Just got done preping Jeffs bike and finished packing everything back in the truck. It is like a ritual of the Chequamegon to prep Jeff Halls bike the night before the big 40 mile race on Saturday. I finish working on the bike, have a beer and hit the bed for 3.5 hours of sleep cause the alarm is set for 5:15 AM. The race starts at 10:00 AM this morning. Jeff finished 2nd last year, there are 1800 riders in this race and this is the 27th year of the race. It's a true classic.
The year of 1995 when Jeff won this race, I had to rebuild his rear derailer and it took until 4:00AM the morning of the race. I never told him cause I didn't want to distract him. Well it worked, with him winning by 4 seconds over Eric Ringsrud.
Got to finish the 16 oz. Silver Bullet and get some sleep, GOOD TIMES!!
Adventure Motorcycle, Adventure Travel, Overland Camping, Mountain Bike, Winter Fat Tire Mountain Bike, Snowboarding / Sledboarding, Smowmobile, @ Minnesota, Central United States.
MIKE HALL: Adventure Motorcycle,Travel, Motorcycle, Overlanding, Backcountry, Avalanche, Snowmobile, Snowboard, Snowboard, Sledboarding, Winter Fat Tire Mountain Bike, Mountain Bike, Ski Patrol @ Montana, Colorado, Wyoming, Oregon, Utah, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Jackman, Maine
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Riders of the Fall
Friday, September 11, 2009
Biking With My New Computer / Test Riding the New Computer
First post with the new computer, It took a bit, but one step at a time. I've had my other laptop for 41/2 years. It is an hp. The new one is up-to date, another hp, with wireless (wow) and Verizon enabled. A little more compact. It's a bit of a pain to get it set up as familiar as my old one, it will be worth it. It will come in handy with my travels, that's the plan.
Tuesday, September 08, 2009
Friday, September 04, 2009
Fred Flintstone Month <> I Get'ta Play with Rocks From the Quarry

This is where the truck earns it's keep in the summer. It is on the job 4-5 days a week hauling whatever needs hauling, plants, trees, yard waste and mulch. The trailer follows me 80% of the time for the jobs, load after load.

Don't need no health club. This will get us in shape for the snowboarding, snowshoeing and mountain snowmobile season. Just add some good mountain biking this fall for endurance and reflexes for riding through the trees.

It isn't as exciting as surviving a deer <> motorcycle collision. The dang deer never try to take on the 3/4 ton pick-up. I'm working outdoors so it is all, GOOD TIMES!!
I feel very lucky and I want to extend a my good wishes and good luck toward a friend of mine, MIKE KELLY who I worked with for 30 years and is going through a very tough time right now after falling off a ladder last week and fracturing his skull. Mike is a tough guy and I am willing him to pull through this. He has a great family to support him. Don't take life for granted because sh!t happens so damn fast and we don't get a redo. BE READY!
Monday, August 31, 2009
Sunday Ride Turns Ugly / Then Good Times Watching Dirt Bikers Playin in the Woods & Mud

THE DEER STORY

I saw the deer bolt out of the trees, and at full speed proceeded to run up on the shoulder, it was at that point it decided its fate. Go right and get to frolic in the woods and have a good day or go left. The deer made a wrong decision, went left running at full speed, ran into my front tire, almost jerked the handlebars out of my hands. At that point I never let off the throttle, there was a fraction a second that I didn't know where the deer was after impact, then I ran over it's legs and I was still up on 2 wheels thinking, What the Hell!! I then hit my brakes and made a U-turn back. The deer was stone dead, laying in the middle of the lane, some fur wafting in the air.
This is where I go back to the reaction to an action. I surely didn't plan this, but I have gone over in my head a hundred times what to do if I am put in this situation. DO NOT SWERVE INTO DITCH OR WOODS, YOU WILL GO DOWN! Keep a grip on the bars, stay on the road, deal with the impact and ride it out if at all possible. Some bonehead local stopped and told me "ya gotta hit the brakes and swerve to try and miss the deer". I felt like punching him in the face. I'm standing there uninjured talking to him and deer is dead. I win. If you hit the brakes or swerve when you are about to collide, it will cause the front wheel to lose control and you are at that point screwed. You will be on the ground or off the road and into the trees. Now at the same time if you see up ahead a possibility of trouble, hey slow it down. Not when you are 15 yards away.



PLAN B / FORGET THE NORTH SHORE AND CHECK OUT A MOTORCYCLE RACE THAT WAS TAKING PLACE JUST DOWN THE ROAD OFF HIGHWAY #23 NEAR THE TOWN OF BRUNO, MN




It ended up a good day with about 290 miles on the motorcycle on Sunday. The beer tasted good when I got home.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Snowmobiles <> http://engineeringtv.com/blogs/etv/archive/2008/04/17/direct-fuel-injection-solution.aspx
http://engineeringtv.com/blogs/etv/archive/2008/04/17/direct-fuel-injection-solution.aspx
Shared via AddThis
Just click on the http above:
This a clip that I found pertaining to the 2-stroke vs 4-stroke snowmobile emissions and mileage issue. Not thrilling but interesting.
Both of my snowmobiles are fuel-injected 2-strokes. I have a 2008 Polaris 700 RMK Dragon and a 2008 Polaris 700 RMK. They are both mountain snowmobiles that produce 140 horse power with the new fuel-injection technology. My 2-stroke snowmobiles are about 70 - 80 pounds lighter than comparable 4-stroke snowmobiles and they make more horsepower. What would you ride?
Shared via AddThis
Just click on the http above:
This a clip that I found pertaining to the 2-stroke vs 4-stroke snowmobile emissions and mileage issue. Not thrilling but interesting.
Both of my snowmobiles are fuel-injected 2-strokes. I have a 2008 Polaris 700 RMK Dragon and a 2008 Polaris 700 RMK. They are both mountain snowmobiles that produce 140 horse power with the new fuel-injection technology. My 2-stroke snowmobiles are about 70 - 80 pounds lighter than comparable 4-stroke snowmobiles and they make more horsepower. What would you ride?

Tuesday, August 11, 2009
2009: Ore To Shore 48 Mile Mountain Bike Race / Marquette, Michigan


At the same time Jeff was winning the Short and Fat 16 Mile Race on the same day (Jeff won the Short and Fat twice, when he was 16 and 17 years old, then won the Chequamegon 40 in 1995 when he was 19).

Labels:
Chequamegon,
Jeff Hall,
mountain biking,
Ore to Shore
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