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Mets Team

July 30th, 2010 admin No comments

Mets Team

Park Dental, Mets Team Up

Dental offices are no longer the inhospitable, stark white, hard edged places of the past.  Gone are the cold, uninviting, potentially threatening, chairs that all but strapped you down, and spit sinks whooshing nearby.  No, dental office are now warm, welcoming, even entertaining places where patients can maintain oral health and improve smiles. 

Dental offices now include video screens and headphones so that the only sound patients hear is their favorite music.  Many dental offices offer a wide range of CD and DVD choices to suit any taste whether children and adults.  Patients can actually relax in ergonomic chairs designed for comfort and safety.  Gone are the spit sinks.  Sleep sedation dentistry is a solution for those who still dread dental procedures.  Don’t be surprised to find a beverage bar where early arrivals can enjoy a cup of coffee or tea or a glass of juice. 

Moreover, beyond cavity care, cleaning, and periodontal problems, services include porcelain veneers to create a bright, uniform smile, crowns for improved tooth strength and health, and implants.  Many offices have onsite oral surgeons, and  specialize in orthodontia, including Invisalign®; the new invisible was to align teeth. 

Additionally, dental offices are becoming more engaged with the surrounding community.  One example is a dental office in the New York and Queens area, Park Dental of Astoria, Family Dentist.  In August of 2009, this office is sponsoring fundraising event to support the battle against cancer.  The New York Mets are teaming up with the Philadelphia Phillies at Shea Stadium and will play for the Christine Caiafa-Guarino Memorial Scholarship Fund.  The following day, the Mets’ Xavier Nady will stop by t Park Dental Care to promote dental awareness between noon and 2 p.m.  Nady will be signing autographs and speaking with patients and guests.  Dr. Gene Caiafa, clinical director of Park Dental Care, will be offering free checkups for all adults and children as part of the dental awareness campaign. As well, patients will receive an in-depth oral cancer screening.   For those living in the area, check online for exact dates and times.  This is just one of many ways that dental offices are reaching out to neighborhoods and connecting with people to make mouth hygiene a comfortable and intricate part of their health care routine.

Dental care professionals understand the importance of both oral health and beautiful smiles.  Make an appointment today with your dentist.

About the Author

The Best Astoria Dentist is Just a click away. Dentist in Astoria is not so hard to find. Trust us! Astoria Family Dentist is just a click away. Find affordable Family Astoria Dentist right here!


Philadelphia Phillies Team Logo Lunch Bag


Philadelphia Phillies Team Logo Lunch Bag


$10.00


Take your favorite team to lunch with an officially licensed MLB soft lunch box. These lunch boxes feature a simulated baseball leather material around the perimeter and a pocket for a photo or trading card. Each lunch box features a logo on a baseball de…

New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print - 34x22


New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print – 34×22


$7.14


New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print – 34×22…

Anaheim Angels Team Logo Lunch Bag


Anaheim Angels Team Logo Lunch Bag


$10.00


Take your favorite team to lunch with an officially licensed MLB soft lunch box. These lunch boxes feature a simulated baseball leather material around the perimeter and a pocket for a photo or trading card. Each lunch box features a logo on a baseball design on one side with a baseball diamond and team logo on the other. Availability: Usually ships within 1-2 business days….

Ny Mets: Songs & Sounds That Shake Shea


Ny Mets: Songs & Sounds That Shake Shea


$9.98


Songs Include……………………………….
1. Opening Montage

2. Rock This Town – Stray Cats

3. National League Eastern Division Champions

4. Higher Ground – Red Hot Chili Peppers

5. Pennant

6. Lunatic Fringe – Red Rider

7. Records and Milestones

8. Centerfield – Alphabet City All-Stars

9. Mike Piazza… New York Met

10. Bad to the Bone – George Thorogood & the Destroyers…


Mets All-Amazin' Team 40th Anniversary Commemorative Video


Mets All-Amazin’ Team 40th Anniversary Commemorative Video


$49.99


On August 17, 2002, the Mets’ 40th Anniversary All-Amazin’ Team was introduced during a special pre-game ceremony. This ceremony is captured on this limited edition home video, along with career highlights and interviews from many of the baseball greats who were honored by the fans that day at Shea….

New York Mets LED Team Logo Light


New York Mets LED Team Logo Light



Show off your team spirit with this New York Mets LED team logo light. The efficient LED lights form the Mets name in team colors. It’s approved for interior and exterior use, allowing it to be used as a wall and window light in your home, as well as a yard light inviting guests to come in and watch the big game. Includes wall and ground mounting hardware, along with a 6-foot power cord with inlin…


New York Mets Pro-Grip Hammer


New York Mets Pro-Grip Hammer


$42.95


This Pro-Grip Hammer Is A Great Gift Idea For Your Favorite Sports Fan. The Head Is Made Of Stainless Steel, Painted In Team Colors With Hard Fired Enamel Including Team Logo On Both Sides. The Body Is Fiberglass And Color Matched To Represent The Teams Colors, Which Also Has The Team Name Printed On Both Sides. Molded Rubber Grip Is Simulated Football Leather Complete With The Laces Facing Front….

MLB Table Lamp - New York Mets


MLB Table Lamp – New York Mets



2305131 Features: -Officially licensed table lamp. -Features official New York Mets logo and colors. -Perfect table lamp for the sports fan that has limited space. -Made of translucent plastic which glows from the inside. -Three – way switch allows lamp to be illuminated with the top light only, base light only or both at the same time. -Fits easily on any nightstand. -UL listed includes 7.5 wat…


The New York Mets 1986 World Series Collector's Edition


The New York Mets 1986 World Series Collector’s Edition


$26.95


October of 1986–for New York Mets fans, it was an unprecedented, unparalleled rollercoaster of emotions stretching from the gripping National League Championship Series to the unfathomable World Series against the Boston Red Sox. A time when plays, players–Knight, Carter, Dykstra, and Mookie–and announcers? words were forever etched in time, ?…it?s a slow roller to first…?All the twists, tu…

MLB Vintage World Series Films - New York Mets 1969 & 1986


MLB Vintage World Series Films – New York Mets 1969 & 1986


$9.14


1969 NEW YORK METS vs. BALTIMORE ORIOLES1986 NEW YORK METS vs. BOSTON RED SOXAll the classic moments of the New York Mets? 1969 and 1986 World Series? Championships are digitally preserved on this one-of-a-kind DVD.The World Series champion Mets of 1969 and 1986 were embraced by fans for their pitching, personalities, and perseverance.In 1969, the world was mesmerized by man’s first steps on the m…

Mets Official

July 26th, 2010 admin No comments

Mets Official

New York Mets Tickets And A Day At Citi Field

Established in 1962, the New York Mets is one of the most recognized names in baseball. Members of the National League since their formation and the National League East since 1969, blue, orange, white and black colors of the team are almost as famous as the team itself. Affectionately known by nicknames such as The Amazin’ Mets, The Amazins and The Metropolitans, the Mets have won 2 World Series titles, 4 National League Pennants, 5 East Division titles and 2 Wild card berths. Since their start, retired numbers include 14, 37, 41 and 42. Meet the Mets, the team’s signature song, was written in 1961; a year before the team was officially established.

The brief but colorful history behind the color choices for the Mets’ uniforms comes from the Brooklyn Dodgers whose colors were blue and white and the New York Giants whose colors were orange and black. Blue and orange are the flag colors for New York City as well. In 1957 both the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers pulled up stakes out of New York and headed to the east coast in California. New York did not have a baseball franchise in the National League at the time and thus the New York Mets were formed to fill the gap.

Just a few years into the major leagues, the Mets won their first World Series in 1969. Although the Mets have been in more World Series than any other expansion team, they have only added one other World Series win to their credit, which was in 1986. Up until 1999, the Mets also held the record for baseball attendance. In 1970, they garnered approximately 2.7 million fans to one game. For 29 years, the Mets held the attendance record until the Yankees broke the record themselves in 1999.

Although the Mets hold one of the worse records in major league history with a 40-120 for their 1962 playing, they have to their credit Hall of Famers like Tom Seaver, whom they acquired in a lottery. Most associate Seaver for his instrumental role in helping the Mets to win the World Series in 1969 against the Baltimore Orioles. Although it has been an off/on relationship with winning, there is no question that the Mets are a top notch team who can take it to the top of their game.

All home games for the Mets are currently held at Citi Field. Located at the corner of 126th Street and Roosevelt in Flushing, New York, Citi Field was first opened in 2009 with a college game that was held on March 29 of that year. Owned and operated by Mets, the playing surface is grass and the construction cost was $900 million to complete this ballpark that has a capacity for 42,000 fans. The design of Citi Field reflects New York itself at every turn with its Shea Bridge and Jackie Robinson Rotunda.

A wealth of eateries, excellent sites, FanFest area, museum, batting cage, dunk tank and New York Mets Hall of Fame plaques are all a part of the enjoyable experience one can have during at day at Citi Field to take in a Mets game.

About the Author

New York Mets tickets
offer access to enjoying a Mets game up close and personal. Ticket America can help take you there.
Citi Field
is an excitingly new venue with food options and plenty of amenities to enjoy.


NEW YORK METS OFFICIAL LOGO INSULATED LUNCH BAG LUNCHBOX


NEW YORK METS OFFICIAL LOGO INSULATED LUNCH BAG LUNCHBOX


$6.99


Soft-sided, insulated lunch bag shaped cooler. Keeps contents cool or hot for hours. Lunch Bag” sized. Holds a light lunch. Perfect for kids and light eaters. Measures when expanded 9″ tall x 7″ wide x 5″ deep. Convenient top-handle for carrying. Easy-to-clean vinyl construction. Cleans up quickly and easily. Velcro closure keeps contents inside. Collapses easily for storage when empty. Official t…

New York Mets 2 oz Square Shot Glass


New York Mets 2 oz Square Shot Glass


$7.49


You and your friends can enjoy a drink during the big game with these 2 ounce square shot glasses. They feature a photo quality domed team logo. These shot glasses make a great gift for collectible or using to mix a drink or take a shot of your favorite beverage. Most customers appear to purchase them for collectible for their sports rooms, officies, etc…Although they are made to actually drink …

New York Mets Mlb Baseball Collectible Gift Coffee Mug


New York Mets Mlb Baseball Collectible Gift Coffee Mug


$6.85


Relive the glory of a sunny Saturday afternoon at the ballpark! Old-time styling gives this officially-licensed 11 oz. mug the vintage appearance of a timeless treasure; proudly boasts the bold blue-and-orange and distinguished emblem of the fabled New York Mets. Ceramic. Microwave and dishwasher safe. 4 3/4″ x 3 1/4″ x 3 5/8″ high. – California Proposition 65 Notice: WARNING: This product contain…

2000 Official World Series Video - New York Yankees vs. New York Mets [VHS]


2000 Official World Series Video – New York Yankees vs. New York Mets [VHS]


$1.89


Following three world championships in four years, the New York Yankees’ dynasty was starting to show a little wear in 2000. Still, the Bronx Bombers managed to stumble into the playoffs and get past the Oakland A’s and Seattle Mariners. Meanwhile, the Mets disposed of the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals, leading to the show everyone in New York wanted to see: Yankees vs. Mets in…

Special 30th Anniversary Edition of Look Who's Number One: The 1969 Mets Official Highlight Film


Special 30th Anniversary Edition of Look Who’s Number One: The 1969 Mets Official Highlight Film


$4.99


A great chronicle of the miracle campaign of 1969. Seaver, Agee, Bud Harrelson, Ed Kranepool. They are all here!…

Amazin' Again:the Official 1999 New York Mets Highlight Video


Amazin’ Again:the Official 1999 New York Mets Highlight Video



From spring training to the post season. Player interviews, it’s all here. Franco’s 400th save, Todd Pratt’s game winner in the Division Series. It’s all here….


MOUSESMART Official New York Mets Optical Mouse


MOUSESMART Official New York Mets Optical Mouse



USB / For Windows PC / Shaped like Baseball Cap with NY Mets’ Emblem…


Official Major League Baseball Checkers Game - New York Yankees Vs. New York Mets (In Yankees Box)


Official Major League Baseball Checkers Game – New York Yankees Vs. New York Mets (In Yankees Box)


$25.99


MLB New York Yankees vs. New York Mets checkers! Relive the Subway series and battle it out on the checkerboard with mini team helmets as the checkers. Comes in a YANKEES themed box….

New York Mets Licensed Official Size Pitching Rubber from Schutt


New York Mets Licensed Official Size Pitching Rubber from Schutt


$66.10


WhoÕs been starring in every Major League Baseball stadium since 1939? Schutt® bases, thatÕs who. Their pitching rubber is the official size of the actual game-play pitching rubbers used in the MLB™. 24″ x 6″ official size pitching rubberAuthentic New York Mets logo on top…

New York Mets MLB Rocking Chair


New York Mets MLB Rocking Chair


$109.99


Little sports fans love this sturdy hand-carved and hand-painted Rocking Chair. Handsome and comfortable Wooden Rocking Chair holds up to 100 lbs. Seat to floor 13.5″. Select a Major League Baseball(TM) team and we’ll customize with official logo, colors and markings of your favorite team. Availability of teams may change due to manufacturer. Assembles in minutes. Size 23″l x 16″w x 29″h, Weight 1…

mets Batting Helmet

October 17th, 2009 admin Comments off

Batting Helmet

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 Batting Helmet Earbuds


New York Mets Batting Helmet Earbuds


$3.82


HPBBNYMEH Features: -NES Group Earphone collection. -Official New York Mets team colors and logo. -With team logo 3D sculpt batting helmet design. -Team insignia on the head jack….

Major League Baseball New York Mets Batting Helmet Earbuds


Major League Baseball New York Mets Batting Helmet Earbuds


$3.65


Batting Helmet Earbuds In-Ear earbuds with team logo 3D sculpt batting helmet design, official MLB logo wire slider, and team insignia on the head jack…

NEW YORK METS MINI BATTING HELMET ICE CREAM SNACK BOWLS 4 PK


NEW YORK METS MINI BATTING HELMET ICE CREAM SNACK BOWLS 4 PK


$6.94


Awesome mini batting helmets are specially designed to hold snacks. This set includes FOUR batting helmets. Perfect size for peanuts, pretzels, snack mix, candy, or ice cream. Each hat holds 8 oz. Perfect for snacking. Great party favors. Each hat measure 2? tall, 5? long, and 3? wide. Leveled top resists spills when turned upside down for use. Plastic construction is top rack dishwasher safe. Off…

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 Era

October 10th, 2009 admin Comments off

Mets Era

First Impressions Count More in the Era of Credit Crunch

Do you think about how you dress at work and carefully select your outfit depending on your working environment? Or do you think it doesn’t matter and simply put on any outfit which is to hand?

Perhaps, you should know that your attitude to work can be gleaned from how you dress? So, if you look sloppy and unkempt others will assume that this is also your attitude to your work. Why is this? In today’s tough times when jobs are scarce and we need to do all we can to hang on to our employment, read on to find out how can you adapt it to your advantage?

You have 30 seconds 1st impression which can last up to 15 years. 

Think about the last time you met someone new, albeit in a social or business environment. Do you recall how they spoke to you, the tone of their voice? Do you remember exactly what they said? Or do you remember what they wore?

Recall a time when you’ve been watching a politician, presenter on the television and you’ve commented on the colour of the tie or the wrinkled shirt or some other slip up on their appearance.   Or imagine if you were seeking the advice of a lawyer and were met by someone in jeans and a casual shirt. Or if you arrived at the car mechanic’s and he was dressed in a suit.  Would you take either of them seriously?

Whether we like it or not, we are all judged on our appearance. Research by Professor Albert Mehrabian (his book Silent Messages) shows that 55 per cent of our first impression comes from our behaviour and appearance. 38 per cent of the sound of our voice are remembered from the first 30 seconds while only 7 per cent of what we say will make any impact. So, be aware that 93% of how you come across has nothing to do with what you are saying.

What about the time you walked into a local store requiring advice, only to be confronted by a sales assistant whose hair was a mess, who looked scruffy and unkempt. Did you approach them for advice or did you seek out another member of staff?  The first staff member you encountered may have been the most knowledgeable but his appearance portrayed an attitude of ‘I don’t care’ and so you are very likely to have wanted to look for someone who appeared tidy and therefore portraying a more professional image.

How can you use this knowledge to your advantage?

It is known that after communication skills, the next most important element that CEOs and HR executives consider when making a new appointment, is a candidate’s personal image. This includes grooming, dress and manners.

By dressing well and looking appropriate for your workplace, you will alert those around you as someone who means business and is serious about their job.

For example, if are attending a client meeting dressed appropriately, the client sees immediately that you respect them. But secondly, you are also giving yourself confidence. If you were to imagine attending the same meeting dressed in your swim wear, you won’t feel so confident.

Here are some key tips on making your image work for you in your workplace ensuring you make the right first impression;

Make sure you fit in. Research the company you are visiting or look to your bosses for dress code clues. This will ensure you are dressing appropriately.

As we’ve discussed above, your image says most about you as a person and your attitude to work. So, take pride in your appearance – make sure clothes are well maintained and your grooming is impeccable.

Dress for the job you want and not for the job you have. This will show your bosses or interviewer that you are serious about your work.

Add variety to your working wardrobe. Don’t always wear the same shirt and tie combination or the same blouse. It will be noticed and be viewed as non flexible and lazy.

Ensure your accessories are of the best quality you can afford. Eg: briefcase, business card holder, cufflinks. These are the finer details and are noticed.

Ladies, do wear make-up. It shows you can manage your time well and also enhances your eyes and mouth – your key communication portals.

Men, don’t forget a belt on your trousers. A belt is as important a part of your outfit as a tie.

Smile!! With your polished look, the best additional accessory is to smile as this shows you are confident and approachable.

The upshot is that you should always think carefully about what you wear. If you are dressed appropriately you will feel comfortable, have positive body language and be noticed by the powers that be.

If you are unsure of how to dress appropriately for your workplace, visit your local Style Consultant who will help you become the best dressed person you can.

About the Author

Sarah Gray is a Senior Style & Image Consultant with Colour Me Beautiful Style Consultants. Located in Warwickshire, Sarah offers advice on all aspects of personal image such as colour analysis and style consultations. She also offers wardrobe weeding, personal shopping and corporate presentations.


An Amazin' Era: The New York Mets 25th Anniversary (1962-1986) [VHS]


An Amazin’ Era: The New York Mets 25th Anniversary (1962-1986) [VHS]


$19.99



Mlb: Mets - Amazin Era [VHS]


Mlb: Mets – Amazin Era [VHS]


$14.95



Metrologic-Cable (RS-232) for MS700i Scanner to Sharp ERA 510-610-MET-51601


Metrologic-Cable (RS-232) for MS700i Scanner to Sharp ERA 510-610-MET-51601



ITHACA, RJ11 POWER SUPPLY FOR SERIES 50 & 50+ PRINTER…


New York Mets Authentic On Field Road 59FIFTY Cap


New York Mets Authentic On Field Road 59FIFTY Cap


$34.00


The official on-field cap of Major League Baseball, New Era’s 59FIFTY road cap is the same one that is worn by all the major leaguers on the team. This fitted cap with closed back features New Era’s CoolBase performance polyester, which has a wool feel to it but offers enhanced moisture wicking, drying and shrink resistance. It has a raised, embroidered team logo on the front of the cap, a durable…

New York Mets Authentic On Field Alternate 59FIFTY Cap


New York Mets Authentic On Field Alternate 59FIFTY Cap


$33.00


It’s no sweat to look like a pro in this comfortable new New York Mets Hat, built with revolutionary moisture management technology that helps keep your head cool and dry, even on long summer afternoons at the ballpark. This is the authentic hat MLB players will be wearing on field all season, and the MLB players themselves helped New Era develop and test it. Features raised embroidered team logo …

New York Mets Authentic On Field Game 59FIFTY Cap


New York Mets Authentic On Field Game 59FIFTY Cap


$34.00


The On-Field 59Fifty fitted hat from New Era combines revolutionary wicking, superior drying and shrink resistant properties for a one of a kind hat!…

Few and Chosen Mets: Defining Mets Greatness Across the Eras (Few & Chosen)


Few and Chosen Mets: Defining Mets Greatness Across the Eras (Few & Chosen)


$16.07


In the middle of the 1983 season, I got traded to the Mets. That was a tumultuous year for me, getting uprooted in the middle of the year from St. Louis, where I had spent almost 10 years and was comfortable, going from a first-place team to a last-place team, not being where I wanted to be. It was not a very good time for me. Rusty asked me where I was going to live that season, and said, “If you…

James Levine: New era at the Met


James Levine: New era at the Met




Little ''Tee'' and Era: We Met By The Apple Tree


Little ”Tee” and Era: We Met By The Apple Tree


$14.55


Categories: Mets Baseball Tags: , , , ,

Mets Mlb

September 14th, 2009 admin Comments off

Mets Mlb

Everything you Need to Know About New York Mets Tickets

The New York Mets are a Major League Baseball team located in Flushing in the New York City borough of Queens. The team is also called “the Metropolitans’. The Mets are considered, by some, the greatest team in the history of baseball. The most common nickname used by them is “the Amazin’ Mets” or just “the Amazin’s”. The New York Mets play in the Eastern Division of the National League. They are one among the two major league franchises in the City of New York. The other is the New York Yankees. The team has the credit of winning two World Series Championships in their 46-year history. They won the first one in the year 1969 and the second in the year 1986. The New York Mets tickets can be obtained from a ticket broker. Do not venture out to get the New York Mets tickets on you own. New York Mets tickets are very popular and thus only a good agent can procure New York Mets tickets for you.

Some Baseball Tricks

Baseball is one of the most popular games of America. It can drive the fans totally crazy. Fanatic fans even go to the extent of worshipping the game and the players. For them, the game of baseball is their life. There are certain tricks in the game of baseball that you can use to better the game. As you must already be aware, the basic motive of every batter is to become a base runner or help others to run with him. A good batter needs to read the mind of the pitcher. He needs to understand the strategy the pitcher intends to adopt and react accordingly. He needs to communicate with his team members for their suggestions.

Observing the arm movements of the pitcher can go a long way in understanding the strategy of the pitcher. By scrutinizing the movement of the arms, the batter should be able to gauge which way the ball will move. Once the batter gets to understand the strategy of the pitcher, he can decide on his own course of action. If the batter has less number of strikes as compared to the number of balls, then the batter can take the chance of an easy ball. However if the situation is reversed, then the batter might land into trouble.

Base running is a crucial and difficult part of the game of baseball. It requires a thorough understanding of the game. All batters need to check the risk involved before running helter-skelter. The safest strategy would be to hit the ball very hard and high up in the air so that the batter gets many opportunities to run.

Baseball is a high energy, action packed game. So the players must keep themselves well hydrated and energized. They need to keep their cool and avoid making hasty decisions. Whichever, the game may be, stress is a killer for all players. Therefore, the players need to avoid stress big time.

About the Author

For more resources on New York Mets Tickets click the link and enjoy team and venue history as well as New York Mets tickets tickets information.


Philadelphia Phillies Team Logo Lunch Bag


Philadelphia Phillies Team Logo Lunch Bag


$10.00


Take your favorite team to lunch with an officially licensed MLB soft lunch box. These lunch boxes feature a simulated baseball leather material around the perimeter and a pocket for a photo or trading card. Each lunch box features a logo on a baseball de…

New York Mets - Logo Soft Lunch Box MLB Pro Baseball


New York Mets – Logo Soft Lunch Box MLB Pro Baseball


$14.95



New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print - 34x22


New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print – 34×22


$7.14


New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print – 34×22…

New York Mets Let's Go Light


New York Mets Let’s Go Light


$34.99


MLB-NYM-894 Features: -”Let’s Go” light. -New York Mets collection. -Color: White, Blue, Orange. -Disc can be rotated so light can stand or lay. -Let your team spirit show with the flashing let’s go light. -This versatile light has rotating lenses. -Hang on a wall or be placed on a table or a shelf. -Indoor use only. -Officially licensed by MLB….

New York Mets Tiffany Table Lamp


New York Mets Tiffany Table Lamp


$119.95


Fans of the New York Mets will win style points with this Tiffany-style table lamp featuring the baseball team’s logo on its hand-cut, colored glass shade. Base has brass patina finish with decorative detailing. Takes one 60 watt bulb (not included). Lamp measures 11″ wide and 23″ high; shade is 3 1/4″ across the top, 11″ across the bottom, and 10″ high….

Blue Mountain 5815418 6-Inch-by-15-Feet NY Mets MLB Prepasted Wall Border


Blue Mountain 5815418 6-Inch-by-15-Feet NY Mets MLB Prepasted Wall Border


$13.26


New York Mets Wall Border. Licensed pre-pasted wallpaper border. This sale is only for the wall border described. Other items pictured are for illustration only.This sale is only for the wall border described . Other items pictured are for illustration only….

MLB Vintage World Series Films - New York Mets 1969 & 1986


MLB Vintage World Series Films – New York Mets 1969 & 1986


$9.14


These two vintage Major League Baseball films capture 40 minutes each of the New York Mets’ World Series victories. First, the 1969 Mets, only a few years after record-setting losses, pulled off the improbable victory against the Baltimore Orioles’ roster of sluggers and starting pitchers. The Mets won thanks to clutch hitting , spectacular catches by Tommie Agee and Ron Swoboda, and their own p…

Major League Baseball: The Team. The Time. The 2006 Mets


Major League Baseball: The Team. The Time. The 2006 Mets


$1.00


The 2006 Mets clearly had an unmistakable passion for the game that translated on the field as Mets Mania gripped New York. With all the on-field heroics, fans were reminded of the excitement surrounding the 1986 Mets – a team very much like the 2006 squad. Everyone could feel this is a special group – with fan favorites like Pedro, Beltran, Delgado, Wright, Reyes and many more – and a special yea…

Mlb: 1969 World Series - Ny Mets Vs Baltimore [VHS]


Mlb: 1969 World Series – Ny Mets Vs Baltimore [VHS]


$24.95



PHI-TEN MLB Authentic Bracelet, New York Mets


PHI-TEN MLB Authentic Bracelet, New York Mets



**** This product can be shipped to US and Puerto Rico addresses ONLY.**** Look professional to play and feel professional with the Phiten Titanium Bracelet X30. This 100% silicone bracelet is worn on the field by some of the game’s greatest players and is part of the MLB Authentic Collection. This bracelet features Phiten’s Phild processed Aqua-Titanium, which has the ability to regulate the body…