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Not A Bike Review

(re)Filling The Void

Photos Mike Ferrentino
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Loss Or Opportunity?

There’s something to be said for having all the stuff you considered “important” corralled in one place, say, the cab and bed of a truck. Easy access. It’s all right there. You know where everything is, and you are self-contained and self-sufficient. There is also something to be said for having all that Important Stuff stolen, along with the truck you were ostensibly living out of, in the wee small hours of the night while you splurged on a fancy hotel room. In my case, the something I said was; “Ahhh, fuck.”

The massive bummer of having most of my Important Stuff jacked in the middle of the night was somewhat offset by the blank slate sense of near weightlessness that followed. Material possessions represent value, but they also can act as ballast, as weighty life anchors. More shit to worry about. The absence of those things, once the sting of loss is processed, once the red mist passes, is liberating. At least that is what I tell myself as I try to maintain perspective.

Perspective, however, is not always easy to find or maintain. Especially when rummaging around looking for a pair of sunglasses, a favorite base layer, or something to trim my toenails with, only to realize that the inanimate object that had been faithfully, almost invisibly, serving its purpose for god knows how many years had vaporized along with all my other Important Stuff. Then the anger and sense of violation briefly flares white hot, before subsiding and leaving me with an exposed need. Which brings us, roundaboutly, to the point of this column: the unexpected essential items that have been part of my restocking process. Some of these have proven more essential than others, but all of them were sourced in a moment of “gotta have it now” necessity.

AHand

Victorinox Wenger

This little gem was one of several just like it that were gifted to me and my then partner when a young Garen Becker (that charming dude at Santa Cruz bikes) was renting a downstairs apartment from us about 12 years ago. He had just come back from rolling around Central America in a diesel Suburban with his brother, and they had picked up some Swiss hitchhikers, and the Swiss had left them with a big bagful of these tiny little knives that they had then used to barter their way home. And they rule (so does Garen). My ex and I refer to these little knives as “Beckers”, due to how they arrived in our lives.

I had, for the same past 12 years, a trusty SOG-Tac auto pocket knife that served me faithfully and was never out of reach. Until I left it in the glove compartment the night my truck got stolen. Upon regrouping at the storage unit a couple weeks later, I found this little Becker in a bin labeled “office desk”, hooked it onto my keychain, and drove off into the dawn of a new day. It’s a sharp little bastard that is completely forgettable until I need to open some boxes, slice some calluses, trim some toenails, dig some cactus spines out of my forearm or tires, tweeze some tweezables, or use the toothpick to un-schmutz the charging port of my iPhone. It totally lacks the heft and menace of my stolen SOG, but it more than makes up for that with unobtrusive every day functionality. Thanks again, Garen!

APump

Topeak Mountain Morph

What’s too big to fit in a jersey pocket, not big enough to really be considered a full size pump, but is still so awesome that everyone should own one? This little beauty right here. While I was regrouping at the storage unit, lamenting the loss of my Specialized floor pump, I found this in a duffel bag full of dirt bike gear and tools. It is probably about 18 years old, but apparently it rules so much that the design hasn’t changed. I have used it to air up everything from exercise balls to car tires. I lost it once upon a time, and bought another one. The other one was in my riding backpack, which, surprise surprise, was in the back of my truck when it got stolen. Along with my floor pump. So, finding this was sort of like an extra Christmas.

The “neither fish nor fowl” size and bulk of the Mountain Morph makes it hard to parse in the modern mountain biking hierarchy of needs. It’s too big for a pocket, and nobody really frame mounts their pumps anymore, do they? It is perfectly sized for pack duty, but then again, are people even packing full-ish size pumps anymore? That said, it blows a ton of air, can even seat tubeless tires on friendly rims, the little foot and hose that imitates a mini floor pump is actually functional, it switches relatively easily from Schrader to Presta, and will it outperform anything this side of a real floor pump or an old Zefal hPX. And it will last forever. I’ve long lost count of how many dirt bike tires I’ve inflated with this thing, and have never once even looked inside it to see if the piston needs some love. The other one, the one that got stolen, same deal. Year upon year of stone reliable, absolutely dependable service. Welcome back, old friend.

AGrip

ODI Vans Lock-On Grips

While I was digging around in the storage unit, I loaded my brand new, still unfinished Starling Murmur into the back of the replacement getaway vehicle, cursing at myself for getting 99% of a build finished before getting distracted by some shiny object, or an escrow process, or cancer, or Mexico, or whatever. Wabi-sabi; story of my life. In this case manifested as a bicycle that is almost rideable but minus handlebar grips. Fortunately, thanks to a sale bin purchase at a bike shop on the way north from The Scene Of The Crime, I had scored these gumwall wonders. No, they do not match anything else on the bike. Yes, they absolutely rule. I bought them on a whim, had no idea if I would like their 31mm diameter or waffle pattern or grip texture, and as it turns out I may have a new favorite grip. For now, anyway. Probably been discontinued already…

ASkratch

Skratch Labs Hyrdation/Recovery Drink

Among the many items that got poached with my truck, there was a bin filled with fancyass titanium camp cookware, a Jetboil, and a whole mess of “things that cyclists shove in their mouths while riding” – Clif Shot Bloks, GU gels and Stroopwafels, and a couple big bags of Skratch Labs drink mix. The chewable things, I was not too torn up about. I have a love/hate relationship with most edible “cycling nutrition” anyway. But, damn, I’ve sort of become addicted to Skratch Labs hydration aids over the past couple years, so these were two of the first things I replaced, at the same bike shop I found those ODI grips.

Skratch Labs don’t use janky fake sugars, and rely on simple recipes and real-ish ingredients. For me, that makes them better tasting and easier to stomach. I run the Lemon-Lime hydration juice in a single bottle on rides less than 2 hours, mixed somewhere in between their “average athlete” and “heavy sweater” recommended ratio. Then I chug a recovery shake as soon as I get off the bike. Me gusta el sabor Horchata. Maybe it works, maybe it’s happy taste bud placebo effect, but I feel less thrashed on a day to day basis following this protocol. It also bears mentioning that both these flavors have solid potential as cocktail mixers.

ASilca

Silca HX-1

Chalk this one up to extravagant excess. I’ve always been a sucker for classy wooden cases, practicality be damned. Yes, 99 USD is a ton of money to pay for a basic array of hex and Torx wrenches (“don’t forget the screwdrivers, dad!”) that could be essentially replicated for about half that (provided we stick with name brand stuff and don’t cheat by going full Harbor Fright). But on the flip side of that rationale, sourcing the same range of stainless steel wrenches (2-10mm 8-piece hex set, 7-piece Torx set, 4 screwdriver bits) from everyone’s current darlings, Wera, would probably cost about the same, or maybe more than this. AND this comes with a totally impractical but beautiful wood case. There’s a magnetic adaptor that fits onto the 6mm hex key, and the Torx as well as screwdriver bits fit into that. The plug-in wrench fitting is the same size as used on cordless power tool bits, which means there is an absolutely huge range of replacement bits available when these get lost or wear out or if you need to really stretch out your purchasing rationale. No, it is in no way portable. Yes, it was there in the display case when I was buying the grips and the Skratch Labs stuff. Yes, I have wanted one of these boxes since I first saw them a few years ago. Yes, I paid full fucking retail. No, I do not regret it one bit.

… I was going to wrap this up with a barely coherent attempt at tying the room together about how these seemingly unnecessary necessities were enabling me to get my tires dirty and find the hidden trails that in turn fuel my combined need for adventure as well as pedal therapy, but it seems like a stretch. I mean, they do facilitate all that, but they are not the absolute “must have” glue that binds. I’m not sure if there is any “must have” glue that binds anymore. But these little things, seemingly not that important in the grand scheme of things, are what helped me start putting chaos back in some semblance of order over the past couple months. I’m thankful for each and every one of them.

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Comments

cooperquinn
+24 TristanC danithemechanic R.bobbby Velocipedestrian twk Bikeryder85 Timer DonB23 mrbrett BarryW Andy Eunson Hardlylikely Andeh Mammal Skooks dolface Matt Cusanelli Spencer Nelson Pete Roggeman tashi Harris Mike Ferrentino vunugu chaidach

"I was going to wrap this up with a barely coherent attempt at tying the room together"

Have you tried using a rug?

Reply

craw
+4 Cooper Quinn Andy Eunson Mammal Timer

Or at least a marmot.

Reply

Roxtar
+1 Raymond Epstein

Best

Movie

Ever

Reply

mammal
0

Definitely my favorite movie ever, and it's the only one I can watch at will, and not get sick of it.

Reply

xy9ine
0

had to google that reference

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dolface
0

And now you should watch it!

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lookseasyfromhere
0

Your google-fu is stronger than mine. All I get is this article and its comments.

Reply

LoamtoHome
0
taprider
+7 fartymarty Andy Eunson Mammal Skooks Spencer Nelson dhr999 Mike Ferrentino

Thanks again Mike.

I get the warm fuzzies from your story, from how you are surviving and recovering.

I had my car stolen with all my bike and camping stuff in it, while on the way to a Canada Cup race I was peaking for.  I understand the shopping and repurposing/redisovering therapy you are going through.

Reply

lacykemp
+7 mnihiser PowellRiviera Morgan Heater Timer dhr999 Mike Ferrentino vunugu

I ride with a pump attached to my frame. So there!

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Losifer
+2 Skooks Mike Ferrentino

As terrible as the feeling of coming out of the hotel to all of your material life gone must have felt, you’re inspiring us so much with the rebuilding process! Thank you for letting us tag along.

And om looking forward to reading your thoughts comparing the  Twist and Murmur- considering picking one of them up.

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mrbrett
+2 Mammal Mike Ferrentino

I have and regularly use that Topeak pump as a car trunk pump. Feels less obscene in a parking lot than a mini pump and its' mini pump actions. Same with the Skratch - also a pouch of both of those in my trunk. Come to think of it, I also have that same model of knife in my pocket but it says Shimano. 

After reading the pack loadout articles lately I am left wondering how closely outfitted our trunks/truck beds are too?

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mammal
0

I was just scheming to order one as a replacement for the floor pump I keep in my vehicle. I technically have room for the big one in my SUV, but I often run into trouble when I need it in the house but it's in the car (or vise-versa). A small but mighty floor-ish pump in the car is the perfect solution!

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mrbrett
+2 Mammal Mike Ferrentino

Super durable too! I think my pump is from circa 2006? Something like that at least.

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denomerdano
+1 Mike Ferrentino

I am a Victorinox child. My father was a frequent visitor to Switzerland growing up, coming back with suitcase full of chocolate and cheese. And swiss army knives. I've had all shapes and sizes and every year more added as he gifted hundreds of them to his clients. Still have a few decade old ones in my daily use. And one extra special one with a Leica logo.. that.. probably is worth tens of dollars!

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mammal
+2 BarryW Deniz Merdano

My stepdad used the Swiss Army Knife as a "first responsibility tool" when I was around 10 years old. I'm assuming he wanted to instill in me the ability to care for, and not lose, quality goods. I don't know if it worked, but I've always had a love for those beautiful devices.

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denomerdano
+1 Mammal

The fear of snapping it closed on my finger was so real. My dad's fear mongering stories of "his buddy's" finger falling off was enough to keep me responsible. 

Although later years, I've even used them as hammers in dire situations. I still miss the days we could fly with them as carryons.

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mammal
0

I was also terrified of folding the blade back onto my fingers. Part of the "responsibility quest" was to try and always have it with me, and NEVER lose it. I carried it to school with me daily, but one day a fellow student ratted me out, and that ended. I felt betrayed by society.

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Fat_Tony_NJ
0

I ran a scout troop for a while. When the cubs would show up to learn knife basics, they all would proudly bring a huge, 32 function Swiss Army knife. I hated to break their little hearts when I explained why a locking blade was so much safer.

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velocipedestrian
0

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dsciulli19
+1 Mike Ferrentino

Sorry to hear your stuff got lifted. There are scumbags everywhere these days. Love the shout-out to the mountain morph pump. I have had one for a while and every time someone needs a pump they are amazed at how well it works and how much less annoying it is to use than other portable pumps. I have been carrying it around in my pack for a few years now and its size is a pain to the point that I've replaced it with a more compact oneup EDC pump, but it will definitely be living in my truck bed and parts bin as my other "go-to". It really is "like bringing your floor pump on the trail" as they say.

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Captain-Snappy
+1 Mike Ferrentino

Have a similar Filzer mini floor pump I bring on bigger rides in the Cambelbak. Always get the 'man, that thing is wa-a-ay better than those micro pumps!' comments. It's worth hauling around and hardly noticeable against the 2-3 liters of water sitting right next to it in the pack.

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BarryW
+1 Mike Ferrentino

Thanks for the words Mike. I always look forward to your stuff and this didn't disappoint.

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syncro
+1 Mike Ferrentino

I totally get the impulse to buy that Silca hex key set, price be damned. With my reno biz and other fixing exploits I have  purchased/rented/used a lot of tools over the years, some disposable, some good quality and a few what I would call luxury items. Oddly the luxury purchases don't get used all the much, but when they get pulled out of their cases and used there is a definite indescribable feeling of satisfaction and delight that comes from using them. It is totally worth it to spoil yourself with something that provides this feeling when you are doing any sort of building/fixing project.

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snorris
0

Very pretty... but if they are all red, how do you tell which size is which?

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mikeferrentino
0

I'm not up to speed enough on the new school wrench color coding to remember how that all works anyway, so I just use the old fumble around until I get it right method that has served me so well for the past four decades...

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