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Giro d’Italia

2010 Giro d’Italia Plan de Corones Time Trial

As a professional photographer and athlete, the thing I love to see above all else is effort; 100%, focused, passionate, effort. So for Janine and I to shoot the 2010 Giro d’Italia’s absurdly steep Plan de Corones uphill time trial in the Dolomites was pure joy. With sections as steep as 24%, gravel roads, and a pink jersey at stake, suffering is guaranteed. In fact, the road is so steep that the motorbikes following the riders will often stall and get stuck. Best of all, I could walk to the finish from my house.

For a complete Gallery of our images from the Stage, visit: 2010 Plan de Corones Time Trail

Thomas Voeckler, always at 100%, always fun to watch. Proud.

Alexandre Vinokourov; Love him or hate him, the guy goes for it.

Cadel Evans. Class Act.

David Arroyo proudly defended his pink jersey ...and bike

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Photos from the Bike

Alberto Contador in the Maglia Rosa during the Plan de Corones Time Trial in the 2008 Giro d'Italia

Cycling Photos from the iPhone

DolomiteSport posts have been thin lately. Ski season is over so my attention has turned from backcountry skiing each day to getting my cycling fitness to where it should be. A sore butt, poor form and rainy weather makes for rather dull stories. So I take time for myself, train, and see if anything comes to mind before the summer crazy season.

Today it did. With the Giro starting this afternoon I was particularly enthusiastic about the bike. During my ride I made an iPhone photo from high above the Val Aurina of the agricultural fields far below – then, as I pedaled uphill I quickly applied an effect to the photo that I thought would add to it. And so it came to me, all these little scenes I run across while on the bike, for 20+ years now, countless beautiful scenes, have always remained in my head, but now with the iPhone and onboard camera I can snap pics and share what I see. Hours each day, sitting there looking around, one is bound to witness some special things. Or, just capture special feelings that perhaps only another cyclist can appreciate. Not everyone gets the whole bike obsession thing so maybe this will help explain what it is we cyclists love; life slowed down to our own speed, the feeling of fitness, power when needed, and the aesthetic movement – all these things, beautiful.

Therefore, I thought to make a post with a collection of favorite photos from life on the bike. For me, this is pure joy, combining what I love. As a professional photographer, using a big, bulky pro camera is my life, (for photos like Contador, right). The iPhone is freedom, always on hand, and in some ways the most creative and challenging with all the many apps for effects.

A Gallery will go up on the DolomiteSport Facebook Page called “Life from the Bike” that I will add photos to while on the go – others can do the same, let’s have a look at some moments as seen from the bike.

And the Giro d’Italia……  Predictions anyone?

1. Cadel Evans  |  2. Vino  |   3. Sastre

Today's photo that inspired the post. The Val Aurina from Acereto, Italy

Jos Van Aert on the Sella Pass, Italian Dolomites

Spring on the Michaelskreuz, Udliginswil, Switzerland

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Giro d’Italia | Alpe di Siusi Finish

It is not often you get an offer for an all access media pass to the finish line at the Giro d’Italia. And even better, today was the Giro’s 100 year birthday. No work, just fun – stress free shooting and some plain old spectating, how great. Or, on assignment to cover the finish for DolomiteSport as it was a Dolomite stage? The Alpe di Siusi is an amazing location for a finish and one of the best roads I have ever seen for a climb, I will be headed right back to do it.

Buon Compleanno Giro d’Italia

Some fun pics:

100 meters of sausage laying in the sun. Yum.

100 meters of sausage laying in the sun. Yum.

The perfect setting for watching TV

The perfect setting for watching TV

Marco Pantani fans

Marco Pantani fans

My view down the media lane to the finish

My view down the media lane to the finish

Winner Denis Menchov after crossing the finish line

Winner Denis Menchov after crossing the finish line

Levi Leipheimer and Chris Horner

Levi Leipheimer and Chris Horner

Ivan Basso interviewed

Ivan Basso interviewed

2008 Tour de France winner Carlos Sastre

2008 Tour de France winner Carlos Sastre

Lance Armstrong

Lance Armstrong

Lance Armstrong

Lance Armstrong

The media crush on Lance Armstrong

The media crush on Lance Armstrong

Fabian Cancellara actually impressed I married a Swiss, seriously!

Fabian Cancellara actually impressed I married a Swiss, seriously!

Interesting juxtaposition; waiting or passing by?

Interesting juxtaposition; waiting or passing by?

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Giro d’Italia

One look through our body of photography reveals we do not shoot much cycling.
Why, when I am all consumed by this beautiful sport do I not shoot it?
“Don’t combine work with fun.”
“Keep your personal and biz life separate?”
Yes, I guess these are the reasons.
But here and there we shoot it, and I enjoy it.
I grew up in America yet with a strange love for European cycling. Somewhere along the lines I found the sport and have been passionate about it ever since. From racing fulltime, to strict training programs, to just going out each day and being on my bike, cycling is the one sport that has remained with me all through my life, 30 years on my bike, always looking forward to it. It is also one of the primary reasons for living in Italy, for here it is a culture. The quality of the riding and those you ride with is something extraordinary.

And so a special day came along on May 26. The Giro d’Italia visited our town. It was a day that when I first saw it on the schedule, I would allow nothing to get in the way of me watching this stage, the Giro d’Italia live. Even better, it was an uphill time trial on my very own training roads.
I left the house early on my bike, intending to ride up the course and check out the going’s on. I was not disappointed, like a river of people, uphill it flowed, all the Tifosi streaming up the course.
Names were being painted on the road, banners raised, good viewpoints staked out. As I pedaled up the 16% climb, I, along with all the other riders were cheered for. Everyone was getting in the mood to scream a bit louder.
Finally nearing the top, I realized I was surrounded by pro riders, they were on course checking it out. And there, right alongside me, Alberto Contador himself, looking focused and prepared to defend his maglia rosa.
I stuck around a bit, gawked, then descended straight to my house to get Janine and meet friends to head back up for the race.

At the house I decided, “Okay, one lens, I’ll shoot something”. Some part of me just wants to watch, to look into the eyes, to see the effort, not to be shooting. I have been shooting work each day, all week, now I just want to take it all in, be a tifosi and scream for each rider. But the camera, thankfully, goes along.

We take the gondola to the top of the ski mountain, get out and find ourselves in a sea of humanity, all there to see these riders time trial up a dirt and gravel road that rises as much as 24%. It is too much I think, ridiculous, just too steep. Torture. Even the motorcycles struggle to get up it.

As we begin walking down the course, the roaring begins, a rider is coming, and there, finally, not zipping by as is so typical when watching a pro race, but slowly, painfully even, rocking the bike from side to side, all the effort of 24% on his face. It is brutal, it is beautiful. Goosebumps cover me, I am in the tunnel of fans all screaming and pounding on the barriers.

Rider after rider passes, I shoot some photos, I talk to some fans. The older lady next to me knows each rider by sight, at 200 meters, she just knows. “Here comes Bosisio”, she gasps, and then, “Bettini!!!, Bettini is coming”, she sees the World Champion before I do, the intensity of the screaming doubles as Paolo rides by, he rises from his saddle and his back wheel spins a bit on the loose gravel, a small stone shoots out from his wheel and it goes between the woman and I.

Finally, the last rider appears, but before him, like a wave of energy, the sound comes. Screaming, sirens, stomping and pounding; the maglia rosa is coming on the back of Alberto Contador. Finally, I am witness to the sport I love so much. Contador passes inches from me, the old woman always keeping her hand on my shoulder in case I lean too far out while I make my photos.
I shoot, drop my camera, stare at this athlete and scream for the maglia rosa, for cycling (high drama for Italians!!) and for all the energy I am a part of. My own voice cannot be heard above the roar, I am just a part of it all.

Morris Possoni arriving at the steep

Giovanni Visconti, Italian National Champion rolls through

Alberto Contador in the maglia rosa

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