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Rolling Off a Clif

In the Napa Valley, Clif Bar CEOs Gary Erickson and Kit Crawford have built a wine-tasting room that doubles a a refuge for cyclists. To really understand the concept, I figured I had to join Erickson for a ride. I should have known better.

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鈥淏igger gear here,鈥 Gary Erickson says to me over his shoulder just before banking left and disappearing behind a wall of oak and madrone trees. We鈥檙e about 45 minutes into our ride, the last five of which have been on an old fire road carved up by tree roots. Erickson鈥檚 guidance has been spot on since we saddled up in St. Helena, so I obediently downshift, follow him through the turn and鈥oof鈥攕tart slowly cranking up a steep grade.

Erickson at Velo Vino's one-year anniversary concert. Erickson at Velo Vino’s one-year anniversary concert.
Cyclists before a ride. Cyclists before a ride.
Tales from tours in the Alps. Tales from tours in the Alps.

It鈥檚 a perfect summer afternoon for mountain biking on Howell Mountain, on the east side of Napa Valley. The forest offers a shady respite for the swelter of the vineyards below. The kids from Pacific Union College who usually swarm the trails are on vacation. It鈥檚 a Thursday, so there are no weekenders. There鈥檚 just one problem: we鈥檙e on road bikes.

I鈥檇 been warned that rolling with Erickson could be like this. The 54-year-old founder and CEO of Bay Area-based energy foods maker Clif Bar has a well-known preference for 鈥渨hite roads,鈥 a term he started using in the mid-1980s during a long bike tour in the Alps. As Erickson and a close friend plotted their course on the fly, they learned that the red roads on their map were the most direct, but also more crowded and less inspiring. The white roads were far more interesting. They required greater commitment鈥攖hink shouldering bikes over snowy passes鈥攂ut gave him what he was after: adventure. So was born a mantra that鈥檚 guided many tours that followed as well as his vision for Clif: ride the white roads.

Last year, I鈥檇 sat down with Erickson and his wife and co-CEO, Kit Crawford, at Clif鈥檚 Bay Area headquarters to talk about where the white roads have taken their company over the last 20-plus years (it鈥檚 now worth a reported $235 million). Among the things I learned: they still love competing, real men do eat Luna Bars, and food is a great business to be in. We also talked about a new venture they set to launch in St. Helena, where they鈥檝e lived since 2003, a cycling-themed tasting room for their . They were envisioning the place, to be called Velo Vino, as a space where, as Erickson put it, 鈥渁ll these worlds collide鈥: Clif Bar, wine, cycling, food from their organic farm, 鈥渁nd everything in between.鈥

Fast forward to this summer. has emerged as a unique destination in the California wine country for cyclists, a welcoming hub to start and end rides. You can order an espresso, bring your own lunch, and swill cabernet. You can simply hang out on their shaded back patio鈥攊n spandex. All this, and wine aficionados seem to love it: Velo Vino is among the top rated tasting rooms in the Napa Valley on Yelp.com.

So when Clif Family Winery called recently to see if I鈥檇 be interested in a visit, I said absolutely. But I suggested we mix in a ride with Erickson. What better way to get the full Velo Vino experience? Erickson鈥檚 response: Good idea.

As much as I was thrilled at the prospect of a ride with Erickson鈥攈e鈥檚 been something of a hero of mine ever since I read his 2004 book, , which outlines a business philosophy of responsible and sustainable growth鈥擨 was also anxious. Yeah, he鈥檚 almost 20 years older than me, but the man rides his bike a lot, still taking long European tours. And I was given no clues about the kind of ride we鈥檇 take, other than that it would last a few hours. So I decided to bring along a ringer, my friend Mark, a former semi-pro cyclo-cross racer. If Erickson put down the hammer, I鈥檇 just draft behind Mark and try to keep up.

It was a great plan鈥攁t least while we were on pavement.

A BIKE GEEK ENTERING Velo Vino has this as a first reaction: My kind of place. This is because of Fred. Fred is a beat-up old steel road bike stationed near the front door. Hanging from Fred鈥檚 top tube is Fred鈥檚 story, as told by Fred. The short version: He was Erickson鈥檚 trusted bike in the Alps for about 10 years, until he got replaced because Erickson鈥檚 鈥渁ging body couldn鈥檛 push the gears I was born with over those difficult passes.鈥 But Fred is happy now because he鈥檚 surrounded by photos of the good old days.

The shots, which are mostly concentrated on one wall, are from a number of Erickson鈥檚 adventures in Europe. They鈥檙e the kind of images people usually keep in albums and pull out when friends come over and you get to telling travel stories. Looking at them made me suddenly realize that, some day, I absolutely must go on a grand biking tour of Europe.

Elsewhere inside Velo Vino there are more bikes, both vintage and modern, along with racks of Clif cycling apparel, displays of gourmet nut mixes from Erickson and Crawford鈥檚 high-end snack brand, Gary & Kit鈥檚 Napa Valley, a small bar, and many bottles of wine. There is lots of attractive wood: floors, walls, shelves, picture frames.

When Mark and I first showed up, Erickson and Crawford were out back on the patio, which, with its built-in stone seating areas, wicker couches, and coffee tables, felt like someone鈥檚 private outdoor living room. This is by design. 鈥淧eople come in and say, 鈥極h, I feel so comfortable here. It鈥檚 not pretentious. It feels like home,鈥欌 Crawford said when I asked her how Velo Vino compares to other tasting rooms. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 know about wine, it鈥檚 OK. Just come in and we鈥檒l talk to you about it.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e getting 35-member bike clubs staging rides out of here,鈥 Erickson added. 鈥淭hey go out and come back and they鈥檙e literally laying all over the place. To feel so welcomed as a cyclist, it鈥檚 awesome. This is our piazza, our refugio, you know? Just a place to take refuge and hang.鈥

To attract cyclists, Velo Vino will sometimes set-up a big screen on the patio and screen films like . In July, they hosted Tour de France nights, replaying the day鈥檚 stage. They also put on regular music concerts, with Erickson, who plays the trumpet, occasionally taking the stage.

The operation has clearly had a positive impact on Clif Family Winery鈥檚 business. Over the last year, they鈥檝e gone from 25 members in their wine club (called, naturally, Club Peloton) to 500. As Erickson sees it, opening a real tasting room helped the brand, which they鈥檇 launched in 2008, 鈥渆nter into the legit category in the wine world.鈥 It also gives them a chance to connect with potential customers. 鈥淵ou go into BevMo and there are thousands of brands. How do you compete?鈥 he said. 鈥淭his has given us a nice niche for direct communication with people.鈥

For Erickson, it鈥檚 also a chance to play the part of the charming European restaurant owner, many of whom populate his tales from the Alps, where a day of riding often ended with a huge meal and bottle of wine. As we chatted, he instinctively got up and refilled the wine glasses of a couple seated behind us. When another couple rode onto the patio on bikes loaded down with saddlebags, he quizzed them about their trip. They were from Montreal and had flown into San Francisco, mounted up at the airport, and ridden north, aiming for Velo Vino.

Erickson is a born schmoozer, but there鈥檚 also a business goal behind the small talk. He鈥檚 conducting subtle qualitative market research for both Clif Bar and Clif Family Winery. 鈥淲e go up to the table and start with, 鈥榃here are you from?鈥欌 he said. 鈥淭hat leads to their first Clif Bar. Then they say something like, 鈥楬ey, whatever happened to the chocolate espresso flavor? You gotta bring that back.鈥 Yes, you can do that through email, the Web, Twitter, whatever. But there鈥檚 nothing like being able to sit down with someone.鈥

With that in mind, this October, Erickson and Crawford are taking a five-week road trip in a bio-diesel RV through the West to introduce people to a new line of snack bars under the Clif Kit鈥檚 Organic label, which launched in May. It鈥檒l be just the two of them, plus their terrier, Sparky, and their mountain bikes, cruising between stores and handing out samples.

But first, there鈥檚 today鈥檚 ride. 鈥淪o, uh, where are we going?鈥 I asked.

鈥淯p past the Clif vineyard on Howell Mountain,鈥 Erickson answered. 鈥淲e鈥檒l do about 30 miles and 3,500 feet of climbing.鈥

He paused and smiled broadly, then said, 鈥淎nd we鈥檒l go on a little white road.鈥

ERICKSON HAS THE THICK legs of a lifelong cyclist and steady, smooth pedal cadence. More importantly for me, he rides like a gentleman.

As we worked our way up out of St. Helena he took great care to warn Mark and me about road hazards and traffic, and kept looking back to make sure we kept up. When we made a short pit stop at the Clif鈥檚 Cabernet vineyard鈥攆ive and half acres of grapes near the top of Howell Mountain鈥攈e fetched us cold water from a fridge. I barely had to draft behind Mark at all.

Not that drafting is worth much when you鈥檙e climbing a crumbling fire road, trying to keep your skinny tires from spinning out. As we near what I pray is the top, I look up from my handlebars to see that in another 100 feet, difficult becomes impossible. Not only does the trail become ridiculously steep, the dirt turns to smooth, exposed boulders, topped with fist-sized rocks. Erickson has to be kidding.

And he is. 鈥淔akeout!鈥 he says, turning sharply left onto a singletrack path obscured behind the trees. It swings us around the top of the mountain and a few minutes later, we鈥檙e back on pavement.

鈥淏it of a sporting descent,鈥 Erickson cautions before we rip down a winding road into Pope Valley. We climb another road up to the Clif Family Farm, near Erickson and Crawford鈥檚 home, stopping for a brief tour. He leads us to an area where an old farmhouse once stood. It burned down but the stone foundation makes for a killer outdoor party spot. In another couple weeks, his daughter, in her mid-20s will be getting married here.

He points uphill, where his property extends into the forest. 鈥淭here鈥檚 some rideable singletrack up there,鈥 he says. But we don鈥檛 have time to try it today, as Erickson has to get to a neighborhood meeting. So he gives us directions back to Velo Vino and pedals away.

When I get home in the evening, I enjoy a couple glasses of Clif鈥檚 cabernet. Then I head down to the garage to spend about 45 minutes cleaning the Napa dirt off my bike.

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