Tuesday, February 28, 2017

3 Tips for Buying Bathroom Faucets

Content originally published and Shared from http://perfectbath.com

Having a hard time looking for faucets that best match your bathroom style? Luckily, we have some tips for buying bathroom faucets, such as: knowing the different styles, choosing the quality and matching with the number of mounting holes.

Below are 3 tips for buying bathroom faucets:

Knowing the Different Styles
Widespread: Most commonly found on pedestal sinks, widespread faucets are made for sinks with three pre-drilled holes that are 8″ apart. When purchasing a widespread faucet you’ll receive three individual components: two handles and one spout.
Vessel/Single-hole: On single hole faucets, the handle is attached to the spout and is for use on a sink with 1 pre-drilled hole. If you are in the market for a vessel style faucet but have a sink with 3 pre-drilled holes, it’s sometimes an option to purchase an additional deck plate to cover the existing holes on the sink. Contact the faucets manufacturer to see if that is an option before buying.
Wall-mounted: Ready for it? Wall-mounted faucets are mounted to …the wall! Normally, your water supply lines come up from the sink, but in this case they’ll need to be installed into the wall. One thing to be aware of when purchasing these types of faucets is that the spout is actually long enough to reach from the wall over the sink basin.
4″ Centerset: These faucets are found on sinks with 3 holes set at 4″ apart. The components sit on a deck plate that connect the handles with the spout body, and can also be found with single handle components.
4″ Minispread: Similar to centerset, these faucets fit 4″ configurations on sinks with 3 pre-drilled holes. But instead of purchasing a faucet with a 4″ deck plate, a minispread faucet looks more like a widespread faucet with three individual components: two handles and one spout. Source: ApartmentTherapy

Choosing the Quality
You’ll have to pay for it up front, but buying quality now means you won’t be paying during the life (or lack thereof) of your faucet. Look for an all-brass body, as opposed to brass- or chrome-plated. And keep in mind that the tub faucet has a larger flow rate than other household faucets, which means you can’t use a kitchen faucet or your tub. Bathtub faucets should have a 3/4-inch supply line, as opposed to 1/2-inch for the rest of the house. Some tubs hold up to 60 gallons of water, so you’ll want a faucet that can get the job done in a timely manner. Source: HGTV

Matching with the Number of Mounting Holes
Most sinks come with mounting holes pre-drilled for faucets and accessories such as side sprays or soap dispensers. If you’re keeping your original sink, you’ll need to match what you have or get a base plate to cover any extra holes. The base plate sold with your new faucet can be used to cover holes in your countertop, but don’t buy a faucet that requires more sink holes than your sink has; it’s not a good idea to try to drill additional holes in an existing sink or countertop. Get additional information on how to best match sinks and faucets.  Source: ConsumerReports

 

Contact:
Perfect Bath
Phone: Toll Free 1-866-843-1641
Calgary, Alberta
Email: info@perfectbath.com

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Job: Full Time Mountain Bike Sales – Fat Tire Farm

Job Title *
Full Time Mountain Bike Sales

Company/Organization *
Fat Tire Farm

Job Description *
The Fat Tire Farm is the Northwest’s premier mountain bike shop and was recently selected by Bicycling Magazine as one of the top 100 bike shops in the country. We’re a small shop with a highly-skilled, tight-knit staff, and are looking for a full-time salesperson who’ll be able to mix well with our crew. This is currently a seasonal position with the potential to be a full-time, year-round position. We’re a mountain bike shop, but we ride everything: downhill, street, road, DJ, trail, XC, BMX, ‘cross, and don’t judge riders of any discipline.

QUALIFICATIONS:
Previous bike shop mechanic experience (at least 2 years).
Extensive current knowledge of a wide variety of bike types, particularly full-suspension mountain bikes, accessories, tools, etc.
Oral and written communication skills.

RESPONSIBILITIES:
Produce consistently high quality work in a fast-paced environment.
Maintain high level of customer service.
Maintain a clean and organized workspace.

How to Apply *
Please email resumes to barry@fattirefarm.com

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Job: Full-Time Suspension Technician – Traction Works Suspension Shop

Job Title *
Full-Time Suspension Technician

Company/Organization *
Traction Works Suspension Shop

Job Description *
Traction Works is the Northwest’s premier mountain bike suspension service center. We’re a small shop with a highly-skilled staff, and are looking for a full-time mechanic who’ll be able to maintain a high level of work in a fast-paced environment. This is currently a seasonal position with the potential to be a full-time, year-round position.

QUALIFICATIONS:
Previous bike shop mechanic experience (at least 2 years).
Extensive current knowledge of a wide variety of suspension forks and shocks.
General mechanical aptitude (ability to understand how things work and apply concepts to practice).
Proficiency with at least basic service on Fox and RockShox forks.

COMPENSATION:
Generous pay, medical and dental, 401k match, paid vacation after 1 year of FT employment.

How to Apply *
Please email resumes to jeff@traction-works.com

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With $8 million up for grabs, Portland kicks off series of Safe Routes to School open houses tonight

Bike to School Day in NoPo-6
(Photo: J. Maus/BikePortland)

Have traffic safety concerns in your neighborhood that prevent you and your kids from biking to school? Listen up…

Thanks to the voter-approved, 10-cent increase in the local gas tax, the City of Portland Bureau of Transportation expects to raise about $64 million over the next four years. The money will be spent on a wide range of projects between now and 2020. About $8 million of that total amount is set aside specifically for making it safer and easier for people to walk, bike, and roll to school. This is important because safety concerns are a major barrier to people when deciding how they’ll get their kids to school. The most recent City survey of people who live 1-2 miles away from their school found that 51 percent of respondents were concerned about traffic safety — more than any other limiting factor in their travel choice.

Now PBOT wants to hear your feedback to make sure this $8 million helps ameliorate those concerns.

Chart taken from PBOT Safe Routes to School Fall 2016 survey report.

PBOT’s Safe Routes to Schools program reaches 100 schools citywide and there are currently 11 projects that will split the funding. PBOT has mapped the projects according to “high school attendance areas”. Right now each project is just a placeholder around these various high school feeder zones. From tonight (2/28) through the beginning of May PBOT is hosting open house events where members of the community can show up and tell them specifically how to spend the money.

Here’s more from PBOT about how the money will be spent:

Safe Routes to School divided Fixing Our Streets funds geographically across Portland’s 12 high school clusters, each including boundaries of 3 to 13 schools (elementary, K-8, and middle). The allocation process considered cluster-wide demographic information (including student body population) compared with the existing network of pedestrian and bicycle facilities. The final funding recommendations prioritize communities of concern across the clusters, namely schools with high rates of communities of color, free & reduced lunch, and English language learners.


Is there a street on the way to your child’s school that needs a safe crossing? Perhaps the bikeway leading to it isn’t as safe as it could be — or perhaps there’s no bikeway at all. PBOT needs to know your insights and concerns and school travel habits

Here’s a list of all the open houses:

The events are drop-in style from 6:00 to 8:00 pm. Learn more here.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

BikePortland is supported by the community (that means you!). Please become a subscriber or make a donation today.


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Help TriMet make transit better

Bus and bikes
As transit goes, so goes biking.
(Photo: J. Maus/BikePortland)

Like flowing water that takes the path of least resistance, so too will people when deciding how to get from point-A to point-B. Unfortunately in Portland today, driving a private car is still way too cheap and easy so it’s not surprising that the majority of people still prefer to drive.

To get the transportation results we need in order to save lives, save time, save money, and save our health; we must make options to driving more attractive. In Portland that means we must get more out of our significant investment in transit.

While they’re good at chasing mega-projects (including ones that have nothing to do with transit), TriMet is not doing enough to make bus service great. The result is fewer people taking transit — and more importantly, more people opting to drive.


A recent report by the Federal Highway Administration showed that more American are driving — but transit ridership is going down. In the Portland region there was a 1.3% decrease in the amount of people who use transit from 2015 to 2016. This trend should cause concern to everyone who cares about safety and livability. But as Streetsblog reported last week, two cities who bucked that trend — Seattle and Houston — have managed to increase transit ridership. Why? It could be because they both made significant investments to improve transit options – particularly bus service.

TriMet is working on bus improvements and they can’t come soon enough. We think it’s crucial for the success of cycling — and for Portland’s future in general — that transit gets better. You can help TriMet help themselves by taking their Rider’s Pulse Survey to share your input. (You might have to join their Rider’s Club before you can take the survey.)

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

BikePortland is supported by the community (that means you!). Please become a subscriber or make a donation today.


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Register Now For The 2017 Bike Tourism Summit

Travel Oregon will be hosting the 2017 Oregon Bike Tourism Summit on March 21, 2017 at the Oregon Zoo in Portland. As with the inaugural Oregon Bike Tourism Summit in 2016, this event will be held in conjunction with the 2017 Oregon Active Transportation Summit.

You can register for this event on the 2017 Oregon Active Transportation Summit website (http://https//www.thestreettrust.org/active-transportation-summit/).

The 2017 Oregon Bike Tourism Summit aims to continue to build upon the ongoing work of the Oregon Bicycle Tourism Partnership. This year’s conference will dive deep into the emerging discussions on the formation a statewide trails association in the morning before moving into a keynote on world-class cycle routes from Louise Böhler of the German National Cyclists’ Association focused on the AFDC “quality routes” certification program and an update on the Oregon Timber Trail. The afternoon will focus on small group work considering how to build out world-class routes. The program will end with a reception featuring bike tour operators, guides and outfitters.

Bicycle tourism stakeholders, including bicycle tour operators, event producers, land management organizations, transportation and land use planning organizations, destination marketing organizations, trail organizations, advocacy organizations, and marketing and media organizations, are all encouraged to attend.

Learn more and review the draft agenda on Travel Oregon’s website (http://ift.tt/2mByZ6x)

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Martin Greenough: City and state settle lawsuit while new path shapes up

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The new bike path being built where Martin Greenough was hit and killed while riding in December 2015 is being built as I type this. While the path nears completion, so too does the lawsuit filed by his family last April.

Greenough’s family named the City, State and the man who was driving drunk while intoxicated with marijuana prior to hitting him in their $3.6 million lawsuit. Last week The Oregonian reported that they’ve accepted a settlement with the City and State for $23,000. Here’s more from The O:

That’s far less than the $3.6 million that relatives of Martin Lee Greenough sought, but they’re pleased because they believe the lawsuit prompted the state to finally fast-track construction of a bike lane along the stretch after years of delay, their lawyer said.


I rolled over to the location yesterday to see how the new path was shaping up. A tractor was working on the site and seemed to be leveling out the first layer of gravel and dirt that will be the foundation for the coming pavement. Headed eastbound, the path will transition from the on-street bike lane just east of where eastbound NE 42nd Avenue traffic merges onto Lombard. The path then becomes separated from motorized traffic via a guard-rail and continues under the overpass. It then transitions back onto the bike lane about 100 feet east of the overpass.

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The new path begins just beyond these signs. (ODOT crews need a lesson in safe work zone management.)

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West of the 42nd Ave overpass.

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East of the 42nd Ave overpass.

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Keep in mind that there’s still a gap in the westbound direction. ODOT says there’s simply not enough room to add one and they’re not willing to narrow or change the existing two-lane roadway. We’ll see if there tune changes after another person is hit and injured or killed in that gap.

The Oregonian reports that the City of Portland is paying $3,000 of the settlement while the State is paying $20,000. The State owns and manages this section of Lombard, but the family felt the City of Portland also shared responsibility because their official bike map recommends this route. As we first reported, Greenough was new to town and was using the map to find his way home when the collision occurred.

If this obvious, well-documented, and dangerous bike lane gap was closed with a path like this prior to December 2015, Greenough would very likely still be alive today.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

BikePortland is supported by the community (that means you!). Please become a subscriber or make a donation today.


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Woven Accessories

Jungalow-HQ-65

We are big fans over tapestry-woven rugs over here — from the kilim pieces of Turkey and Morocco to the woven rugs of South and Central America, we can’t get enough of the bright colors, patterns and nubby textures. Today, I’ve done a roundup of some of my favorite pieces folks around the web are making from these woven masterpieces — I’ve recently ordered the booties from Teysha, and now I’m seriously eyed a weekender from Red Poppy Vintage. Someone stop me.

kilim-picks

Journal |  Booties | Kilim Loafers | Coasters | Bag | Weekender Bag



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Make-Ahead Alfredo Sauce

Make-Ahead Alfredo Sauce

Here’s a nifty meal helper for when you have a busy week coming up: make-ahead alfredo sauce!

The sauce can be made in about 10 minutes and then stashed in the fridge until you need it. Reheat and toss with pasta, veggies, or anything that could use a little saucy, cheesy assistance to make it delicious.

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Monday, February 27, 2017

The Ride: A return to Timber’s snowy, logjammed backroads

(Photos: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

The Timber Logjam ride is a symbol of modern adventure cycling culture. Without formal organization or promotion, word of the ride spread through social media. And by Saturday, as welcome sun beat down through frigid air on the Banks trailhead of the Banks-Vernonia State Trail, about 70 people were on their bikes and ready to ride.

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The bikes varied as much as the terrain they’d be coaxed through in the hours to come: There were mountain-bikes with front suspension, cyclocross bikes fresh off the racing circuit, “gravel bikes” (a term used by the bike industry in an effort to capitalize on interest in this type of riding), standard road bikes with fenders, and all sorts of genre-bending hybrids in between.

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This bike belonged to Angharad Porteous. Asked what inspired her to show up Saturday, she said, “I might as well do this ride, there’s so much gravel on the roads anyways.”

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My steed of choice was a Giant TCX-SX (built up by our friends at River City Bicycles). The last time I rode this was in the finale of the Cross Crusade race series where I had my best year ever (finishing 15th overall for the series in the Men’s 2/3 category). Whether I’m in the saddle for an intense 45 minutes of racing or six hours of rambling through forests, I’ve come to really appreciate this bike. Watch for a more thorough review in a separate post.

The route itself would be much more difficult (and daring) without the aid of helpful route-creation and navigational tools like Ride With GPS and various GPS devices. While the tools are modern, the challenge is as old as bicycles themselves: To explore the woods and have a fun adventure with some friends.

Saturday’s route — a loop of about 50 miles and 5,400 feet of climbing — would provide plenty of that.


We rolled out from Banks and headed north to Bacona Road. After a few miles of standard gravel and dirt fare we descended Genzer Road where a local couple had set out a rest stop. Coffee, tea, homemade walnut chocolate chip cookies, and lots of other treats were generously offered by Bacona residents Jay and Alison Graves. Those names might be familiar to Portland bike advocates who remember Jay as the former owner of The Bike Gallery, a former State Parks Commissioner, and a former board member of Cycle Oregon. And of course Alison has been featured here on BikePortland many times for her work as the former executive director of the Community Cycling Center and Cycle Oregon.

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Rolling out on the B-V.

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A view west from Bacona Road.

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What’s this? Oh, just a fully-stocked rest stop.jam over

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Thanks Jay and Alison!

After that roadside hospitality, the adventure really began. There was snow in the air and on the ground when our route took us into Stub Stewart State Park at the highest point of our ride (1,561 feet). After taking in the Unfit Settlement Viewpoint and its vistas of the coast range, we dropped into singletrack covered in a fun mix of mud, snow, and needles. The descent on Hares Canyon Trail was the perfect introduction to the conditions we’d face for the next four hours (or so). There were sections of mud and deep puddles with unknown contents, lots of logs to jam over, and several spots with so many downed trees we had to hike a path through the forest just to get around and stay on course.

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At the top of our loop we turned off of Highway 47 and onto another dirt section on Johnson Road. This was a beautiful section; but it comes with a rather large asterisk. About 1.4 miles west of the highway there’s a locked gate and on Saturday there was a man at the gate concerned about the presence of all the bicycle riders. This part of northwest Oregon is a patchwork of private land owned mostly by two major timber companies: Weyerhaeuser and Stimson. Stimson has a very sensible policyreaked that says non-motorized vehicles are free to use their lands (albeit with caution and respect of course). Weyerhaeuser on the other hand recently introduced a permit program that requires all users — motorized or not — to purchase a permit. For bicycle riders it’s $75.

The gate at Johnson Road that was on Saturday’s route had a Weyerhaeuser sign on it saying only those with a permit could pass. It also had a real person in a white truck standing next to it who said he owned some of the land. Accounts from riders differ (the ride was very split-up by this point), but the man seemed to simply want to learn more about what was going on and remind people that beyond the gate was private land. By the time I arrived he was talking with another person in a truck and he seemed to nod and wave me through — as if to say “It’s fine. I know you don’t plan to stop, so just go on through.” It was all pretty confusing and after the two-mile gated section (a short but key section that makes this entire loop possible) I noticed the gate on the other end said the land was indeed owned by Stimson.

In the end, I was glad to hear from other riders that several groups stopped and talked to the man in the white truck. In the future, I’d avoid this part of the route unless you have a Weyerhaeuser permit (and never ride it during the week and/or when there is active logging in process). Unfortunately the permits are currently sold out and won’t be available again for sale until May. (Learn more and sign up to get one here.)

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Don’t need GPS with tracks like this to follow.

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Timber Road.

After Johnson Road and a brief jaunt on the pavement of Timber Road, we headed back into the forest via Lousignont Road. We left Lousignont rather quickly to begin a series of climbs that would take us to Carlson Creek Road and eventually back to Timber and the reprieve of pavement. The section between Lousignont and Carlson Creek was full of suprises. Big piles of fresh gravel wreaked havoc on bikes and bodies. I noticed several people slip out and get flats. One rider rolled by with a bloodied hand. He was lucky to find a man in a truck chopping firewood who came to his aid with paper towels and duct tape.

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Lousingnont Road and Lousignont Creek.

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Carlson Creek Road.

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We rolled through the sleepy enclave on Timber toward our last big challenge of the day: the ascent of Wildcat Mountain. From Timber Road we were back on the dirt for a four mile, 900-foot climb punctuated by more bike-carrying and bush-whacking at the top. The descent from Wildcat Mountain to the finish in Banks was about 10 miles of pure rolling bliss. It started with panoramic views, sloppy mud and snowy singletrack and ended with dry skies and lakes on both sides of Cedar Canyon Road.

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I’ve been wanting to do this ride myself ever since we published Gabriel Amadeus’ images of last year. Thankfully the family and weather gods cooperated and I was lucky to be able to enjoy this most excellent adventure.

One last note about the route. It’s relatively easy to get to the start via transit. I really don’t like to drive to ride my bike, so I hopped on the Blue Line MAX from Goose Hollow and took it to the end-of-the-line in Hillsboro. From there it was a flat and easy 13 miles to the start. Taking the MAX back home was also a nice way to decompress (and warm up a bit!) after the ride. Here’s my full route on RideWithGPS if you’d like to check it out for yourself.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

BikePortland is supported by the community (that means you!). Please become a subscriber or make a donation today.


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