845 lines
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845 lines
50 KiB
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[1]Skip to main content
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[2]The New Yorker
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[19]The New Yorker
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[20]Annals of Design
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The Art of Taking It Slow
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Contemporary cycling is all about spandex and personal bests. The bicycle
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designer Grant Petersen has amassed an ardent following by urging people to get
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comfortable bikes, and go easy.
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By [21]Anna Wiener
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September 16, 2024
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• [22]
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• [23]
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• [24]
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• [25]
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• [26]
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A man rides a bike down a dirt path.
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Petersen has written that bikes can “just about save the world, or at least
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make you happy.”Photographs by Jake Stangel for The New Yorker
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Save this story
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Save this story
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There are places in California that can make a person feel in tune with
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geological time, newly alert, on the brink of something cosmic. Walnut Creek,
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an affluent suburb east of [29]San Francisco, is not one of them. Nestled in
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the foothills of stately Mt. Diablo, the city’s quaint downtown is buffeted by
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chain retailers and big-box stores. On a recent summer morning, I took the
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train there to meet Grant Petersen, the bicycle designer, writer, and founder
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of Rivendell Bicycle Works. Petersen has become famous for making beautiful
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bikes, using materials and components that his industry has mostly abandoned,
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and for promoting a vision of cycling that is low-key, functional, anti-car,
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and anti-corporate. He has polarizing opinions and an outsized influence.
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Sensing that it would be uncouth to arrive on foot, and wanting to honestly
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communicate my level of commitment to cycling, I brought my bike: a red
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nineteen-eighties Nashbar that I purchased in my mid-twenties, rode happily for
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a decade, and abandoned when I became pregnant and freshly terrified of death.
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The bike had spent the past two years hanging vertically in the garage, where,
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from time to time, I accidentally backed into it with the car. The wheels were
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out of true, and—a separate issue—couldn’t be removed: I had installed locking
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anti-theft skewers, then lost the key.
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Petersen met me at the BART station. There were ways in which my bike was not
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up to Rivendell standards: it had sylphlike tires and an over-all look of
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abandonment. He was polite about the situation. “It’s steel, it has lugs,” he
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said. Petersen is seventy and muscular, with buttony blue eyes, a gentle smile,
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and graying hair that gravitates toward the middle of his head, like a cresting
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wave. That morning, he was wearing a long-sleeved black shirt, a red bandanna,
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and loose pants made by Rivendell’s clothing line, MUSA, which Petersen
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developed himself. (“They seem to fit like normal pants, thank god,” a
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description on the Web site reads.) He was riding a Rivendell Roaduno, “a
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single-ish speed road bike” painted banana-slug yellow, and he set off on the
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sidewalk, beckoning for me to follow.
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In the past forty years, cycling has increasingly been branded as a form of
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exercise, one that emphasizes speed, optimization, and competition. On any
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given morning, in Central, Prospect, and Golden Gate Parks, gangs of
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white-collar workers—wearing curve-hugging performance apparel and tethered to
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the cloud by G.P.S.—whiz in circles, cheating the wind. Indoor fitness
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companies, such as SoulCycle and Peloton, have reinforced the image of cycling
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as a high-octane cardio workout. Most new, high-end bikes are compact,
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lightweight, and hyper-responsive, with carbon-fibre frames, drop handlebars,
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and disk brakes, some of which are hydraulic. One of the bikes recommended by
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Bicycling magazine last year has a matte-black colorway with “a stealthy
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aesthetic”: the cables and wires are tucked inside the frame. The bike is
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advertised as “race bred, built for speed.”
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Petersen believes that the bike industry’s focus on racing—along with
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“competition and a pervasive addiction to technology”—has had a poisonous
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influence on cycling culture. He dislikes the widespread marketing to
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recreational riders of spandex kits, squirty energy gels, and workout apps such
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as Strava. He thinks that low, curved handlebars contort riders into an
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unnatural position; that bicycles made of carbon fibre and aluminum have safety
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issues; and that stretchy synthetics have nothing on seersucker and wool. “The
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whole purpose of pro riding now is to create a demand at the retail level for
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the really expensive bicycles,” he said. He sees the glorification of
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speed—personal bests, constant quantification, metrics, leaderboards—as
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discouraging to entry-level riders who might otherwise enjoy life with a bike.
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“I would like to see the Tour de France only allow riders to ride one bike the
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entire tour,” he said. “Do their own maintenance, change their own flats, the
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way that normal people have to. Racing would have a positive trickle-down
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effect, instead of the way it is now. Bikes would be better, they’d be safer,
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and they would last longer. And the races themselves wouldn’t be less
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interesting at all.”
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Rivendell’s bicycles are marketed as “UNracing” bikes. The frames are made of
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lugged, brazed steel. They have long wheelbases, luxurious chainstays, and
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sloping top tubes. “The rear triangle of his bikes, you could fly a plane
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through there,” Ashton Lambie, a record-breaking American track cyclist, said
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admiringly. “Nobody is doing that.” The bikes have playful names—Roadini,
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Atlantis, Hunqapillar, Susie W. Longbolts—and run roughly from two thousand to
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five thousand dollars, depending on the build. One of Rivendell’s signatures is
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the country bike: a rig equally suitable for paved roads and, as the company
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puts it, “the kinds of fire trails a Conestoga wagon could negotiate, but not
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the kind that would require a jackass.” Rivendell frames are generally
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outfitted with upright handlebars, leather saddles, manual shifters, platform
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pedals, and lush, chubby tires. They are designed to accommodate racks,
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baskets, fenders, and bags—whatever is useful for cross-country touring, local
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bike camping, and running errands. “Bikes are turning ugly,” Petersen recently
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wrote. “I personally have more respect, tons of respect, for somebody who rides
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around town, to work, for shopping, and for fun, than somebody who does
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front-flips on handrails with a fifty-foot dropoff on one side.” He is an
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advocate of pleasurable, unhurried riding—alone, or with family and friends—and
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is obsessive about comfort. Through the years, Rivendell bicycles have amassed
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a devoted following. People take portraits of their bikes in stunning natural
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environments and post them to social media; they “Riv up” non-Rivendell frames;
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they pore over Petersen’s writing, and adopt his preferences. Adam Leibow, the
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publisher of Calling in Sick, an “extreme alternative cycling magazine,” told
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me, “Some people call Rivendell a cult.”
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In Walnut Creek, I tailed Petersen as he pedalled at a leisurely pace back to
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Rivendell’s headquarters. For the past twenty-six years, the company has
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occupied a six-bay industrial space in a sleepy area by the highway. One of the
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bays is a showroom, though it felt less like a sales floor and more like a
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clubhouse. A mobile of lugs, made by a local teen-ager, twirled from the
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ceiling. Rows of bicycles leaned nonchalantly against their kickstands.
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Rivendells are distinctive: they have Kodachrome paint jobs, elegant decals,
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and delicate metal-inlay head badges—a sort of hood ornament for bikes. The
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lugs, steel sockets that connect the tubing of a bicycle frame, have patterns
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and shapes cut into them—a heart, a diamond, the curl of a leaf. Even the fork
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crowns are pretty. In a 1996 catalogue, Petersen wrote that he likes “the idea
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of a fine frame being identifiable by brand, even without its paint, decals,
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and head badge, if it happens to wind up in a junkyard 100 years from now . . .
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in 2095, a hobo art connoisseur could saunter by, see the frame, pick it up, be
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drawn to the joints, and say ‘(Burp) Ha!—an old Rivendell.’ ”
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[30]Woman standing in front of giant can of prebiotic soda with door.
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Cartoon by Lindsey Budde
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Copy link to cartoon
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Link copied
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Shop
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We were greeted in the showroom by Will Keating, Rivendell’s general manager, a
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tall lapsed skateboarder in his mid-thirties. He was wearing Vans, Dickies, and
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a baseball cap embroidered with the Calling in Sick logo. Rivendell has twelve
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employees, a disproportionate number of whom are into vintage cameras; for a
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while, the shop had a darkroom. (“Skateboarders tend to follow a trajectory,”
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Keating told me. “They skate, then they get into photography, then they get
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into bicycles, and then they get into birding.”) On the wall, there were
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monochrome photos of Petersen’s employees and their friends: well-dressed,
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tattooed, and helmetless, they rolled through groves of oak and eucalyptus, and
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pedalled along sun-dappled ridges. The photographs looked like an ad for
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California.
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These days, some mainstream bikes incorporate electronics requiring batteries
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and firmware: shifters that change gears at the press of a button, or power
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meters that collect data on a rider’s output. “So many basic things are being
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teched out of existence,” Petersen said. He saw this as a function of business
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incentives: electronics break or need replacement; an upgrade is always around
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the corner. Petersen’s objections are practical but also philosophical. As
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bikes become higher-tech, riders lose skills and agency. “A lot of sports have
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been watered down,” [33]Yvon Chouinard, the founder of Patagonia, told me.
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“People are bicycling, but they have a motor. And people are climbing, but
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they’re climbing indoors. They’re riding big waves, but they’re being pulled in
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by Jet Skis. Yet there are a few people that are bucking the trend.”
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In the Rivendell showroom, a table held a silver bike frame, fitted with
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shifters and a drivetrain: the system of cranks, chains, pedals, and gears that
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propels a bicycle. “It gets really sappy if I try to talk about the beauty of a
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mechanical movement,” Petersen said. “I don’t want to be poetic about it at
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all. But I think people like to see how things work.” He turned the crank and
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moved the friction shifter—a small, silent paddle that shifts gears smoothly,
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“like a ramp rather than stairs,” as the Rivendell Web site describes it—which
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was the industry standard until the mid-eighties, when index shifting was
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introduced. We watched the derailleur lift the chain from gear to gear. “It’s
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so simple and so easy,” he said. “It takes a little bit of practice, and it’s
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that little bit of practice that dooms it, absolutely dooms it, in the market.”
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Electronic parts, he said, were cheaper and easier to make, and lowered the bar
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to entry. “But the thing that’s lost in there—it’s the control that you have.”
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I followed him to his office, a narrow room stuffed neatly with tools, books,
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fly-fishing supplies, and, on a high shelf, a plastic box full of rare
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derailleurs. There were two ergonomic kneeling stools; the landline telephone
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was wrapped in a block of ergonomic foam. By the door to the office was a
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small, framed color photo of two friendly-looking septuagenarians, standing
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next to a pair of Rivendell bicycles. “Are those your parents?” I asked. “No,”
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Petersen said. “That’s Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter.”
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Petersen grew up in Lafayette, California, a suburb one town over from Walnut
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Creek. His father was a mechanical engineer, and his mother was a painter and a
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homemaker. Petersen was a well-liked, athletic, outdoorsy kid, and when he
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describes his childhood—baseball, paper routes, slingshots, pheasant-hunting—it
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can bring to mind a mid-century Boy Scout Handbook. Still, he felt apart from
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his peers. “I wet the bed until I was twenty-three,” he said. “It changes your
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whole point of view toward life.” He never had sleepovers and was shy around
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girls. The problem, a physiological one, limited his future prospects. When he
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graduated from high school, in 1972, dorm life seemed impossible. So he stayed
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home, enrolled at a local junior college, and, in 1975, began working at the
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newly opened R.E.I. outpost in Berkeley, a hub of the Bay Area’s energetic
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outdoor-recreation scene. (Petersen said that for a time the company instituted
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a rule, “No handwritten signs,” after he began taping up long, chatty shelf
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talkers for products he liked.) He took up mountaineering and rock climbing,
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and commuted to work on his bicycle, a thirty-mile round trip. In the summer of
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1976, he and a girlfriend biked across the country, from Walnut Creek to
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northern Connecticut, and hitchhiked back.
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Throughout his twenties, Petersen raced in local competitions. Chris Watson, a
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friend and teammate, said, “He probably doesn’t want to tout this fact, but he
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shaved his legs like the rest of us.” Most of his peers relied on bicycle parts
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made by Campagnolo, an upscale Italian company, but Petersen couldn’t afford
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them. “I think I had thirteen different brands and seven different countries
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represented on my racing bike,” he said. “It was a hodgepodge, but it worked
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perfectly.” He was talented but ambivalent about competing. “I know the racing
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scene extremely well, I know the culture really well, I’m comfortable with it,
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and I hate it,” he told me.
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In 1984, Petersen took an entry-level job at Bridgestone Cycle U.S.A., an
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offshoot of the Japanese tire conglomerate. Bridgestone was Japan’s largest
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bicycle manufacturer, but the American office, which had a half-dozen
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employees, was not staffed by bicycle experts. Petersen and Watson, who worked
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in the sales department, helped design a bike called the MB-1, which combined
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the sportiness and speed of a road bike with the strength of a mountain bike.
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“I had more influence over Bridgestone bicycles than I should have,” Petersen
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told me. “But nobody knew anything about bicycles except for me.” The bike sold
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out immediately, and subsequent models from Bridgestone Cycle U.S.A. bear
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certain hallmarks of a Petersen build. Kyle Kelley, the owner of Allez LA, a
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bike shop in Los Angeles, described Petersen’s Bridgestone designs as “some of
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the best race bikes in the history of mountain biking, period.” Petersen became
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the division’s head of marketing. He formed a subscription club for Bridgestone
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riders and enthusiasts, the Bridgestone Owners Bunch, and began publishing a
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newsletter called the BOB Gazette. The newsletter had articles, product
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listings, Q. & A.s, word games, tips (“next time somebody hoodwinks you into
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giving a therapeutic massage, do it with a rolling pin”), and a devoted
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readership. BOBs, as they were known, were thrifty, embraced a D.I.Y. ethos,
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and valued function over prestige. “I am philosophically for putting cheap,
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really high-functioning stuff on a bike,” Petersen told me. “A
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twenty-eight-dollar derailleur on a thirty-five-hundred-dollar bike has a kind
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of beauty in itself.”
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In 1994, Bridgestone announced that it was shuttering its U.S. bicycle
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operation. Petersen told me that he had an informal standing job offer from
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Specialized, a major bicycle manufacturer, but that he couldn’t get excited
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about the changes in the mainstream market. Production was moving to China.
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Mountain bikes had begun to draw influence from motocross, incorporating shocks
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and suspension forks. The introduction of carbon fibre and titanium brought new
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manufacturers, including aerospace companies, into the industry. “The
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proportions, designs, paint jobs, graphics were hard for me to embrace,”
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Petersen said. The timing was not ideal: he and his wife, Mary Anderson, had a
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five-year-old daughter and were expecting a second child. Still, in the final
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issue of the BOB Gazette, he announced that he would be forming his own
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company. “For better or worse, for richer or poorer, Rivendell will reflect my
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extreme personal taste,” he wrote.
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Within a few months, Petersen raised eighty-nine thousand dollars from friends
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and family, and set up shop in his garage. Anderson became the company’s
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vice-president. Rivendell’s first product was beeswax, for lubricating bolt
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threads; Petersen processed it in his kitchen. He began publishing another
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newsletter, the Rivendell Reader, and distributed it to the old BOB mailing
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list. “In the simplest terms, I think of bicycles as rideable art that can just
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about save the world, or at least make you happy,” he told readers. “Yet so
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many modern bicycles are promoted as tools for self-aggrandizement, status, and
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hammering the competition to a pulp, and the bikes themselves look like
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hoodlums, thugs, and ne’er-do-wells.” The Reader was rich with information
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about bike parts and accessories, and often incorporated Petersen’s non-bicycle
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interests, as with a short physics primer on “Why a Boomerang Boomerangs,”
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written by a boomerang designer. The newsletter also included a column titled
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“Progress Report,” a detailed journal of the company’s development.
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Financially, Rivendell was almost always in the red. “We’re forging ahead with
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little projects that cost loot but will pay off down the road—all stuff a
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financial advisor would advise against, I’m sure,” Petersen wrote, in 1999, at
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a low point. “But the lugs are so fun, and it’s so ironic that here we are
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doing them in an age when almost nobody gives a hoot. It’s tragic and funny at
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the same time.”
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A few days after I met Petersen, I went downstairs to retrieve the mail and
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found a cardboard box containing what can only be described as a dossier: old
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Bridgestone catalogues, issues of the BOB Gazette, a nearly complete archive of
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the Rivendell Reader. The box also included an issue of Outside magazine from
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1996, in which there was a story about Petersen—a “messiah to cycling
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Luddites”—under the headline “Lead Us Not Into Titanium.” He’d been styled for
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the photograph, in baggy jeans and a dark shirt buttoned clerically to the
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neck. A Post-it had been slapped over the text: “Hate it,” he’d pencilled.
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“They made me wear the clothes.” In an issue of the Reader from the same year,
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Petersen responded to the article in his “Progress Report”: “Man, I look like a
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turkey posing in the damn sunset holding up a frame I didn’t even make myself,
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and the text has me some kind of damn leader of the *$#@$!#a$#$ ‘flock,’ and
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that’s so insulting and misdirected and man, it makes me mad. . . . I don’t
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hate titanium! It’s good material! It’s pretty! No rusto! Bravo! Whatever!
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Damn!”
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Rivendell’s employees object to descriptions of the company’s following as
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cultlike. “The other stuff is the cult,” Keating told me. “Putting the suit on,
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and going as fast as possible, and using the bars like this”—we were sitting at
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a table, and he hunched over his coffee cup, as if to protect it. “That’s the
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culty stuff, right? We’re just making nice bikes for regular people.” Still,
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people kind of get a bug. They buy in. The RBW Owners Bunch, an online forum
|
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for fans, has more than five thousand members, and users post on a daily basis.
|
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People organize “Riv Rides” in their home towns, and name-check their bikes in
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their professional bios and Instagram handles. On one afternoon that I visited,
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employees were nibbling on a large cheesecake from Junior’s, sent by a
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customer. Leah Peterson, a nurse in southwest Michigan, and the owner of three
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Platypuses—a curvy, elongated upright country bike—sends themed enamel pins to
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other Platypus-riding “Riv Sisters.” Some years ago, when she visited the shop,
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the crew suspended a large cardboard welcome sign from the ceiling; she and
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Petersen cruised around town on a HubbuHubbuH, Rivendell’s tandem. Several
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months later, her father died unexpectedly of a pulmonary embolism. She was
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astonished to open the mail and find handwritten notes from the Rivendell
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staff. “What company sends you a sympathy card when your dad dies?” she asked
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me.
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[34]Sperm cells travel together.
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“But I’m not even a natural leader.”
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Cartoon by Victoria Roberts
|
||
Copy link to cartoon
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|
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Link copied
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|
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Shop
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An undeniable part of Rivendell’s appeal is Petersen. The guy has an aura. He
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tends to ride in long-sleeved shirts, pants, and Teva sandals, on bicycles
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dotted with multicolor nail polish. He wraps some of his handlebars in colorful
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felt or tape and hemp twine, then shellacs them. (“I like to put a broccoli
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rubberband amidships,” he has written; it adds grip.) From time to time, he’ll
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strap poems to his basket or bars, then memorize them on trail rides. A
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pragmatist, he is a fan of what he calls the S24O, or the sub-twenty-four-hour
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overnight, a sort of working cyclist’s staycation—“bicycle camping for the time
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challenged”—in which participants ride into nature near their homes, camp out
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for one night, and return in the morning. In 2012, he published “Just Ride: A
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Radically Practical Guide to Riding Your Bike,” which offers advice on cycling
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technique, diet, fitness, and etiquette (“Be saintlike on the bike path”).
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Controversially, he is ambivalent about helmets: he believes that most are
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inadequately padded, sacrificing safety for style; that our cultural obsession
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with them unfairly places the onus on cyclists, not drivers; and that they
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instill unearned confidence. (“Don’t risk-compensate,” he told me, as I clipped
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mine on.) His own helmet, which he wears only occasionally, is augmented with
|
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packing foam.
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Petersen keeps a blog, Grant’s Blahg: a freewheeling repository of business
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updates, how-to tips, personal reflections, bicycle information, appreciative
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photos of goats, and so on. He takes his interests seriously, and when
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something captures his attention—fly-fishing, insulin, behavioral psychology—he
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goes deep. He also has strong feelings about soap (pine tar is best), the
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figures on American currency (“Put Pooh on a coin”), and spelling bees (“To
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titillate the audience, the contestants don’t all spell the same words”). He is
|
||
less dogmatic about e-bikes than one might expect (“Better than a car”). He
|
||
enjoys wordplay; one Rivendell publication, a twenty-page flyer, excluded the
|
||
letter “E.” “It’s not about the bike, it’s about the relationship,” Richard
|
||
Sachs, a master frame builder, told me. “You’re buying Grant. You’re buying
|
||
Grant’s intellectual property, and his forty or fifty years of staying true to
|
||
his belief system.”
|
||
|
||
Recently, out at a bar with friends, I struck up a conversation with a man in
|
||
his late thirties, a climate-impact investor named Peter, who was sitting alone
|
||
at a sidewalk table, drinking a beer. Across from him was a Rivendell: an A.
|
||
Homer Hilsen frame, with thick tires, side-pull brakes, saddlebags, and
|
||
built-in lights, which ran on wheel-generated electricity. Peter said that he
|
||
had wanted it to be an “apocalypse bike”: good for commuting, running errands,
|
||
and bike camping, but also something he could “hop on after an earthquake and
|
||
get anywhere, dependent on no one.” He had been taken aback by how often
|
||
strangers initiated conversations with him about Rivendell; I was the third
|
||
person to approach him that evening. “Would I have bought this bike if I knew
|
||
people would talk to me about it multiple times a week?” he asked. Still, a few
|
||
minutes later, he said he was thinking about buying a second.
|
||
|
||
In July, Petersen enlisted his friend Dan Leto to drive us out to Fernandez
|
||
Ranch, in Martinez, for a trail ride. Petersen is a licensed driver but hates
|
||
to do it—“It scares me, the thought of hurting somebody”—and estimates that he
|
||
has spent ninety minutes behind the wheel of a car in the past four years. When
|
||
Leto arrived at the shop, driving a white nineties Ford Explorer (Eddie Bauer
|
||
edition), the temperature was ticking toward triple digits. Petersen
|
||
disappeared into the workroom, and returned with a blue bandanna soaked in cold
|
||
water, which he tied around my neck, like a tiny cape. That morning, he had
|
||
taken a sunscreen stick to his face, and his cheeks and forehead were covered
|
||
in thick white streaks; an equally sopped bandanna hung around his own neck. He
|
||
looked a little crazy. “Sit behind the airbag,” Petersen instructed, pointing
|
||
to the front seat; he and Keating, who came along, folded themselves into the
|
||
back.
|
||
|
||
The ranch, a seven-thousand-acre nature reserve, is just off the highway, a few
|
||
miles from a Chevron refinery. For much of the year, it is grassy and lush,
|
||
with rolling meadows and riots of wildflowers. But this was midsummer, and the
|
||
earth was golden, crunchy, and pocked with ground-squirrel holes. In the
|
||
parking lot, Petersen eyeballed the bicycle he had brought for me, a moss-green
|
||
Clem Smith Jr., with thick tires and upright bars. The seat was higher than I
|
||
was used to: I had ridden almost exclusively on pavement, with traffic, and was
|
||
used to dropping a foot to the ground at short notice. The previous week,
|
||
trying a Platypus at Rivendell HQ, I had slung a leg over the frame, pushed
|
||
myself up onto the saddle, and fallen over. Petersen looked at me. “This saddle
|
||
height is ergonomically fine but psychologically terrifying,” he said, and
|
||
lowered the seat.
|
||
|
||
The ride that Petersen had chosen was short: a series of switchbacks, climbing
|
||
to an overlook, and then a long, voluptuous descent. In the days leading up to
|
||
it, he had nervously e-mailed me advice and instructions—on friction-shifting,
|
||
pedalling uphill, and coasting down steep descents—appended with apologies for
|
||
being “helicopter-y.” His two daughters are about my age, and I had the feeling
|
||
that if I hurt myself, consoling him would be the worst part. We started up the
|
||
narrow trail, moving from an open field to a shaded grove. The highway and
|
||
refinery fell out of sight. I was slow, and not at peace. On the ascent, I had
|
||
to walk the Clem a bit, guiding it up the trail like a donkey, and, despite
|
||
everyone being relentlessly reassuring and kind, I engaged in a little
|
||
therapeutic self-talk to quell my shame at dragging the pace down.
|
||
|
||
About halfway through the ride, I came to a fork in the road. I didn’t know
|
||
which path the others had taken, and I stood for a while, appreciating the
|
||
shade of the oak trees, the quiet, the bandanna crisping around my neck. I
|
||
tried to channel an essay of Petersen’s, written in 2002, on what he calls
|
||
“underbiking”: taking a bike somewhere it isn’t obviously built to go. “Riding
|
||
an UB changes how you look at any terrain,” he wrote. “You ride where it lets
|
||
you ride, walk when it wants you to, and rely more on your growing skills than
|
||
on the latest technology.” This struck me as a harmonic way of moving through
|
||
the world—not my way, but whatever. I pushed off, found the group, and followed
|
||
them down a steep, exhilarating slide. Dry earth sputtered against my calves. I
|
||
loosened my hold on the brakes. Even in the heat, with friction shifters I
|
||
didn’t understand how to use, I felt a flicker of my favorite feeling:
|
||
competence. The wide tires were emboldening; the saddle height was
|
||
psychologically fine. It was by far the longest, heaviest bicycle I had ever
|
||
been on, and it moved with a surprising grace.
|
||
|
||
We dismounted in the parking lot. The sun returned to being unforgiving. I had
|
||
no idea what time it was or how long we’d been out. I wanted to do the whole
|
||
thing again. I looked at my phone: texts from the babysitter, calendar alerts,
|
||
a moldering heap of e-mails. “Don’t you just feel like a kid again?” Leto
|
||
asked, as he and Petersen began disassembling the bikes and loading them into
|
||
the car. I knew what he meant. But I felt, instead, a very adult sense of
|
||
longing—as if I had just glimpsed, at a deeply inconvenient time, a new and
|
||
appealing way to live.
|
||
|
||
Petersen often cites, as inspiration for Rivendell, a 1972 catalogue for
|
||
Chouinard Equipment, the precursor to Patagonia. In the catalogue, Yvon
|
||
Chouinard took his industry to task for the environmental damage of rock
|
||
climbing and copped to his own culpability, as a purveyor of steel pitons. “I
|
||
can relate to what he’s trying to do, because I’ve tried to do the same thing,”
|
||
Chouinard told me, of Petersen. Like Chouinard, who has expressed concern about
|
||
Patagonia’s size continuing to increase, Petersen is wary of growth. There are
|
||
only a small number of factories that do things the Rivendell way. Its lugs,
|
||
which are made using lost-wax casting, are incredibly strong but take a long
|
||
time to make. The vast majority of the frames are painted by a single person.
|
||
“I don’t want to dilute anything,” Petersen said. “I don’t want to be like
|
||
Filson, trying to sell ranch wear to urbanites.”
|
||
|
||
Last year, Rivendell brought in four million dollars in revenue. The company
|
||
sells about fifteen hundred bicycles a year, alongside parts, pants, and other
|
||
things that Petersen appreciates, including merino-wool socks and sweaters,
|
||
copies of “[37]The Wind in the Willows,” brass bike bells (“Noisy but
|
||
friendly”), bandannas (“They come to you stiff”), and Olbas aromatherapy
|
||
inhalers (“My often congested son-in-law tried it, and within two seconds
|
||
asked, ‘Is it addicting?’ ”). Rivendell works with a small number of dealers,
|
||
but sells most of its bicycles directly to customers. The company does not have
|
||
a large storage facility, and inventory is limited. “I am no businessman, but
|
||
it does seem like perhaps they are leaving some amount of money on the table if
|
||
their frames sell out in 4 minutes?!” a friend recently texted me, after
|
||
failing to secure a Joe Appaloosa during a presale. “I don’t think growth is
|
||
necessarily good,” Petersen told me. “When you’re making a whole lot of
|
||
something, with the goal being profits, there are usually compromises.”
|
||
|
||
Since 1999, Rivendell has produced Silver, its own line of components, which
|
||
include friction shifters, cranks, and hubs. Some are “virtual but ethically
|
||
produced knockoffs” of products that have been discontinued by larger companies
|
||
such as Shimano and SunTour. “We’re trying to become independent of the big
|
||
bicycle-parts makers,” Petersen said. “Ten years ago, we could still get stuff
|
||
that we liked. Twenty years ago, it was easy. Now it’s really hard.” The
|
||
obsolescence of mechanical parts has been a fixation of his for more than
|
||
thirty years: at Bridgestone, he kept an “Endangered Species Calendar,” a
|
||
monthly listing of bicycle parts that appeared to be going out of style. Eben
|
||
Weiss, the author of the blog Bike Snob NYC, told me, of friction shifters, “If
|
||
it wasn’t for someone like Grant, you could only get them on eBay. He keeps
|
||
them alive.” For five years, Rivendell has been working on manufacturing its
|
||
own derailleur. “He doesn’t make business decisions,” Weiss said. “He makes
|
||
decisions for the love of cycling.”
|
||
|
||
Image may contain Clothing Hat Adult Person Photography Baseball Cap Cap Baby
|
||
Bicycle Transportation and Vehicle
|
||
Petersen believes that the bike industry’s focus on racing—along with
|
||
“competition and a pervasive addiction to technology”—has had a poisonous
|
||
influence on cycling culture.
|
||
|
||
Through the years, some of Petersen’s ideas have filtered into the cycling
|
||
mainstream. People go on S24Os, and refer to them as such. They take road bikes
|
||
into the mountains and document their adventures on Instagram, using the
|
||
hashtag #underbiking. In some corners of the industry, baskets, racks, and
|
||
thicker tires are popular; Petersen is widely credited with bringing an
|
||
unfashionable wheel size—the plump, gravel-friendly 650b—back into circulation.
|
||
Newer brands such as Surly, Crust, and Velo Orange now make similar frames. But
|
||
some cyclists find Petersen overbearing. They are comfortable in spandex and
|
||
motivated by a little competition. They don’t mind if their bikes won’t last
|
||
forever. They have their own joy. Armin Landgraf, the C.E.O. of Specialized,
|
||
said that his customers like buying professional-tier bikes seen at the Tour de
|
||
France for a sense of connection with the sport. “It’s a passion,” he said.
|
||
|
||
The main critique that Petersen faces is that his preferences are needlessly
|
||
nostalgic. In 1990, a columnist for Bicycling dubbed Petersen a “retro-grouch,”
|
||
and joked that he must be a descendant of nineteenth-century penny-farthing
|
||
riders. (An ardent cyclist of my acquaintance, who underwent his own Rivendell
|
||
“journey,” told me that he had once worn Petersen’s recommended brand of wool
|
||
underwear on a multi-week tour: “It didn’t work out well,” he said. “For my
|
||
butt.”) But the same qualities that provoke this critique are part of
|
||
Rivendell’s appeal—as is true of other niche, low-tech products that attract
|
||
dedicated enthusiasts, such as film cameras and vintage watches. “Bikes look
|
||
very digital these days,” Kelley, of Allez LA, said. “Rivendells look very
|
||
analog.” He joked that the typical Rivendell customer is someone who “maybe
|
||
still has a flip phone” and listens to vinyl: “They get a feeling when they see
|
||
something that doesn’t look new.” Georgena Terry, a famed bicycle designer who
|
||
specializes in bikes for women, told me that electronic shifting was valuable
|
||
for some of her older customers, such as those with arthritis. Still, she
|
||
described Petersen as an “icon” in the industry. “Even people who would never
|
||
ride one of Grant’s bikes, because they just think they’re too simple, or
|
||
whatever, still have a great deal of respect for him,” she said.
|
||
|
||
In 2018, Petersen posted angrily on the Blahg about the Trump Administration’s
|
||
[38]family-separation policies, and was surprised when some of his readers
|
||
pushed back. Later that year, Rivendell began offering discounts to interested
|
||
Black customers who came into the shop: an effort at anti-racist action, if an
|
||
imperfect one. In 2020, Petersen formalized the program, calling it Black
|
||
Reparations Pricing, and started the Black Reparations Fund, a donation pool.
|
||
Days later, right-wing lawyers accused Rivendell of illegally discriminating
|
||
against customers based on race. Petersen’s lawyers advised him to shut the
|
||
program down. The company renamed its charitable fund “Bikes R Fun,” to
|
||
maintain the same initials; last year, it gave sixty-two thousand dollars to
|
||
charities. Petersen also fund-raises for individuals, including “Grocery Guy,”
|
||
a Black checkout worker he met at a local supermarket, and Isabel Galán, a
|
||
single mother of three living in the South Bronx, whom Petersen read about in a
|
||
Times article about undocumented women. He is interested in making cycling more
|
||
inclusive and accessible, although he is aware that the revolution won’t be
|
||
riding four-thousand-dollar Rivendells. He is currently working on a
|
||
multivolume book project, “An Illustrated History of the American Bicycle:
|
||
Riding through Racism, Sexism, Pollution, Politics, and Pop Culture.” It begins
|
||
with the Big Bang.
|
||
|
||
Rivendell’s future isn’t obvious, or even inevitable. “For the first ten years,
|
||
we were one bad month away from not being able to pay the bills,” Petersen
|
||
said. Twice, in 2008 and 2018, the company could barely make rent and payroll.
|
||
Both times, Petersen appealed to customers, who purchased gift cards and other
|
||
items to reinvigorate cash flow; the second time around, customers bought more
|
||
than two hundred thousand dollars in store credit. Rivendell could double its
|
||
prices, Petersen said, but he didn’t want people to get precious. “They
|
||
wouldn’t use them as everyday bikes,” he said. It was only in 2020 that
|
||
Rivendell’s finances started to stabilize, after the pandemic-era bicycle boom
|
||
and a newfound popularity in the Japanese market. (Keating, the general
|
||
manager, credits Blue Lug, a chain of bike shops in Japan, with much of the
|
||
company’s current health.) These days, Petersen’s primary concern is getting
|
||
Rivendell to a place where his employees, if they want to, can stay for the
|
||
rest of their careers. “I know, and they know, and it’s absolutely clear: if we
|
||
quit doing what we’re doing, nobody is going to pick it up,” he said. “Nobody’s
|
||
going to do it.”
|
||
|
||
In August, I joined Leibow, from Calling in Sick, for a weekend ride. At about
|
||
nine in the morning, six of his friends, including Keating, gathered at the
|
||
base of the Golden Gate Bridge, wearing sweatshirts, plaid button-downs, and
|
||
Vans slip-ons. A thick fog hung over the bay, cloaking the arches. Seagulls
|
||
drifted in the wind; cars on the bridge passed into nothing. We were headed
|
||
into Marin, a popular destination for San Francisco cyclists: on weekends, the
|
||
roads are inundated with riders in sleek-looking pelotons, who roll up to
|
||
small-town main drags and, rocking lightly in clipless bike shoes, click-clack
|
||
into bakeries for halftime refreshments. A few yards away from us, two people
|
||
with spandex outfits, matching white helmets, and lithe physiques clasped each
|
||
other against the cold. I thought about something Petersen had written on the
|
||
Blahg: “A beautiful bicycle in a beautiful biome makes sense.” There was
|
||
something romantic about the Rivendells. They made the other bikes on the road
|
||
look mean.
|
||
|
||
Petersen had loaned me an A. Homer Hilsen the color of celestine, with upright
|
||
bars and a metal basket. Leibow and two others were on green Rivendell Clem Ls,
|
||
a step-through model with an ultra-low top tube, to which Calling in Sick once
|
||
dedicated an entire issue. One of the Clem owners said that, on a recent ride,
|
||
a stranger on the trail had heckled him, hollering, “Nice that your sister let
|
||
you borrow her bike!” Though Rivendell’s customer base has historically skewed
|
||
middle-aged—the target audience for comfort—during the past decade the company
|
||
has become popular among younger riders, many of them skateboarders, who have
|
||
found that the bicycles are fun, and hardy enough, to take off-road. “The brand
|
||
ethos is about being O.K. with going slow,” Leibow told me. “But the reality
|
||
is, people who want to go fast go fast, even if it’s on a Rivendell.”
|
||
|
||
At a not especially swift pace, we crossed into the hills and started up a
|
||
paved, curving road, toward the trail. The ground was littered with sardines,
|
||
presumably dropped by birds. Wild fennel grew along the shoulder; Leibow
|
||
harvested some fronds to chew on. He and Keating, who have both spent years
|
||
riding around the Marin Headlands at night, to take advantage of the empty
|
||
roads, seemed familiar with the area at a near-molecular level. At the
|
||
trailhead, Keating suggested that we take a little air out of my tires.
|
||
“Personal preference,” he said. Then we turned onto a rutted, rocky hiking
|
||
path. We rode to a retired battery, which hung over the Pacific Ocean. A gun
|
||
pit, filled with water, had been overtaken by newts. Three different brands of
|
||
gummy bears materialized. The riders leaned over the pool, eyeballing the
|
||
salamanders, shooting the breeze.
|
||
|
||
The strength and fearlessness of the others filled me with an almost
|
||
indescribable envy. What was it like to leave for a long ride at dusk—or cycle
|
||
off into the woods with a sleeping bag, a patch kit, and some groceries—and be
|
||
reasonably assured you’d have a great night? The world seemed divided between
|
||
two types of people: those with a command of the physical world, and everyone
|
||
else. The former had confidence, skill, and know-how; the rest of us had
|
||
YouTube tutorials on removing anti-theft skewers.
|
||
|
||
Back in the city, I parted ways with Leibow and company. For the first time in
|
||
a long time, I had no particular place to be. It was pleasant to be
|
||
purposeless. As I passed other riders in Golden Gate Park, I was aware that the
|
||
Homer was signalling like crazy to an in-group, and I felt like a poseur: if
|
||
someone had a question about, say, the drivetrain, I wouldn’t have an answer.
|
||
But I wanted to—not for cachet, but because it felt right. I thought about all
|
||
the ways relentless optimization could contort a good time. I felt a not
|
||
unfamiliar anxiety about Stuff, its overabundance and baseline cheapness. I
|
||
tried not to get clipped by an e-bike.
|
||
|
||
A few weeks later, I went out to Walnut Creek to return the loaner. Since our
|
||
last meeting, Petersen and I had exchanged dozens of e-mails: about Virginia
|
||
peanuts, rubber bands, and a ride he’d taken with his nearly two-year-old
|
||
granddaughter on a Rosco Bebe—a Rivendell designed to hold a baby
|
||
carrier—during which he’d fed her berries and figs foraged from the saddle.
|
||
“Bicycles!” he wrote, at one point. “Eventually get a really good one that
|
||
works for your life and is beautiful and you love. It’s just basic.” When I got
|
||
to the showroom, my red Nashbar was leaning against a wall. Amid the
|
||
Rivendells, it looked a little wan, and much smaller than I remembered. I was
|
||
happy to see it. Still, before I left, Petersen sent me around the block on a
|
||
grape-purple Platypus. I cruised past the auto-body shops and a restaurant
|
||
puffing anise-scented air. The Platypus was agile, and sturdy as a parade
|
||
float. “You could have that bike for the rest of your life,” Petersen said.
|
||
“Imagine that frame, fifty years old, how beautiful that would be.” ♦
|
||
|
||
Published in the print edition of the [39]September 23, 2024, issue, with the
|
||
headline “Joy Ride.”
|
||
|
||
New Yorker Favorites
|
||
|
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• After a London teen-ager plummeted into the Thames, his parents discovered
|
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that he’d been [40]posing as an oligarch’s son.
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|
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• Don’t put off reading this [41]article on procrastination.
|
||
|
||
• Why you [42]can’t get a restaurant reservation.
|
||
|
||
• Is it O.K. to eat [43]any type of meat?
|
||
|
||
• What it was like being [44]married to the Marquis de Sade.
|
||
|
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• [45]An excerpt from Sally Rooney’s new novel.
|
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|
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[46]Sign up for our daily newsletter to receive the best stories from The New
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Yorker.
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[47][undefined]
|
||
[48]Anna Wiener is a contributing writer at The New Yorker covering the Bay
|
||
Area, technology, and the cultural influence of Silicon Valley. She is the
|
||
author of the memoir “[49]Uncanny Valley.”
|
||
More:[50]Bikes
|
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Read More
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[51]
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Among the Gaza Protest Voters
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The Political Scene
|
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[52]
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||
Among the Gaza Protest Voters
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[53]
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Among the Gaza Protest Voters
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Some progressives in Michigan say that they won’t support Kamala Harris unless
|
||
she changes her policy on Israel. Will their tactics persuade her, or risk
|
||
throwing the election to Trump?
|
||
By Andrew Marantz
|
||
[54]
|
||
Land of the Flea
|
||
U.S. Journal
|
||
[55]
|
||
Land of the Flea
|
||
[56]
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||
Land of the Flea
|
||
A road trip though America’s annual celebration of other people’s stuff.
|
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By Paige Williams
|
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[57]
|
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Is It Time to Torch the Constitution?
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Books
|
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[58]
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Is It Time to Torch the Constitution?
|
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[59]
|
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Is It Time to Torch the Constitution?
|
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Some scholars say that it’s to blame for our political dysfunction—and that we
|
||
need to start over.
|
||
By Louis Menand
|
||
[60]
|
||
Richard Powers on What We Do to the Earth and What It Does to Us
|
||
Profiles
|
||
[61]
|
||
Richard Powers on What We Do to the Earth and What It Does to Us
|
||
[62]
|
||
Richard Powers on What We Do to the Earth and What It Does to Us
|
||
“Playground,” Powers’s new novel, aims to do for the oceans what “The
|
||
Overstory” did for trees.
|
||
By Hua Hsu
|
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[63]The New Yorker
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[86] https://www.newyorker.com/about/contact
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[88] https://www.condenast.com/advertising
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