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Streb, 44, and her husband Mark Fitzgerald spent the past few years trying to develop sustainable multi-user trail parks in Costa Rica, building on her 16 years as a professional racer. They recently moved back to Sausalito, California where she has taken on a new role as Team Luna Chix spokesperson and Luna Sport Gear evangelist.\\n\\u201cI\\u2019ve always been interested in marketing in general, so this job is a good fit,\\u201d she explained when BikeRadar visited her new office in Sausalito. \\u201cI\\u2019ve been positioning myself for this role over the past few years. I raced as time allowed, being based in Costa Rica. I missed the cycling community. We have some great momentum with Luna as a company, and are looking forward to launching the Luna Sport Gear line at Interbike.\\u201d\\nAs one of the first pro racers with Luna in 2002, Streb is excited to see the company and team evolve, mature and expand. When she first began flying the Luna colours on race courses around the world, there were just five Luna ambassadors; that number has grown to more than 250 all over the US, including runners, triathletes and mountain bikers.\\nStreb also inherits a successful race team to promote: already in the first part of the 2009 season, the Luna pro team has two World Cup victories and has got on the podium at nearly every race. Katerina Nash won the recent Downieville Classic, and Georgia Gould is hitting her stride, winning the elite women\\u2019s short track race at the national championships.\\n\\u201cKaterina, Alison (Dunlap) and Georgia will be racing the cyclo-cross circuit as a team, and our multi-sport athletes are doing quite well,\\u201d Streb said. \\u201cWe\\u2019ve branched out into XTERRA (the off-road triathlon series), with some road racing. we plan to grow the results from there.\\u201d\\nLuna Gear: \\u2018Designed from the breasts down\\u2019\\nAnother aspect of Streb\\u2019s new role with the Luna brand is working with the media, pro team and ambassadors to tell the world about the new line of women\\u2019s performance clothing.\\n\\u201cThe theme is maintaining our authenticity, using recycled materials wherever possible while still presenting a unique fit aimed at active women,\\u201d Streb said. \\u201cEven our packaging is minimal, while keeping things consistent with our Luna goals inherited from our parent company, ClifBar.\\n\\u201cWe\\u2019re doing our best to make good, comfortable clothing for women like me who aren\\u2019t interested in printed white fabric with butterflies. We create tasteful designs with colour blocking integrated into the garments. Our prints are from 200-year-old Asian wood blocks, from a local artist.\\n\\u201cI like to refer to this process as \\u2018designed from the breast down\\u2019 versus the old saying \\u2018from the ground up\\u2019. We don\\u2019t subscribe to the \\u2018shrink it and pink it\\u2019 mentality so prevalent in the bike industry.\\u00a0\\nWe hired some fashionista designers and pattern makers \\u2013 all women \\u2013 to take this to the production level once we\\u2019ve received feedback from the Luna racers. We don\\u2019t want any of our garments to constrict at the arms, wrists or waist or thigh, so we distribute the pressure out by using wider elastic. Comfort is the key for active women.\\u201d\\nAccording to Streb, Luna has a big pool of women to test its clothing, including some of its ambassadors. \\u201cWe get awesome feedback from our annual Luna summit participants before Sea Otter,\\u201d she said. \\u201cOur initial focus with the clothing line will be for the cyclist, which has been our cornerstone. Once we\\u2019re rolling, we\\u2019ll branch out into the other garments needed for the other disciplines our Luna racers and ambassadors participate in.\\n\\u201cLuna has enjoyed a positive soft opening for the Luna gear, producing small production runs that have sold out through some regional dealers in the past season. They\\u2019ve also been getting some specific product input from the retail level, which is key for a new line.\\u201d\\n\\n Streb and her luna office mates are launching the 2010 luna gear line at interbike in september: streb and her luna office mates are launching the 2010 luna gear line at interbike in september Sam Boulanger\\nSome 2010 Luna Gear samples \\nCareer highlights\\nStreb was X-Games mountain bike champion in 1999, three-time national downhill champion, two-time singlespeed world champion (she has the winner\\u2019s tattoos to prove it) and a World Cup winner. \\nAll this from an athlete who spent 18 years as a classically-trained pianist, worked as an AIDS researcher at the renowned Scripps Research Institute, had a brief stint as a bike messenger (don\\u2019t ask, she\\u2019ll say) and tried her hand at BMX, cyclo-cross, road and motorcycle racing (her forte was the hare scramble, a discipline made famous by southern California motorcycle legend Malcolm Smith and actor Steve McQueen in the 1970 documentary On Any Sunday).\\nTo hear Streb tell it, life as the fourth of five and the only girl in the family growing up in Baltimore was her first proving ground. \\u201cGrowing up with four\\u00a0brothers who didn\\u2019t seem to want me around gave me my persistent way,\\u201d she said. \\u201cThere weren\\u2019t any other girls in the neighbourhood, so they were stuck with me. We go-carted, skateboarded, jumped from tree to tree, all kinds of crazy stuff; it\\u2019s ironic that I became the only extreme athlete in the family.\\u201d\\nThe 5ft 10in Streb knew that the great outdoors was calling her name, even as a well-paid AIDS researcher in San Diego in the early 1990s. She enjoyed the lab work her job required, but struggled with the animal testing that was part and parcel of searching for an AIDS cure.\\n\\u201cI didn\\u2019t care much for the animal testing; my bike riding was taking care of the angst I felt and had nightmares over from my work at Scripps,\\u201d she said. \\u201cInjecting monkeys with phosphate-buffered saline and watching them die was tough.\\n\\u201cI enjoyed the lab work, because my background was in micro biology and pathology at the University of Maryland. I have an undergrad degree in marine biology, but AIDS work was where the money was. The job also allowed me to come and go as I pleased, which I liked.\\u201d\\nStreb was commuting by bike to work at Scripps, and became fit in the process. Mountain biking was taking off, especially in southern California, and she had an understanding boss who let her take long rides during work. Along the way, someone recommended racing.\\n\\u201cI strapped my bike on the back of my motorcycle and headed to a cross-country race in Big Bear the following weekend, which I won,\\u201d Streb said. \\u201cIt was just the beginner\\u2019s category but I was hooked. I\\u2019ve always had an affinity for danger, so I was drawn to downhilling soon after. I viewed it as a legal way to get that adrenaline fix.\\n\\u201cThe next weekend I raced the downhill in my farmer red pajamas because it was so cold. I won that race as well. It was a blast; I literally climbed the mountain and felt like I was accomplishing something!\\u201d \\nWithin a year she turned pro and quit her job at Scripps.\\u201dI drove my polka-dot VW bus with the cow horns on the front to meet with Iron Horse; because I wasn\\u2019t a natural at racing, I felt I needed some kind of hook to sell myself,\\u201d she said.\\n \\u201cThe popular racer at the time was Missy Giove, and she had this \\u2018dead piranha thing\\u2019. Mine was being this over-educated girl from next door who plays guitar and lives in a VW bus\\u2026 actually, I don\\u2019t remember what my hook was! I made the guys at Iron Horse sign me by promising to beat Missy. The best relationships come from face time, I think.\\u201d\\n\\n Does this look like a 44-year-old mother of two little girls to you: does this look like a 44-year-old mother of two little girls to you Sam Boulanger\\nThe always-adventurous Streb outside her Sausalito office\\nOn to Marin\\nEven though her passion was racing downhill, Streb was signed to race cross-country for Iron Horse, back in the days when the National Off-Road Biking Association (NORBA) was in full throttle and American racers like Juli Furtado, John Tomac and Ned Overend were puling down big contracts and getting big results on the world stage. \\nHer next stop was racing for Marin, based in the fertile mountain biking grounds of northern California. She was also able to become a bonafide downhiller with the Novato company.\\nOakley sports marketer Steve Blick met Streb on the NORBA circuit, and on her advice got a job at Marin Bikes, where he went on to run the World Cup team. He has fond memories of their time together.\\n\\u201cOne of the things I cherish was our daily ride, starting in Fairfax and spending most of the daylight hours riding everything imaginable in Marin,\\u201d he said. \\u201cMost of the time we would get lost and laugh until we bonked, then laugh some more. Those were super-great rides; now that she has returned, I have a great reason to head back to Marin.\\u201d\\nStreb earned enough cash during her Marin days to buy a house in San Geronimo, northwest of Fairfax \\u2013 but only after she agreed to run into a tree repeatedly.\\n\\u201cI was asked to do a television commercial for the V02 Max bar, made by the Mars company,\\u201d she explained. \\u201cEverybody hated that commercial, but I was able to buy a house with the money made from that commercial! You can\\u2019t argue with that; I\\u2019m not too proud!\\u201d\\nRacing multiple disciplines for most of her career, Streb was obsessive with training. Having a science background prompted her to use a logbook, keeping a meticulous journal of everything: resting heart rate, hours trained, miles ridden, hours ridden. She timed and memorised all her downhill runs on Mount Tamalpais, which loomed large over her training grounds. \\nShe says she was doing this because of her lack of skill and co-ordination. She even