Performance

Ines Swamped by People after Performance

I met some great people that know me through the bicycle film festival, like Karta Healy.

Karta Healy at Natooke Booth

Also of course some Beijing friends like Master Yang had also travelled to Shanghai for this exhibition which is the biggest cycling show in China.

Beijing Master Yang in Shanghai

Global Times: Where’s the Catch

Dienstag, April 27th, 2010

Today there was an article about Fede and the juggling shop in the Global Times. It is a very nice article. Here is a copy:

Where’s the catch?

Source: Global Times April 27 2010

fire poi on the street in Beijing

Goodness gracious… fire poi on the street in Beijing. Photos: Matthew Jukes

It looks good, works as a form of meditation, and can push your body beyond its natural boundaries. Although China may have been one of the first places it started, it has now been all but forgotten. But, there’s always room for change. „My idea is that juggling will have the same evolution as break dancing in Japan and Korea,“ said Federico Moro, the man with the balls to keep the Beijing jugglers running.

Already a well loved hobby, and in some circles a professional sport in the West, juggling can be anything from the simple act of tossing a couple of lemons around to passing six sharp objects at speed across a stage. Quite simply put, it’s moving around a number of objects that exceeds the number of limbs you’re using to do it.

Here in Beijing it’s limited to a group of people who meet up on a Monday night. Strange fortune perhaps, as China was possibly one of the modern ancestors of juggling, albeit with swords.

Zen like

In the depths of Yugong Yishan, normally renown more for its music than strolling players, Moro, shouts out. „Anyone can do it!“ and „It’s just like riding a bike!“ This encouraging shout normally means a lot of sheepish grins as most of the novices in the crowd look down at the sea of dropped juggling balls around their feet.

„Everyone can do three balls. Everyone is able to do five balls; everyone can do six or seven balls,“ explained Moro. „The whole point is the amount of time you are willing to put in.“

He insisted that all you need to learn how to juggle is two minutes of lesson, and then 10 to 20 hours of practice on your own. The more you’re spending scrabbling around on the floor to pick up dropped objects, the better. The idea is to keep swapping which hand you start throwing with, and to enter into the rhythmic zen like state which keeps three balls in motion just in front.

At any given meet up, the group can include newcomers, hardened pros and even the odd visitor just stopping by to keep in practice.

„I’ve been juggling for eight years,“ said Koert Van Eijk who had come over to visit a member of his family in their place of work. „It’s my first time in Beijing, I thought I’d give it a shot and I found this group very close to the hotel,“ he added. As an avid jongleur, he’d even brought his own balls. Van Eijk is used to the juggling clubs in Amsterdam, where visiting enthusiasts pop in for a quick practice.

Mind and body

Making it sound casual and easy is all very well after several years of practice, but it’s also good for the brain, as much so as meditation, and good for the body, in the same fashion as martial arts.

„Juggling is my meditation,“ said Moro, who studies and connects mind and body movements as part of his project the Body Foundation. He’s now been juggling, and practicing the diabolo for around 10 years. „What I’m doing gives me the tools to do things in a different way. These tools are a good way to read yourself.“

The skill set may be similar to martial arts, with reflexes, dexterity and con-trolled movements which develop with practice. But there are fundamental differences, most importantly for Moro, the lack of „martial“ in the arts.

„You don’t have to think about attack and defense,“ said Moro, „and there’s no hierarchy involved.“ He believes that both things detract from the body’s ability to learn, for jugglers you pick up the tool you want to practice with and work from there – no belts and sashes needed (unless you really want to).

The group in Beijing practice on the whole for fun and despite the obvious novelty as a party trick, and the fact circus skills help attract the opposite sex during festival season, China hasn’t branched into the pro circuit just yet.

Beijing Jugglers Monday Workshop

Just like riding a bike. Photos: Matthew Jukes

Novelty

„At the first workshop I really loved it, but I never expected my legs would be so sore,“ said Michelle Yu, a newcomer to the group who had been dashing about madly to pick up the balls. Like many hanging around the hall, she’d been brought by word of mouth to the workshop. „I really like it and want to practice and improve my skills; it’ll be a lot of fun when I don’t have to keep picking up the balls!“

Standing off to one side, so as not to injure anyone, the poi spinners also wander down to the Beijing jugglers, long term residents and visitors alike. For those who’ve never seen it, poi are a pair of wires with small weights on the end.

„It’s China! I just had to come and see this place!“ exclaimed Ruben Valas, who’d been entertaining people, and more dangerously distracting motorists outside with some lit fire poi. He’d been traveling, but had met Dave Cooper, a member of the group in a bar and had come down. Cooper’s chosen tool is the devil stick, another Satanic sounding form of juggling done using balanced sticks.

„I picked up devil spinning at Glastonbury in 2004. Everyone can do three balls but no further. I just messed around a bit today devil sticking the festival away…“ He was only too happy to put on an impromptu performance for a local travel channel that turned up to film the group last week.

The different forms of object manipulation practiced by the Beijing group all have their own unique style, and aesthetics, but the processes are essentially the same. You’ve got to be on your toes (hands) and stay focused to keep everything airborne.

„Of all the sports of we can imagine juggling is the one which improves the most connection of synapses in brain,“ said Moro. „Switching between left and right, left and right, the two sides [of the brain] keep working at the same time.“

As a general rule the jugglers meet every Monday night in Yugong Yishan, travelers and passersby always seem to gravitate and share their experience and it’s normally an opportunity to see several different types of the art at the same time. If nothing else it gives the uncoordinated man on the street the opportunity to learn what they’re capable of and not get laughed at when their balls drop.

For more information check out www.natooke.com