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Ready, Set, Race
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Northstar Cycle Courier
takes competition to the alleys
Boise Weekly, October 26, 2005
By Katy Dang
Go to any major city in the United States or Europe and you'll likely
encounter bicycle messengers. Since the mid-1980s, cities around the
world have relied on the contemporary incarnation of bike messengers to
deliver packages efficiently. Their selling points include their
ability to maneuver through traffic faster than the cars, and to
navigate the backroads, alleys and shortcuts around the city, which
allow them to deliver packages unencumbered by the hassles that
accompany driving. Their hands-on delivery method has survived the
arrival of the fax machine and the rise of electronic office
communication.
Bike messengers are an urban phenomenon that have provided a gateway to
hipsterdom for many a young person moving to the big city. The
lifestyle that surrounds the job feeds off of its effects: the
adrenaline rush of speeding through city traffic, the exhaustion of a
physically demanding day and the knowledge that they are an essential
part of the city's commerce while existing outside the realm of the
well-dressed business professional. There is some satisfaction in being
"different" than the status quo while working right alongside it; in
existing outside of the mainstream while demanding to be a functional
part of it. They are the rebels-with-a-job, and their ranks include
tattooed hipsters, gutter punks trying to make a difference, hippies
sticking to their environmental ideologies for another year, gearhead
bikers whose machines are their lives, and believers in the cult of
human power. These stereotypes and their offshoots form a loose-knit
subculture based around their jobs, and their jobs are their way of
life.
Messengers have developed a well-organized network, with a strong
online presence and several international events intended to bring
messengers together. There are significant messenger populations in
Boston, New York, Chicago, Montreal, Berlin, London, Toronto and San
Francisco. These cities are home to frequent races that test
messengers' skills against each other, from the Stupor Bowl in
Minneapolis to Beer Not Bombs in San Francisco. There are World Bike
Messenger Championships, held in a different location every year. And
there are smaller races put on in messenger communities as well. Known
as "alleycat races," these events traditionally pit messengers against
each other to ride through the city and visit various designated stops.
These underground races are not sponsored by corporations or sanctioned
by organizing bodies, but are put on by messengers for other riders.
Boise is set to enjoy its third alleycat race this year on October 29.
The race, named "Hellracer" in the spirit of the season, begins at
Lucky 13 in Hyde Park at 3 p.m. After that, it's hell on wheels and
every rider for themselves.
Alleycat races are intended to simulate the everyday activities of bike
messengers. Riders gather at a designated starting point. None of them
know the route of the race beforehand because there is no set route.
Instead, riders are given a manifest that lists all of the stops they
must visit to collect verification from a designated point person.
Often the stops will have specific tasks that riders must complete.
Tasks can range from drinking a particular beverage to picking up an
unwieldy package to pumping up a flat tire. There are no rules, and the
rider is free to map their own course. The first rider to reach a
finish point with a completed manifest is the winner.
Lacking a significant courier culture here in the city of trees hasn't
stopped local business owners and bike messengers Patrick Sweeney and
Chris Scuglia from organizing the Hellracer event. The co-owners of
Northstar Cycle Courier held their first race in May.
"We thought we were bringing a taste of messenger culture here, but
there was some already going," said the duo of their first Boise
alleycat.
Their first race was populated with former messengers, bike mechanics,
couples on cruiser bikes, speed demon kids, local racers and everyday
bike riders out to try something different.
There was also a messenger race as part of Boise Bike Week.
"The Boise Bike Week race was a more intellectual course," says Nikos
Sawyer, a self-described flunkie at George's Bike Shop on Front Street
who ran a bike messenger company in Boise called True Flight. Sawyer
came in second place at the alleycat race in May. That race was won by
Jason Bauer, the shop manager at George's. Bauer, like Sawyer, has
raced in all kinds of bike races. So how does an alleycat race differ
from a sanctioned race?
"There's not too many ways to compare them, except that you're on a
bike," says Bauer.
"Alleycat races are more madcap," adds Sawyer.
"We're hoping to attract people that appreciate bikes rather than being
'cyclists,'" explains Scuglia. "And it helps if you're a bike-riding
drunk," adds Sweeney.
Hellracer promises to be a great way to get a taste of the fabled bike
messenger lifestyle while still keeping your day job. Chances are, it
will taste a lot like beer.
Hellracer Halloween Alleycat Race, Sat. Oct. 29, 3 p.m., begins at
Lucky 13.
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