bienvenue europa.

Bonjour to the hustle & bustle of the street cafe's and all the fashion & creative stimulation of Paris for a few days before we ย headed down south to the Haute Loire countryside, to a tiny little village (small enough to not have street names just yet) where my sister has lived for the past 10 years and where my parents live for about 6 months of every year. Everything is electric green and in full bloom after the long winter and gardening & planting veggies is to them what cycling is to us. It is an obsession & a constant ongoing project of learning & trying new methods of perfecting your passion and doing what you love.

I could get used to this laid back lifestyle - for a little while anyways. ย It definitely gets you to reconnect with the rhythms of the land & the seasons, which in turn gets you to somehow reconnect with yourself. Life is basic & very uncomplicated here - as a visitor that is. A typical day starts by lazing with my morning coffee, keeping all the crankbrothers customers happy (hopefully), ride & explore on my bike, followed by some yoga and then the obligatory red wine, mom's yummy food ย & then bedtime. Repeat. Simple. Happy.

Check out some of my hipstamatic shots in and around Paris & life in the village of Vernassal pics will follow in next post ( Yes, I got sucked into the whole hipstamatic thing too, but I love it!).

Peace out.

Anka

 

Adieu Cape Town, it was a pleasure. Next stop - Europe.

Aaaahhhh, the summer in Cape Town has come to an abrupt end with frequent rain bouts and beautiful fall colors replacing the parched vineyards. Dry, dusty earth has become hero dirt overnight and the crisp, cool air is just perfect for a mid day bike ride. This sounds lovely, and I enjoy the change of season, for a little while, but then I've had enough and I'm ready for summer weather and blue skies once again. Of course there is always a tinge of sadness when we get ready to pack up and move on again, the good byes, the familiarity, the beautiful trails and nature you've got used to again, but I think it must be mostly the memories that makes it sad to leave a place. ย All the fun summer memories and adventures that we experienced on our bikes, at the beach, in the mountains, with wild animals and the challenges that we yet again overcame - this time I completed my 4th Cape Epic with my good friend Tracy Moseley & became the DH National champ. Sven on the other hand had to overcome a massive spider bite he got in Botswana, that put him out of action for weeks.

Anyhow, there is no point in reminiscing in the past, it is time to leave, to say good bye for now and to move on to the next set of adventures, trails, scenery, sunsets, friends and family. It is time to move into our trusty or not- so- trusty ย Renault van again for the next few months of traveling between events and squeezing in some fun in-betweeners as we plod along the Autobahn.

Sometimes this nomadic way of life can get a bit much, but then again, would I rather be sitting in some office cubicle? I don't think so. I wouldn't want to change my lifestyle for anything right now. Well, I would like to have a veggie garden, but I can wait a little longer for some homegrown tomatoes.

Peace out.

Anka

Cape Epic update: 8 days, 48 hours in the saddle, 707km, 14550m of climbing with copious amounts of bum cream & mini banana muffins later.

This past week has been quite a strange week. It is the week after the finish of the Cape Epic and with that comes some strange, sad, sort of empty, anti climatic feelings and emotions. After so many weeks and months of preparation, it is suddenly all over, with no more 3-4 hour training days and preparation of all sorts of stuff. It feels like I have way too much time on my hands now and Iโ€™m not really sure what to do with this new concept, already thinking about and planning the next challenge and adventure. Tracy and I had an amazing week at the Cape Epic. The weather was abnormally cool and overcast, even raining the one day which made the long, exposed days very bearable and pleasant. The route this year was extremely scenic and we rode through and up and over some beautiful nature reserves and Fynbos clad mountains. It felt like we literally covered the entire Western Cape and rode over every mountain that appeared.

We were perfectly matched in every aspect, and made a great team with our main goal to enjoy all the downhills and to smoke some xc bandits on all the descents (Only to be passed back by some of them come the first climb). We both hated the morning starts with all the frantic people sprinting out as if we had a 2 hour ride ahead of us, only to pass them hours later after they were spent. We both hated the flat fire road stages when the packs of roadie pelotons would come screaming past us, way too fast for us to try and stick with a group for even a little while. We both had no problem enjoying all the yummy treats at the various feed stations and it felt like we never stopped eating โ€“ ever. Tracy and I both loved and excelled during the tough stages with the rough, loose technical climbs and challenging sand sections and generally ended up getting better results during those stages.

All in all we had a perfect week of riding with a perfectly matched partnership. Our knee's held up, our bums held up and we still had a pretty good sense of humor by the end of every grueling day. Pretty amazing considering we did zero training together and our first xc ride together was a day or so before the race started. We ended up a respectable 306th out of the 603 teams that entered and 15th in the Womenโ€™s category. Not too shabby for some downhillers.

Thanks to Rob from Africa Cycles, we didnโ€™t have to worry about the maintenance of our bikes, and they felt and looked brand new and shiny every morning. We didnโ€™t have one flat tire or one mechanical between the two of us all week, which is pretty unbelievable considering the rough terrain and the massive devil thorns scattered across the route. A huge thank you also goes out to all our supporters along the way, the family, friends, the screaming school kids and cheering farm workers. Your smiling, happy faces really made the daily long slog a little bit easier and more enjoyable.ย Also a big shout out to my amazing sponsors who helped to make all of this possible: crankbrothers, FOX clothing, SRAM, Rockshox, Santa Cruz Bicycles - you guys ROCK!

The greatest motivation for me this year was to be riding for a cause such as World Bicycle Relief. So far we have managed to raise US$62 000, together with the other teams and are hoping to raise some more money to go to our cause of donating bikes to 10 different schools in Zambia. For more information on our fundraiser and to donate, please check out our blog/website at: http://capeepicchallenge.blogspot.com/

Now that it is all over, with my 4th Epic completed, it is time for Tracy to go and focus on what she does best โ€“ racing downhill very fast and for me to start plotting and planning the rest of my summer racing enduro events, undertaking some more crazy adventures with my beloved trail bike and submerging myself in lots and lots of yoga!

Peace out.

Anka

South African national DH champs

This past weekend we had our South African National DH Championships out here on a farm called Contermanskloof just outside of Cape Town. It was a hot, dusty & very dry weekend of riding as Cape Town has been experiencing a crazy heat wave over the last two weeks with temperatures reaching into the 40 degree Celsius mark. A perfect weekend for the beach, not that ideal for downhill gear and full-face helmets though. I saw this weekend as a great opportunity to take a break from my Cape Epic training and to step away from the little bike for a few days of fun on my downhill rig. Training for the Epic can get a little bit boring and tedious after a while, so I was ready to get back on my big bike for a weekend of shredding some downhillโ€™s on my brand new Santa Cruz Carbon V10! I knew Tracy was out in Spain with her team for some downhill testing and riding, so I didnโ€™t feel guilty either, we were both having a weekend off our training bikes to keep the stoke alive.

You start off thinking that youโ€™re just going to have fun out there, because of the upcoming Cape Epic and the fact that you have a team mate to think about and all the time and effort that you have put into your training and so on, so you start off by taking it easy but then after a while you start getting confident and you get back into race mode. After all it was the National Champs, and it had a nice ring to it. Before you know it, you are hitting road gaps, big doubles and smashing through rock gardens. All the things I was worried and concerned about was tossed out the window, and all I could think about was how freaking fun that was, how I almost ate shit so many times and how alive I felt. The Adrenaline was pumping through my veins and I couldnโ€™t get rid of the perma-grin on my face. The Cape Epic was a distant memory, I had a race to race and I wanted to give it my all. After a long, dusty and extremely hot weekend I stood on the top of the podium โ€“ I won the national champs. I was in one piece. I was stoked.

I definitely needed this three day break to remind me just how much I love riding my bike and to feel mentally refreshed and energized going into the last two weeks of training that has to be done before the start of the Cape Epic. Tracy also had a fun week of riding and returned back to the UK safe & sound. No more distractions for us now, our only focus is the Cape Epic that is 17 days away from the start. Our downhill bikes will have to wait a few more weeks till we can go out and play again.

Please help us make a difference and pledge some support to World Bicycle Relief bringing bikes to Africa and changing lives.ย http://capeepicchallenge.blogspot.com/

Time to reflect - Urge Cabo Verde

I am sitting outside on my parentโ€™s porch, drying out in the sun from a quick dip in the pool, eating ice- cold watermelon and guzzling down water by the gallons.ย  We arrived in a very hot & dry Cape Town, South Africa this past weekend, so I am still trying to adapt to this intense summer heat. Finally I have some time to reflect upon the amazing adventure, race & overall life experience that we just returned from. The URGE Cabo Verde invitational was truly a very special humanitarian event that I will cherish forever and I feel very proud to have been a part of it.

Flipping through hundreds of Svenโ€™s stunning photoโ€™s, I cannot help but feel sad to be off the colorful islands with all itsโ€™ happy people. The people of the Cape Verde islands know how to live. They are some of the richest people (culturally) that I have ever met. Happily living with next to nothing. To us it seems like nothing, but they have what matters. They have their families, crops, wine, music, culture, exquisite nature, time, patience and that freedom of not revolving your life around materialistic bullshit. We can all learn from this content and peaceful nation. I love these kinds of adventures, because it really just puts everything into perspective.

If there ever had to be a huge disaster affecting the whole world, I really do think that this archipelago of Islands will remain untouched and unharmed and that the people will just carry on with their lives without ever realizing what happened in the outside world. That is how remote they felt to me, out in the middle of the big blue Atlantic Ocean.

The focus of the URGE event/race was more about the humanitarian impact that we could offer than the actual racing. We were all told to race at 85% of our ability, as we were very far away from any kind of hospital, and we had no access to a helicopter for emergency rescues and there were 1000foot drops offs backing the countless slippery switchbacks. The fact that we had no idea what the four different racetracks looked like didnโ€™t help either. Try telling 10 time World DH Champion, Nicolas Vouilloz or current World DH champion Tracy Moseley to only race at 85% of their potential โ€“ not possible when you are dealing with racers and a timing device! I am not sure how, but somehow all 15 of us racers made it through all 4 races with no helicopter rescue needed. The tracks were insane, and some sections completely unrideable, but it was oh so much fun!

Besides the amazing races we did, we visited the school that we were raising funds for. It was the first time that I had been back in a school environment since I left it a long time ago. We spent the whole morning in various classrooms meeting the students and teachers, exchanging stories and learning about their culture while enjoying some traditional food that was made especially for our visit. Students were fluent in up to 4 different languages, some even more, putting all of us to shame.ย  It was a real eye opener, and this visit to the school was a great reassurance of the purpose of our trip in Cabo Verde. There were so many highlights on this trip, and Iโ€™d like to share a few with you:

The ferry ride to the Volcano Island of Fogo, was most definitively not one of them. It was four hours of torture, trying not to vomit when absolutely everyone around you was vomiting. The worst part of it was that we had to get back on the ferry 2 days later and repeat the above.

Having to hike to the top of a volcano with my bike was a first. One step up, three steps down. Then having to race down the volcano on my bike was another first. The fact that I was the (un)lucky one that got to race down first and had no tracks to follow was another first. I guess someone had to show those pro guys how to do it!

Meeting Cesaria Evora was really special. I have been a fan of her music for a long time. She invited all 25 of us into her humble home for grog or punch as she called it. A traditional rum and sugar cane concoction that was rather harsh on an empty, post sea- sick ferry stomach, but drink we did. It is not everyday that you get to raise a glass with an absolute legend.

Leaving all our bikes on the back of a small pick up truck in the street in front of our accommodation for the night, with no locks, gates, guards or garages in sight. A nervous 15 riders went to bed hoping to see their beloved bikes in the morning. (Of course mine was at the end โ€“ so first to go if someone decided to steal them). That doesnโ€™t happen on these islands. My faith has been restored. Poverty does not have to lead to theft.

The small ferryboat ride to Santa Antao was such a great experience. We were lucky enough to sit out in the open, on the floor and witness a group of incredibly passionate and talented guys practicing Capoeira, singingย  & dancing. The music was so infectious you couldnโ€™t sit still, you had to move, clap and sing, and before we knew it we arrived in Santa Antao with no seasickness in sight, ready for the next adventure.

Our second race almost didnโ€™t happen because of logistical problems with half the bikes not making it on the plane, but thanks to Fred & Manu, they rented a yacht and got the rest of the bikes to Santa Antao. It was a stressful day filled with planes, boats, taxiโ€™s and building up bikes at breakneck speeds on the side of a road, throwing on some gear and starting our hike up into the wind and clouds late in the afternoon. The race was on. It was rather nerve racking at the top with zero visibility, howling winds, a day nearing its end, and us having to race down the other side completely blind. This was exciting. While waiting for my race run, Iโ€™ll never forget Nicoโ€™s face as he came running back up the track after walking down a ways to scope it out, he looked at me and saidย  (in a very French accent): โ€œZere iss ziss rock slab, iiit iiiiss veryyy sketchy, wet, and you can die, you must not ride it, you get off your bike, ok.โ€ย  When Nicolas Vouilloz tells you something, you better listen. It was a crazy track, and I just wanted to get down safe. Halfway down the track, the mist lifted and it was a sight that I will never forget. It was the most incredible view of the most amazing valley and I just had the biggest smile on my face. I loved every minute of this and giggled all the way down to the finish line. It wasnโ€™t about the race, it was about the ride, the place, the camaraderie between friends and the people we were here to help. ย I got two second place finishes, but ended up in third place overall behind Tracy & Sabrina with the combined time of the four races โ€“ only 1 minute back from Sabrina!

We all received these really special one of a kind volcano rock mask trophies, hand carved by a local Fogo artisan called Tarzan. A great gift to cherish this amazing adventure and to remind me of the amazing people, hospitality and the beautiful islands of Cabo Verde.

Training diaries

I have just returned from an amazing riding trip and adventure to New Zealand & Western Australia for the last 6 weeks, and am struggling to come to terms with the cold winter weather back in Bend, OR this crisp January morning. It is not even as cold as it usually gets out here in the Central Oregon Mountains, but I have become a cold weather weenie over the last few weeks of summer riding. My training for this upcoming Cape Epic race has been quite a bit different than in the past when I was on the trainer for hours on end and getting all the road miles and gym hours logged in. It started off with a 6 week intensive Yoga teachers training course that I attended to become a qualified teacher. It was intense, and all my usual gym work was replaced with the yoga studio using my own body weight. It made me strong and has given me a good base to start training from.

Then it was off to New Zealand where I only had my beloved 6โ€ Santa Cruz Nomad trail bike & I was just out riding my bike wherever and whenever I could. If I had a heart rate monitor, it would have been beeping constantly, as there were no gradual climbs or rides in the entire country. Put it this way, I could potentially take the win for the hike a bike sections โ€“ if there was such an award at the Epic. I had a blast though. We lived in a van, rode pretty much every day, dealt with crazy rain and floods, ticked off as many different trails in our riding NZ guide book, pushed hard to try to keep up with all the locals who always show you their hardest and best ride, rode some pretty scary, very technical, actually completely insane trails โ€“ if you can call them trails. I felt like a true adventurer out in the jungle, clambering over gigantic fallen trees from all the rain and windstorms and riding & hiking through the most beautiful pristine indigenous forests. We got heli dropped at the top of mountains only to reach our van hours later after riding rocky, scree clad mountain faces, sliding down slippery roots and wading gushing rivers. Not once did I think of my mileage, or my time in the saddle or my training, I was just out on my bike, riding hard and loving every single minute of it, having an epic bike adventure and passing out of exhaustion at the end of every day. 100% Pure NZ indeed.

Australia was a different story. I was still on my New Zealand riding high, and went straight to the Boranup forest to go on a cross country bush ride in the Karri forests, only to see 4 of the biggest, most dangerous, venomous snakes in Australia in a matter of only one hour. One of them โ€“ a Tiger snake, even had the cheek to slither right under my bottom bracket. I was pretty freaked out to say the least, and not willing to start loosing limbs for the sake of the Cape Epic, so I resorted to the road to keep riding. I wanted nothing more to do with the Australian forests. Riding the road with no shoulder on a Nomad when it was 36 degrees Celsius ย (96F) was not too much fun, but I kept riding, thinking of Tracy having to do the same in equally tough but opposite freezing temperatures. ย Sven was my back up, motivator and support vehicle. He would drive ahead and have cold water and ice towels ready to cool me down. What a treat. Almost as good as a Cape Epic water stop! It was a little glimpse into what the temperatures could reach during the Cape Epic, and it was a good reality check that this event was no joke. You have to be prepared on every level and so I kept pedaling hoping that when I got back on my little Santa Cruz Carbon Blur XC, it would feel like a breeze and the pedaling would be effortless.

Now that we are in mid January, I canโ€™t help but think of the Epic and wonder if all the trail riding and yoga has been enough to see me through the grueling stages of the Cape Epic. There is still some time though.

Between intervals on the snow shoes and some cold riding Iโ€™m busy packing for another pre-Epic trip. Tracy and I are both getting ready for the Urge Cabo Verde enduro downhill event that takes place from the 7th to the 14th of February on the Cape Verde Islands offย  of the West coast of Africa. We were both invited to participate along with 13 other athletes to this amazing humanitarian event where we will be doing 4 downhill races on 4 different islands to raise money and bring awareness to the country. www.urgecaboverde.com

This will be a great time for Tracy and I to catch up, have some fun and to get some riding done together even though its downhill riding we will be hiking up volcanoes and mountains each day! Our team training is a bit different to the rest of the Epic field Iโ€™m sure. Sure itโ€™s not the ideal training program for an XC Stage race like the Epic, but we will be strong. After all, its about having fun, riding bikes with a good friend for a great cause, and passing tons of guys on the downhills J

More NZ pics to be posted soon.

Peace out.

Anka

good bye Bend. hello New Zealand.

As we drove away from our house early yesterday morning, the snow was coming down and everything was super quiet and really beautiful. Our house was locked up and we were packed to the brim as usual, poor Subie, heading out to start the long, dreary and extremely slippery drive to Los Angeles to catch our flight to sunny New Zealand & Western Australia for the next few weeks for some work, and of course some riding & surfing adventures. This was the first time in a while that I have actually been home in Bend for almost 2 and a half months straight - quite something. No weekend trips or getaways, just at home, in Bend. The thought of it scared me at first, but I was enrolled to start my Yoga Teachers Training certification course at MYC, so I had no choice, I was signed up and committed to be in town for the full duration of the course - 5 weeks. I was excited and nervous, but soon found myself completely submerged and embraced by a whole new community in Bend. I met new people every day, made some wonderful friends during the teacher training course whose friendships I will cherish for the rest of my life. I was introduced to Kirtan, crazy dancing yoga classes, Sanskrit words, chanting, singing, common table, The Mysore Brothers from India, candlelight yoga, 3 First Friday's, Gerry Lopez yoga, Sean Hayes, DJ Lucius the fire Shaman, the artists at the Poet House, Mandalas in lunch hour flow with Kat, the list goes on and on. So much has happened in my life over the last 2 months of being at home in Bend. It has been so refreshing to embrace the community, to dive into it and to be embraced by them. After living in Bend for the past 5 years, this was the first time that I made the effort to embrace, and when you decide to embrace, lovely things seem to develop and bloom around you. It is quite nice when the people at the coffee shop actually knows your name - a first for me!

So when we pulled away yesterday morning, all packed up and ready for our next adventure, I couldn't help but feel quite sad. Sad to leave our cozy house covered in snow. Sad to leave my routine of going to yoga and learning new and exciting things everyday, sad to not be able to teach at MYC for now, but also excited. This is my life right now, and I need to embrace it. We are nomads traveling to where the work moves, for now and I will always be able to settle down again. Now that we have left, I cannot wait to discover new single track trails, rugged mountains, the smell of the ocean, adventures, sunshine, new yoga classes, camping, kumara fries & flat white coffee's. I am ready for our next adventure. I have said good bye. Thank you Bend for a great couple of weeks, we'll be back - sometime soon with a whole new appreciation.

Much Love

Namaste.

Anka x.

happy tofurkey day!

So, it is that time of the year again, when everyone gets super frantic about everything - food, shopping, black Friday, Christmas? and all sorts of silly stuff. I for one am not a huge Thanksgiving fan, I guess because we didn't grow up with it, so it doesn't have that special meaning to me, and secondly, we don't have any family here to celebrate it with, and finally, I'm a veggie, so I am not a huge fan of eating the turkey bird. With that said, Sven and I decided to snowshoe up to the top of Tumalo mountain & snowboard back down to the car, making fresh powder turns all the way down. It was a perfect, wind still, blue sky day out here in Bend, Oregon and we couldn't have asked for a more perfect way to spend our Thanksgiving day away from the crazy masses overindulging on a big, fatty, bird.

Mountain of hell mayhem

Well, the Mountain of Hell race lived up to it's name for me last weekend. We had another amazing week of riding in the French Alpes, at Les deux Alpes this time. Great weather, great friends and really good trails. After a slow start due to complete and utter fatigue after the Mega, I really got into these tracks and was super excited to get racing again. The qualifying track was incredibly technical, more so than the Mega track and would be way more suited on a DH bike, but my new Carbon Nomad was absolutely incredible. The best bike ever! After a crazy start on a wide fire road, the track went straight up the steepest two climbs. I got the whole shot at the start and then battled it out on the climbs with two other girls. It was insane how steep this was right after the start when you are completely frantic and your lactic levels are sky high. I got passed on the climb, but managed to overtake again on the next downhill section. From there on I got into a great rhythm ย and managed to get quite a big lead on the girls, only to get a front flat. Bummer. This meant I got a bad start position for race day on the glacier. O boy, and bad it was. Line 20 for the start on the glacier for me.

I tried to make the best of a pretty bad situation and still had my eye on the podium. I knew it could be done and I was ready to dig deep. Very deep. The glacier was amazing, it was hard and fast and I managed to get by a lot of people and get back into the mix of the girls. I was back in business, until I realized I had a rear flat. That was that. No chance of the podium for me today. After that realization, I stayed calm, changed my flat and just rode down the track to enjoy the whole experience, to soak up the amazing views and to see how many guys I was able to pass. I managed to still end up in 7th place. Not too shabby considering this was a weekend of mechanical hell for me from the get go.

Sven, on the other hand, killed it. He finished in 9th place overall - putting him in 3rd place for the Masters category. He was second off the glacier and finally had a good run at a race. Awesome.

Thanks again to all for a great weekend of riding.

Cheers!

Anka

viva Megaaaaaaa Avalanche!

Sven and I have just survived another Mega Avalanche out here in Alpe d'Huez, France and I feel as if I got hit by a bus today. So stiff and sore from crashing, riding, and running down glaciers, rocks and steep mountain slopes! We were up here with the Rockshox/Sram guys testing out some new BlackBox products. We had a great week of riding and hanging out with these guys, testing out parts and my bike getting the royal treatment of getting cleaned and worked on 24/7. What a treat and what a difference it makes to have such support. It really makes all the difference when you are at an event like this. This was also the first week of riding my new and much loved Carbon Nomad - thanks to Santa Cruz. Man, what a bike. We really hammered these bikes and parts and they felt amazing. You cannot begin to describe what you put your bike, equipment and your body through in a week of riding out here. Pure abuse.

What an amazing event once again, such a blast to ride out here all week. ย We qualified on Friday on a completely different quali track, super technical, rocky track way more suited for a full on DH bike than a trail bike, but what an awesome trail. I managed to get a 6th place and front row start after a crazy mass start on really loose rocky fire road. Sven had a great run too, securing him a good spot in 2nd row for the race line up of 2000 racers.

For the final the weather was really hot, so that made the glacier a bit softer than usual and we had to run in the snow on the flat bottom and uphill sections, which was incredibly hard and just drained all your energy. I had a great race though, it took me 1h18 min, to complete the 32km downhill track ย with almost 10 000ft of vertical and put me in 4th place overall. It was a really stacked field with 3 x DH World Champions as well as a World Cup overall champion and some of the best riders in the world all out here battling for the win. Anne Caroline Chausson took the win, current World DH champ Emmeline Ragot was 2nd, me in 4th and Tracey Moseley in 5th place. I was super STOKED. Never thought I'd stand on the box with these girls. Also managed to be the first old lady! LOL, winning masters women! The whole crew finished up really well and we all survived the week.

Needless to say, I don't want to see my bike for a few days - only a few though, because we are about to head across the valley to another glacier at Les Deaux Alpes for the Mountain of Hell race. I'm a sucker for pain, what can I say.

Thank you to everyone for all your wonderful support.

Check out some photo's below.

Peace out

Anka

Wheels 4 Life charity clothing order.

I have just wrapped up a few weeks of sewing, creating, printing & deconstructing some hooded sweatshirts and T-shirts for the amazing Wheels 4 Life charity that was started by Hans Rey and his lovely wife Carmen. It was such a fantastic opportunity to finally be able to work with their charity and I had an absolute ball of a time completing this order. I hope the people who get these pieces will LOVE them and take special care of them. It was not the easiest of order to complete, as I was e-mailed the order by Carmen the day I left America for the next 3 months to go to Europe. Quite the logistical nightmare to get everything over to Europe so I could fulfill the order from our van traveling across Europe from race to race. I was a rather funny sight for people at the world cup races as I sat sewing away in our van at various camp sites. I guess this would be considered life after racing.

A little summary of the well traveled clothing order.

1. Inside labels printed in moms flat in Paris (in-between shopping bouts)

2. Two big boxes of screen printed W4L labels flown in from San Diego and collected atthe US Open by Sven (thanks babes)

3. All screen printed logo's & slogan's were cut out on the floor of the Atherton Racings offices in Schrewsbury UK ( on route to Scotland when our trusty van broke down)

4. Actual sewing started in Scotland at the Santa Cruz Syndicate's team house (after they all left - thanks Kathy & Doug!)

5. Sewing continued all across Scotland (riding all the famous 7 stanes trails in-between of course)

6. Continued into a very rainy Austria - it never stopped raining and I was sewing in a closed up van with my head lamp.

7. After a week of this rain business we headed back to France to finish up this amazing order in the luxury of my parents house.

8. Off to France Express - Au Revoir W4L clothing order! Safe travels to the UK.

Thank you Carmen & Hans for giving me the opportunity to create fun stuff for a great charity!

Check them out at www.wheels4life.org and make a difference.

Love

Anka

New trips, adventures & website to go live soon

We have just confirmed the dates for our mountain bike adventures for 2011, also added a new trip for next year that will be a Cape Town & surrounding areas only mountain bike trip- with no bike safari, for those of you that can't be away from home for too long. We will also be launching our new website within the next few days, so go and check it out for all the details, dates, and costs & book your spot now to experience ย the riding adventure of a lifetime in 2011.

www.ridehousemartin.com

3 days & 400km later

Sven & I just finished our second Sani2C race and it was an absolute blast. We had terrible weather, tons of mud & mist, but it all made the adventure that much more exciting. We loved day 2 when we were bombing past hundreds of people in the muddy, misty conditions. Great fun when you know not to touch your front brakes. Not so fun for the majority of the riders out there. Thanks again to Farmer Glen and the whole Underberg community for putting on such a top class event. Weโ€™ll be back next year to ride the singletrack down to the Umkomaas valley.

Welcome back to the houseMARTIN blog!

Hey there!

Welcome back to the new houseMARTIN blog page, where we will be posting random tidbits, stories & news about all things bikes, adventures, travel & of course a bit of fashion news.

Follow us as we travel all around the world in search of sweet singletrack, hero dirt, great food & good times.

Enjoy!

much LOVE

Anka