Reflection, Reparation, Repentation, Rejuvination, and Recreation

Reflection, Reparation, Repentation, Rejuvination, and Recreation
Having fun on the Midnight Beast

Monday, March 31, 2008

Friday, March 21, 2008

Monday, March 17, 2008

Soul Machine?


An amusing yet very relevant story. This will be  today's sermon.
"When one rides another's bike the machine soul detests this and causes the borrowing rider to crash which makes the owner upset. Machine soul has punished the infidelity of the owner."
Read the entire article at:
Machine Soul
by John Gurklis 
published in Dirt Rag Mag

Friday, March 14, 2008

Not just motorized

Massachusetts DCR is working on some new guidelines for motorized offroad use. We should all be concerned as this is a work in progress, while the DCR struggles to catch up with us and all park users. Much more info at DCR
"Off-Highway Vehicle Enforcement Working Group"
We  as Mountain Bikers need to realize that these new initiatives will eventually effect all 'vehicle' users, and we need to be involved in the DCR's decision-making process as much as we can.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

TRAIL MAINTENANCE: CUTTING


 

TRAIL MAINTENANCE: CUTTING

 

     Look at the trail and decide what kind of trail it is:

Forest road with motor vehicle access?  Old carriage path – Bike(s) Horse(s)

Narrow and or rocky trail – Hiking only?

Herd path or unmapped trail? (leave it alone)

 

Decide what to cut: 

Roads and wide trails: Cut braches off near the trunk if they hang into trail.  Cut sprouts and seedlings off at ground, if they are at the trail's edge.  Consider that tall vehicles (10 feet), people on horseback (8 feet), and bike riders (6 feet) need clear passage.

For narrow trails be less aggressive, but make similar cuts where necessary.  Trim with a "doorway" of clearance in mind.  Decide for yourself if a fringe of vegetation is appropriate for a section, or if wider sightlines improve the character of the section.

If the trail is crowded by a grove of small pines or beeches, it's fine to eliminate as many as is needed to properly regain walking clearance. 

For trees of 2" caliber or more, that you think should be kept, just select branches that encroach the trail, and don't cut more than ¼ of all the live foliage.  You can cut more, next year.

Safety:

Always wear eye protection, gloves, sturdy clothing and footwear.

Use bug and tick repellant. Be adequately rested and ready for strenuous work.

Work with at least one other person, whenever possible. Everyone sees from a different angle, and there may be a better (or worse)way attempt a cut. Take turns on large logs. Don't attempt anything bigger than you know you can handle.

When taking down an upright tree(even a small one), know what you're doing. If you don't know how, don't attempt it.

 

Pick a tool:

Loppers generally work well for trunks and branches between 3/8 and 1¼ inches thick.  They are also good for extending one's reach, but otherwise are a heavy and awkward maintenance tool. By-Pass loppers are best for live branches and saplings, Anvil loppers are for dead stock.

Hand pruners ( also known as hand loppers) are best for trimming small stock, and with a sharp blade and good technique, these can handle almost anything a lopper can, and make a cleaner cut. Hand loppers also are available in By-Pass or Anvil-styles.

Hand saws are ideal for large branches, or removing the entire plant.  Wide, unsupported blades (carpenter's saw) are ideal for making ground level cuts on diameters to about 3".

Large saws are needed for sectioning logs for removal, but a big gang of people is better for just hauling the whole log away.

When using any saw, make sure it doesn't contact the ground—dirt and rocks will dull the blade quickly.

 

Cutting:

When actually pruning a plant, make your branch cuts clean without making tears in the remaining bark structure.  If sawing cut below the branch, before making the top cut.  Broken wood, poor cuts and long stubs are aesthetically undesirable.

Make the cut either near a branch junction, leaving the remaining branch growing away from the trail, or cut the whole branch off, leaving a stub about as long as the branch is wide, so that the plant expends the minimum energy to heal the site.

When cutting the whole plant, try to cut flush with the soil, but don't ruin your tools by getting dirt trapped in the cut. 

Toss cuttings off the trail, with cut ends facing away from the trail, and not snagged in living plants.

 

Jim K  6-21-07

Edited by Steve C 03-05-08

Thursday, February 21, 2008

GF the 'Klunkerz' King!
Got to chat briefly with the 'developer' of the modern mountainbike at a showing of his movie, 'Klunkerz' that we saw at the Somerville Theater last night.......
He truly is the 'Big Daddy' of the scene!
Checkout the full-zip neoprene batman blazer......

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

2008 Events, so far......


Some mostlyNEMBA dates to remember and to plan around:

(All TCD's are NEMBA/Trek Bicycles Trail Care Series--in other words, all NEMBA members that participate in work dates get a chance for the free Trek bikes EVERY time they volunteer for any of those dates! So don't forget to sign in every time!)

This list is SEMASS NEMBA-biased, so for complete NEMBA listings, go to the above link.

Feb 21 Klunkerz Trips for Kids Benefit with Gary Fisher, Somerville Theater, 7 pm

Feb 18 Friends of Wompatuck meeting 7 pm

March 16th Trail Care Day (TCD) Wompatuck 8:30-12:00

March 30th TCD Ames Nowell SF 8:30 am-12:00

April 5th TCD Foxboro--roadside cleanup AM, Blowdown Ride PM

April 6th, Wompatuck TCD 8:30am-12:00

April 13th TCD Borderland 9 am 

April 14th, Friends of Wompatuck Meeting 7 pm

April 26 NEMBA general meeting and fundraising Gala at Holiday Inn, Boxboro

May 4th TCD Ames Nowell SF 8:30 am

May 10th Friends of Blue Hills(FoBH) Trail Work Blue Hills(BH)

May 17th DCR Park Serve Day(DCR-all parks) Wompatuck 8:30 am-12:00

May 17-18 NEMBA Spring Trail School Wendell SF tent., maybe with the IMBA TCC in attendance

May 25 Wendell SF, Kona Bicycles MTB Adventure Series (KBMTBAS)

June 7th National Trails Day (this MAY be a Wompy work day)

June 7th FoBH Trail Work BH

June 8 Bear Brook Boogie (KBMTBAS)

June 15th, Blue Hills Mountain Bike Day

June 22 Happening at Huntington, CT (KBMTBAS)

Aug 10 Bradbury Mountain ME( KBMTBAS)

Aug 24th TCD Wompy 8:30-12:00

Aug 29-Sept 1 Labor Day NEMBA Camping Trip possibly KT

Sept 6 NembaFest at Wompy (KBMTBAS)

Oct 12th TCD Wompy 8:30-12:00

Oct 26 Wicked Ride of the East, HPSF (KBMTBAS)