Return of the Interbiker: Surfing Sin City

Flagstaff's Late for the Train
Late for the Train in Flagstaff. Grab a newspaper, a scone and a cuppa, then watch the daily parade of cyclists, regardless of weather conditions.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Apparently I just missed all the fun in Flagstaff. A hailstorm beat me to town — and also beat the mortal shit out of a whole bunch of stuff with giant ice bombs — and after I departed, the flooding commenced. Good times.

I did get a light paddling from Ma Nature, however. After enjoying the traditional java stop at Late for the Train, I  hauled ass westward into some of the wettest high-desert weather I’ve ever seen in many a hard road mile in service of the bicycle bidness.

The rain started bucketing down long before I hit Kingman and it didn’t stop until just short of Searchlight, Nevada.

Somewhere in between, outside of Laughlin around Christmas Tree Pass, I saw some poor desert rat tricked out like some sort of Blade Runner Bedouin, pushing a shopping cart full of Christ knows what eastward through the deluge. Welcome to Nevada.

Change in the weather
It wasn't the usual hotter-than-Hades trip across northern Arizona into southern Nevada this year.

Bugsy Siegal’s Fun House looks a little shabbier since I last visited in 2006. The unemployment rate in the Silver State is pushing 13 percent, and it’s even worse in Vegas; the class war’s body count was shambling zombie fashion along Flamingo and Paradise as I rolled into town.

And there’s not much hope for a speedy return to the good old days, according to Jennifer Robison of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, citing a Brookings Institution report.

She also spoke with a local economist who thinks the report overly pessimistic, but I note that he only expects the unemployment rate to dip once jobless construction workers find gigs elsewhere and flee Sin City like tapped-out gamblers skipping out on their hotel tabs.

BTI getting busy
The fine folks from Santa Fe's BTI uncrate the magic on the Sands floor Tuesday afternoon.

If that’s good economic news, you can have it.

Meanwhile, the Strip was hopping last night as the Adventure Cycling crew and I went out for dinner and drinks to get acquainted. The service-industry folks we encountered seemed to be weathering the economic storm with equanimity, but then they still have jobs.

Me too. And on Wednesday I have to get busy. It’s showtime.

Return of the Interbiker: Bibleburg to Flagstaff

Bibleburg in the rear-view mirror
The obligatory shot of Bibleburg receding at speed in the rear-view mirror.

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Whenever I take one of these journalistic road trips I quickly come to wish I’d gone into another line of work. Like, say, the manufacture and distribution of orange traffic cones.

I don’t believe I’ve ever driven Interstate 40 when it wasn’t under construction, and today this record remains intact. If only I’d had the foresight to major in traffic cones instead of journalism! With double minors in orange barrels and orange signs, of course. I could buy the 2012 elections, and wouldn’t that be interesting. Maybe not.

Cerrillos in Santa Fe was a construction clusterfuck, too. It was something of a struggle to enjoy my evening ales at Second Street Brewery, my breakfast burrito at Tia Sophia and a leisurely soak at Ten Thousand Waves. But I got them all done, and in that precise order, because I know that you, Dear Readers, expect nothing less than perfection in recreation from Your Humble Narrator.

Now I’m at a Motel 6 in Flagstaff and wishing I’d fetched a piece along, as per my usual practice. The place has backslid along with the economy and I’m pretty sure there is at least one flatbacker working the joint alongside the usual collection of chain-smoking toothless weirdos, grinning ax murderers and illegals camping 12 to a room. But there is wifi, so we have that going for us. I can webcast a digital appeal for help as the serial killers dismember me in front of my own webcam.

Meanwhile, I ignored the national slobbering over the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. I didn’t hear anyone mention their most chilling effect — turning us into a nation of cheapjack, chickenshit bullies who wiped our collective asses with our own Constitution and then set about roaming the globe, shoving that stained document into brown people’s faces.

Instead I listened to a nonstop collection of Tom Waits CDs: Real Gone, Blood Money, Mule Variations, Small Change and Alice. Now I have a party in my head and an idea for a fireworks display.

Tomorrow: Vegas. Pray for me.

Adios, Vuelta; hola, Interbike

Outdoor Demo 2005
Your Humble Narrator, courting sunburn at the 2005 Outdoor Demo.

The Vuelta a España wraps up this weekend, and come Sunday I’m off to The Big Show in Vegas for the first time since 2006.

This will be my 14th Interbike, and my first under the aegis of anyone other than Bicycle Retailer and Industry News. I started out doing medium-heavy lifting for BRAIN, first in Anaheim and then in Vegas, pitching in on straight news coverage for the Show Daily. But as the years passed I gradually scaled back to compiling the Grapevine column and drawing a special Mud Stud strip for the Daily; I also lent a hand with headlines, photo captions and page-proofing, having done plenty of all three in 12 years as a copy editor for various newspapers.

When money got tight my annual trip to Sin City got nixed. It didn’t help that my post-show column was usually a variation on the theme “Interbike sucks,” which must have become tiresome to the publisher, editor, Interbike and the readership. I contributed Show Daily cartoons from a distance for a year or two, and then bean-counting saw the plug pulled on that, too. In a trade magazine comedy is an option, and occasionally more bug than feature.

No worries. I wasn’t enjoying myself, and it was time to take a break.

Now I have the chance to visit the show as a tourist, thanks to the fine folks at Adventure Cyclist magazine, who have yet to see the worst of me. Editor Mike Deme and I will wander the floor of the Sands Expo and Convention Center, looking for bikes to test-ride in 2012, and I should have plenty of spare time to unearth interesting bits of this and that, not being tethered to a Show Daily deadline.

So stay tuned — that low rumbling sound you hear in the distance is the DogMobile warming up for another high-speed run across the desert to Bugsy Siegal’s Fun House.