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Mountain unicycling
'doesn't come across as looking very
possible to most people.'
- Eugene Cathcart, pioneer of the
'impossible' sport
ARI DENNISON
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Peak performance on one wheel
By Elizabeth Armstrong Moore | Correspondent of The Christian
Science Monitor
TERREBONNE, ORE.
Shoulders upright, helmet secured, eyes on the target, Eugene
Cathcart hikes the final steep steps of his ascent of Misery
Ridge at the rock climbing mecca, Smith Rock State Park. But, as
he reaches the top, the wiry college student doesn't emit the
usual growl of victory, nor even pause for a daredevil view down
at gnarly, 3,000-foot pinnacles of compressed volcanic ash.
Instead, he pulls the metal unicycle he's carried up the rock
off his shoulder, smiles grandly, jumps on the contraption and
begins to ... well ... hop. Yes, on a unicycle on the precipice
of a rocky outcrop.
This is essential mountain unicycling - aka "MUni," yet
another extreme sport taken to yet another extreme. The feat
isn't the end (reaching the top) but the means (hopping along it
and then pedaling down). The goal of the MUnicyclist, who tends
to be a daredevil, a geek, or both, is to hoist oneself upright
over the gearless single wheel, pedal and/or hop over
complicated terrain (which can include not just mountains and
ridges but park benches, tree stumps, and hand railings), and
avoid getting hurt in the series of inevitable falls.
Though top speeds in unicycling reach only 3 m.p.h., helmet
and lots of padding are required because of a basic tenet of
physics: The slower the speed, the more difficult it is to
maintain balance. Riding a unicycle is challenging. Riding one
on ridges is impossible for anyone unwilling to clock in
countless hours trying. And this is the draw, says Cathcart, who
has been unicycling since he devoted a month in high school to
falling down - before getting up - in the alley behind a bike
shop.
Like many MUni enthusiasts, Cathcart was first a mountain
biker - which meant he already had developed a high tolerance
for the dangerous and difficult. But, Cathcart explains, "To
even consider getting on a unicycle, you have to realize you're
in for a challenge. It doesn't come across as looking very
possible to most people.... Even as a unicyclist I don't think
it's very easy to comprehend exactly how your body can figure
out to stay balanced on top of this wheel."
***
In spite of the athletic prowess required, the unicycle is an
easy butt of jokes. The realm of the unicycle is populated with
images of clowns, tricks, and the bizarre. And to stay atop the
precarious perch, the rider's body gyrates slightly from left to
right; the faster a unicyclist moves and the more difficult the
terrain, the more desperate the motions and the more often the
rider eats dirt.
But since the late 1970s, a small number of athletes have
begun tinkering with the design and use of the unicycle. And in
the past few years alone, the construction of the
unicycle-as-all-terrain-vehicle has evolved by leaps and bounds.
"The seats used to be so uncomfortable," says Cathcart, who
has engineered his own all-terrain unicycles. "It was a major
deterrent, even for me."
The new boom of interest in the sport clusters largely around
biking enclaves such as Boulder, Colo., and Moab, Utah. (The
annual Moab MUni Fest drew 15 participants in 2000, its first
year - this year 169 gyrated through the course.)
The undisputed MUni heavyweight is Ian Holm - a
Vancouver-based geomorphologist - whose single-tire business and
movie ventures since the 1990s helped kick life into the image
of the sport. The 2005 film "Into the Thunder Dragon," about his
unicycle crossing of the Kingdom of Bhutan, romanticized this
peculiar-looking struggle as sport. The facial expression of the
Bhutanese - who'd never seen a unicycle - unanimously conveyed,
"This man is crazy." But during the trip, many kids, and even a
few older men, tried Mr. Holm's unicycle.
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ELIZABETH ARMSTRONG MOORE
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"For those who think riding a unicycle off-road makes little
sense, my response is: There's no sport out there that actually
makes sense!" says Holm, who manufactures and sells some of the
most popular mountain unicycles on the market. "If that had to
be true, there is no way that Tiger Woods could get paid to
whack a ball into a hole with a stick."
So, indeed, a growing number of enthusiasts are willing to
shell out $200-plus for a custom-made mountain unicycle that
will guarantee not only thrills, but spills, too.
***
The arc of the sport's appeal can be traced in microcosm
through Cathcart's growing following in Bend, Ore. Here he
experiments with custom unicycles with his mechanic partner,
Wade Beauchamp. During his first job in Bend, at a bakery in
2000, Cathcart delivered loaves of bread on his unicycle just to
raise awareness. He also organized unicycle rides in Bend's
quaint downtown.
Six years - and 100-plus unicycles built and sold - later, he
estimates there are up to 100 unicylists in this town of 70,000.
Enough, anyway, that the police recently upped enforcement
against unicycling on sidewalks downtown.
It's hard to know whether the sport's coolness developed into
a sidewalk hazard, or the enforcement itself created the
coolness, but participants believe Cathcart has a lot to do with
the aura of the sport in Bend.
"I was never the cool kid," Cathcart says, reflecting on his
years as a unicyclist from the apex of Misery Ridge. "I'd skip
class to go out biking with guys who were 10 years older than
me. No one really tried to imitate me."
So it's a genuine surprise to the mild- mannered and
ponytailed Cathcart - whose earnest geek vernacular is flavored
with words like "gyroscopic" and "near-frictionless" - that he
actually got the unicycle rolling here. His following includes
recent college graduate Natty Seidenverg, who has been unicyling
since she was 7. Naturally, they are dating.
"Eugene could convince the world to go on one wheel, and
that's saying something," says Mr. Beauchamp, an avid mountain
biker who finally gave in to Cathcart's urging and learned to
ride a unicycle himself in 2000. "It's so unnatural - unicycling
is like a joke on physics."
Add to that the simplicity of the machine. Cathcart didn't
have much trouble figuring out how to build - and improve on -
one. The unicycle's solid hub and lack of gears do make it a
truly simple gadget with fewer than a dozen parts.
But riding a gearless cycle, where one rotation of the pedals
results in one rotation of the wheel, is a different story.
Unlike on a bike, there is no coasting; riding downhill can be
just as strenuous as riding uphill.
As Cathcart makes his way back down Misery Ridge, several
hikers can't help staring at the unicycle he's hoisted over his
back. Where terrain is manageable, he hops on and speeds down
the path; when his legs can't pedal fast enough, he brings them
up and shifts his hip to the side, effectively performing a
"controlled slide" and fall. When the path curves sharply he
jumps off the cycle, kicking it away to avoid entanglement. To
anyone else, he probably looks like a geeky, over-padded failure
of an athlete, sliding and falling and scrambling after his
wheel. But this is peak performance MUni.
"I went pretty far that time!" Cathcart says, triumphant.
So don't knock it until you've tried it, but definitely don't
try it until you're ready to fall - again, and again, and again.
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DAREDEVIL:
Eugene
Cathcart explores Oregon's Smith Rock
State Park.
ARI DENNISON
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