Bruised Elbow, Can’t Bike - What to Do?
#26
Commuter
Join Date: Jun 2022
Location: SE Wisconsin, USA
Posts: 679
Bikes: Main Bikes: 2023 Trek Domane AL3, 2022 Aventon Level.2 eBike, 1972 Schwinn Varsity, 2024 Priority Apollo 11
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Yes, walking and hiking. These are both good alternatives to cycling, except for transportation, where cycling is far superior. A nice compliment too, because it is load-bearing on more joints and helps keep your bone density where it should be.
I used to see a guy in the forest preserve every weekend morning. He would bring a backpack with fixins to make fresh coffee: a little burner, perculator, etc. He would get to his favorite place, a foot bridge with a wide wooden railing, get his stuff out, make coffee and just stand there enjoying the view while enjoying his coffee.
I do a variation on that sometimes now: I bought a small, collapsible twig stove, a camp pot, big woodsy chopping knife, lighter, etc and a tupperware with left-over, scratch-made chicken noodle soup. My daughter loves it, so I bring the setup to the park and start the fire in those public grills that no one uses.
It's a good time to take up whittling as a hobby too. There's a guy, Chris Lubkeman, who wrote a couple books on whittling with just a Swiss army knife and green wood. (get the wood from invasive trees like Buckthorn)
I used to see a guy in the forest preserve every weekend morning. He would bring a backpack with fixins to make fresh coffee: a little burner, perculator, etc. He would get to his favorite place, a foot bridge with a wide wooden railing, get his stuff out, make coffee and just stand there enjoying the view while enjoying his coffee.
I do a variation on that sometimes now: I bought a small, collapsible twig stove, a camp pot, big woodsy chopping knife, lighter, etc and a tupperware with left-over, scratch-made chicken noodle soup. My daughter loves it, so I bring the setup to the park and start the fire in those public grills that no one uses.
It's a good time to take up whittling as a hobby too. There's a guy, Chris Lubkeman, who wrote a couple books on whittling with just a Swiss army knife and green wood. (get the wood from invasive trees like Buckthorn)
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#27
Junior Member
Had the same thing after a crash last year. Kept riding with a elbow support for a while. Really hurt more when sleeping on it. Took 6 to 9 months to really feel better.
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