urban scavenger hunt, this Sunday

From an email I received today…

People of the Triangle,

The Durham Committee of the Triangulator would like to invite you to attend the first of a series of Triangle scavenger hunts aimed at increasing Triangle-centric knowledge, exploration, and sharing. This debut event will be held on Sunday, April 20th in Durham.

To help get your mind scavenging the Triangulator Photo Team has provided a practice question - see the attached image and try to track this guy down.

To RSVP email: scavenger.hunt@triangulator.org
(As part of our pre-registration process, please include your favorite Durham street name with your RSVP)

What: Triangulator is a six hour, multi-media, multi-modal (sub)urban adventure. It is very much like and very much unlike other scavenger hunts in that it involves searches for specific items and subjective, interpretative explorations. There may or may not be right answers, you may or may not know them and that may or may not be an advantage. Go forth and triangulate.

When and Where:
Sunday, April 20th
10am: Congregation, Caffeination and Circulation of Clues at Parker and Otis (map)
11am-5pm: Scavenger Hunt within 2 mile boundary of downtown Durham
5-6:30: Napping and Uploading of photos;
6:30pm: Awards, Drinks, Food, and Presentations - location TBA (map)

Why: Because we like fun games and competing and exploring the urban/suburban landscape with our friends

How: Through genius, bicycle, social capital, blood, toil, sweat, tears, and vision.

Rules and regulations:

* Bikes, automobiles, mopeds, scooters, walking, running allowed.
* Each team will require a digital camera (i.e. bring one if you’ve got one).
* Registration is $3 per person or snacks of equal value.
* Unexpected interpretation of the questions and unpredictable results are encouraged.
* Boundaries: Space between 15-501, Cornwallis, I-85, 70, and NC Central Univ. far side
* Winning teams will receive the profound envy of other players (not redeemable for cash).
* Teams will be formed on arrival (bring folks to play with or come and join up with others).

Disclaimer: This is an experiment - participate at your own risk! You may be asked to provide feedback and suggestions for future events. Depending on the day’s success other events in Raleigh, Chapel Hill and any number of the other municipalities within the 13-county Triangle Region will soon follow.

triangulator_practice.jpg

hat tip to Martha Pentecost for the email

Halloween Hundred and Hallowheels

2007 Halloween Hundred

Halloween Hundred

16 mile group ride starts at moonrise! (head and tail lights required)

100 miles, 8:30 a.m. / 62 miles, 9:30 a.m. / 31 miles, 10 a.m.

Family Fun Ride, 10:30 a.m. 6-12 miles on the American Tobacco Trail

All rides are fully supported and start and finish at the American Tobacco Historic District located at 318 Blackwell St. in downtown Durham.

For more info: http://www.durhamhabitat.org/about_us/news.php?ID=79

Hallowheels, an alleycat in Raleigh

hallowheels_final.pnghallowheels_back_final.png

Durham Ride for Rwanda — Saturday, September 8th

From the Durham Bike Co-op website…

On Saturday, September 8th, a community of like-minded Durham businesses will host a truly special event that will benefit a cause very close to our hearts. I’m pleased to announce that The Durham Bike Co-op is a co-sponsor of a bicycle scavenger hunt around the city of Durham designed to raise funds for, and awareness of, Bikes to Rwanda, an organization with the mission to provide much-needed cargo bicycles to co-operative coffee farmers in Rwanda. The organization also works toward improving the quality of life in these coffee-growing communities through a bicycle workshop and maintenance program that not only provides transportation resources for basic needs but also enhances the production of quality coffee.

Registration for the event begins at noon, and the scavenger hunt begins at 1 pm at event co-sponsor Shade Tree Coffee, which is also great place for coffee or espresso before, after, and during the event! Other sites along the route include Durham locations of co-sponsors The Scrap Exchange, SEEDS community garden, Locopops, Chaz’s Bull City Records, and the Durham Bike Co-op. Registration is $7 and all proceeds go directly to Bikes to Rwanda. Special thanks to Docusource for printing one of the most beautiful posters we’ve ever seen; and to Counter Culture Coffee for helping organize the event.

In solidarity with our partners in Rwanda, the event takes place on the same day as the Rwandan Wooden Bike Classic. At each stop on the hunt, participants will complete fun challenges such as riding a wooden bike; competing in a coffee sack race; enjoying a delicious popsicle; drinking a shot of single-origin Rwandan espresso; and more! At the end of the hunt, those who have completed all the challenges and make it back to Shade Tree will be entered in a drawing for prizes.

The event is sure to be a lot of fun for the whole family, and even if you don’t have or ride a bicycle, we encourage you to still come out and join the festivities. For those of you who do plan to ride, please remember your helmets!

el baile de los toros

toros_sm.jpg

city of suspects II

city_suspects.jpg

Nutcracker Alleycat

see Arleigh for more info…

Durham’s Alleyrat alleycat

Saturday, September 2nd, come test your ingenuity on a bike. Race Durham’s next alleycat, and help raise money for a new organization — the Durham Bike Collective. While you’re clicky-clickin’, ask them what the Durham Bike Collective is.

Here’s an earlier version of their mission statement:

We propose an open community for bicyclists and bicycle culture in Durham. To this end, we further propose a bicycle co-operative that can function as a nexus of this community. Aside from the pleasure of riding them, we believe that bikes are a vital vehicle for sociality and movement, and that they offer a real alternative to the (economically, socially, ecologically) disastrous hegemony of the automobile. We further believe that in connection with other practices and knowledges there is in bicycling a vision of autonomy that has much to contribute to the creation of new forms of social life. Our practice as a collective will therefore be (at least initially) twofold:

1) Skill-share. In order to encourage self-empowerment through the exchange of practical knowledge, we will regularly facilitate and host gatherings in which skills related to bicycle maintenance, repair, and riding will be communicated in an open, free, and inviting setting.

2) Bicycle recovery and redistribution. We will solicit donations of unused and unwanted bicycles and bike parts, fix these bikes, and distribute them to the Durham community on a first-come, first-served basis. Ideally and budget permitting, these bicycles will be free; although in some cases a donation (money and/or sweat equity put into a bike or into the co-operative, in connection with our first goal) will be asked for the cost of any parts needed to refurbish the bike. All labor done within the collective will be voluntary and unpaid.

twisted sister

raleighalleycat.jpg

The Outspokin’ Cyclist: Bike couriers spur alleycats

Phillip Barron
The Herald Sun
April 27th, 2006

Remember the childhood fun of a scavenger hunt? You and your friends run around the backyard or school yard, gathering clues in corners or under rocks. Sometimes the clues stared you in the face, but the excitement of the game obscured them from view. And for some of them, there was a goal and even a winner. But that wasn’t really the point. The point was to have fun, right?

Take a scavenger hunt, mix in a little punk culture, anti-authoritarian politics, and a taste of danger, spread the course out over town, and make it a bike race. Now, you’ve got what’s called an alleycat.

Although only a handful of people showed up to Durham’s St. Patrick’s Day alleycat, they came from as far away as Hillsborough, Raleigh, and New Haven, Connecticut. OK, Mark didn’t come to Durham just for the race; Yale Divinity School was on spring break and he was in town visiting old friends. But Eric Owens, organizer of the event, isn’t surprised that folks came up from Raleigh for the ride.

“It’s really growing at an exponential rate right now. Many small towns the size of Durham are now hosting alleycats, whereas a few years ago no one had heard of them,” says Owens. So, where did they come from?

Alleycat races are an outgrowth of the bike courier scenes of major metropolitan areas. In cities like Chicago, New York, or San Francisco, the downtown centers are so densely packed that frequently the fastest way to get a letter, memo, filing, or other parcel from one side of town to another is by bicycle. Courier companies employ bikers to navigate through car, bus, and truck-filled streets, and because the courier is paid by delivery, efficiency is key to being a successful messenger.

Efficiency on a bike in a dense urban area, however, often translates into speed, disregard for traffic laws (it might be more convenient to ride the wrong way on a one-way street, for example), and a significant element of risk-taking.

The risks of the job, thinks Owens who spent a year as a bike messenger in Manhattan before coming to Duke for graduate school, bond the couriers together. Bragging about delivering this many packages over that big an area is something he heard regularly after work.

And an alleycat race is the place to settle the bragging rights, to see once and for all who is the fastest or who knows the city the best. “They grow out of a culture of work,” says Owens.

An alleycat is a unique sort of race. It’s designed to recreate the day-to-day challenges of messengers. At the Durham alleycat, each rider received a manifest made up of checkpoints throughout town. To complete the manifest, each rider had to visit each checkpoint and document somehow that he or she had been there.

For instance, to prove that they’d been to Cookout on Hillsborough Rd, riders had to write down the number of milkshake flavors the restaurant offers. Hand-written signs hung near the top of several parking garages downtown, and racers had to scribble down the signs’ messages. And one checkpoint was simply to write down what’s at 1825 Chapel Hill Rd. Riders had to go there to find out.

Unlike other cycling races, alleycats are not held on closed courses. They’re held in the streets, where riders mix with other traffic. Nor is there a prescribed route; riders complete the manifest in whatever order they want. So in addition to being a test of speed, an alleycat tests how well riders know local landmarks and streets.

But, without a bike messenger scene in the Triangle, why are there alleycats?

“Now that skateboarding culture has been completely co-opted, is mainstream, and you can find everything you need at the mall, I think people are looking for the next underground thing,” says Owens. Since alleycats are not sanctioned bike races, they have a certain chic factor to them.

So, did the St. Pat Alleycat bring together an emerging Triangle urban-bike scene? I’m really not sure. But it was fun, a little absurd, and no one got hurt.

For more urban-bike scene absurdity, check out bike polo. Meet at The Bicycle Chain, Durham on Thursdays at 8:30pm

A little post-alleycat video… complete with crooked-crank racing, bike tossing, and a brief night ride.