Subscribe to RSS
it’s taken ages, but my Guinness World Record Certificate finally arrives.
Actually, the main reason it took so long is that they stuffed it up twice.
Spot the differences:
Current Mood:
Those of you who know me will know that I’ve been working on Unicon XV, The 15th Unicycle World Championships and Convention for the best part of 3yrs. UNICON is the biggest event in Unicycling, with multiple events (over 30), ranging from Unicycle racing, Muni, Artistic Freestyle, Street, Flatland, Hockey and Basketball, Track and Field and more. This was the first time it was held outside the Northern Hemisphere, in my hometown of Wellington, New Zealand.
It started off as a throwaway remark I made to Andy Cotter at UNICON XIII in Switzerland, back in 2006. We were out on a MUni ride and I asked if he thought we could host something like that in New Zealand. It was such a big undertaking that it didn’t seem possible so I didn’t make much more of the idea until I got home. I remember thinking how cool it would be if we could get several hundred unicyclists riding along the waterfront, interacting with the general public. No one would understand why Wellington was teeming with unicyclists! We could host the parade of Nations to Civic Square, and have races through the streets of Wellington, a big trials course outside the NZX building, and the Street and Flatland competition at Waitangi Park.
That vision became a reality a couple of weeks ago, when Wellington, New Zealand hosted UNICON XV. It was three years of hard work by a small team, headed by Arthur and Lynne Klap of Sports Impact. I approached them in early 2007 wondering if they would be interested in helping us get UNICON to New Zealand. Lynne and Arthur have over 20yrs experience in organising events, ranging from the Mountainbike World Championships, Mountain-Running World Championships, MTB World Cup races, Triathlon World Champs, Winter Games and more. Wellington didn’t (and still doesn’t) have enough unicyclists to do this on our own.
Fast forward to Dec 2009, and we found ourselves playing host to 650 Unicyclists from 23 countries for UNICON XV. It was a challenging three years, marked by a worldwide recession and the toughest sponsorship market that Arthur and Lynne had encountered in their experience with event management. We managed to string it together on a pretty lean budget, with support from the Wgtn City Council and some very awesome volunteers.
Was it a success? Well, it achieved the two things I set out to achieve. Namely, to show off my hometown, Wellington, to my friends from around the world; and to show off unicycling to people of Wellington.
We made use of the best facilities in Wellington, including the TSB Arena, Waitangi Park, Wellington Waterfront, Mt Victoria and Newtown Park for our events. Because of the compactness of the City, most events were within a few minutes of each other. Unicyclists mostly stayed at the YHA, X-Base backpackers and the Bay Plaza Hotel, all in the middle of town. It was uniquely New Zealand- from the welcoming Powhiri through to the Pounamu medals for the expert medalists. Most unicyclists will bring back fond memories and hopefully visit New Zealand again in future.
For Wellingtonians, you had to be shut in a cave not to have noticed that there were a few hundred unicyclists out and about. It was near impossible to walk down the street and not see a unicyclist or three. The TSB Arena was fully packed for our artistic finals, and we also had a good spectator turnout for the 10km waterfront criterium, street, and trials competition. The public ‘learn-to-ride’ workshops drew a few hundred people….many having to wait their turn on a unicycle. The 10 day event probably brought in close to $2-3million dollars to the local economy, and more to New Zealand, as unicyclists travelled around the country before and after UNICON.
My personal performance at Unicon was a bit pathetic though, but I had no excuses really. I just didn’t pedal fast enough. I could only manage third in my main event, the Unicon Marathon. I was riding well, but didn’t have the power into the wind that the other riders did (and Wellington blows!). The 10km course was tight and technical, and I came in 5th after being taken down early by a crash. My biggest disappointment was in the cross-country, where I placed 6th overall on the highly technical course.
Aside from that, I’m pretty satisfied with how UNICON went. We put together something unique and I’m happy to have played a significant role in that.
Now for a bit of rest before I figure out the next challenge. Perhaps a big unicycle stage race, a jungle Muni festival, or even a non-unicycling related project. We’ll wait and see.
For more information on UNICON, visit the UNICON website: www.uniconxv.co.nz
Current Mood:
Here are a few photos and videos of the Unicycle Hour Record Attempt.
My Photos:
And some Video Clips:
Current Mood:
Ok, I’ve recovered sufficiently to write about the Hour Record. It’s taken me a whole week to get around to it, and I’ve finally got my videos and photos online
The record went really well, and I’m honoured to put my name to something so special. The Unicycle Hour Record has become the equivalent of the Bicycle Hour Record, it’s the benchmark for speed and distance. Everybody wants it, and its’ changed hands 5 times in the last four years. I wanted it one more time before the power-animals start going for it. I consider myself a climber, not a time trialist. As unicycle gears get bigger, the record will favour bigger riders.
I held the Unicycle Hour Record at 25.6km on an ungeared Unicycle back in 2005, but with the advent of Schlumpf geared hubs, unicycle speeds have increased by a factor of 15-20%. I like to think of the geared and ungeared records as separate…but I’m one of the few who do. You lose the essence of simplicity on a geared unicycle, which was what I liked about unicycling. Patrick Schmids’ 2006 ungeared Unicycle Hour Record of 27.18km stands as one of the most amazing feats I’ve seen on one wheel. Anyhow, a few people have their eye on the Unicycle Hour Record, and if you can’t beat the geared unicyclists, you might as well join them!
I built up a 36″ Schlumpf with a 1:1.5 gear ratio late last year, but it took a while to get the thing going after various teething problems (stuck shifter buttons, dead unicycle frames, tyre implosions and a lack of training time mainly). I was on the lookout for a track to set the record and found it in Victoria Park Oval, in the town of Dubbo, NSW. It happened to be where I’m working at the moment, so was the easiest place to do it! Unicycles don’t handle banked velodromes well, and this was a relatively flat cycle track, with a circumference of 406.55m.
After a few practice sessions, I was consistently lapping 52-53s laps, which was fast enough to get the record, but only just. It was not until the week leading up to the record attempt that I found myself hitting that ‘sweet spot’ and getting a consistent spin out of the unicycle. I started lapping 48-49 secs, which would mean I would be hitting the 30km mark. In fact, I hit 30.003km twice in my practice rides, which would have been the unofficial world record!
The day turned out fine, but a little windy. Here are the weather stats for Hour Record Attempt:
Time: 4.30-5.00pm; Weather: Fine; Wind direction: SSE; Temp: 11.8-16.5C; Wind Speed: 9-20km/hr; Pressure: 1025.6-1026.1HPa; Humidity: 35-51%
In short, it was sunny, a little cool, and fairly breezy. Wind is never an advantage. Even though it’s a circuit, the tailwind never quite cancels the headwind…so it did slow things ever so slightly.
I did a few warm up laps, with Mick, Ray and another Mick setting up the lap board, timing system and paperwork. I had to give a quick interview to a TVNZ reporter, before a nut and bolt check. Lucky I did, as one of my shifter buttons had worked itself loose, and that would have been disastrous for the record attempt. If I had hit the button accidentally at 30km/hr, it’s a guaranteed crash. For the hour record, if you crash, it’s gone. You don’t have time to get back on, accelerate to speed, and get your rhythm back!
Once I had the shifter button tight, Mick from the Dubbo Cycle Club helped me onto the unicycle, and I was off! I kept my speed up for the first few laps, but felt stiff and slow. I needn’t have worried however, as I completed the first 10 laps (I kept score by 10 lap times) in 8min00s, which was well under what I needed. I relaxed a bit and got my rhythm for the next set of 10, and lapped 16min06s, on track for a 30km Hour Record. Ray Wheeler from the local bike shop was giving time-checks every 10 laps, which gave me something to focus on.
The next few sets of 10 were a bit of a blur, as I tried to keep my rhythm. I almost got too relaxed at one stage, finding myself falling asleep (it’s boring going around in circles). I had to give myself a mental kick to make sure I my lap times didn’t start creeping down. The local cycle club and my workmates at Dubbo Base Hospital were out in force, cheering me on. I managed to flick off a couple of dings to acknowledge from my lucky bell (mounted on the handlebar).
My biggest worry was to lose concentration and fall off in front of the crowd, but apart from minor balance adjustments, I was relatively safe once I relaxed. Most crashes happen when your body is stiff, as you don’t have the ability to soak up bumps. I had one hand on the extended KH T-bar, and the other on the KH seat-handle. The handlebar is there to lower your body position, but is not great for accelerating with. I had the other hand on the seat handle, as every turn required effort to maintain speed.
As the sun set I saw my goal creep closer. 30 laps, 40 laps, 50 laps. Once I hit 60 laps I knew the record was mine, but the question was whether I could get the extra few laps to 30km. I went through the 68th lap with cheers from the crowd…it was the new World Record!
From there it was a push to the finish. I gave it everything for final few minutes, and rolled across the 74th lap at 1:00:11. The hour record is calculated using a formula based on the time of the last lap before 60min, and the time of the first lap after 60min. I knew it was going to be close…but I didn’t realise just how close. The final calculation came in at 29.993km, which was less than 1sec short of the 30km mark! I was averaging approx 8.5m/sec, so I must have blinked, snorted, blown my nose, or something. Still, it felt great to get the Unicycle Hour Record, and to break it by 2.4km!
I went home, showered, went to the pub for a Guinness, but they didn’t have any. Big thanks to all the people who supported me and helped with the record attempt. Names listed in my last post
Here are a few articles in the local Newspaper/Radio:
And from WIN News:
Current Mood:
I’ll post a bit more later…but I have officially broken Jan Logemanns Unicycle Hour record (27.564km) with a 29.993km ride today! I missed the 30km mark by 7m (which roughly works out at less than 1 second!), but otherwise I was very pleased with how it went.
Will put photos and a writeup tomorrow.
The thing about setting world records is that the easy part is the riding. The tough part is getting it all together and I couldn’t have done it without a whole bunch of people helping out.
I’d like to say a BIG THANK YOU to:
-Mick and Kerry Coffee from the Dubbo Cycle Club…for all your support and timekeeping
-Mick Cooper for your support and timekeeping
-Ray Wheeler from Daryl Wheeler Cycles…for timekeeping and giving me all the timechecks…kept me focussed the whole way!
-Everyone from the Dubbo Cycle Club…for letting me use the track on your race night, and for all the encouragement you gave me
-Everyone from Dubbo Base Hospital who turned up to cheer me on
-Everyone else who turned up and told me to pedal faster
-Unicycle.com NZ and Australia (Peter and Mal…thanks for sending up the spare tubes when my 29′er tube blew up for the umpteenth time)
-The guy I gave my camera to…for taking photos of me going around in circles…sorry I didn’t get your name!
-Florian Schlumpf for the technology to make this possible (as in the Schlumpf geared hub)
-Graeme Astley of Imrie, Astley and Associates, for surveying the track down to the closest cm (oh, if only you’d rounded it to the closest meter
)
My sponsors:
-Johnsonville Cycles…for supporting me since High School (that’s more than half my lifetime!)
-Triple 0 Medical Recruitment…for the cycling kit (jersey and shorts)…I told you I’d put it to good use
-Adventure Unicyclist
I’m sure there are others I should have on here…my mind is a bit of a blur at the moment! Let me know if I’ve missed anyone!
Current Mood:
For those of you interested in some of my buildup towards the Hour Record, here are a few things FYI (mainly for Unicyclists)
Course Length: 406.55m
Type of track: concrete cycle track, minimal banking. A few bumps, but fairly smooth
Start: Standing Start
Pacing: Unpaced (ie no drafting!)
Weather forecast: Sunny, 0-17 degrees celcius, wind 10km/hr SSE
Equipment:
Frame: KH 36″ Aluminium
Hub: KH/Schlumpf Hub, 1:1 and 1:1.5 ratios
Rim: Nimbus Stealth
Tyre: Nimbus Nightrider
Tube: 29′er
Spokes: 14Ga SS
Cranks: Qu-ax 145mm straight aluminium
Pedals: Wellgo MG-1
Seatpost: Schlumpf 27.2mm aluminium
Seat: KH Street Gel seat, cut down foam
Handle: KH T-bar, in fully extended position
I’ve been practicing on this track on and off for a few months, but only started getting serious about it a month or so ago. Initially I was intending on using the V-frame type position (ie more bike like position), but owing to my general lack of organisation, I haven’t built up a V-frame yet. However, for an hour record attempt, I think there is little advantage, because it’s mainly a position which allows comfortable riding for long distances. Acceleration is actually slower on the V-frame set up (with bars further away from the seat), but I suspect it’s something that comes down to practice.
Practice Times
Here are a few recent practice times, and notes:
16/8/09: 30.003km. 74 Laps in 1:00:10. I can’t believe I did exactly the same time as on the 14/8!, but legs felt better and it was an easy spin. It was much less windy though. Also spent the first 30min dodging a runner on the track
14/8/09: 30.003km. 74 Laps in 1:00:10. Legs felt good, bit windy but warm. New Inner tube as last one blew up. Happy to break 30km for the first time!
13/8/09: 10 laps in 8:09, then the tyre blew up
12/8/09: 36 laps in 30:33. Cold day, went for 30min only. The air felt thick and about 1-2s slower per lap than on a warm day
11/8/09: 70 Laps in 1:00:48. Very windy day, legs felt like crap. New Inner tube as old one has slow leaky puncture and a broken valve
8/8/09: 29.33km. 73 Laps in 1:00:43. Legs felt good, worked hard, but also windy. Broke the presta valve whilst pumping up tyre
Current Mood:
I’ve decided to have another go at this record, because people have been bugging me about it for ages! I held the unicycle hour record back in 2005, but it has been broken several times since. It’s a record adopted from bicycling that most long distance unicyclists use as a benchmark for speed/distance.
Jan Logemann from Germany holds the current IUF Hour Record at 27.564km, but I still hold the current Guinness World Record at 25.6km. What’s the difference? Not everyone who breaks the record submits it to Guinness, or does it to Guinness guidelines. However, I’m not out to beat my own record, I’d like to push it further!
The track has been marked out at Victoria Park, Dubbo, NSW at 406.55m. It’s an outdoor cycling track but with minimal banking unlike most velodromes. That means I need just under 68 laps to break Jans’ record.
The local Dubbo cycle club has kindly agreed to help officiate the record attempt, so if you are in town, come on down and watch me go around in circles. Free pizza and refreshments provided.
Current Mood:
And why you should come to New Zealand for UNICON XV
Cheesy Ad, but one of my favourite songs
Current Mood:
Australia is home to some of the mos venomous snakes in the world.
How do I know this? I work in a hospital Emergency Dept. We see the odd snake bite. Luckily, only a few of those who get bitten are actually envenomated. That only happens to stupid people who walk barefoot in long grass right?
Wrong. Take yesterday for instance. I went for a unicycle ride to the Zoo. There I was, hammering down the trail, minding my own business, and guess what? An Australian Brown Snake wriggles it’s way in front of me. A fully grown, 1m long, Australian Brown Snake. If there’s one thing that makes you yank on your unicycle so hard your knuckles go white, it’s decelerating your unicycle from 30km/hr to a stop in less than 1m, just inches away from a deadly serpent.
Now, this is not the first time I’ve run over a snake. I ran over something that looked like a dead baby snake in Austria a few years ago, quite by accident. But this was one of the most poisonous snakes in the world, alive and wriggling.
Don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against snakes. They are part of the ecosystem, and humans were never meant to intrude into their environment, just to run them over with unicycles. So I felt for the poor snake. She was as petrified of that giant round thing barreling towards her as I was of those vicious fangs.
Did this story have a happy ending? Yes, it did, because I skidded to a halt just as madame serpent slithered her way back into the undergrowth. But others aren’t so lucky.
Today, some guy was bitten by a snake and came in to the Emergency Dept.
He was fine, but he shot the snake.
What a asshole.
Current Mood:
I’ve just ridden around Lake Taupo again. It’s New Zealands biggest cycling event…..a very scenic 160km ride around NZ’s largest lake. We had over 11,000 cyclists turning up this year, and I keep coming back. This is my 5th time, and the fourth I’ve ridden around on a unicycle: Lake Taupo Cycle Challenge
Anyway, we got up early on Friday packed up my Schlumpf 29′er geared unicycle and headed up north with my cycle buddy Colin and his partner Wingya. I love road trips and it was a beautiful day…..summers finally here!
Race day started with my usual pre-race meal of rolled oats and bananas. If there’s anything that will get you through the day…this is it!
Now with 11,000 odd cyclists it takes almost 2hrs to start everybody off in waves. I join the 6.30-7hr group, which was what I was aiming for. My previous best was 7hrs43min, but with the geared unicycle I was hoping to cut time on the flat sections and make use of the peletons.
And it all went according to plan for the first 40km or so….I was cruising at a brisk 25km/hr average, and hitting over 30km/hr on the flats. It’s definitely an advantage with the bigger gear.
And then my legs died. Not literally, but they might as well have been pedalling backwards. Not good. I found myself cranking up the shallowest gradient in 29′er 1:1 gear. That’s like granny gear on a bike. Not even that…more like great-granny gear.
Now, normally I can cope, but this happened at 40km. A bloody long way from the finish. And added to that it was a scorching hot day….I don’t do well in heat at all. I bonked big time.
I got to the half way mark, was was looking forward to having one of the famous pies at the half-way pie shop…..I was dismayed to find it shut. Not literally in tears, but close enough. Big ups to the riders who gave me a sandwich. That got me up Kuratau Hill, before a long downhill and flat stretch to Turangi for a quick rest stop at Burger King. A super sized burger combo got me the rest of the way back to Taupo, thankfully. Now, a word of advice when doing endurance events….do not stuff yourself with a super-sized combo and wash it down with copious amounts of gaseous brown liquid.
I had the hiccups all the way to Taupo, and crawled in at 10hr4min….my slowest ever LTCC. ARgh.
On the plus side, I slept like a baby, and kept everyone awake with my hiccups.
It was still an awesome (*hic*) weekend.
I’ll be (*hic*) back next year!
Current Mood: