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Check out the Clothing for Recumbent Riders

blue tie dye pants

Recumbent riders have somewhat specific needs for jerseys and shorts. For jerseys, it’s better to have pockets on the front than on the back, as they are on a traditional cycling jersey. For shorts, padding is unnecessary (though I find it blocks the wind on a cold day).

The following companies have good options for bent riders, though I don’t necessarily have experience with any of them other than Ice Breaker.  (And I’m not sure what I think of the spectacular tights.  Maybe I’ll get them for the Halloween ride.)

Aero Tech Designs. Some unpadded shorts. Slightly cheesy site, but try and look beyond that. Check out the tights!
Ibex. Merino wool sports clothing. Good stuff.
Ice Breaker. Merino wool technical clothing. Hard wearing. Highly recommended.
Regatta Sport. Unpadded shorts and tights for the non-cyclist look.

Reverse Gear. Specializes in recumbent clothes.

Best,
Robert

P.S. Today I was hit by a car. Bruised calf muscle but otherwise okay. More about that later. It’s been a rough four weeks!

————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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Rockin’ in the Three-World: We’ve got Gekko!

“We’ve got Gekko, folks, we’ve got Gekko.”

For those of you who choose to rock the three-wheeled-world, I’ve got two words: “friggin’ awesome.”  This thing — the Gekko fx — exceeds all expectations.

I’m still in the middle of unpacking this baby.  It always takes time, HP Velotechnik is generous with packing material.  And I have already discovered a secret feature that HP Velotechnik does not advertise!  And it’s not that the name is Gekko, not Gecko.  No, it’s something else entirely.  They didn’t tell me this, I never expected this.  I’m not going to say what it is — I like that it’s a secret — but this is the coolest friggin’ thing I’ve ever seen on a folding bike of any format, recumbent or standard frame.  I’ll give you a clue: Brompton does something similar (different, and more British, but similar).

I put a water bottle in the picture so you get a sense of scale.  Compact.
Once again, HP Velotechnik makes an emphatic entrance.

Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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In case of accident…important information

Recumbent bikes are the ultimate long haul bike.  So comfortable, it barely matters how long you’re in the saddle.  For some of us, that means “yearnin’ for the open road.”  Even if it’s just for a weekend, for me, there’s simply nothing quite like living by bicycle for a while.

However, some trips are less than all roses.  Predictable challenges come in the way of steep hills, bad weather, rough roads, motor vehicles, and getting lost — all part of a good day’s riding.  However, there are also unpredictable challenges, the worst of which are illness and injury.  Drinking bad water or hitting the pavement can mark the end of a — up till then — great trip.
There are good habits a cyclist can adopt to avoid accidents.  New York Cycle Club recommends all riders read Bicycle Safe for advice on avoiding accidents with oil-powered vehicles.  There is no question; an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
God forbid you’re in an accident, but I can’t think of any cyclists who haven’t hit the pavement at least once.  On trips, I try to live by the rule “prepare for the worst” so the worst doesn’t happen.  I also believe that thoughtful preparation helps us avoid accidents because it heightens our awareness to common dangers.  If only preparation could be prevention.  Most cyclists are protected by little other than skin, thin fabric, a helmet, and, if you’ve planned ahead, a few pieces of cycling armor.  Soft body, hard road; a bike accident is going to hurt.  (On long trips, besides a helmet, I wear padded shorts and elbow guards since these are common contact points in a recumbent fall.  Mine are from Six Six One and there are a few other manufacturers of bicycling body armor.)
Before I go any further, I will say that a responsible cyclist should obtain Wilderness First Aid (WFA) training.  This two-day class is offered by a few different schools.  Stonehearth Open Learning Opportunities (SOLO) teaches the class in multiple locations several times a year.  A trip leader could benefit from Wilderness First Responder (WFR) training, also available from SOLO.  This course generally involves 70 – 80 hours of class work.
If you can’t wait for the next class from SOLO, look into the day-long class in basic first aid and CPR/AED offered by the American Red Cross.  You’ll learn principals like checking for scene safety, wearing gloves to protect yourself from the victim’s body substances, using direct pressure to stop bleeding, recognizing the onset of a heart attack, and other basic skills.  Although there’s a big difference between getting hurt in the office and getting hurt on the road, it would be a mistake to dismiss this training.  If all you learn is to wear gloves before touching an injured friend, it may not save your friend’s life, but it might save yours.
The information here is intended to help you prepare for a severe accident as a result of which, due to reduced consciousness, you are unable to provide vital information that would assist with your medical care.  These recommendations are based on information that Wilderness First Responders are trained to gather when they first make contact with a victim.
Some training, racing and touring organizations gather an emergency contact’s name and phone number and not much more.  I’d be concerned that it expects too much of a spouse, friend, mother, etc….that they will a) be available during the critical hours after an accident, b) be able to provide complete and correct information, and c) know what medications you take, your drug allergies and your medical history.
Before your next trip, record your vital medical information in a permanent, non-electronic form that you can carry with you.  Accidents are tough on things and are more likely to occur in wet weather than dry, so make sure the material is strong and waterproof.  I suggest using a Sharpie pen on Tyvek or strong tape.  Personally, since I’m fortunate to have a short medical history, I write my information on removable tape and attach it to the main tube of my bike.  There’s no guarantee a rescuer will see it there, I realize, but it’s better than doing nothing.  If you have serious and chronic conditions, like drug allergies or diabetes, this information should be on a wrist or ankle in the form of a bracelet or tattoo.  You might also consider writing medical information in your helmet, though there isn’t room to write very much.
If you want to keep your information private, write it on Tyvek, fold it, and tape it to your bike.  Clearly label it as medical information so it isn’t easily overlooked.
The following information will be highly useful to first responders.
Name, age, sex (Don’t assume it’s obvious.)
Allergies (especially drug allergies and those that can cause anaphylaxis like bee stings, peanuts, etc.)
Medications you take, including all over the counter, herbal remedies, health supplements, prescriptions and restricted substances.  Natural remedies and dope are considered medications for this purpose.  Include when you had your last dose and information about what happens if you do not take your meds.  On long trips, write down doses in a log book to make it easier to keep track.
Past medical history.  Be complete, be honest.  Include all serious injuries, surgeries and psychiatric conditions as well as chronic conditions.  It may be a good idea to include significant emotional conditions if you know they could interfere with care.  If you’re alert, medical providers will want to know your prior history as it relates to the specific injury or illness.  However, if we are making advance preparations in case of an accident, we need to cover all bases as we won’t know how or where we might get hurt.  This may require a bit of work the first time, but if done properly and in enduring form, it only needs to be done once.  After that, just update the list.
Last oral intake.  On a multi-day trip, I keep a simple log book with the date and time of significant meals, what I ate, and the itinerary and mileage for the day.  I don’t agonize over it to the point it ruins the trip.  The point here is that a little information is better than none.  From the perspective of providing medical care, it will be helpful to know if it’s been 24 hours since a patient ate, or only an hour, and whether it was an energy bar and water or a Big Mac and shake.  A side benefit of a food log is that it may help you see how nutritional intake affects performance.
Emergency contact name and phone.  There’s a reason I list this last.  For cynical reasons — identifying a dead body or inquiring if a victim has insurance — yes, this is important.  But for emergency care of a living patient, this decreases in importance if you provide the other information on this list.  It’s more urgent for ER doctors to know if you have drug allergies than the name and number of your spouse.
On long trips, I keep an itinerary or log (paper-based).  This should include point of departure, way points and planned finish.  This isn’t to prevent spur of the moment changes in plan, a.k.a., “fun”.  It provides a basic framework so rescuers know what you’re up to.  It will be helpful to know if you’re traveling ultra-light 500 miles from home, or just out for a day ride in the hills.  For multi-day trips, worthwhile information would include waypoints, mileage, anything notable that happens, nutritional intake, when you take meds, injuries, illnesses, and mechanical problems.  As a bonus, at the end of the trip, this will be a nice little trip diary.  “5am woke up.  Cold.  Lips chapped.  BK: oatmeal w/ protein powder, hot choc.  Tightened seat bolts.  Got water.  I’m out.  Plattsburgh tonight — apx. 75 miles.”
Please feel free to write if you have questions about any of this or believe I’ve missed something.
Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
copyright 2011 Robert Matson
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Your death is worth $6.1 million. So is your life.

In the 15 years from 1994 up through 2009, 5,746 people were killed in the five boroughs of New York City in motor vehicle accidents.  That’s an average of 383 deaths per year.  (Source: the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s “Fatality Analysis Reporting System Encyclopedia” at http://www-fars.nhtsa.dot.gov/Main/index.aspx)

Today’s New York Times reports that the U.S. Department of Transportation has established a new dollar amount on the value of a single life.  It is $6.1 million.  Therefore, grade school math tells us that the 383 people killed annually on New York City streets, on average, are a loss of over $2.3 BILLION dollars to the city ($2,336,300,000 to be precise).
There would be a fantastic financial benefit if New York City had perfectly safe streets, where no one was killed by cars.  And what is a cheap and easy and fast way to create safer streets?  Create bike lanes.  Bike lanes have repeatedly been proven to diminish accidents for all users on city streets.
The New York City Department of Transportation spends only $6 million dollars per year on bike lane improvements, with $4 million of that coming from the federal government (source: NYC DOT testimonial to the city council in 2010).  This is less than the value of a single human life saved, each year.
Imagine: if safe streets blanketed the city, and no one had to “die by motor vehicle,” the city would have $2.3 billion dollars to use for safety improvements. Of course there is a cost for safer streets.  Does it exceed $2.3 billion per year?
For council members who are ready to put their money where their mouths are, here is an easy way to raise $2.3 billion, every year, for the city they represent.
Install street improvements.  Quickly.  On every street in New York City.  And start with the bike lanes.

New York Times
BUSINESS DAY
As U.S. Agencies Put More Value on a Life, Businesses Fret
By BINYAMIN APPELBAUM
Published: February 16, 2011
Agencies that calculate the worth of a life have been raising the number, which affects how much the government should spend to prevent a single death.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/17/business/economy/17regulation.html

Best,
Robert

————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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Gold medal reclaimed: HP Velotechnik is Germany’s ‘Best bicycle manufacturer’ for 2011.

Understand that this is Germany, and the Germans build possibly the best bicycles in the world.  Then consider that HP Velotechnik is awarded this “best” ranking from a field of both standard frame and recumbent manufacturers.  And that is why HPV’s are so very, very good.

Read the excellent Recumbent Journal article here.
(This may not be a “perma-link,” so if it fails to work, just head over to Recumbent Journal.)

Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply (TM)
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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So, you want to know more about RAAM?

The New York Cycle Club’s March 8th meeting will include a presentation about the Race Across America (RAAM), a ride famous with bent riders because it lets us race.
6pm.
NYCC Club membership and RSVPs required.

“George Thomas, Executive Director of Race Across America (RAAM) and 6-time RAAM finisher, will join NYCC’s March 8 Club meeting to deliver a riveting presentation on Race Across America.”

http://nycc.org/node/49910

Join NYCC and go.

Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply (TM)
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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Darn it. That’s why I ride a bent.

Darn it.

Yesterday I fell.  Thankfully it was in a bike lane and not in the middle of Second Ave.  But I think I broke a bone in my shoulder.  Maybe the scapula (shoulder bone), maybe that and a bit more.  Tomorrow I’m going to reassess it and (maybe*) go to the doctor. (*As in, “maybe I won’t be a fool, and actually go see the doctor two days after the accident.”)

It happened in a predictable way.

As one does, I was riding fast in the Second Ave. bike lane in the East Village.  Cutting with confidence through the slush and snow and over the ice.  Thought I was the boss, didn’t I?  Feeling sure of my gear — specifically my fat carbide steel studded tiresas one does, before being reminded of how soft one really is…compared to asphalt.  Hit a patch of frozen slush which then lost cohesion.  And suddenly I was flying through the air, with the greatest of ease, down to the street, shoulder first.  Arm, hip, and leg impact next.

That should tell you something: I wasn’t riding a bent.  And it should tell you something else: no matter how good your tires — and I still love my Schwalbe Marathon Winters — they only grip as well as the substance they’re gripping to.  Ice, hey that’s great.  But semi-frozen slush?  Look out.

Now, had I been riding a bent, I would have hit the pavement ass first, and from only two feet off the ground.  Instead, I was riding my beater diamond frame, an awesome Surly Cross Check as I usually do during the messy months, and so my shoulder  had a good six feet to travel down to the streetscape.  Of course, it was exactly as I always tell people; on a DF, it’s usually the upper body that leads in a fall; on a bent, it’s the feet and ass.  You’re better off leading with your feet and ass.

Well, I got up and kept going.  And continued my day.  Saw friends.  Attended a discussion about the nature of reality (you don’t miss this kind of thing when it’s moderated by Deepak Chopra).  Had coffee.  Attended the Downtown Meditation Community’s potluck.  And rode another 15 miles or so on slippery streets.  As a real man (a.k.a. idiot) does.  I still had full rotation of my arm and wrist, didn’t hit my head, nothing obviously broken.  I could support my upper body on the handlebars w/o problem.  But all the while well aware: the body and mind can mask injuries initially (as it’s supposed to do).

Thank God I didn’t tear the merino.  (That’s really amazing stuff.)  And thankfully my 800-fill down sweater was safely stowed in my rear basket.  That would have been a mess.

But today, darn it, the shoulder pain has increased, as it might for a broken scapula.

Friggn-A.  Like I needed a reminder.  If you’re going to fall on a bike — and everyone falls sooner or later — it’s better to fall from a bent, than a diamond frame.  Better to fall towards your legs and ass then towards your head and shoulders.

Go ride a bent.

Update: saw the MD, got X-rays. Nothing broken!  Just bone bruises.  As for tendon or ligament damage, I’m still waiting.  Maybe, just maybe I haven’t blown my swimming season.

Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply (TM)
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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5,746 killed on NYC streets over 15 years. Please make it stop.

To:
Councilman Eric Ulrich
Queens
E-mail: eulrich@council.nyc.gov

Dear Councilmember Ulrich:

Thank you for dedicating your career to making New York a better place to live and work.

However, I have learned that your office has announced a proposal to mandate bicycle licensing.  Thousands of New Yorkers are likely to be killed and injured by this law, if enacted.  Surely, this is not the consequence you intend.

According to the facts from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, in the 15 years from 1994 up through 2009, 5,746 people were killed in the five boroughs of New York City in motor vehicle accidents.  Allow me to emphasize that: Five THOUSAND, seven HUNDRED and forty-six.
     Source: The U.S. Department of Transportation’s
     National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s
     “Fatality Analysis Reporting System Encyclopedia” at
     http://www-fars.nhtsa.dot.gov/Main/index.aspx

Considering that these 5,746 people were killed over a period of _ONLY_ 15 years, the mind boggles to contemplate the thousands upon thousands of New Yorkers who have been killed by our dangerous streets over the decades.

Experts in the field of transportation safety have ample evidence that bicycles and bike lanes create safer streets with fewer accidents to all street users.  The New York City Department of Transportation has
published data showing this is true in New York.

There is also testimony from experts showing that laws which inhibit the wide use of bicycles, such as bicycle licensing and helmet laws, causes a decrease in the number of cyclists (source: Transportation Alternatives).  Since a drop in the number of cyclists creates more dangerous streets for all street users, licensing laws have the unintended effect of increasing mortality — deaths — on city streets.

The 5,746 street users who were killed from 1994 through 2009 must not be ignored.  Being dead, they can not write you or your office, or march to City Hall in protest.  But it is a great injustice to forget or ignore them.

How many more New Yorkers must die, before we reach a consensus that safe streets are important, and that, as a community, we should pursue all efforts that create safer streets?

Bicycle licensing will cause fewer people to bike.  Fewer bikes will mean more dangerous streets.  More dangerous streets will mean thousands killed on New York roads.

New York does not need laws that result in deaths.  What we need, are leaders who will support and advance a readily acceptable truth: New Yorkers need laws that result in quality of life improvements.  We need safe streets.

I hope you will agree.

Please retract the proposal for bicycle licensing.  And please support the construction of safe streets and bike lanes.

Thank you for caring about New Yorkers.

Respectfully yours,

Robert Matson
Member: New York Cycle Club and Transportation Alternatives

cc: Blog.NYCRecumbentSupply.com

# # #

————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply (TM)
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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Mandatory: spend 10 minutes to save lives; possibly your own.

In the here-and-now presently-apocalyptic world of Cyclists vs. Shysters, two new fronts have opened.  Read on.

In order to ensure you continue to get life-saving bike lanes, you need to spend 10 minutes today to tell your council member what you think.  (Suggestion: you want bike lanes because they decrease injuries and save lives for ALL street users — motorists, cyclists, pedestrians, skaters, dog walkers, dogs, cats, you name it — and you want them fast, before the next 100 people needlessly die on New York City roads.)

Here are some facts so you better understand just how serious this business is:
http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/811156.PDF
Browse around here: http://www.nhtsa.gov/NCSA
Here’s an article at RecumbentJournal.com on the subject
http://www.recumbentjournal.com/views/columns/item/299-cycling-safety-situational-cities-certainly-scariest.html
See my previous blog entry: Get involved in local politics to improve street safety.

And here are the two stories and what you should do:

New York Cycle Club Alert: Where You Can Help

Issue: Queens Councilman Eric Ulrich has announced a proposal for citywide bike licensing.

Action needed: Email the Councilman (e-mail address: eulrich [at] council [dot] nyc [dot] gov) and tell him why this scapegoating of all cyclists for the bad habits of a few is wrong.  Mention you are a member of New York Cycle Club to show that, all together, we have clout.

Central Park Alert: The past week has seen a ticketing blitz by police directed at Park cyclists running red lights. This has occurred regardless of hour or density of traffic, pedestrian or otherwise, leaving a number of our members with $270 fines.

* * *

Councilmembers James Oddo and Vincent Ignizio (Staten Island, Republican) are demanding new bike lanes be subject to a lengthy and unnecessary review process.

From:
Paul Steely White

Executive Director,
Transportation Alternatives (“T.A.”)

Dear T.A. StreetBeat Reader,

As reported by the New York Post, Staten Island Republican Councilmembers James Oddo and Vincent Ignizio are demanding that all new bike lanes be subject to a lengthy — and highly unnecessary — review process. Councilmembers Oddo and Ignizio’s proposal would put a snarl of red tape and potentially years of waiting time between New Yorkers and life-saving improvements to their streets.

Take Action: http://transalt.org/takeaction/actioncenter/5073

Send Councilmembers Oddo and Ignizio a fax and stand up against a long, drawn-out review bogging down life-saving bike lanes. Tell Councilmember Oddo and Ignizio that New Yorkers need bike lanes. We will not stand for their attack on safe streets.

T.A.’s legal committee is fast at work on an official answer to this nonsense. Meanwhile, before other Councilmembers begin blaming every other traffic jam on bicyclists, we need you to tell Councilmember James Oddo that obstructing the installation of bike lanes will only make our streets more dangerous for cyclists, pedestrians and motorists alike.

On Manhattan’s 9th Avenue, a parking-protected bike lane and its accompanying pedestrian islands reduced injuries for everyone by 56 percent. That’s drivers, passengers, pedestrians and cyclists, all safer because of a bike lane. Because bike lanes make streets safer for pedestrians and drivers too, their timely installation is integral to making our streets safer for everyone.

T.A. needs your help to defeat this attack on bicycling before it gets started. Stand up for your right to bicycle in a safe lane! Send an e-fax to Councilmember Oddo now!

Paul Steely White
Executive Director,
Transportation Alternatives





Councilmembers Here!

Not sure who your councilmember is?  Find out here: http://council.nyc.gov/html/members/members.shtml

To e-mail your councilmember, find their name and e-mail address below.  You could also pick up the phone and call their office.  I’m not certain how to address them, but try “Your Honor” — can’t be too far off — and let me know how that goes.

MATHIEU EUGENE                      mathieu.eugene@council.nyc.gov
GALE BREWER                             gbrewer@council.nyc.gov
FERNANDO CABRERA                fcabrera@council.nyc.gov
MARGARET CHIN                          chin@council.nyc.gov
LEROY COMRIE                             comrie@council.nyc.ny.us
ELIZABETH CROWLEY               ecrowley@council.nyc.gov
ERIC MARTIN DILAN                   Edilan@council.nyc.gov
JULISSA FERRERAS                      jferreras@council.nyc.gov
LEWIS A. FIDLER                          LFidler@council.nyc.gov
HELEN D. FOSTER                        foster@council.nyc.gov
Daniel R. Garodnick                        garodnick@council.nyc.ny.us
James F. Gennaro                             jgennaro@council.nyc.gov
VINCENT J. GENTILE                   vgentile@council.nyc.gov
SARA M. GONZALEZ                   Sgonzalez@council.nyc.gov
DANIEL J. HALLORAN                dhalloran@council.nyc.gov
VINCENT IGNIZIO                        Ignizio@council.nyc.ny.us
ROBERT JACKSON                       rjackson@council.nyc.gov
LETICIA JAMES                            ljames@council.nyc.gov
PETER KOO                                    pkoo@council.nyc.gov
G. Oliver Koppell                 okoppell@council.nyc.gov
Karen Koslowitz                   Koslowitz@council.nyc.gov
BRAT LANDER                     lander@council.nyc.gov
JESSICA S. LAPPIN              lappin@council.nyc.gov
Stephen Levin                     slevin@council.nyc.gov
Melissa Mark-Viverito           mviverito@council.nyc.gov
Darlene Mealy                     darlene.mealy@council.nyc.gov
Rosie Mendez                      rmendez@council.nyc.gov
JAMES S. ODDO                  joddo@council.nyc.gov
ANNABEL PALMA                 apalma@council.nyc.gov
Domenic M. Recchia, Jr        drecchia@council.nyc.gov
JOEL RIVERA                       Joel.Rivera@council.nyc.gov
Ydanis Rodriguez                 yrodriguez@council.nyc.gov
JAMES SANDERS, Jr             jsanders@council.nyc.gov
LARRY B. SEABROOK            cmseabrook12@yahoo.com
ERIC ULRICH                       eulrich@council.nyc.gov
JAMES VACCA                      jvacca@council.nyc.gov
JIMMY VAN BRAMER             jvanbramer@council.nyc.gov
ALBERT VANN                      avann@council.nyc.gov
Mark Weprin                        MWeprin@Council.NYC.gov
RUBEN WILLS                      Ruben.Wills@council.nyc.gov

Stand up for safe cycling, today.

Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply (TM)
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson

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Scepticism.

This video is making its way around the recumbent community.  Suckers?

I don’t speak Russian, so I don’t know what President Yeltsin is saying.  However, I didn’t see a single image of him on a recumbent.  Therefore, I assume the video is a joke.  If someone can provide evidence of the contrary, send me the evidence.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=FwJ3acaQjDE

Best,
Robert
————
Robert Matson
New York City Recumbent Supply (TM)
The Innovation Works, Inc.
copyright 2011 Robert Matson