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Otis Rubottom

The First Place

Posted by Otis | April 9th, 2008 | Filed under Personal Reflection, Who We Are

Photo: tlianza

I’ve been thinking a lot recently about the idea of inspiration. Where it comes from, when it arrives, how it is born. Like many, my earliest and most powerful source of inspiration was the outdoors. Recently I’ve been reflecting on the literal source of these feelings: the first place I discovered them.

This weekend I visited my family in San Diego, where I grew up, and went for a run on the cliff trails at Torrey Pines State Reserve. It’s a place I have spent countless hours in since I was a child, exploring and discovering the quiet wonder of the earth. While I think of it as a profound spot, it was not until this trip that I realized how important it was in my development of a relationship to the outdoors. Read More »

The Art of Politics

Posted by Otis | February 21st, 2008 | Filed under Positive Change, Who We Are

Art of Politics 2008 logo


Art and politics have long history together. So it was with great pleasure that I read about a recent addition to the marriage of creative output and political activism. Art of Politics 2008 is, in their own words, “a political art poster design contest geared to engage youth in art and politics and to inspire and motivate people around the country to become more aware and involved in social, political and environmental issues this election year.” Sweet.

So far poster topic submissions have ranged from political apathy to police brutality. New posters will be posted to the site on a weekly basis through April 30th, 2008 at which time the contest will open on-line people’s-choice style voting. Check it out.

Bike Love

Posted by Otis | February 12th, 2008 | Filed under Design, Outdoor Sport

Well, it was a banner weekend for bike lovers in Portland. The NAHBS is now behind us, and in its wake lingers the aroma of pure two-wheeled lust, not to mention permanent grins and some new ideas for the next bike-you-never-knew-you-needed-that-now-you-have-to-have. Between the Teams of Portland exhibit and party, the show itself, and Rapha’s debaucherous, ridiculous, sublimely excellent night of Roller Racing, there was a little something for everyone.

Go to the next page to see photos!

Read More »

Got Bikes?

Posted by Otis | February 8th, 2008 | Filed under Outdoor Sport, Who We Are

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It’s the beginning of a banner weekend here in Stumptown. As many of you know, the North American Handbuilt Bicycle Show is in town, highlighting the incredible crafts-personship (there’s some damn fine women showing this weekend, too) of this hemisphere’s finest bike builders. With over 150 exhibitors, and crazy amounts of gorgeous bikes on display, it will be a visual feast. Don’t miss it.

Running concurrently are some notable bike culture events worth checking out. For sheer graphic and design enjoyment (al la the above photo of my people on the Super Relax program), be sure to check out the Teams of Portland exhibit, or at least the website for all our non-local Kitchen readers. Also, uber-stylish bike clothing purveyors Rapha are hosting some good times of their own. Peep the options, including a killer Sunday ride, here.

No doubt there’s more. Add ‘em to the comments if you like. Now go outside and enjoy!

Blue and White and Sweet All Over

Posted by Otis | January 28th, 2008 | Filed under Outdoor Sport, Who We Are

Hiking for the good stuff!


You know those days when all you want to do is be at home, drinking coffee with your love and watching the weather out the window? Well, if I was at home on Saturday I’m sure that’s how I would have felt. But I was in Utah, burnt after a week on the road to the Sundance Film Festival and the Outdoor Retailer show. I missed my wife, my French Press and any amount of humidity (good thing chapstick falls from the sky like manna at the OR show). I was not at home. Lucky for me, however, Utah in January just happens to have a seriously good cure for homesickness: Alta powder.

So, while the coffee and air quality may not be stellar, that’s irrelevant when you wake up early, beat the crowds (mostly) and score first tracks on Ballroom and the Devil’s Castle traverse and generally ski yourself silly in fresh snow under blue skies. I laughed out loud more than once on Saturday, skiing with an old friend and pushing myself as hard as I could, finding untracked stashes and just burning out the crud of travel and trade show lighting. Home now, I’m rejuvenated by a day in the mountains followed by day of cooking and couch time with my girl. Today, my thoughts turn to the coming storm, and what it has in store for Mt. Hood. Funny how the mountains can do that you.

A Treasury By Any Other Name

Posted by Otis | January 18th, 2008 | Filed under Who We Are

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I love the unexpected pleasures that await me as I scroll my daily sites for news, laughs, insight and inspiration. Many of you no doubt know of this site, but today’s post left me feeling like I needed to share. It’s one of my favorites to date, right up there with the one about Herman Melville on his birthday. Just in case you were ever curious about how such a compilation of words as the thesaurus ever came to be, here’s the scoop.

From The Writer’s Almanac:
It’s the birthday of the physician and lexicographer Peter Mark Roget, born in London, England (1779). He was a working doctor for most of his life, but he was also a Renaissance man, a member of various scientific, literary and philosophical societies. In his spare time, he invented a slide rule for performing difficult mathematical calculations, and a method of water filtration that is still in use today. He wrote papers on a variety of topics, including the kaleidoscope and Dante, and he was one of the contributors to the early Encylopaedia Britannica.

He was 61 years old and had just retired from his medical practice, when he decided to devote his retirement to publishing a system of classifying words into groups based on their meanings. Other scholars had published books of synonyms before, but Roget wanted to assemble something more comprehensive. He said, “[The book will be] a collection of the words it contains and of the idiomatic combinations peculiar to it, arranged, not in alphabetical order as they are in a Dictionary, but according to the ideas which they express.”

He organized all the words into six categories: Abstract Relations, Space, Matter, Intellect, Volition, Sentient and Moral Powers, and within each category there were many subcategories. The project took him more than 10 years, but he finally published his Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases in 1852. He chose the word “thesaurus” because it means “treasury” in Greek.

Roget’s Thesaurus might have been considered an intellectual curiosity, except that at the last minute Roget decided to include an index. That index, which helped readers find synonyms, made the book into one of the most popular reference books of all time. It is considered one of the great lexicographical achievements in the history of the English language, and it has been helping English students pad their vocabularies for more than 150 years.

Thoughts for ‘08

Posted by Otis | January 15th, 2008 | Filed under Environmental Change, Personal Reflection, Sustainability, Who We Are

Green 08 Drawing sm.jpg


OK, we’re a few days late to it, but here’s a selection of well-intended resolutions from the Nau gang. Hopefully they’ll inspire, or at least inspire a chuckle.

What’s on your plan for the New Year?

Eat Tastier Food, Dude
I’m of the school of thought that New Year’s resolutions shouldn’t be painful. As a matter of fact, they should be as decadent as possible, to counteract the post-holiday blues, crappy winter surf and the end of fantasy football season. This year my goal is to eat more delicious meals, meaning I’ll have to shop regularly at the farmer’s market and frequent local restaurants that abide by the slow food ethos like Portland’s Nostrana. Everybody knows that organically grown food tastes tons better and supporting our area’s mom ‘n pop farms and eateries is good for the environment and the health of our community. Next year’s resolution? Drink lovelier wines. “Rick

More Work, Less Office.
I have resolved to put in less time at the office, so as to cut down on the amount of fossil fuel I consume on my daily commute from the houseboat. I will endeavor to drop down to three days in the office, and two days telecommuting from home. If that doesn’t work, I’m just going to shack up with our office manager and walk into work from her house. “Hal

Car Smart
My resolution starts with a dilemma: I have a ten-year-old truck, and I want to keep it rolling. But, 2008 will likely be the year for a trade-in, so I’m looking to move to a biodiesel or a hybrid vehicle. “Ian

Home Is Where the Napkins Are

My resolution is to permanently turn my paper towel holder into an abode for the cloth napkins Santa brought me. “Josie

Deep Thoughts
My resolution for 2008: At the juncture where heart and mind collide, I will choose to follow the heart. “Mark

More or Less?
And mine? I resolve to make 2008 the year of more and less. I will write more of my own work. I will cook more of my own food (good start on that one so far). I will visit my family more. I will ski more (and hopefully better). I will ride my bike more…which means I will drive to work less. I will spend less money, and more carefully. I will spend less time on things that leave me unsatisfied. I will do more, with less, whenever possible. That’s a lot of line items, but after a year filled with richness and exhaustion of the best kind (marriage, buying our first home, meaningful work) I am seeking to reinvest in my own routines and rituals in a way that can hopefully transcend the calendar year.

And yours? What ever they are, the Nau collective wishes you success in realizing them.

Also, if you need some more inspiration for a greener 2008, check this post out.

Push It Real Good

Posted by Otis | January 4th, 2008 | Filed under Outdoor Sport

I’m all for bikes. Of all kinds. With all kinds of people on them. But the bike world is far from immune to the world of foolish trends and ill-conceived applications of otherwise good ideas. Take the fixed gear explosion. A great bike, grossly out of place for most of the riders currently on them. But hey, more bikes is more bikes. Never the less, I also love a good satire. In that spirit, here’s a 100% genuine documentary on the emerging sport of fix-push skateboarding. Haven’t heard of it? Don’t sweat it. It’s an underground thing.

For background reading on the target of this fine piece of cinema verite, visit the ever-enlightening Bike Snob NYC. He’ll break it down for you.

How Does Increased Vocabulary Help End Hunger?

Posted by Otis | December 21st, 2007 | Filed under Positive Change, Who We Are

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Quick, define “anemophilous.” Don’t know? That’s OK, neither did I. What if I told you that you could learn the answer while helping fight hunger? All you need to do is visit freerice.org. Created by John Breen, a father trying to come up with a better, more engaging (and interactive) way to help his kids learn vocabulary, Free Rice is addicting in its simplicity. All you do is choose from multiple-choice definitions of a featured word. But the part that moves it beyond enjoyable, to a compelling act of positive change, is that for every word you get correct, Free Rice donates 20 grains of rice to the United Nation’s hunger relief efforts. You see, Breen already had a passion: Working to end world poverty and hunger. His first website, poverty.com, is a tremendous resource for learning about global hunger, and taking action against it.

I love words, and not just in the “I really like to read” way. I’m the kind of person who could spend hours in the hammock with the Oxford American Dictionary and call it a good day (bourbon helps with this). So it was with great joy that I discovered Free Rice earlier this fall. Since it’s creation in October, Free Rice has donated 10,604,716,470 grains of rice, and I’m glad to know that I’ve helped. So far, I’ve hit the wall at level 46. Let me know if you crack that (without a dictionary). Oh, anemophilous, which was my most recent nemesis, means “wind-pollinated.”

Gone Crossin’

Posted by Otis | December 4th, 2007 | Filed under Outdoor Sport, Who We Are

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This past weekend Portland played host to the last stop in the USGP of cyclocross. In true Pacific NW fashion, the weather served up some epic conditions, from early morning snow on Saturday morning to frigid rain that afternoon to a torrential downpour with crazy wind on Sunday. All in all, a perfect weekend for cyclocross. Something about dealing with the worst weather brings out the best in people in the cross scene, as evidenced by the impressive racing and the unflagging commitment of the spectators. I was out cheering for the local crew, and snapping a few pics of notable wet-weather fashion moments. Here’s a few for your enjoyment… Read More »

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