If the road is the cathedral where we go to worship at the altar of Merckx then the workshop must surely be the rectory. The workshop of the Velominatus is semi-sacred space where one goes primarily to sharpen one’s tool of worship. In so doing, the workshop also provides a space in which to meditate on the machine, make repairs from rides gone by, and prepare for rides to come. The workshop may not be the space where we engage in our most revelatory work, however, the work we do there both before and after each ride is no less important than the work we do in between.
Though we have no Rules governing the workshop, I suggest the following is what constitutes good workshops:
Beyond these basic guidelines there are other considerations one can make in order to give their workshop an even more shrine-like aura. Your workshop or workspace might include some or all of the following:
Similar to our varied bikes and certainly to the vastly different places we all profess our devotion, our workshops are no doubt reflections of our own uniqueness as cyclists. That said, just as the Rules bind us, the spaces we retreat to in order to sharpen our tools should also provide us with a modicum of comfort in the familiar. In other words, I may not know my way around your kitchen straight away but if it’s a well appointed kitchen it shouldn’t take me long to learn my way around and start making good food. Take a minute to share what you appreciate about your workshop (or workspace if it serves secondarily as a living room or kitchen). Additionally, maybe you can share a workshop tale. For the workshop should not be overlooked as an integral room of the church in which we pray.
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
@brett
I stand corrected..
I'm learning.
Who is "LeMan" and what the heck is a "randonneur whip"?
@ClassicCyclist
Those who seek, shall find. ie The Lexicon
@ClassicCyclist
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randonneuring
Whip is a term for bike.
@Cyclops
I really like thIs post. La Vie is all in there.
@Marko
Ha, well we do have it set up as a second bedroom for when we have friends in from out of town, but it's also where I set up my trainer - mostly so my cat doesn't lose an arm as I spin, as she loves messing with my bike when I leave it out.
If I put down a drop cloth I could set up a repair stand in there, but I'd have no room for a workbench. Perhaps one of those toolboxes that folds open with multiple levels would work in a pinch.
I know what randonneuring is. I've been riding brevets since 1984. But "whip" only means "car" to a handful of numbnuts; it sure as heck doesn't mean "bike," unless you're so lame as to refer to Greg Lemond as "LeMan."
@ClassicCyclist
Yes, the world is lame sometimes.
@ClassicCyclist
Don't like Greg? Like Lance?
@ClassicCyclist
Easy there, Old Fella! The so-called "fixie" community have been calling their bikes whips for years, so it's not really surprising that the use of this popular vernacular of the youth has crept into the roadie community, even if it's only ironically.