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Mets Bobble Head

December 27th, 2009 admin Comments off

Bobble Head

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Troll bobblehead:  New York Mets                 [Russ]


Troll bobblehead: New York Mets [Russ]


$9.99


N.Y.METS DAVID WRIGHT BOBBLEHEAD SGA


N.Y.
Mets David WRIGHT BOBBLEHEAD SGA


$19.99


NEW YORK METS JOSE REYES SGA BOBBLEHEAD


NEW YORK METS
Jose Reyes SGA BOBBLEHEAD


$24.99


JJ Putz Bobblehead Mariners Mets Baseball 2008 NIB


JJ Putz Bobblehead Mariners
Mets Baseball 2008 NIB


$2.99


NEW YORK METS SET (4) BOBBLEHEAD DOLLS FRANCO PIAZZA


NEW YORK METS SET (4) BOBBLEHEAD DOLLS FRANCO PIAZZA


$19.99


JOSE REYES FOREVER COLLECTABLES METS BOBBLEHEAD


JOSE REYES FOREVER COLLECTABLES METS BOBBLEHEAD


$12.99


CARLOS BELTRAN FOREVER COLLECTABLES METS BOBBLEHEAD


Carlos Beltran FOREVER COLLECTABLES METS BOBBLEHEAD


$12.99


David Wright NY Mets Bobblehead Bobble Head SGA 9-10-06


David Wright NY Mets Bobblehead Bobble Head SGA 9-10-06


$5.00


2007 ENDY CHAVEZ NY METS BOBBLEHEAD DOLL AIG


2007 ENDY CHAVEZ NY METS BOBBLEHEAD DOLL AIG


$5.99


New York Mets Carlos Delgado Big Bobblehead Figure Gift


New York Mets
Carlos Delgado Big Bobblehead Figure Gift


$4.99

Panama Real Estate Flight From Hell

“You’ve got a good head on your shoulders” Moose told me. It was the second time I had heard that saying in about a week and I was pressed into envisioning just what exactly someone would look like who did not have a good head on their shoulders. A bobble-head doll was as far as I got when Carl interrupted again:

“Excuse me but can you move out of my way? If you don’t I’m gonna pee in my pants.”

I had bought my plane ticket on extremely short notice and consequently been penalized with perhaps the worst seat in the entire aircraft. 18B. After arriving and seating myself next to a little boy in the window seat, I thought that would be the extent of my punishment—an annoying child. “Hi” he said with this loud shriek before I even had a chance to take my seat, “I’m Carl.” Carl was small, about the size of a young bobcat, and had this piercingly annoying personality which I’m sure his mother and teachers labeled as inquisitive.

I sat there getting situated as Carl yapped my ear off about a number of things; from the new sneakers he had scored for his birthday, to his wobbly front tooth which, in my opinion, was destined to come out during our time together. Carl was in the middle of demonstrating its imminence when the reality of the next few hours set in. A large walrus-of-a-man appeared at our row, the shadow of his frame darkening about half the cabin. The man looked at his seat, then looked at Carl and me as if we were somehow part of the problem. “Why are you so fat?” Carl blurted out.

Children have my utmost respect when it comes to being blunt and Carl, with that one question, had impressed me. “Well” the fat man said, “I guess I eat a lot.” You can say that again, I thought to myself.

“Jeez, I could fit four of me in your tummy!” Carl was really talking from his heart and I couldn’t help but smirk with approval. The man sat down and wedged himself between the armrests, becoming lodged like an overstuffed sausage. In an effort to make him more comfortable, I scooted a little bit closer to Carl giving Moose (as we would come to find out) some extra space.

Moose was a Florida native, heading to Panama for what he termed “a real estate venture”. He wore one of those futuristic earpieces connected to his cell phone which allowed him to use his hands to do other things, like eat. On his feet were some of the biggest therapeutic shoes I’ve ever seen, close to the size of footballs. When he asked why I was going to Panama, I told him I was a professional shark breeder, and being that Moose (like most people) had never met a professional shark breeder before, I was able to explain to him just what it was I did. Carl took real interest in my profession, asking typical-industry questions like, “do sharks fart?” and “do sharks poop?”

Moose was fifty nine. He and his 77 million co-baby boomers are the group that is targeted for Panama’s current real estate thrust. He is part of a psychographic that simply is ready to retire, move somewhere new, and start again. Alongside the baby boomers too, is the late-twenties to early forties demographic: Panama must groom itself for the eventual Generation Xers—a generation characterized by big challenges, international flings, and anything but the typical corporate ladder. People like Moose are tired and frustrated of the chronic workaholism and ready for something new. When I heard him use phrases like “start living again” and “take a risk for once”, I knew good things would be waiting for him in Panama.

“I don’t have a whole lot (of money)” Moose said, “but I’m really excited to see where what I do have will take me. What’s life without a little risk?”

The flight to Panama City was characterized by deafening chatter and zero breathing room. But in Moose, a symbolic viewpoint was established and for that I felt lucky. Not everyone can just up and leave for a tropical paradise, but for some, it’s not as far off as they think. When the plane eventually landed and everyone turned on their cell phones, there was a chorus of chiming and dingles. One woman, upon hearing the messages delivered to her phone mid-flight, burst out screaming which eventually melted into tears.

“What’s wrong?” Carl asked her. “An alligator ate my dog!” she howled. “An alligator ate Teapot!” Everyone on the plane gasped and it was true: sometime during our flight, a ravenous alligator had climbed out of a lake near to her home and eaten her beloved nine year-old llhasa apso. The tragedy happened completely out of the blue.

I pictured Teapot planning what she was going to do that evening or maybe thinking about what she’d eat for an afternoon snack. What Teapot didn’t know was that life, more specifically a 5-foot alligator, had other plans for her. I pictured Teapot and the fear that must’ve run through her eyes just before the final kill, wishing maybe that she had eaten that extra biscuit that morning or smelled that extra behind at the park. Because after all, what’s life, if you haven’t lived a little.

About the Author

Frank Rizzo has years of experience in the Panama real estate industries as well as a significant amount of Panama travel.


David Wright New York Mets MLB 8 On The Field Bobber


David Wright New York
Mets Mlb 8 On The Field Bobber


$19.99


Forever Collectibles MLB 8″ On The Field Bobber – Wright…

New York Mets MLB Mrs Potato Head


New York Mets MLB Mrs Potato Head


$15.99


This fun toy can be dressed up to be a fan or mascot of your favorite team. Comes complete with multiple pieces to change his look regularly….

New York Mets Roberto Alomar Forever Collectibles Bobble Head


New York Mets Roberto Alomar Forever Collectibles Bobble Head


$8.82


These hand crafted, highly detailed collectibles feature thematic bases, special moments, unique people and exciting events. They are 8″ tall and made of a resin material. These bobble heads are limited editions, and hand numbered on the bottom. Made by Forever Collectibles….

HULA GIRL DASHBOARD SHAKER BOBBLE WITH UKULELE


HULA GIRL DASHBOARD SHAKER BOBBLE WITH UKULELE


$7.99


Here is a classic local girl dashboard shaker . Leilani Polyresin Dashboard Dolls with Green Skirt – Local Girl with Ukulele @ 7″ H Local Boy with Ukulele polyresin dashboard doll is sculpted by an artist and hand painted to detail. He wears a natural hula skirt with fresh Hawaiian lei over his neck and having a great time.Check out the picture for more details.Place him on your car dashboard a…

MLB Team Gnomes - 11


MLB Team Gnomes – 11




New York Mets Mr. Met 2009 Bighead Bobble Head


New York Mets Mr. Met 2009 Bighead Bobble Head


$19.99


This New York Mets Mascot 2009 Bighead Bobble Head can keep you company all day at work, or add a touch of Mets pride to your growing collection. Features authentic replicated team name, number, and logo….

Mets Key Chain

December 19th, 2009 admin Comments off

Key Chain

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New York Mets High Definition Baseball Keychain


New York Mets High Definition Baseball Keychain


$5.95


New York Mets Keychain


New York Mets Keychain


$3.95


NY Mets 1969 Championship Key Chain


NY Mets 1969 Championship Key Chain


$19.00


New York Mets Men Keychain


New York
Mets Men Keychain


$5.95


New York Mets 3D Spinning Baseball Keychain


New York Mets 3D Spinning Baseball Keychain


$6.95


New York Mets Key Bottle Opener Keychain


New York Mets Key Bottle Opener Keychain


$4.95


NEW YORK METS MR. METS COLLECTOR KEYCHAIN NEW!


NEW YORK METS MR. METS COLLECTOR KEYCHAIN NEW!


$7.99


New York Mets Baseball Glove Keychain


New York
Mets Baseball Glove Keychain


$5.95


MLB NY New York Mets Lanyard Keychain Clip New


MLB NY New York Mets Lanyard Keychain Clip New


$3.24


New York Mets Hummer Collectible Keychain Diecast


New York Mets Hummer Collectible Keychain Diecast


$4.95

Earn Quick Money Creatively

Young adults are often on a search to earn quick money to cover expenses of a trip or to buy something their parents cannot afford. The older generation often faces circumstances of temporary increase in expenses that can be met by creative ways. There are many options that allow you to hone your innate talents and get your capability known to others in your nearby locality. Take care not to overload yourself with work and alter your original work and study schedule. Utilise these options strictly as a fall back or a side activity that you engage in during your free hours.

Painting

Are you artistically inclined? Are you good at fabric painting? Your only investment is in small squares of plain cloth that you can paint and sell for sticking on to t-shirts. Earn quick money by conducting a sale in your front lawn or consider selling them to retailers. You should consider trying to cover the preferences specific age groups so that you can ensure that there is a ready market for your offering. If you are good at certain types of painting and are unsure of whether people will like what you offer, you can avoid major investments by announcing a sale at your house.

Project work

Are you academically inclined? Were yours the projects that regularly earned high marks? Often, young adults are unable to bear the burden of too many class assignments coupled with the load of homework. Offer your services to carry out projects where you are certain that you can assure a good score. You will need to make the project, explain the working of the prototype, and train the student in presenting the work and asking questions and finding answers about the work done. This is an effective route to earn quick money and teach youngsters to hone their academic skills.

Crafts

Are you talented at craft work? People are inclined to purchase attractive knick-knacks at the payment counter. Key chains, pencil tops, hand-painted handkerchiefs and scarves are quickly picked up because of the sheer choice of colours and the uniqueness on display. You can earn quick money while you get yourself known for your skills. Take orders for creating displays at events like small parties and display your name and contact details against these creations so that you are able to receive more orders while you continue to carry out your normal activities.

Birthdays

Do you like arranging birthdays and similar events for a close knit group of people? Coordinating refreshments, arranging entertainment and managing the needs of members who attend the party and understanding the sensitivities of individual requirements is a complex task. This is an assignment that can help you to earn quick money and provide others in your locality the knowledge that you are good at taking up these time consuming aspects of hosting parties and free their time to take care of other things. Since you are utilising this as a way to supplement your regular income avoid taking up contracts that will impinge on your time and take you away from your main focus.

About the Author

If you are looking for some Quick Money Making scheme to help you tide over a patch of high expenditure, log on to http://www.goodinternetmoney.com to find out more of these Work at Home opportunities.


I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met. Keychain


I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met. Keychain


$2.99


Text on keychain: I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met.* Durable acrylic key chain is crystal-clear and double-sided so the artwork or message is seen twice. * Sturdy metal ring holds your keys securely. * Full color printed images or messages are included. * If you have new ideas or need help selecting text for your custom keychains please contact us. * Size: 2 1/8″ x …

Kooky Klickers Collectible Pen - Krew MLB - NEW YORK METS #S019


Kooky Klickers Collectible Pen – Krew MLB – NEW YORK METS #S019


$3.99



MLB Kookys Klicker Pens New York Mets (Mr. Met)


MLB Kookys Klicker Pens New York Mets (Mr. Met)


$3.80



New York Mets Lanyards


New York Mets Lanyards



Event lanyard is comprised of a silky and vibrant material which is decorated with your favorite sports team. Ideal for tradeshows, conferences, college student, and special events. New breakaway hardware affixed to the lanyard for added safety and comfort. Lightweight and stylish….


NEW YORK METS LANYARD NEW MLB KEY CHAIN


NEW YORK METS LANYARD NEW MLB KEY CHAIN


$2.49



Key Chain Watch of I Love Baseball (Astros, Twins, Dodgers, Yankees, Brewers, Oakland Athletics, Mets, Mariners, Phillies, Rays, Pirates, Rangers, Padres, Blue Jays, Giants, Cardinals, Nationals)


Key Chain Watch of I Love Baseball (Astros, Twins, Dodgers, Yankees, Brewers, Oakland Athletics, Mets, Mariners, Phillies, Rays, Pirates, Rangers, Padres, Blue Jays, Giants, Cardinals, Nationals)


$19.97


Silver-tone high quality watch. The key chain watch casing measures approx. 1 1/2″ in diameter. Stainless steel back. Miyota watch movement made by Citizen. The battery for the key chain watch is included….

New York Mets Key Bottle Opener Keychain


New York Mets Key Bottle Opener Keychain


$4.95


This bottle opener keychain is the key to any Mets fan’s heart!…

New York Mets Bottle Opener Keychain


New York
Mets Bottle Opener Keychain


$7.99



New York Mets MLB Logo Key Chain


New York
Mets Mlb Logo Key Chain


$13.99


Grosgrain 1-2 color ribbon keychain in MLB team colors with single logo, nickel finish split key ring and swivel hook…

New York Mets Team Keychain


New York Mets Team Keychain


$11.99


Show your support for the New York Mets with this unique keychain. Made of genuine leather. Features the team colors and logo. Officially licensed by Major League Baseball….

mets Batting Helmet

October 17th, 2009 admin Comments off

Batting Helmet

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New Style NEW YORK METS Road Full Size Batting Helmet


New Style NEW YORK METS Road Full Size Batting Helmet


$49.99


Mini New York  Mets Batting Helmet


Mini New York Mets Batting Helmet


$1.50


2 NEW YORK METS 1970s PLASTIC BATTING HELMETS


2 NEW YORK METS 1970s PLASTIC BATTING HELMETS


$2.00


New Style NEW YORK METS BLACK Full Size Batting Helmet


New Style NEW YORK
Mets Black Full Size Batting Helmet


$49.99


NY Mets batting helmet


NY Mets batting helmet


$7.00


2009 NY Mets Nelson Figueroa Game Used Batting Helmet


2009 NY Mets Nelson Figueroa Game Used Batting Helmet


$46.55


New Style NEW YORK METS Road Full Size Batting Helmet


New Style NEW YORK METS Road Full Size Batting Helmet


$49.99


NEW YORK METS MINI BATTING HELMET ICE CREAM BOWLS 4 PK


NEW YORK METS MINI BATTING HELMET ICE CREAM BOWLS 4 PK


$9.95


NEW YORK METS ~ LOT OF 20 SUNDAE MINI BATTING HELMETS


NEW YORK METS ~ LOT OF 20 SUNDAE MINI BATTING HELMETS


$29.90


NEW YORK METS ~ LOT OF 100 SUNDAE MINI BATTING HELMETS


NEW YORK METS ~ LOT OF 100 SUNDAE MINI BATTING HELMETS


$119.90

Chasing adventure via motorcycle in Latin America

On the pampas the horizons seem to flee. The llamas are golden, the clouds impossibly white. We let the bikes run. Suddenly, the view changes. The lead bike rises above the line of the horizon, a rider flails through the air 10 feet above the ground. This is not good. Jeff has gone off the road at 70 mph. Katie goes into paramedic mode, calming Jeff, running her hands up his spine, probing, checking ribs, legs, arms. The fall has ripped his touring jacket from shoulder to waist, peeling the back protector to reveal the We-Build-Bridges T-shirt. He is scuffed, but within moments is giggling, flashing the “I Can’t Believe I’m Still Alive” grin that is his default expression.

Ryan pulls the bike up and starts collecting the bits scattered across the desert. The luggage is destroyed. The right handlebar is bent almost to the tank. Mirrors, turn signals, front fender snapped off in a microsecond. Both wheel rims have dents. Incredibly, it still runs. He puts the parts that still work back on the bike, takes it for a test ride. It will last another 7,000 miles. Our motto: We Will Make This Work.

Jeff tells what happened. A small bird had hopped into his path. The next thing he knew he was off the road, launched into a culvert. “I thought, wow. I’m Superman. Oh look, there’s the bike. Oh look, there’s the bird…” In a field strewn with jagged boulders, he had landed on sand.

THE BEGINNING

The trip came up long before I was ready. A phone call, an invitation to tag along with a group of BMW riders embarking on a five-week, 8,000-mile journey from Peru to Virginia. I would document the ride, a fundraising effort for a group that builds footbridges in remote areas of the world. I’d been thinking about a long ride, something open-ended, without support vehicles, the experience of being totally “out there.” This seemed to fit the bill. A third of the distance around the world with complete strangers. I had a brand-new BMW F 800 GS and it was thirsty. If there was a point of no return, I crossed it before I hung up the phone.

First, the riders. Ken Hodge is an insurance benefits specialist and member in good standing of the Newport News Rotary Club. He discovered motorcycles late in life, when he bought a bike, rode it across country in 48 hours, then began to dream of a bigger adventure, something for a good cause.

He recruited his daughter Katie (a fire department paramedic), his stepson Ryan (a mechanic and dirt-bike rider) and Ryan’s best friend Jeff. I’m impressed by their preparations. They ride old BMW R 1150s and F 650 singles. Ryan had spent a year renewing the bikes, poking about the inner recesses, memorizing the shop manuals for each machine. They would bring enough tools and parts to handle almost every emergency.

INTO THE ANDES

We stop at Nazca to view the ancient figures scratched in the rocky desert. From the top of a tower we can see a figure with raised hands. Just to the north, the Pan-American Highway bisects the figure of a lizard, decapitating the creature. Bound by the tight focus of brass transit levels, the surveyors who laid out the road were not even aware of the sacred relics, discovered when aerial flight became common.

I realize that we are as blinded by focus, by concentration as the surveyors were by their instrument. The trip will be a series of images, sidelong glances, captured at speed.

Descendants of the people who built the Inca trail, Peruvian builders know their stuff. But it’s the tracery, the managed flow of momentum, that has our respect. The road ascends ancient seabeds, hills covered with talus, fractured dry ridges with cornices sculpted by landslides. Midday, we find ourselves on a high pampas inhabited by thousands of vicuña and alpaca. In the distance, our first sight of snowcapped peaks. There are stone corrals on nearby slopes, one-room huts. In the middle of this giant nowhere, a lone shepherd walking on the side of the hill.

We discover that the distances on maps are those of the condor. We travel incredibly twisted roads that sometimes take a hundred turns (and several miles) to get from one ridge to the next. The map indicates towns, but to our dis-may not all have gas stations. We buy gas in a small outpost from a woman who ladles it out of a bucket with a coffee pot, then pours it through a plastic, woven kitchen funnel into our tanks. The whole town watches. We push on into the descending night. We make it to the next set of lights, 20 or so buildings on two streets, find a hotel, and park our bikes in an enclosed backyard with dogs, chickens, dead birds, plastic bottles and an animal hide tanning on the wall. Instead of the usual exit signs, the restaurant in our hotel has green arrows that say “ESCAPE.” It is not a criticism of the food. The forces that drive the Andes skyward have been known to demolish whole towns.

The next morning we fire up the bikes, and ascend into the Andes on a perfect road. We are fluid, going through hairpins, double hairpins, squared-off turns—climbing the flank of a single 4,700-meter peak. I can think of only one word: delicious. We move through mist and low-hanging clouds, with shafts of sunlight slanting into rainbows. The valleys below are green and fertile, a mix of old Inca terracing and more modern farms. Slender eucalyptus trees line the road, providing shade for huts with red tile roofs. A girl tends a flock of goats (identified with colorful ribbons) on a green meadow, book in hand. At one point I think the clouds above have parted to reveal patches of blue, but when I look up I see that it is snow-covered rock, another 3,000 or 4,000 feet of mountain. On a turnoff near the top of the peak we find a dozen or so tiny shrines, little churches decorated with flowers and ribbons and photographs of loved ones. The site of a bus plunge. On a hillside across the valley paragliders work the thermals, the canopies looking like bright-colored eyebrows, or ostentatious angels.

We share the road with vicuña, alpaca, llama, sheep, goats, dogs, roosters, pigs, horses and cows. On a narrow lane near Abancay, a bull tries to gore me as I pass, charging and making a hooking motion with its horns. One night after the sunset, I round a corner and a beautiful roan stallion wheels in the light from our bikes, filling the lane with wide eyes and flashing hoofs, inches from my head. I realize that riding sweep poses a risk. The novelty of our passing bikes wears off, and the local wildlife has time to react.

Entering Cusco, Ryan asks directions, a girl directs us onto a narrow cobblestone street, slick with rain, as steep as a bobsled run. The rocks are turned on their side, like teeth. The knobbies have no traction whatsoever. The people on the sidewalks frantically wave their hands, indicating that the road gets steeper. I touch my brake and the bike goes down, pinning my leg against the curb, a quarter of an inch shy of a fracture. The bike behind me goes down. It is harrowing. The locals help us lift the bikes, get them turned uphill.
A police escort leads us to a hotel that lets us store the motorcycles in the lobby. Without bothering to shower, we make our way to the Norton Rats Bar on the northeast corner of the central plaza. The owner, an American expatriate, once piloted a Norton to the tip of the continent. The walls are lined with photos from the trip. Above the bar are mounted heads, the four past American presidents, with their best known soundbites: I am not a crook. I did not inhale. I do not recall. We will find WMD in Iraq. We sip beers, trade stories, trying to reassemble the past few days. The dead battery. The punctured radiator. The roadside repairs. The incredible rush of unrelenting beauty.

Three days of desert north of Lima generate a few details. The total absence of life, the three colors of sand. Young boys pedaling tricycle ice cream carts in the middle of nowhere. We enter a <I>zona de nimbleras</I>, but instead of fog we find a 60-mph crosswind that sends a layer of grit skittering across the road like a special effect in a Steven Spielberg movie. Two lanes narrow to one covered by blowing sand, thick enough to swallow the front tire, deep enough that a road grader prepares to clear the drifting sands.

We decide to try a secondary route through the hills. We turn onto a dirt road and everything changes. We pass through villages alive with people, dogs, tiny three-wheel taxis fashioned from old motorcycles. Kids on motorscooters ride past, snapping pictures with their cell phones. The road throws split-finger fastballs at the bash plate that clang as loud and adamant as the sound of an aluminum bat. We slosh our way through gravel, gray dust on everything, parts falling off, teeth rattling. Oh yes, this is what we wanted.

ECUADOR

In Macara, we sit on the sidewalk near a minor town square, eating pork cooked by a rotund woman in a yellow dress. Her daughter brings us three beers (giant) at a time, and keeps the empties in a milk crate for accounting later. Boys on motorbikes cruise the quiet streets, the lucky ones with girls on the back. Across the square, girls sit on benches. Jeff experiences a cultural revelation, that South American girls have breasts, and wear tight pants…and “Hey, I think she likes me.”

Our dinner companion is David McCollum, an American expatriate that Ryan had met on ADVrider.com. He tells us stories about riding the Ecuadoran Andes, and gives us tips on handling roadblocks. “Act Stupid. Do not try to communicate in Spanish. Say ‘No fumar Espanol’ (I don’t smoke Spanish). If all else fails, have Katie cry.” Er, Katie does not do “cry.” The next day he leads us into the Ecuadoran Andes.

Impressions: Razor-sharp ridges. Lumpy, conical outcroppings. Monasteries on top of hills. Slopes so steep they will never be worked by machine. A couple standing above dark earth, the man holding a wooden hoe, the woman a bag of seeds. A woman on horseback, black and red cape, a whip coiled in one hand. Trees. Cloud. Mist. The feel of a Japanese block print, the ones that suggest the road goes to infinity.

I had introduced the group to a family tradition. When we travel, we end each day by recounting high point, low point and funny bone. After this day, I will add “Pucker moments.” Trucks hurtle out of the fog, running without lights, signaled only by the ghostly wave pushed before. They appear in our lane without warning or reason. We go through construction sites where the road narrows to one lane that offers no escape route. One side seems hideously close to the new concrete, studded with rebar fangs. The other side is precipice. Pucker moments? Take your pick. Sometimes it’s the surface, a half mile of muddy bobsled run, of loose gravel, of gushing water, the bike handling like a loose bowel. Twice, we round a corner and find no road, the surface having caved in, sucked away by underground torrents. Katie’s moment comes when a cow, with no footing, scrambles into the path of her bike. For Jeff, it is passing a truck that suddenly swerves to avoid a pothole, the trailer swinging toward him like a baseball bat.

We spend two days in Cuenca, a 500-year-old city surrounded by mountains. Ken phones ahead and discovers that the ship that was to have taken us and the bikes from Ecuador to Panama doesn’t exist (had we had drugs or been illegal aliens, no problem, but there are no accommodations for <I>turistas</I> with motorcycles). We ask David for help. While we ride to Quito, he will work the phones. He finds a contact, a guy known for getting things done when no one else can. We meet up with this air freight magician at The Turtle’s Head, a biker bar in Quito. At midnight.

The next morning we ride our bikes to the military section of the airport, then into a refrigerated warehouse. The steel floor is covered with embedded ball bearings, across which slide steel palettes. For the next three hours we wrestle with tiedowns. A skinny man dressed entirely in black oversees the operation, taking pictures of the bikes with a digital camera, making sure batteries are disconnected, tires are deflated. Drug-sniffing dogs poke their noses into every recess.

Then, just like that, our bikes are gone, on their way to Panama in the belly of an airplane.

CENTRAL AMERICA

Central American countries are the size of postage stamps. You can cross them in a day and a half, only to spend a half day at customs and immigration. Ken had prepared Xerox copies of all our documents (passports, licenses, titles, registration, VIN numbers) and had them notarized. As he works with the official in the air-conditioned office, we sit in 100-degree heat and watch ants carry grains of dirt from beneath the ground. We will become used to the demands for more copies, the freelance currency traders waving bills in front of our faces, the young hustlers willing to facilitate the process, the food vendors waiting for starvation to overcome caution about local cuisine.

Before embarking on this trip, I’d read State Department travel advisories. The section on Peru warned that five Americans had died from liposuction in Lima. OK, was that consensual liposuction, or were there gangs of thugs wielding vacuum cleaners with sharp pointy attachments? Virtually every entry on Central American countries warned about fake checkpoints, bandits in uniform, soldiers in the middle of nowhere.

Along the roadside are signs with a blood-red eye and the warning <I>vigilantes</I>. We round a corner to find two soldiers walking patrol, miles from the nearest town. They ask for paperwork. A surge of adrenaline turns my mouth to cotton. David, our friend in Ecuador had given us good advice: Act stupid. Smile. We seem to have a natural talent for that. <I>No fumar Espanol</I>. After inspecting our paperwork, they wave us on. In the next few weeks we will be stopped repeatedly, sniffed by dogs, x-rayed, wanded with devices that look like carving knives with car antennas where the blade should be. At border crossings, guys in jumpsuits and facemasks spray our bikes with liquids designed to kill stowaway bugs too lazy to cross borders under their own power. There are soldiers at every gas station, armed attendants at convenience stores and restaurants, guys with shotguns on Pepsi trucks. We are aware of poverty, a culture of criminal opportunity. The night air can strip your bike naked, if you don’t find a hotel with secure parking.

These countries are linked by soil to the United States, and our culture has rattled its way through. Central America is a motorbike culture. Whole families whiz by, perched on narrow seats, wearing helmets with missing visors. In Panama City we run into a group of Harley riders. The bikes have exhausts the size of howitzers, the horns blare a soundtrack of special effects. They surround us, and ask if we want to join their regular weekend burger run. We follow them to an exclusive country club just beyond the Mira Flores locks on the Panama Canal. They send us off with directions to a bed-and-breakfast up the coast. I fall asleep that night in a hammock, a bottle of beer still clutched in my hand, the blades of a fan whirring softly overhead.

Central America has a different feel than Peru and Ecuador, a different gravity. We move through verdant countryside at a speed that would be natural in Virginia or Colorado or California. The vegetation looks like fireworks, only green. Here clusters of one plant have taken over a hillside. There a different species explodes. A slow war.

We have been in the saddle for three weeks. Nothing can break our pace. We abandon the Pan-American Highway and find roads that make it seem like you have two flat tires, ones that seem like you’re riding on an oil spill. There are narrow, one-vehicle-at-a-time bridges of mismatched narrow-gauge rails, or on lesser roads, steel plates tossed across rotting timbers. The terrain is a geological mash-up, without the power of the Andes, but enough unexpected elevation change and tight corners to make for an interesting ride. Towns announce themselves with speed bumps and potholes that can swallow bikes whole. I see road signs unique to the country, silhouettes of odd animals. A snake crossing. A jaguar crossing. In Costa Rica we hit a 30-mile stretch of gravel road, and the world becomes dust. The bikes come alive. We romp, skitter, wander, trusting the gyroscope. I try to read the strange shadows that appear in the dust—bicyclists, ATVs, huge trucks with no lights—not always accurately. There are breaks in the dust cloud when I see fields filled with white cattle and at their feet white egrets. The sky tinges pink with light from a setting sun. A feeling almost like peace.

We spend a night in Arsenal, a destination resort for adrenaline junkies with discretionary income. Posters advertise canopy walks, zipline rides through the rain forest, the chance to rappel down waterfalls, night hikes to lava flows, kayaking, canoeing. We ignore the offers, saddle up and ride into the rain forest. A group of meercats swarms down an embankment onto the road. Monkeys cavort in the trees overhead. A tourist zips by on a steel cable casting a shadow on the road, a blur of color in the sky. It looks like someone was hanging laundry and forgot to take his or her clothes off.

Nicaragua has its own feel. We ride past volcanoes so large they make their own weather, the crowns hidden beneath wide-brimmed clouds. Don Quixote in his barber bowl hat. The streets are clogged with horsedrawn buggies. We find a hotel near the town square. Across the street from the hotel is a shop offering galactic Internet. The traditional culture is slowly losing ground to bandwidth. Relay towers compete with church steeples, billboards for cell service block oversized statues of saints on nearby hilltops.

We visit a bridge, built by Ken’s organization, in a remote area of Honduras. At the turnoff from the main road I think we are entering a drainage ditch. Indeed, during the rainy season the road is impassable, the clay surface too slick for traction. Now, the bikes tackle a road gouged by erosion, working their way around rocks exposed by the force of water. This is by far the most technical riding of the trip.

The 40-mile road will take five hours to cross. The clawmark gullies pull Ken’s bike out from under him; Katie rides into a ditch and smashes her bike’s windscreen. Even Ryan has trouble. The river, when we reach it, is intimidating. I take pictures of the bikes as they come through, pushing a bow wave over front wheels, jouncing up the rocks on the other side. If a trip can be reduced to 1?250th of a second, a single moment seared in memory, these pictures would be it.

We cross into Guatemala, and spend the night with Hemingway impersonators and Jimmy Buffet wannabes in Rio Dulce. The hotel has a wonderful tacky feeling. The overhead fan showers sparks. The power goes off at regular intervals, as does the water. If you want a shower, step outside. We spend a long day riding through rain. The water destroys one of my cameras, turning the LCD into an aquarium. Hey, I have enough pictures.

ALMOST THERE

At the first town over the Mexican border, we stop for directions on a crowded street. A truck sideswipes my bike, snags a sidecase, and drags me down. I’m unhurt, but the windscreen and instrument panel lie in fragments. The police, when they arrive, are the opposite of helpful. We collect the broken bits, duct tape everything in sight, and fire it up. We are unstoppable. We ride on, but the mood of the ride changes and the calendar beckons. Katie, Ryan and Jeff have to be back by a certain date, or they lose their jobs.

The ride becomes time vs. distance, a push that blurs most of Mexico, and a final border crossing into the United States.

We hurtle across long roads, nursing bikes that are showing signs of wear. Ken’s bike is missing a sidestand. Ryan’s helmet a visor. Katie treats her BMW’s busted windscreen like a badge of honor, but still, a 75-mph headwind is exhausting. Jeff’s bike has chewed the rear sprocket to nubbins, the chain is beginning to slip. It will wind up in a U-Haul 100 miles from home.

Five weeks after departing, we see the lights of Newport News. As they enter the city, Ken, Ryan and Katie spread across the road, side by side, arms raised. The long ride is over.

About the Author

To read more motorcycle tours stories like this or get reviews of the latest bikes and gear, go to ridermagazine.com or pick up a copy of Rider Magazine.


New York Mets Pink Riddell MLB Replica Mini Batting Helmet (Quantity of 6)


New York Mets Pink Riddell MLB Replica Mini Batting Helmet (Quantity of 6)


$74.94


New York Mets – Riddell MLB Mini-Helmets – New York Mets Pink Riddell MLB Replica Mini Batting Helmet – Autograph-Supply Item: RiddellMLB-Pink-6…

New York Mets Rawlings Black & Blue LEC Full Size Baseball Batting Helmet


New York Mets Rawlings Black & Blue LEC Full Size Baseball Batting Helmet


$99.00


Left Ear Covered for a Right Handed Batter …

New Era New York Mets OnField Home 59Fifty


New Era New York Mets OnField Home 59Fifty


$33.99


NC5NeMe-OnHo is manufactured by New Era for New York Mets fans. It is 59Fifty style and called OnField design. Main color is Home. Additional Note About Particular Design: Authentic Collection, Official Player Cap. Please make sure to select the size. If you are not so sure about your size, please measure around your head just above the ears and refer to New Era Size Chart at www.neweracap.com/ima…

Mets Tee Shirt

August 10th, 2009 admin Comments off

Tee Shirt

eBay Logo  

Nike New York Mets Ash Practice T-shirt - L


Nike New York
Mets Ash Practice T-shirt – L


$19.95


Majestic New York Mets T-shirt - L


Majestic New York Mets T-shirt – L


$14.99


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt - XL


Majestic New York
Mets Youth T-shirt – XL


$11.99


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt - XL


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt – XL


$17.95


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt - S


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt – S


$17.95


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt - S


Majestic New York Mets Youth T-shirt – S


$15.95


Nike New York Mets T-shirt - XXL


Nike New York Mets T-shirt – XXL


$19.95


Nike New York Mets Royal Blue MLB Practice T-shirt - M


Nike New York
Mets Royal Blue MLB Practice T-shirt – M


$19.95


New York Mets Youth Heather Blue Distressed T-shirt - S


New York Mets Youth Heather Blue Distressed T-shirt – S


$15.95


Nike New York Mets Black 2010 Practice T-shirt - XXL


Nike New York
Mets Black 2010 Practice T-shirt – XXL


$19.95

Custom T-Shirts for all Purposes

There are many uses for custom T-shirts in today’s world.  From polo shirts emblazoned with a company name to personalized tees with team names on the front and names  and numbers on the back, custom T-shirts are at home practically anywhere.

Businesses use custom T-shirts as a casual “uniform” for their employees, especially those that deal with the public.  A specific logo and color will help to build a solid brand image with the business’s customers, and also serve as additional advertising when the employees wear the shirts outside of the business.  Many businesses also offer an additional style of customize T-shirts to their customers, perhaps just a little different from the employee’s tees, and offer them in special promotions.

  1. The team name is generally on the front of the shirt in sports team shirts, but again, whatever the team asks for can be accommodated.

Charity functions often have custom T-shirts designed specifically for the event.  This gives the volunteer team a cohesive look and helps bond people who many times have never met before that day.  Many often use the tees as giveaways for donations as well.  These T-shirts are worn all year long by volunteers and attendees alike, helping to build awareness for the function and the cause that it supports.

Foot races and cycling events are another place where a wide variety of custom T-shirts are utilized.  Depending upon the event, the sponsors might opt for the name of the event and all of the sponsors on the back of the shirt, or even personalize it with each participant’s name.

Bars and night clubs have been very quick to catch the custom T-shirt fever, as they realize how much additional business and traffic it drives when people run about town taking care of errands with the name of the club on their back. Inevitably, conversations are struck up and the wearer will most often give the club rave reviews.  After all, if they didn’t love the place, why would they wear their shirt? These shirts can be basic, with just the information about the club, or special ones can be designed around certain events.  The designs themselves can also be basic, or quite detailed and artistic, depending upon the image the club is after.

In all cases, custom T-shirts can be ordered from companies who do the majority of their business online, thereby saving their customers the added costs incurred by brick and mortar operations.  One of the very best Custom T-shirt companies is Under the Influence Tees. You can check out their website at http://www.utitees.com and design the shirts you need for any occasion.  The design team is very helpful, turn-around time is quick, and shipping is FREE on all orders over $40!

About the Author

He is an expert t-shirt designer working with companies who are offering custom t-shirts and t-shirt design tools.


Lamb Of God - Logo Shot Glass


Lamb Of God – Logo Shot Glass


$6.95


From death metal band, Lamb Of God, comes this clear shot glass featuring their logo in black. Great for any fan to use or collect. WARNING CA RESIDENTS (PROP 65) This product may contain a chemical known to The State of California To Cause Cancer, Or Birth Defects, Or Other Reproductive Harm….

Iron Maiden - Seventh Son Tapestry


Iron Maiden – Seventh Son Tapestry


$14.95



Iron Maiden - Stranger Tapestry


Iron Maiden – Stranger Tapestry


$14.95



2009 OAKLEY RETRO METALLIC TEE


2009 OAKLEY RETRO METALLIC TEE


$19.99



Cradle Of Filth - Logo Wallet W/ Chain


Cradle Of Filth – Logo Wallet W/ Chain


$16.95



Black Label Society - Hangover Keychain


Black Label Society – Hangover Keychain


$1.95


BLS’s Hangover Music artwork on this cool keychain. Acrylic….

KISS - Four Faces Keychain


KISS – Four Faces Keychain


$3.99


Hang your keys on this cool KISS keychain. Features band members faces and KISS logo. Acrylic….

How I Met Your Mother Legen-dary TV Show Series Sitcom Episode Adult Black Tee T-Shirt


How I Met Your Mother Legen-dary TV Show Series Sitcom Episode Adult Black Tee T-Shirt


$26.99


An adorable 100% cotton preshrunk T-shirt for any fan Available up to XXL!…

Metallica - Master Of Puppets T-Shirt


Metallica – Master Of Puppets T-Shirt



Kickin’ T shirt – old time Metallica! From the 1986 album – the song list is on the back. Black shirt (of course!) in 100% cotton and hard to find!…


Guns n Roses - Appetite for Destruction T-Shirt


Guns n Roses – Appetite for Destruction T-Shirt



The classic Guns n Roses Appetite for Destruction artwork is featured on the front of this black cotton t-shirt….

Mets Golf Shirt

June 15th, 2009 admin Comments off

Golf Shirt

eBay Logo  

NEW YORK METS WOMENS BASEBALL GOLF/POLO SHIRT-LARGE-NWT


NEW YORK METS WOMENS BASEBALL GOLF/POLO SHIRT-LARGE-NWT


$24.99


NEW YORK METS NIKE 2010 AUTHENTIC POLO GOLF SHIRT XL


NEW YORK
Mets Nike 2010 AUTHENTIC POLO GOLF SHIRT XL


$34.99


NEW YORK METS NIKE 2010 AUTHENTIC POLO GOLF SHIRT MD


NEW YORK METS NIKE 2010 AUTHENTIC POLO GOLF SHIRT MD


$34.99


NEW YORK METS NIKE 2010 AUTHENTIC POLO GOLF SHIRT LG


NEW YORK METS NIKE 2010 AUTHENTIC POLO GOLF SHIRT LG


$34.99


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz Medium


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz Medium


$24.99


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz Large


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz Large


$24.99


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz XL


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz XL


$24.99


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz XXL 2XL


New York Mets Reebok Cotton Golf Polo Shirt sz XXL 2XL


$24.99


New York Mets MLB Mens Reebok Golf Shirt Size XL NWT


New York
Mets Mlb Mens Reebok Golf Shirt Size XL NWT


$13.99


NEW New York Mets Infant Golf Shirt Creeper by Soft ...


NEW New York Mets Infant Golf Shirt Creeper by Soft …


$19.64

Golf Waterproofs

There can, surely, be nothing worse than being windswept and soaking wet whilst on the golf course unless it is being windswept and soaking wet and not being on the golf course. That’s why golf waterproofs are an essential piece of kit for the frequent golfer.

A golfer lucky enough to play his dream golf course, be that the Old Course at St Andrews; the Belfry in Warwickshire; Sunningdale in Surrey or, even, Woburn in Buckinghamshire on the Duke, Duchess or Marquis Championship courses, would, surely, suffer huge disappointment if, at the first tee on any of these golf courses, he was met with a steady downpour and that golfer didn’t have golf waterproofs available. The dream would, perhaps, be marred with the thought of: if only.

The top manufacturers of golf waterproofs offer an extensive range of waterproof protective golf clothing to ensure that , neither, your dream course opportunity nor your regular golf game will be adversely affected by our, sometimes, inclement weather.
As with all forms of golf clothing, waterproofs have been designed to allow freedom of movement to golfers, so that no swings, shots, or putts are impeded by what a golfer wears.

FootJoy’s DryJoys Sport Rain Shirts offer an ultra lightweight solution to the problem of rain and look as classy and modern in the home or office as they do on the golf course. This rain shirt is not only waterproof, but, storm and windproof, too.
The Nike Storm-fit Light packable rain suit comes with its own carry case and is ideal for storing in golf bags for when it is time to cover up. This two piece suit is storm, wind and waterproof and is available in size small to size XX large.

Sunderland of Scotland has waterproof jackets and trousers, which can withstand the worst weather conditions, for men, ladies and junior golfers.

The Mizuno range of waterproofs are Tour quality designed products that will keep a golfer dry, protected from wind and happy with his game (well, that cannot be promised).

Golfbuyitonline stock and supply golf waterproofs that will keep golfers wind, rain and storm protected, in breathable materials that will never impede a golfer’s play and allows golfer to live the dream.

About the Author


GO YANKEES I MAY STILL SLOBBER SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW THE RED SOX SUCK FUNNY ITEM TO PROTECT A SHIRT BABY BIB


GO YANKEES I MAY STILL SLOBBER SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW THE RED SOX SUCK FUNNY ITEM TO PROTECT A SHIRT BABY BIB



IF YOU WANT TO REPLACE THE TEAM THAT SUCKS WITH A DIFFERENT TEAM THAT SUCKS LET US KNOW….


GO METS I MAY STILL SLOBBER SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW THE YANKEES SUCK FUNNY ITEM TO PROTECT A SHIRT BABY BIB


GO METS I MAY STILL SLOBBER SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW THE YANKEES SUCK FUNNY ITEM TO PROTECT A SHIRT BABY BIB



IF YOU WANT TO REPLACE THE TEAM THAT SUCKS WITH A TEAM THAT SUCKS MORE CALL OR EMAIL US!…


GO PHILLIES I MAY STILL SLOBBER SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW THE METS SUCK FUNNY ITEM TO PROTECT A SHIRT BABY BIB


GO PHILLIES I MAY STILL SLOBBER SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW THE METS SUCK FUNNY ITEM TO PROTECT A SHIRT BABY BIB



IF YOU WANT TO REPLACE THE TEAM THAT SUCKS WITH A TEAM THAT SUCKS MORE CALL OR EMAIL US!…


2001 Upper Deck Golf Cards Unopened Rack Pack Box - Tiger Woods Rookie Cards, Shirt Cards, and Insert Cards Possible !!


2001 Upper Deck Golf Cards Unopened Rack Pack Box – Tiger Woods Rookie Cards, Shirt Cards, and Insert Cards Possible !!


$26.00



New York Mets Windshirt by Antigua


New York Mets Windshirt by Antigua



Feel confident on the course with the travelers windshirt by Antigua. Made of 85 % polyester and 10% nylon; this great piece features a left chest embroidered lo go. Logo may vary….


New York Mets MLB Embroidered Tri-Fold Towel


New York Mets MLB Embroidered Tri-Fold Towel



This premium weight 16 x 26 embroidered tri-fold towel, made of sheared 100% cotton velour, features a swivel clip attachment and is embroidered with your favorite NFL team trademark. – THIS ITEM CANNOT SHIP TO A MILITARY ADDRESS…