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June 1, 2000

NCS Sponsor Chevy Trucks
NATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY SERIES #1
Big Bear
Snow Summit, Ca

 The man to watch Kirk Molday - TREK/VW
Kirk Molday
Trek / Volkswagen

1st Place Pro Men
KIRK MOLDAY

Trek/Volkswagen

Gold at Sydney this year?

Mary Grigson
Gary Fisher / SAAB
(On the podium at World Cup #1)
courtesy XC Rider

   1st Place
     Pro Women
     Mary Grigson

    Gary Fisher/Saab

Mary Grigson Australia's Leading MTB Woman


#1 OVERALL WOMEN MARY GRIGSON (Gary Fisher/SAAB) INTERVIEW

#1 OVERALL MEN KIRK MOLDAY (TREK/VW) INTERVIEW

BIG BEAR RESULTS

How did our Regional Stars
Do at NCS #1
Big Bear?

     We all know the level of competition at the nationals and have the utmost respect for the pros that compete in these events. I'm always asking the question "How did so and so do at Big Bear?" So I thought our visitors might be curious too. Here is a collection of interviews from world-class, national and regional stars!

INTERVIEWS

Keeping things organized - Fair Hill Race '99 in Elkton, Md 
Bill Bowen - Fair Hill Race '99
THE MAN WHO MADE
FAIR HILL

Elkton, Md

Bill Bowen
Founder of the Delaware Trail Spinners
by Jeff Milligan

     Bill Bowen has been confused for a bull and for a mysterious lawn mower man, but he's certainly never been confused for a couch potato. At 64, Bowen, the founder of the Delaware Trail Spinners and an active mountain biker and trail designer, is busier than most 24 year olds and he's showing no signs of slowing down.
     
Even during the sometimes wicked weather this past winter, Bowen didn't settle under a warm blanket with a mug of cocoa and watch old black and white movies. None of that for Bill Bowen. He went kayak sledding instead. That's right, climb inside of a kayak and let fly down an icy slope with just an inch of plastic between your tail bone and the frozen winter earth. A dangerous endeavor, indeed.
     
And one of Bowen's companions on the trip, a mere whippersnapper in comparison, 54-year old Ken Robinson can attest to the danger. Robinson broke his back during the "invigorating" trip. He was hobbled with a cracked vertebrae. Robinson's body is still intact, however. Also intact is Robinson's enduring admiration for Bowen.
     "Bill's a bull," Robinson said of Bowen. "He's not the tallest guy, but he's one of the strongest guys I've ever met. He's got those Popeye forearms. Probably from riding motorcycles through the woods and dodging trees at 40 miles per hour."
     Perhaps Bowen's vise-like grip and powerful frame were partially formed during his 12 years as a Delaware enduro motorcycle racer, but his dedication to fitness has been a lifelong endeavor. "Staying in shape has always been easy for me," he said. "I've always been active." From the tumbling team in junior high school to enduro racing, hunting, fishing, hiking, kayaking and, of course, mountain biking, Bowen has been on the move no doubt since the days when he was swaddled in diapers.
     And during those early years, his hard-working father had a strong influence on Bowen. Bowen explained that his father wasn't an athlete or as much of an outdoorsman as himself but he always kept busy.
     
"My father was active in other ways." Bowen said. "He was active all the time. It was like he had to do something."
     
What he did, Bowen said, was odd jobs. And a young Bowen was often recruited, like it or not, to help out. This early exposure to hard work and physical activity must have played a crucial role in shaping Bowen's character -- his determination and motivation, particularly.
     
Bowen also went on to become a hard worker. He dedicated 38 years of his life to Bell Atlantic (formerly Diamond State Telephone). After spending so many years at one place, you might think retirement would be a difficult thing to accept. Maybe Bowen would long for the companionship of his former coworkers -- for a cup of coffee and a laugh or two. Maybe he'd even think about going back to work. Just part time to keep busy.
     
But this is Bill Bowen -- not the type to sit around and feel sorry for himself. Not the type to look back wistfiilly.
     "
I didn't miss it a bit," Bowen said of his days with Diamond State. "I liked my job, but I certainly didn't miss it." Perhaps Bowen just didn't have time to miss it. He was too busy with other things, like founding the Delaware Trail Spinners.
     Bowen, with typical modesty, underplayed his role in creating the mountain biking club. Instead he deflected attention to the club itself and to the other cofounder, Jim McGroerty. McGroerty has since moved on to other things, but Bowen is a permanent fixture, the living symbol of the Trail Spinners.
     
Bob Cox, current treasurer of the Trail Spinners, hesitated when explaining how the club was founded. After a pause, he omitted McGroerty's name. "Bill really founded the club," he said. "It was really his idea."

 

      And what was that idea? What are the Trail Spinners all about? Alan Turns, current President of the Spinners summed it up succinctly. "[We want] to continue to find areas to ride and to encourage new riders."
 
   And in both areas, Bowen has been a driving force. Whether trudging through the woods and blazing a trail or riding alongside and quietly urging new riders to work hard on a difficult part of the trail, Bowen has been there.      Cox tells the story of the first time he met Bowen: Cox and his son Ken were out riding at Fair Hill, where the Trail Spinners have been instrumental in establishing over 70 miles of trails. While they were out enjoying the spring weather and the exercise, they discovered these strange, unfinished trails.
     "We kept seeing signs of these new trails that had been freshly mowed." Cox said. "Some of them didn't go anywhere or just ended abruptly. My son and I laughed, "There must be a lawn mower man out here somewhere."
     Indeed there was. One who Cox said puts in "tremendous time and effort at Fair Hill clearing and cutting trails."
     One evening a few days later, Cox was out walking his dog with his wife when some riders approached and struck up a conversation. Bill Bowen was among the riders and he invited Cox to a Trail Spinners meeting. Of course, he accepted.
     In another part of the park on another day, Ken Robinson also received an invitation from Bowen. What Bowen didn't realize at the time was that Robinson had some mountain biking connections and had compiled a fairly extensive list of local mountain bikers' names and addresses.
     The loosely connected webwork of riders was called the DelVal Mountain Bike Association. The Association not only loved to ride on trails but also organized volunteer work parties to do the not-so-glamorous trail maintenance.
     This caring principle of Robinson's Association matched well with Bowen's conception for his growing idea. And the synergy and assimilation that resulted from the meeting of Robinson and Bowen has led not only to a great friendship but to a very successfiil nonprofit agency in the Trail Spinners.
     
As a non-profit organization, any money they raise is funneled into trail maintenance and charitable donations. Their main source of revenue is the race at Fair Hill. And of the upwards of 500 riders who ride in the race, Bowen expects all to have their tongues awagging at the finish line or he'll be disappointed.
     
"If we put on a race and the tongues aren't hanging out at the end, then I haven't done a good job." says Bowen.
     One rider ecspecially appreciates the work Bowen has done designing trails, Pete Brakhage, former President of the Trail Spinners.
    
"[Bowen's] trails are challenging enough that you want to come back and try again, but they're not so challenging that you feel defeated," Brakhage said. And in that way, perhaps Bowens' trail designs reflect his character. Perhaps his trails are monuments to his life philosophy.
    
You should lead your life in such a way that people want to emulate you, the dirt packed paths seem to say. You can become a role model and others will challenge themselves to be like you, suggests a winding uphill climb. And yet it's not your goal to show anyone up; you re not interested in gaining glory from others' demise, says the delicately bruised dusk as you prepare to put your bike away for the day.

Perhaps that's Bill Bowen's greatest gift. He seems to want a world where everyone is trying to become better, a world where people won't mope around and complain and watch television and drink too much beer.
    
And maybe Bowen won't say this directly. Maybe he won't preach it from a pulpit or write it in a book, but just look at his life. It seems to force us to ask ourselves a question: How much better can we become? Afterall, we've got to die sometime.
    
But in the meantime, you could always join the Trail Spinners or at least hop on your bike and get out in the world. Let your heart fill with blood and your lungs with air and always ride hard.
    
Pete Brakhage, captures the spirit of the mountain biker with philosophical insight. "[Bikers] need to have the connection with nature," he said. "And if you can accomplish this and get fit, that's a bonus. To me [riding] is a form of self-expression. I compare it to playing a musical instrument. You don't have to be very good to get pleasure from doing it." And thanks to Bill Bowen many people have had the opportunity to metaphorically make a little music. And if you listen very carefully, maybe you can hear it.
    
The chorus would come from Bowen's answering machine message: "We're out enjoying life," it says. "We're out enjoying life."


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