Archiv der Kategorie: 2009

15.000 HITS

OK, we are still four hits short according to Clstrmaps, but we have almost reached 15.000 hits on this website – that is the main page I suppose that counts. For the statistics:

0 – 5.000 hits from 14.11.07, the start of the site to 26.09.2008, 316 days,– 10.000 hits to 21.05.2009, 228 days
– 15.000 hits to 18.11.2009. 181 days

Now let’s compare this with more than 127.000 hits at Hiroshi’s website as per today.

I celebrated the event today with a 35 minute ride to Jiyugaoka, a cheese cake and a hot coffeee at Cafe Cabandon. My personal cafe at Tiffany’s. Somebody got the connection?

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Mob

Chichibu shines

Yesterday night I watched the movie „THE SHINING“ by Stanley Kubrick. I guess one has really fallen in love with cycling when one cannot help thinking during the opening scenes that this might be a beautiful place to make long cycling tours. Despite the music that preludes the horror to come.Also motivated by the blogs of David, Ludwig and Tom about the great tours they made under beautiful skies on Sunday, I decided to ride out on my own to Chichibu the following day. The weather was not as perfect as on Sunday but it was warm, dry and without to much winds so I decided to ride from my house up to the Tamagawa and further up to Ome instead of boarding an overcrowded train as I normally do.

The „Tamasai“ ex-cycling, now pedestrian with dogs obstacled road along the Tamagawa was as boring as ever. I noted however the increase of homeless settlements along the road, in particular under some of the bridges (Sekidobashi) which somehow links cycling to the ongoing economic downturn in Japan. Or for the cycling fanatics among us I would like to provide the proper analogy: These poor guys can barely afford mama charis and even hybrid-bikes with Shimano Sora group sets are well beyond their reach.

In order to reflect the actual situation I believe that the Japanese flag shall be modified: The red circle, symbolizing the sun, should be partly covered with a not so precisely round blue tarp which is so often used in homeless settlements. The final curtain is closing quickly in front of the Japanese sun.
Well, all the land between the river and the embankments is designed to be flooded in case of heavy rainfalls in the upper reached of the Tamagawa and that is why it is not such a good idea to settle there. The older members of the team may recall the floods of early 2006 and the devastation it brought to portions of the cycling track. The park close to Mutsumi bridge was closed for almost a year before it was finally reconstructed and opened again.

Naturally with these gloomy thoughts it took me almost 2:15 hours to reach Ome station. In no way my physical conditions can be blamed for this one.

There I conducted one of three fatal mistakes of the day: Instead of buying the fantastic „royal milk“ at the Aurore bakery which provides plenty of energy for the rest of the day (I mean any day, regardless of the time when eaten and degree of physical activities), I opted to buy only two smaller pastries and subsequently I bonked later in the day when riding up the slopes. Which again provides a good argument to keep with approved team traditions.

The ride I had in mind was to do the most ridiculous routes, accounting for the longest distance and the highest elevation gains to finally reach the fabulous capital of Chichibu, fanciful and aptly named Chichibu-City. The former a promise, the later a joke.

So I started to ride along prefectural road 28 in direction Hanno and took #70 to the West until finding the entry to the fabled Hanachiba-Naguri Line. The climb was fast and I was completely alone after the first Y section. How I love the silence in the woods, away from all the noise at the Tamagawa. I then descended on the other side to road #53 leading to Yamabushi and Shomaru Pass which we have conquered also quite often by now. But before reaching Yamabushi, I took a right turn on #395 to Amamezasu Pass which at 480 meter elevation is slightly lower than the mighty Van Hai pass.

I like this climb. It is only 2.6 km long but covers an elevation difference of about 220 meters so it is somehow similar to Wada but not as demanding. Also it is very quiet and completely in the forest.From the top one has also a nice view on the hair needle curves that are waiting for the adventurous downhiller on the other side. So basically I went up the same ridge from the South that I went over first from the North and now I was heading on National road 299 back in direction Hanno.

In Agano I did a left turn on #61 and went up the slopes of Koburi Pass (顔振峠). Although this road is also no stranger to the Positivo team, I guess it is less frequented by us. But the climb is really nice, short, less than 3 km, but covering about 300 meters up and at some points there are breathtaking views over the Chichibu mountains. The view compensated me very well for bonking. Plus I lost my water bottle somewhere, which was the second fatal mistake of the day.

I don’t care so much about loosing water bottles. I have plenty at home and they keep accumulating naturally after attending races. However, this one was special at it has a very unique one directional flow valve attached to it. It is big and red and one has to pull it out with the teeth before starting to drink. I think it is the right bottle for somebody with a big mother-complex. Which I am not, but nevertheless the bottle was always good a for a laugh or two.

The skies were not as clear as on Sunday, but that gave the far mountains an interesting shade of different greys, almost like in an old Chinese ink painting. At precisely 500 meters elevation, Koburi Pass is even sightly higher than the mighty Van Hai pass.From there onwards I rode along the Green Line. What makes Chichibu so different from Okutama and other places I have went so far is the unbelievable variety of paved roads criss-crossing the hills. There is always the feeling of choice and uncertainty. Why not taking this small road here for a change? Why not trying this one today? Sure, there are many rindos in other parts of the Kanto region as well and also many we don’t know yet (the North approach to Wada until recently a good example). But Chichibu has so much more.

It is always tempting to take a new road, but not without water and at 4.00 PM on a mid November day in Japan. So I made my way up over the Mini-toge of the Green Line to the mighty Karibazaka Pass (at 818 meter higher than the mighty Van Hai pass, Shiraishi Toge (higher than the mighty Van Hai pass) and finally Sadamine Toge (still higher than the mighty Van Hai pass).

The mother and daughter ramen operations at Sadamine Toge had already closed , perhaps for the rest of the season and I started to make the final descent into Chichibu city on road #11. It was getting dark already and I just arrived at Chichibu City limits, famously serenaded by Ike & Tina Turner in the Seventies.

OK, so here I was at Chichibu city on a Monday night at 5 PM.

Which reminded me of the only joke from my home town of Moenchengladbach which I really appreciate. See, I am coming from a non-discript town with almost no hills (the biggest one being artificial, the garbage dump), so we didn’t managed to bring even one famous cyclist to the circuit. Our biggest claims to fame is the local soccer team which I unfortunately support since they were good and famous in the seventies. And which brought only sorrow and tears in the last 20 years. And then we have Nick Heidfeld, a formula one racer and Joseph Goebbels.

Anyway, the town is close to two bigger towns called Duesseldorf and Koeln (Cologne). These cities hate each other, which probably has something to do with the historical fact that one of them is catholic (Koeln of course, with its cathedral) while the other is dominantly protestant. They compete in many aspects, soccer, ice hockey, economical …. Duesseldorf became the capitol of the federal state, Koeln has all the media … character-wise I definitely tend to Duesseldorf and I even lived there for some time in the 80ties and 90ties.

Now, back to the joke. Tuennes and Schael, two immortal characters from my home town (actual Cologne claims them as theirs as well) meet each other and Tuennes says:

“ I bought a new motorcycle. That is so unbelievable fast…… If I start in Moenchengladbach at 7.30 in the morning, I arrive in Koeln at 8 already.“

Whereas Schael answers:

„So what to you do at 8 in the morning in Koeln then?“

Same question, different context: „What do you do in Chichibu City at 5 PM in November?“ Yes, it is along way home by train from Chichibu. I finally made it home by 9 after a 4 hour train ride, partly because I was too stupid to board the right train in Hachioji (again) which in turn allowed me to have look at the nightly silhouette of Ebina city. Third fatal mistake of the day.

All train, no joy, makes Jack a dull boy.

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Cervelo Soloist, Mob

The North Approach – Twice

Perfect weather today: no clouds, very clear air. Fuji-san was dominating the scenery wherever I went. And koyo added for more spectacular scenery, at least below 1,000 meters.

Today was the day to go high, and to try out two north approaches which were new to me: Wada (completely new – Tom has blogged about it, so have TCC folks), and Otoge (have done it only from the other side).

The newly discovered north approach of Wada Toge is nice. Especially the lower part with the farm houses is very picturesque. Quite wet though after all the rain and on the fallen leaves, this can be treacherous. It meant I had to stay in the saddle whenever going over wet leaves, to avoid slipping.

I then headed via the old Koshukaido to Sarubashi, and from there climbed up to Otoge, which was in places in similar conditions as the north approach to Wada, though much, much longer… Very nice views of the distant mountains, including Matsuhime Toge. But no more koyo above 1,000 meters.

I then took Akiyama Kaido and various backroads to Hashimoto where it became too dark to ride on. 200km and 3,000 meters of climbing. Mapmyride will no longer show my newly imported routes (old ones still work), so no GPS trail for now.


Nice coincidence to meet Tom, Nishibe-san and David at Sekidobashi (see also Tom’s blog) – if only David had worn our uniform!
I also wore a long jersey on top of the short one, which proved just right for today’s weather: starting at 14 degrees from home, 9 degrees on the ascent to Wada, 20 degrees in Sarubashi, 12 degrees on top of Otoge – you get the picture…

Can anyone remember such a stunning view from just below Wada Toge?

Koyo on the descent from Otoge, somewhere below 1,000 meters.
Firemen everywhere in the villages, hunters everywhere in the mountains. Fortunately nobody threatened me unlike David – see Tom’s blog.

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, David, Nishibe, Tom

World’s 10 greatest cycling routes


An interesting gathering of the most spectacular cycling routes in the world done by Lonely Planet, the travelbook publisher. Haven’t been even close to any one of them, but other PE riders migh have (Ventoux, Italy, Isle of Wight …) Again, it is more a matter of personal taste I guess. For myself, I would include route 20 from Hakone to Atami Toge in the list. But of course everybody else would just have a similar unique opinion.

Had to smile about this one, describing national highway 1 in Vietnam:

„The route has some reasonable hills, climaxing in the mighty Hai Van Pass (496m)“

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Mob

Helmets on? Helmets off?


An interesting article on Spiegel Online about additional safety when wearing a helmet during riding.

The answers doesn’t seem so clear cut after reading the article. Especially if you don’t understand German but also otherwise. Interesting enough, there is a photo from Robbie McEwen with helmet in the article. And if I am not mistaken, he is wearing the Specialized helmet that failed US safety standard tests.

Personally I would like to add that it is hard to imagine to ride without helmet and I rarely do. I do however occasionally eat in front of convenience stores without wearing a helmet while listening to David Hasselhoff on my ipod.

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An unconvenient truth


I have been contacted by a good friend of the team and myself after he has seen the recent post on the Positivo Espresso blog about the ride that Jerome, Ludwig and myself did in the Odawara/Yamanakako area last week. One of the pictures in the report shows Jerome and Ludwig eating in front of a (properly approved) 7-Eleven close to the Yamanako lake.

I have been advised that eating in front of convenience stores is not regarded as good manners in Japan at all.

I have to confess that for the last seven to eleven years in Japan I haven’t known that such rule exists and I must confess that I have broken this particular rule ignorantly many times. So I would like to make my teammates aware of this fact in case they didn’t know yet: Shingo Mushi may be acceptable from time to time, but conbini mae shoku mushi (コンビニ前食無視) is not.

I am not exactly sure where the things purchased during a ride should be consumed. Details can be find here.

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Hiroshi, Jerome, Mob

西湖は最高と最後 – Ending the season (and my racing career) with a triple championship

Today was the best day in my short racing career – in fact too good not to make it my last…
First place in the Tour du Japan/JCRC race around Saiko (D1 class)
First place in the Tour du Japan 2009 series (D class)
First place in the JCRC 2009 series (D class)
Actually, JCRC was already won with the previous race as nobody had sufficient points to catch me today. The Tour du Japan was a harder win – I was only second before today’s race with a big gap to the first, and because of the different point system stood the danger of being easily overtaken by others if I did not do very well. Alas I was lucky to be able to apply my sprint strategy into undisturbed practice. I still cannot believe it all worked out so beautifully.
This is a very proud day for me first of all because I have never won any prize for any kind of sports before starting road race cycling a year ago; in fact, my worst grades at school were always in sports/physical education. And I did it without any elaborate training gear, joining a disciplined cycling club/team; in fact, I went to all races on my own by public transport and on my bicycle… Which all goes to show that if I could do it, really anyone could.
Well, maybe not quite. My greatest thanks go to MOB for all the advice and coaching that prepared me so well for each race (and in fact, for starting road race cycling at all!), and to my assistant for helping to clear my calendar when a mid-week training was in order.
A more detailed report on the racing season to follow later.
Congratulations also to James for coming in third in E class today and therefore starting next season in pole position for the third Positivo Espresso D-class championship in a row. Now the pressure is on you!

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, James, Mob

Berezina Crossing

Mikuni Pass [三国峠」], literally „Pass of the three countries“ is called so because it was conquered one day by riders from three different countries. The day was November 3rd, 2009 and the three riders came from West-Germany, France and South Germany.

Jerome, Ludwig and me met at Odawara station at 8 and Jerome showed us the way out on a very nice road leading along the gentle slopes of the Hakone mountains. Actually he didn’t even know this road before taken us there, but nevertheless it was very nice. A lot of ups and downs and before we knew it we were on the ascent to Ashigara pass. This was the first climb of the day and it was not an easy one. There are many hair needle curves on the higher part but when we were finally up and over the pass, we had a beautiful view on mount Fuji and on the first snow of the season on it’s top.Note the hidden Belgium flag.


We went all the way down again, but not through the golf course hills but rather through a forest road which led us to a (now approved) family mart in the valley between Ashigara and Mikuni. And then we started the attack on Mikuni Toge.

After having heard much brutal stories about it, I was surely lacking self confidence when I started. Also my legs still felt weak from the Motegi race two days earlier. So it was a very hard climb indeed but luckily it is only less than 7 km long. I was expecting much more and before I knew it we were on the top and over where again we had a beautiful view on mount Fuji and lake Yamanaka. My guess? OWI = 2.0 as it is about double the distance and elevation.
We stopped at the approved 7-eleven at Yamanako and both Ludwig and me had a good Oden-lunch while Jerome was showing off his Ukranian army underwear and pretended that it was still summer. In fact it was cold. Very cold.

We continued to ride along the lake and then up to a new pass called Nijumagari Toge which was kindly introduced to us by Y I. Eternal thanks to you for that one. From lake Yamanaka it is a very gentle approach up only 150 – 200 meters and from the top one has again a nice view on mount Fuji plus there is another holy fountain providing water for the thirsty cyclist.The road that leads down to Tsuru (road 139) and further to Otsuki or Akiyama. One can also cross Dosaka pass and turn back to Doshi Michi (413).

And this road is not only complete void of traffic (except for some construction equipment trucks), but also full of snow on both sides as it is mostly in the shadows. The whole ride felt like a ride in the winter: the air was clear, the sky was blue, the rivers looked beatiful with the surrounding Koyo, it was 4 degres C or so and I was glad that I overdressed on the suggestion of Ludwig.

Also there are many other interesting roads branching off to locations which are called „DO NOT ENTER“ in English. Unfortunately a part of the road is pure gravel.

When finally reaching road 139 we ramped up the speed in the spirit of Motegi and made a fast run for the train station at Otsuki. An equally fast train brought us home within no time.A very nice day out in the winter – back in the city it was much warmer.

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Jerome, Mob

Cycle Mode International 2009


... as usual at Makuhari Messe from Dec. 11th (Fri) to Dec. 13th. Details in English.

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Mob

Motegi Race Data

Lap charts have been isused finally by powertag for the Motegi race and here we can nicely see our good performance.Explanation:

Left vertical axis : lap time in minutes
Right vertical axis : team position
Horizontal axis : lap number

Bars (lap time)
Left, Green : Fastest time in this lap
Middle, Yellow : Winning Team lap time in this lap
Right, red : Positivo Espresso time in this lap

Lines (Team Position)
Blue Line : Position of winning team in each lap
Orange (!) Line : Position of Positivo Espresso in each lap

Believe it or not, but we were in front of the winning team and in 8th position after the third lap……

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Eingeordnet unter 2009, Jerome