Bike Valet Parking at the Reston Festival this weekend!

Ride Your Bike to Reston Festival
The Reston Festival Committee encourages attendees to come to the event by bicycle – Take advantage of a free parking service for bicycles at Reston Town Center. In cooperation with Fairfax Advocates for Better Bicycling (FABB), The Bike Lane, bikes@vienna, and Washington Area Bicyclist Association (WABA), the Reston Festival will provide free secure bicycle valet parking. For more details, click here…

http://www.restonfestival.com/Reston festival

Lances Bike Customized Trek

Lance’s New Trek Customized by Marc Newson2009/07/03

 

 

Featuring subtle flat black paint offset by glossy contrast details including Newson’s “Stroboscopic” rear wheel design that appears to pulse as it spins, the bike brings a new level of design sophistication to the most legendary cycling event in the world while simultaneously flying the flag of cancer awareness in Livestrong yellow.

 

LANCE ARMSTRONG TO RIDE TREK ART BIKE CUSTOMIZED BY RENOWNED DESIGNER MARC NEWSON IN TOUR DE FRANCE LAUNCH IN MONACO ON JULY 4

To help raise awareness for LANCE ARMSTRONG’s mission to bring heightened global attention to the cancer burden and his anti-cancer art show STAGES, which will open its doors in Paris on July 16, world-renowned designer MARC NEWSON has created a special TREK time trial art bike for Lance’s debut ride on the Tour de France on July 4 in Monaco.

Lance made history in 2005 when he rode an artist-designed Trek TTX in his final run in the Tour de France before retiring, and his return to professional racing in 2009 has been marked by a

via Trek Life | News | Lance’s New Trek Customized by Marc Newson.

Mountain Biking The Wheel Deal

Cameron at the Wednesday's at Wakefield

Cameron at the Wednesday's at Wakefield

Pick up your local Connection Newspaper this week to catch a great article about the local youth mountain biking movement!  Yes, one of our little ones is the feature kid, which makes it pretty cool.  However, the more important focus is on local kids getting more into mountain biking and thanks to Trips for Kids Metro DC for helping to make this happen.  Bring your kids and join us at the races!

 

Mountain Biking: The Wheel Deal
Interest in mountain bike riding increases, as does Trips for Kids program’s influence.

By Jason Mackey
Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Cameron Mader has days when he enjoys the solitude of a bike ride. Other times, he said, it’s fun to be able to have his mother, Anne Mader, ride along with him. No less than 100 percent of the time, Mader likes one thing the most when it comes to riding mountain bikes.

“I like to go fast,” said Cameron Mader, 7, who started pedaling at 18 months and has been riding mountain bikes since he was 4.

The Maders, who’ve owned The Bike Lane in Burke for eight years and recently opened a second store in Reston, are a bike-riding family. In addition to competitive rides throughout the week, Cameron Mader rides with his father, Todd Mader, every morning to Oak View Elementary School.

Cameron Mader has also been one of a growing number of participants in the Northern Virginia Youth Mountain Bike Series, which was started in 2007 as a joint effort between local mountain bike race promoters and advocacy groups to get more children riding bicycles. Last year, more than 100 local children took to the trails.

Because of the mountain biking series, which is comprised of multiple races that are sponsored by the Bike Lane, the Potomac Velo Club and EX2 Adventures, mountain biking has become a formidable option for youth sports, as the group’s level of participation has more than quadrupled since its inaugural year.

On Wednesday nights, participants take to the 3.6-mile course at Wakefield Park. In addition to a 10-and-under race, races of four separate classifications run every two years up to age 18.

“It seems like the kids really want to do it because they can’t just ride their bikes around the neighborhood anymore,” Anne Mader said. “Instead, biking has become a planned activity and people are looking for it to become a sport like soccer or basketball, because they’re going to plan for everything and they want to get into the competition part of it.”

PAT CHILDERS jokes that Trips for Kids, a local nonprofit that has been linking under-privileged children with mountain biking for two years, is housed in Springfield. Childers laughs because the bikes are stored in a backyard trailer at his house … and in his basement, shed and under his deck.

Trips for Kids has 40 bicycles that it loans to eager riders so that they may experience the thrill of navigating a dirt trail.

“We’re trying to make it the Little League of mountain biking,” Childers said.

One TFK regular has been Laura Martinez, a rising freshman at Lee High School and an aspiring soccer player. Martinez hopes to make the girls’ soccer team at Lee and has enjoyed her time spent on a bike as a way to prepare for competition on the soccer pitch.

“In soccer, you run and exercise your legs,” Martinez said. “In bike riding, you do the same thing. It’s really interesting as a sport and you get to exercise a lot.”

Childers said that the group started with exclusively under-privileged children. Now, he and his wife, Julie Childers, have fielded several e-mails asking if it’s O.K. for middle- and upper-class families to participate, too.

“It shows that the interest is there,” Pat Childers said. “When Trips for Kids was started, we were providing opportunities for at-risk youth and kids that wouldn’t get out to nature. We started to find that kids in general weren’t getting out to nature.”

Pat Childers’ efforts have paid off. For the month of June, Liberty Mutual Insurance presented Childers with the Responsible Coaching Award, an honor for men and woman who emphasize sportsmanship and character-building in their approach to teaching children.

He’s one of 41 award-winners from across the country that were chosen out of more than 560 nominees. The award also included a $250 check for the organization.

“It’s a great opportunity to get kids together that wouldn’t normally get together,” Pat Childers said, “and they get a chance to spend some time with nature that they normally wouldn’t get.”