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        <title>Scabs: the fun and free vacation souvenir - Bicycle - Bicycle&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Bicycle/7744</link>
        <description>I have seen awesome, and it is PIXIE BIKE RACING. 
My best friend from college and her husband invited me to the pixie bike races while I was visiting Colorado Springs last week. A friend of theirs lives --&amp;nbsp;and builds bike frames --&amp;nbsp;on a couple of steep acres on the west side. Every Tuesday, a crowd of BMX riders, track racers from the Olympic Training Center and various cycling enthusiasts race assorted children&#039;s bikes. On a dirt track. Downhill. With a big ramp at the end.&amp;nbsp; While a band plays and spectators drink beer.
As my friend, Adrian, said &amp;quot;What else are you doing on a Tuesday night?&amp;quot;
I&#039;ll admit right here, the huge ramp kept me from trying the downhill course. Seriously, it was about four feet tall and there was a concrete slab nearby. Even Adrian, who tends toward the hardcore on biking events, said she hadn&#039;t tried the downhill since they added the ramp. (Her husband, Josh, is a stunt biker who&#039;s broken about every bone in his body -- so his willingness to do something isn&#039;t an indicator of whether or not it&#039;s a good idea.)
But for us wusses, there was the homemade dirt velodrome, built to kids-bikes&#039; scale. The &amp;quot;dizydrome&amp;quot; offers several challenges for adults on tiny bikes. First, you have to get going -- picture a clown on a little trike. And just because a pixie bike is lying around doesn&#039;t mean it&#039;s in working order. Once you&#039;re going, you&#039;ve got to stay on the smooth solid wall of the track -- there you can get some good speed. Try to take the flat, inside track and the tiny tires catch on divots and you&#039;ll get launched over the short little handlebars. Drive too high on the track and you could very well go flying out and get launched over the short little handlebars.
There&#039;s not so much a learning curve as there are learning face plants. 
It&#039;s been a week, though,&amp;nbsp;and I&#039;m still talking about it, so I think it&#039;s safe to say pixie bike racing was a highlight of my vacation. But my mom&#039;s blintzes are pretty darned good too.
Leslie</description>
        <itunes:summary>I have seen awesome, and it is PIXIE BIKE RACING. 
My best friend from college and her husband invited me to the pixie bike races while I was visiting Colorado Springs last week. A friend of theirs lives --&amp;nbsp;and builds bike frames --&amp;nbsp;on a couple of steep acres on the west side. Every Tuesday, a crowd of BMX riders, track racers from the Olympic Training Center and various cycling enthusiasts race assorted children&#039;s bikes. On a dirt track. Downhill. With a big ramp at the end.&amp;nbsp; While a band plays and spectators drink beer.
As my friend, Adrian, said &amp;quot;What else are you doing on a Tuesday night?&amp;quot;
I&#039;ll admit right here, the huge ramp kept me from trying the downhill course. Seriously, it was about four feet tall and there was a concrete slab nearby. Even Adrian, who tends toward the hardcore on biking events, said she hadn&#039;t tried the downhill since they added the ramp. (Her husband, Josh, is a stunt biker who&#039;s broken about every bone in his body -- so his willingness to do something isn&#039;t an indicator of whether or not it&#039;s a good idea.)
But for us wusses, there was the homemade dirt velodrome, built to kids-bikes&#039; scale. The &amp;quot;dizydrome&amp;quot; offers several challenges for adults on tiny bikes. First, you have to get going -- picture a clown on a little trike. And just because a pixie bike is lying around doesn&#039;t mean it&#039;s in working order. Once you&#039;re going, you&#039;ve got to stay on the smooth solid wall of the track -- there you can get some good speed. Try to take the flat, inside track and the tiny tires catch on divots and you&#039;ll get launched over the short little handlebars. Drive too high on the track and you could very well go flying out and get launched over the short little handlebars.
There&#039;s not so much a learning curve as there are learning face plants. 
It&#039;s been a week, though,&amp;nbsp;and I&#039;m still talking about it, so I think it&#039;s safe to say pixie bike racing was a highlight of my vacation. But my mom&#039;s blintzes are pretty darned good too.
Leslie</itunes:summary>
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