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Serious cyclists having serious fun!
Big Ring Adventure Team
A Division of 53T, Inc.
P.O. Box 622
Madison, IN 47250-0622
Office: 812-265-4203
Mobile: 812-292-0700
Fax: 812-418-3368
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News & Views
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Advertise on this site - send us an e-mail for more info.
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On this page:
2008 Jaunt with Jim Ride
Click here for the Versailles State Park info page.
Where's the wares? We still have BRATware in inventory - shirts, books, front license plates - but we won't be selling them through this site. We're looking for a better way to manage our retail sales. Until we find it we'll be happy to sell you anything you saw on our old site. Just let us know what you're looking for. And if you have a BRATware certificate, hang onto it. They're good indefinitely.
How do I join? Our online membership options, like our BRATware options, are limited right now. In fact, they're really limited. Nonexistent. It's another area we're seeking to manage better. But we'll be happy to e-mail you a membership form which you can then mail back or bring to a ride and hand to Rich Ries. Basic membership is free. Frequent Flier membership, which includes discounts and special offers, is $53 per year. We also offer corporate memberships.
Bicycle Parts and Service Now Available Through the years Rich Ries has provided mechanical service for cyclists. We've decided to add some structure to the program and make those services a regular part of what we do. We'll provide details later, but for now if you need bike work done, give us a call. We can also get parts at competitive cost. We're not trying to steal you away from any bike dealer if you have a good relationship with one now. But many local riders are frustrated by the travel time and cost or lengthy delays they experience when working with dealers. From simple cable replacement to complex overhauls and installation of new components, we offer a full range of services at reasonable rates - and Frequent Fliers get additional discounts. Contact us today to learn more.
Brown County State Park Trails Update
Text and photos by Rich Ries
Posted April 10, 2008.
Julie and I camped at Brown County State Park on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, April 6, 7, and 8. I rode the trails all three days and we hiked about 10 miles over two days. The photo is of the BRAT Mobile Command Center.
While I was at Brown County I spent quite a bit of time talking with other members of the Hoosier Mountain Bike Association, including Alex Stewart. Here's what I learned from riding and conversing.
The older, established trails (North Gate, North Tower Loop, Aynes Loop, and Hesitation Point Connector) are all in excellent condition. There were a few - a very few - wet spots and minimal use- or erosion-related effects. The newer trails, between Hesitation Point and the Ogle Hollow Nature Preserve parking lot, are much improved over last year, but still not finished. The big problem is a number of seeps that are keeping several trail sections muddy. Once the trees leaf out and start sucking water out of the ground the problem will go away. For now the HMBA trail builders are busily armoring the wet spots. It would be best to avoid these trails until conditions improve. No photos for these trails.
Alex showed me a new Expert trail in its initial phases of construction. Julie and I hiked it on Tuesday. The trail will include lots of challenging features, such as multiple rock jump-ups on uphill sections and some tricky cliff face riding. “The challenge will be to keep less-skilled riders off these trails,” Alex said. “We'll sign it well and put some qualifiers at the start so those riders are discouraged before they get too far along the trail.” (Qualifiers are sections at the start of a trail that represent features included later in the trail. Riders can use the qualifiers to judge their capacity for riding the rest of the trail before they commit to doing so.) The photos show some sections of the new Expert trail.



 Our wet winter kept me off the trails. On Sunday I rode like a complete newcomer to the sport. Fortunately my skill came back quickly. By Tuesday evening I was at maybe 70 percent of my peak-season skill. The photos are of injuries I got on Sunday, when I rode like a Novice but crashed like a Pro. The pix were actually taken the following Wednesday, after the bruise had a chance to color up well.
New to our sport? Interested in road riding? Need a bike? Here are our six best tips for selecting the right road rig.
 One, always buy the bike with the best frame at the price point you're considering. Components wear out and are easily replaced, but you'll have the same frame for as long as you own the bike. If the bike comes with a 50-tooth big `ring and you decide you want a 53t big `ring next year, that's an easy, cheap replacement. If you decide next year that your 6-pound frame is just too darned heavy, well, that's a problem. Your first upgrade will probably be wheels. Enthusiast-level bikes come with good wheels, but not great wheels. Great wheels, which will be lighter and stiffer than the stock hoops, go on sale regularly and will make an immediate, noticeable improvement in the way your bike performs.
Two, don't spend more than a grand. If you stay with biking you'll develop specific likes and dislikes and you'll be ready to trade up in a few years. Since used bike values are low, you're better off having only 20% residual on a three-year-old, thousand-dollar bike than a three-year-old, $2,500 bike. If you don't stay with biking you've minimized your losses.
Three, don't spend less than $600. Less than that and the bike becomes the limiting factor in your performance and enjoyment of riding.
Four, don't order a bike online or by mail order that you haven't test-ridden somewhere. In fact, we advocate against ordering bikes online at all for less-experienced cyclists. Most bike shops have good prices these days and offer service a Web site can't. If you're an accomplished cyclist, can do all your own installation, setup, service, and repair, and have boxes full of specialty tools (headset press, bottom bracket wrenches, etc.), then mail order is a fun way to build your dream bike. For newbies with minimal knowledge and a pair of Vise-Grips, mail order can be the short road to disaster. And do buy from an actual bike shop, not a big-box retailer.
Five, test ride at least a half-dozen different bikes from different manufacturers and visit several dealers. Test ride a bike at least one size too big and a bike at least one size too small. By exaggerating the consequences of poor bike fit, you'll become sensitized to less profound size problems. If you need a different frame size or just a different stem length, it's best to know that before you plunk down your plastic. And women should test ride a few women-specific models, which most manufacturers now offer. Women's body proportions are different than men's and women-specific bikes reflect this in their geometry.
Six, understand your riding style and riding environment and get a drivetrain to match. For most beginners, whose power-to-weight ratio isn't favorable, a compact or triple crankset is a good idea. A compact crank has smaller `rings than a standard crankset, such as 34 and 50 teeth instead of 39 and 53 teeth. A triple crankset has three `rings, typically with 30, 39, and 53 teeth. If there are lots of hills where you'll be riding, get appropriately low gears. In our part of paradise - southeastern Indiana - we have frequent, short, steep hills. We recommend a triple with a tight cassette. A 30-39-53 crankset with a 12-25 or an 11-23 cassette is perfect. It gives you low gears for climbing, high gears for descending, and tight cog spacing so you don't get ridiculous variations in cadence (pedaling RPM) with each shift. Tip: always have a 16-tooth cog in the cassette. There's tremendous pressure within the cycling community to avoid triple cranks. We think that enthusiast-level road bikes intended for use in all but the flattest terrain should be geared as we described (triple crank, tight cassette). If you succumb to the pressure of style slaves in cycling, try to remember how important it was to gain their approval twenty years from now when the doctors are sucking the ruptured meniscus tissue out of your knees and you can't walk without assistance.
Questions? Comments? E-mail Rich Ries.
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Special Offer! "The Christian Life," a 5-CD set, plus 3 bonus CDs and an album for storing and carrying the 8-disk collection is available for $18 with free shipping. (Shown at left. Titles of 3 bonus CDs may vary from what's shown.)
BRAT CEO Rich Ries's brother, Gary, is senior pastor at Augustana Lutheran Church in Duluth, MN. The church records Gary's sermons. Some riders have expressed an interest in hearing these messages and we now have CDs to loan out. If you'd like to borrow one or more, let Rich know. There's no charge and no particular time in which the disks must be returned.
If you'd like to buy Augustana CDs, you can order directly from the church by contacting:
Charlene Ostman, Treasurer
Augustana Lutheran Church
P.O. Box 1037
Duluth, MN 55810-1037
CDs are $3 each. Shipping is $2 for 1-3 CDs and $4 for 4-6 CDs. Make checks payable to Augustana Lutheran Church.
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