WHAT'S NEW
A Wintertime Retrospective
- Winter is the season of too little riding, too much food, with an occasional pinch of cross-training. But now with February looming, a commitment to springtime fitness cannot be deferred any longer. Some visual notes of the off-season that was:
- 50 hours on the trainer. A new annual record. Is it a pain cave? A tedium cave? Either way, a proper portrait:
- The misery of indoor training was something periodically avoided through a more exquisite sort of brutality:
- Stamp fascination gets stronger.
- Rothko cookies to match.
- Dreams of riding in Europe are best fueled by dishes eaten in Europe. Ribollita is as PRO as a frame pump beneath your top tube. This recipe is enough to feed a whole team plus support staff. I suggest you cut it by half. And in my experience plain ol' kale is perfectly good.
- 'Tis the season for food obsessions.
- Until this winter, everything I'd ever known about skiing came in 1980:
- Who knew that Smith Optics owns the ski helmet market given that it was so lost in the woods during its one foray into cycling?
As I took baby steps into Alpine skiing this winter, the one piece of gear which left me smitten was the insulated ski helmet. A lack of air vents plus cushy interior insulation and the thick ear pads keeps your head toasty even in sub-zero conditions.
Is there a market for the winter-specific helmet in cycling? The population of outdoor, wintertime riders may be just too small. Another concern is the trade of warmth for danger. MIght the thick ear pads muffle engine noise of approaching cards until it's too late?
In trying to guess how many cyclists would pony up for a helmet they'd use for just a few weeks out of the year, it's natural to wonder about the global sales of Sidi's incredible winter shoes, the Hydro GTX. They're expensive, season-specific and narrow in purpose. Historically we've done a reasonable business in them. I can't help but wonder if the market for winter cycling shoes correlates to potential for winter helmets.
- And, speaking of shoes, my bony and mismatched feet drove me to purchasing a set of fully custom ski boots from the legendary company Surefoot. The shell itself is an off-the-shelf affair. But as part of the process I got computer-modeled insoles plus a liner shaped to my feet, ankles, and shins. The process involved blowing high-pressure fluid blown through tubes into the boot. The fluid then congealed into something I'd describe as malleable foam. It was an amazing process to behold. The end result is boots that made the difference between me spending my weekends skiing instead of sitting on the couch fretting about my trainer.
In comparison to the Surefoot process, the bike business has a long way to go. Currently, the best options come from the two behemoths of the cycling shoe marketplace, Specialized and Shimano. They offer heat-moldable footbeds and some basic options for arch support. But nobody offers the full-bore customization of Surefoot,. Likewise, to this day no cycling shoe company has matched the promise once offered by Rocket7.
Rocket7 was as custom as custom could be. Thanks to its use of crush boxes for plaster-casting your feet, the fit process offered superb footbeds, near-infinite options for length and width, and the bonus of aesthetic freedom impossible in regular mass production. Their shoes were incomprehensively light (a half-pound lighter than a pair of Sidi's luxe Ergo road shoes), their soles were stiff as a thru axle. The brand had singular cachet thanks not just because of the shoes themselves, but its association with the Slipstream pro road team.
In the end, though, Rocket7 was star-crossed. It was saddled with unreasonably high expectations. Its owner looked at every shoe order as a mystery to be definitively mastered while every customer viewed it as certain deliverance from lifelong disappointment. In addition to the challenge created by those astronomical expectations was Rocket7's lack of capital and its inability to manage its growing production. By comparison, Surefoot has 24 retail stores across the world, and it offers an easily-replicable custom process. If Rocket7 had found similar financial backing and operational expertise, it would own the high-end cycling shoe market. My memory of the company is one part sadness and one part respect.
- Cross racing season is long gone. Time to turn the beast into a commuter. SKS fenders plus 28c tires are a recipe for an all-weather superbike. And adapting Dura-Ace 7900 cranksets to a PF30 bottom bracket shell was a piece of cake.
February 02, 2012
Gotta say, I always appreciate reading the postings here.
But the comments.............geez people, who shit in your cheerios. Lighten up.
- Big Mikey, TO, frozen white north
February 02, 2012
+1 for D2. A bit of a wait, but well worth it.
- Paul, New York
February 01, 2012
Custon Bike shoes. D2 also makes custom cycling shoes. Don Lamson is a really nice guy and did a super job for and many others. Please add them to your list
However, I like several others had issues with Rocket 7 not being able to create the shoe correctly. I snet mine back 3 times before they remade tehm and the 2nd pair was worse than the first.
- Mike, Palatine, IL
February 01, 2012
@ Dan, Waterloo, Cananda-
Move to Florida?
- S, Colorado
February 01, 2012
Nate, I vote yours comment of the year! your definition is to PRO what Dan Savage's is to Santorum! Brilliant!
- James, Mt. Lebanon
February 01, 2012
A note to readers: Surefoot does indeed make custom-fit ski boots but what so many happy customers forget is that part of that setup is a custom footbed, which they can make for cycling shoes (and running shoes and dress shoes and sneakers). If you find a shoe that fits length and width, it may be worth your while to get it fitted with one of Surefoot's footbeds
- Stefan, Brooklyn
February 01, 2012
Given that a commenter mentioned biathlon, I thought you should know that there is actually a mountain bike/shooting biathlon held at soldier hollow near your home in the summer, its pretty fun actually.
- Ben, Utah
February 01, 2012
Nate is apparently the spokesperson for "cycling" and it has pronounced that the author of this blog is a disgrace to it. As the spokesperson for "bicycling" I state that nate is a disgrace to bicycling. So there.
- JZ, Utah
February 01, 2012
PRO = PRETENTIOUS RAMBLING OLIGARCH. You're a disgrace to cycling.
- nate, tucson
February 01, 2012
I love the line of reasoning in What's New, how you jump from one item to the other. But then again, why do you keep making mistakes like "But nobody offers the full-bore customization of Surefoot,"? Why present matters like you know everything there is to know? You very clearly don't. You're not euro-pro either (long valves in box section rims) nor using optimal solutions (why retrofit a crank into a BB system that's built around a completely different design philosophy). All in all, I like your blog posts, I just don't see them as a positive contribution to your web shop...
- Mano, The Hague
February 01, 2012
Dura ace, carbon frame commuter, I love the site but youre losing touch. Neither if those things go together with a bike that might have to get locked up for 8 hours.
- Grayson, Sd
January 31, 2012
Nice piece - ust curious how you cross train between cycling and DH skiing?
- brian, santa fe
January 31, 2012
I live in MN where getting dressed to ride outside is like putting on a space suit. I can confirm that Hydros are great winter shoes.
After years of snarky comments about the rules of Nordic Combined when you were writing from balmy Arkansas, you have not learned the rules after your transplant. Worse yet you have not (yet) embraced biathilon which combines your fascination w/firearms with really intense aerobic effort (drop your plus from 160 to a rate where you can hit 4 very small targets at 50m). In Germany it routinely draws larger crowds than Cyclocross 30-40K. Ironic when the pic you posted of the Cannibal shows him (classically) nordic skiing.
Nordic skiing especially skate skiing is the REALLY Pro way to cross train in the winter.
Greg LeMond used to complain about bulking up too much.
- Felix, Two Rivers
January 31, 2012
How can you talk about custom cycling shoes and not talk about D2?
- Justin, Lafayette
January 31, 2012
I've been reading your blog (here) for years. Love your POV and your writing style. Also love your company. I routinely buy from you. But sorry to see you've ripped off a recipe for Ribollita, without even giving credit to the author of the book. You might have gotten rights from the publisher if you had asked. If you did, and they said no--you shouldn't have printed it.
- Leo, Santa Barbara
January 31, 2012
rosko dot cc
- Brett, Palisade
January 31, 2012
Ahhh - the Rothko stamp - his exhibit at the Whitney in 1998 (I was lucky enough to be there on Halloween when Frank Stella was present) was 8 years before I started riding. Riding and his art, however, do somehow hit the same nerve - as does his Chapel in Houston. By the way, when I started riding I always left the valve cap on as well as the washer - I have not seen either in a long while - on my bike or others. Any thoughts?
- Bruce, Acton, MA
January 31, 2012
What's that white stuff on the ground? In these parts, the windbreaker comes off when it breaks 78, and the arm warmers get the day off if it's over 84. Of course, that's preparation for the summer months when it can dip into the 90s overnight.
Another custom shoe option is RBC Sport out of Australia. On Facebook: RBC (dot) Sport
- Sean, Murrieta, CA
January 31, 2012
Sacreligous! Why in the world would you treat your BH in that way! I say you get only last row starts next season. Your out of our club!
- Rich, Groveland, MA
January 31, 2012
Ditto on just wearing a warm hat under your helmet.... $15 bucks for a hat vs. $100+ for a winter specific helmet.
- Doug, Atl

























