2019! The “How was your commute?” thread!
#1451
aka Tom Reingold
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Yesterday, as I was about to set out for class, I saw my rear rim is broken. A spoke has been pulling too hard. The rim runs straight, but I will need to replace it. I rode it to class.
There was a threat of rain, but it didn't come.
When I lock up my bike, I take the lock out of my backpack, and I put my seat bag into my backpack. My seat bag contains my tools, and my taillight hangs off it. Yesterday, as I was doing everything, I put the seat bag on the rack of the bike parked next to mine. When I came back out of class, I saw I had left it there, and no one had stolen it, so that was lucky.
My commutes to and from class have been fairly pleasant. I'm refining my routes. I try to avoid the avenues, as traffic there is rough. I can do that by taking the river path, which adds a bit of distance but not much. I still have to cross town on the streets from the river to the east side, but that's not so bad.
There was a threat of rain, but it didn't come.
When I lock up my bike, I take the lock out of my backpack, and I put my seat bag into my backpack. My seat bag contains my tools, and my taillight hangs off it. Yesterday, as I was doing everything, I put the seat bag on the rack of the bike parked next to mine. When I came back out of class, I saw I had left it there, and no one had stolen it, so that was lucky.
My commutes to and from class have been fairly pleasant. I'm refining my routes. I try to avoid the avenues, as traffic there is rough. I can do that by taking the river path, which adds a bit of distance but not much. I still have to cross town on the streets from the river to the east side, but that's not so bad.
__________________
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#1452
Disco Infiltrator
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Yesterday afternoon at 2 my wife called me to go pick up kiddo at kindergarten because her hair appointment (which started at 10:30) was still going on with no sign of ending. What's a 5 hour hair session cost in bike parts?... Don't ask
I rode right to his school and we walked home from there. He asked me why I didn't bring his bike so we could ride together :-/
I rode right to his school and we walked home from there. He asked me why I didn't bring his bike so we could ride together :-/
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Genesis 49:16-17
Genesis 49:16-17
#1453
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In the meantime, I discovered a shower at work.
#1454
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Welp. Not sure if this cup is scratched because I’m not a real mechanic, but the cone is definitely toast
Last edited by Darth Lefty; 09-06-19 at 11:45 PM.
#1455
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Left work at 6:45PM, and it was gorgeous. I'd forgotten how big and green the trees are in the South, making it a little bit dark before it's actually dark.
I got a flat tire...a block from home! My lucky day!
I got a flat tire...a block from home! My lucky day!
#1456
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My wife took the five-year-old to SoCal to see her parents and a Kidz Bop concert. So I am single dadding it with the twins. I hatched a plan to dump them at my mother’s house and go do alone things. But as it turned out, I needed to go to work, on Saturday. So I parked the truck with its kids seats at grandma’s house, and rode the roadie bike to work from there. And on the way back, this happened. I just cannot catch a break this week. I went to a bike shop to get a replacement and they charged me $3.22. For one straight gauge spoke. At least they had it.
I am just now noticing in this photo that one of the other spokes has a stamp so it is not original. Hmmm...
Last edited by Darth Lefty; 09-07-19 at 08:12 PM.
#1457
Senior Member
Rode for the first time in about three weeks. Had a longer break due to either weather, sickness or events that I needed to drive to work. Anyway, this week should be a nice week to ride. I was surprised how much darker it was out this morning so glad I changed out my headlight. I also have noticed that since school has gone back I am running into more people out on the MUP's than I did all summer. A few dog walkers, some runners and walkers. I still don't understand why people go out at 6am in the dark wearing their best Ninja look with no light or reflective gear. Then they act surprised when people don't see them until the last minute.
#1458
Senior Member
I was off work last Friday as I joined a team of 11 other runners for the Blue Ridge Relay. Quite a logistical challenge too as about 175 teams of 12 or so people each drop off their runner and then leap frog to the next exchange zone. 208 miles total. It took our team 28 hours and we placed 33rd overall. We were a mixed masters team (all over 40yo and half women). Fun event. My quads are a bit sore from some long downhill sections.
Back on the bike this morning. Felt fine riding. September so far is not breaking the heat. High of 90 today.
Back on the bike this morning. Felt fine riding. September so far is not breaking the heat. High of 90 today.
#1459
Senior Member
Pretty close to a perfect weather morning - 61F, no wind, 4 stars. Would have been 5 stars but got a few sprinkles!
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I'm slow, go around
I'm slow, go around
#1460
Let's Ride!
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Location: Triad, NC USA
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I was off work last Friday as I joined a team of 11 other runners for the Blue Ridge Relay. Quite a logistical challenge too as about 175 teams of 12 or so people each drop off their runner and then leap frog to the next exchange zone. 208 miles total. It took our team 28 hours and we placed 33rd overall. We were a mixed masters team (all over 40yo and half women). Fun event. My quads are a bit sore from some long downhill sections.
Back on the bike this morning. Felt fine riding. September so far is not breaking the heat. High of 90 today.
Back on the bike this morning. Felt fine riding. September so far is not breaking the heat. High of 90 today.
#1461
vespertine member
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Nice 'n' sweaty commuting today, though I didn't feel like death, so I must be acclimating!
Fun sights on the ride home: a young guy with a brand new road bike, who appeared to be practicing using his brand new clipless pedals; a really crazy looking pickup truck done up with all kinds of gemstones and various junk glued all over the place. Said pickup truck was going very slowly and I got stuck behind it for a while, but with all that crazy, I didn't think that trying to get a draft would be a smart move.
It's fun to be a real commuter again.
Fun sights on the ride home: a young guy with a brand new road bike, who appeared to be practicing using his brand new clipless pedals; a really crazy looking pickup truck done up with all kinds of gemstones and various junk glued all over the place. Said pickup truck was going very slowly and I got stuck behind it for a while, but with all that crazy, I didn't think that trying to get a draft would be a smart move.
It's fun to be a real commuter again.
#1462
Senior Member
A pleasant commute in this am with dark skies and clouds.
My new helmet mirror arrived yesterday. It was nice to have a mirror that stayed in place. I did not have to keep re-adjusting the arm. That was awesome.
My new helmet mirror arrived yesterday. It was nice to have a mirror that stayed in place. I did not have to keep re-adjusting the arm. That was awesome.
#1463
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#1464
Senior Member
Was all set and ready to ride and then when I went to hop on the bike, rear tire was flat. Looks like I picked up a nail or something and didn't really have time to mess around with it so ended up having to drive in. I carry a patch but didn't have a tube so ordered a couple to have on hand. Guess I got lucky as I must have picked up the puncture on my ride home last night. It was pretty windy and the last mile did feel a little sluggish so guess I was bleeding out some air and just didn't notice due to the headwinds I was riding into.
#1465
Senior Member
I drove yesterday because I favored sleep over getting up early enough to ride in. Pure laziness!
Plenty warm these days. August weather has worn out it's welcome. Good ride in though.
Plenty warm these days. August weather has worn out it's welcome. Good ride in though.
#1466
The Fat Guy In The Back
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Sioux Falls, SD
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Consecutive work bicycle commute number 799: Tornado Edition
First off, everyone here in Sioux Falls is OK. Thankfully no casualties have been reported. Just a lot of property damage.
The storm hit right as I was going to bed last night. Our cable went out right away so we lost the weather reports and the internet. I decided I wasn't going to get any sleep until the storm blew over, so I sat in my living room watching the carnage lit up via lightning.
The wind was fierce. At one point I thought the tree in my front yard was going to blow over, but somehow it stood strong. A huge limb from someone's tree landed in my driveway, and no sooner did I think, "I'm going to have to deal with that in the morning before work," when suddenly it took off and disappeared. I guess someone else is having to deal with it instead.
The tornado sirens never sounded, so I didn't learn that at least two tornadoes touched down until I woke up this morning. The sirens were supposed to sound, but didn't. The mayor did the right thing and immediately took full responsibility for this rather than making excuses.
After the sun came up I could better assess the damage. All thirteen of my trees remained standing, and I really didn't lose as many branches as I thought I would have. My brother's huge tree next door didn't fare so well; it was snapped off at the trunk. Several houses less than a mile from mine have been completely destroyed.
Schools are running two hours late due to roads blocked with trees and power lines. The police issued a "no travel" advisory for the city. As usual I rode my bicycle to work, which gave me the opportunity to stop and take some pictures. A construction worker running a crane to remove downed trees from their area told me I was "hard core" for riding. I think I actually had an easier time than people in cars as I could easily walk/carry my bike around obstacles and flooded areas.
Our office was about 1/4 mile from the path of one of them, but thankfully only lost part of the HVAC system off the roof. Two large hospital buildings near us have significant damage.
First off, everyone here in Sioux Falls is OK. Thankfully no casualties have been reported. Just a lot of property damage.
The storm hit right as I was going to bed last night. Our cable went out right away so we lost the weather reports and the internet. I decided I wasn't going to get any sleep until the storm blew over, so I sat in my living room watching the carnage lit up via lightning.
The wind was fierce. At one point I thought the tree in my front yard was going to blow over, but somehow it stood strong. A huge limb from someone's tree landed in my driveway, and no sooner did I think, "I'm going to have to deal with that in the morning before work," when suddenly it took off and disappeared. I guess someone else is having to deal with it instead.
The tornado sirens never sounded, so I didn't learn that at least two tornadoes touched down until I woke up this morning. The sirens were supposed to sound, but didn't. The mayor did the right thing and immediately took full responsibility for this rather than making excuses.
After the sun came up I could better assess the damage. All thirteen of my trees remained standing, and I really didn't lose as many branches as I thought I would have. My brother's huge tree next door didn't fare so well; it was snapped off at the trunk. Several houses less than a mile from mine have been completely destroyed.
Schools are running two hours late due to roads blocked with trees and power lines. The police issued a "no travel" advisory for the city. As usual I rode my bicycle to work, which gave me the opportunity to stop and take some pictures. A construction worker running a crane to remove downed trees from their area told me I was "hard core" for riding. I think I actually had an easier time than people in cars as I could easily walk/carry my bike around obstacles and flooded areas.
Our office was about 1/4 mile from the path of one of them, but thankfully only lost part of the HVAC system off the roof. Two large hospital buildings near us have significant damage.
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#1467
aka Tom Reingold
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA
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On Sunday, I rode the NYC Century ride. I did "only" 87 miles. I'm slightly sore from it but in a good way. It doesn't affect my bike commuting.
Lately, I've been riding to classes with a backpack. It has my computer, books, lock, and other things. It's heavy. It doesn't bother me much, at least not yet. I think I might not need to carry the computer, at least not every day, and that will save a lot of weight. I've been wearing my mountain bike shoes which slow me down a bit when walking. I might switch to street shoes. There are no lockers at the college and no other place to drop stuff off, so I have to carry everything the whole time I'm at the college. NYC is very tight on space. The college has lockers only for people with medical needs.
Yesterday, for the first time, I rode a few extra miles while commuting. I don't know why I'm reluctant to do it, but it was the perfect day. It was warm, and I had time to kill. I had a music rehearsal at 7 pm, and my class let out at 5:25. I didn't go home. I rode on the Central Park loop road and then to a diner for dinner before rehearsal. I don't ride in Central Park much anymore. I grew up living near it, and it was my primary place to ride back in the day. I was reminded of how it has gentle hills, and I can coast down them. The river path, my current primary place to ride, doesn't have gentle hills. It is totally flat except for the new annoying detour which has short and steeper hills.
The ride home along the river late at night had a stiff headwind. I may have said this already, but I think after a few years of riding into headwinds along the river, I am finally used to it and don't find it terribly difficult. It took me a long time to learn to pace myself in a heavy wind.
Lately, I've been riding to classes with a backpack. It has my computer, books, lock, and other things. It's heavy. It doesn't bother me much, at least not yet. I think I might not need to carry the computer, at least not every day, and that will save a lot of weight. I've been wearing my mountain bike shoes which slow me down a bit when walking. I might switch to street shoes. There are no lockers at the college and no other place to drop stuff off, so I have to carry everything the whole time I'm at the college. NYC is very tight on space. The college has lockers only for people with medical needs.
Yesterday, for the first time, I rode a few extra miles while commuting. I don't know why I'm reluctant to do it, but it was the perfect day. It was warm, and I had time to kill. I had a music rehearsal at 7 pm, and my class let out at 5:25. I didn't go home. I rode on the Central Park loop road and then to a diner for dinner before rehearsal. I don't ride in Central Park much anymore. I grew up living near it, and it was my primary place to ride back in the day. I was reminded of how it has gentle hills, and I can coast down them. The river path, my current primary place to ride, doesn't have gentle hills. It is totally flat except for the new annoying detour which has short and steeper hills.
The ride home along the river late at night had a stiff headwind. I may have said this already, but I think after a few years of riding into headwinds along the river, I am finally used to it and don't find it terribly difficult. It took me a long time to learn to pace myself in a heavy wind.
__________________
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#1468
Senior Member
Strong south winds and storms expected tonight, might be interesting on the ride home. Seen the biker I usually only see close to home near my work this morning. I always wondered the route he took.. now he's wondering what route I take lol. It's alot shorter.
#1469
Senior Member
Crazy tree damage @Tundra_Man. Glad to hear you escaped safely.
Decent morning for a ride. It's quite warm for September, but at least the days are a bit shorter so it isn't hot until a bit later and doesn't last as long in the evening. We need rain too. Looks like a bit of a chance tomorrow.
Decent morning for a ride. It's quite warm for September, but at least the days are a bit shorter so it isn't hot until a bit later and doesn't last as long in the evening. We need rain too. Looks like a bit of a chance tomorrow.
#1470
The Fat Guy In The Back
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Consecutive bicycle work commute number 800. That's a nice round number.
Crazy ride today. We had more storms last night, which thankfully didn't include more tornados. It did, however, include about 4 inches more rain.
I ran into some flooding blocking the road under a railroad trestle, so I back tracked and carried my bike up over the ridge where the tracks were. Once I made it back down the other side, I looked 100 yards down the road and saw my friend @labrat doing the exact same thing. I started riding towards him and he hollered to get my attention, not immediately recognizing me. He was going to tell me that the MUP was blocked in the direction I was heading due to some downed trees.
Once I got closer he saw who I was and we chatted for a bit about the best alternate route to get to work. We decided to ride the opposite direction up the MUP and take the old railroad bridge across the river, then head up 24th street which is a nice quiet residential route. Before we got to the old railroad bridge, though, we ran into more flooding. So we had to re-evaluate again.
I proposed one route which was a little quieter, but would have added quite a bit of length to our already lengthened commute. Scott decided he was going to head up 26th street, which is one of the busiest arteries on this end of the city. I decided to go with him. Thankfully we only had to go about 1/4 mile on this busy street until we got over the interstate, and then could turn and take side streets. However, because of road construction the busy street was down to one lane in either direction with no shoulder, so we had to ride as fast as we could up the big hill over the overpass. I got pretty winded.
Once we were off the main road things calmed down a bit and we chatted as we rode. About four miles he reached his work, so I bid him farewell and finished riding about 5.5 more miles to our office.
This route took me through an area that had received a direct hit from the tornado. The pictures I took yesterday were nothing compared to the destruction I saw this morning. Entire buildings have been destroyed. That's rotten to think of all the people who lost their businesses and their jobs overnight.
After a little more than an hour I finally made it to the office. Normally it takes me about 35 minutes. Given that 800 commutes is a nice round number I snapped a photo to commemorate the event:
Crazy ride today. We had more storms last night, which thankfully didn't include more tornados. It did, however, include about 4 inches more rain.
I ran into some flooding blocking the road under a railroad trestle, so I back tracked and carried my bike up over the ridge where the tracks were. Once I made it back down the other side, I looked 100 yards down the road and saw my friend @labrat doing the exact same thing. I started riding towards him and he hollered to get my attention, not immediately recognizing me. He was going to tell me that the MUP was blocked in the direction I was heading due to some downed trees.
Once I got closer he saw who I was and we chatted for a bit about the best alternate route to get to work. We decided to ride the opposite direction up the MUP and take the old railroad bridge across the river, then head up 24th street which is a nice quiet residential route. Before we got to the old railroad bridge, though, we ran into more flooding. So we had to re-evaluate again.
I proposed one route which was a little quieter, but would have added quite a bit of length to our already lengthened commute. Scott decided he was going to head up 26th street, which is one of the busiest arteries on this end of the city. I decided to go with him. Thankfully we only had to go about 1/4 mile on this busy street until we got over the interstate, and then could turn and take side streets. However, because of road construction the busy street was down to one lane in either direction with no shoulder, so we had to ride as fast as we could up the big hill over the overpass. I got pretty winded.
Once we were off the main road things calmed down a bit and we chatted as we rode. About four miles he reached his work, so I bid him farewell and finished riding about 5.5 more miles to our office.
This route took me through an area that had received a direct hit from the tornado. The pictures I took yesterday were nothing compared to the destruction I saw this morning. Entire buildings have been destroyed. That's rotten to think of all the people who lost their businesses and their jobs overnight.
After a little more than an hour I finally made it to the office. Normally it takes me about 35 minutes. Given that 800 commutes is a nice round number I snapped a photo to commemorate the event:
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#1471
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We only had a thunderstorm yesterday (kept me inside instead of hitting the bike after I got home early in the afternoon) instead of a tornado. Bad luck for Sioux City, good on them for keeping up the tornado drills for 25 years!
There was a fair bit of trash down after the storms. Sticks, green pecans, and a couple dead branches in my yard, leaves and sticks on most of the home-side part of town. Work-side part of town was hit worse day before yesterday, and it was amazing to see how fast the residents picked big branches up and got it to the curb for today's scheduled trash pick-up.
There was a fair bit of trash down after the storms. Sticks, green pecans, and a couple dead branches in my yard, leaves and sticks on most of the home-side part of town. Work-side part of town was hit worse day before yesterday, and it was amazing to see how fast the residents picked big branches up and got it to the curb for today's scheduled trash pick-up.
#1472
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Just logged by ~12th flat in 4 months. I'm going to put titanium liners in my bloody tires next.
#1473
Disco Infiltrator
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@Tundra_Man your company's logo is ironic today
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Genesis 49:16-17
Genesis 49:16-17
#1474
aka Tom Reingold
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It was a rainy day, but I missed the worst of it. I brought spare clothes with me and didn't need them. I'm really enjoying commuting to classes. I've done it every day so far since they started in the last week of August. I hope I can manage to do it in most weather.
On Tuesday, I have an interview for a professional cycling job! I had to send them a cycling resume. It is to cart compost around Manhattan using an electric pedal-assisted tricycle.
On Tuesday, I have an interview for a professional cycling job! I had to send them a cycling resume. It is to cart compost around Manhattan using an electric pedal-assisted tricycle.
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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#1475
The Fat Guy In The Back
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Sioux Falls, SD
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Consecutive bicycle work commute number 801:
Last spring we had record flooding in our city. With the storms that happened earlier this week that dumped 8"-11" of rain this morning the river rose higher than it did last spring. They don't expect the river to crest until late Saturday or early Sunday morning. So now people who survived the tornadoes are dealing with flood water on top of everything else.
The MUP I usually take was already underwater yesterday morning, so I didn't even bother trying to go that route. My route choices were somewhat limited as other streets are closed for flooding as well. I picked one that I sometimes used last spring, which is high enough that water wasn't a concern at all. The downside was this route contains some pretty busy roads, and is very hilly. I left an hour earlier than normal to try and get ahead of most of the traffic.
Temp was 54F, and there was a pretty stiff headwind.
I have to ride to a meeting this morning at my son's school to talk about him not showing up for classes. (Ugh. That's a topic for it's own thread.) So I would have had to stay late tonight to make up the time lost. Arriving at the office an hour early has the added bonus that maybe I won't have to stay as late after 5 PM.
Last spring we had record flooding in our city. With the storms that happened earlier this week that dumped 8"-11" of rain this morning the river rose higher than it did last spring. They don't expect the river to crest until late Saturday or early Sunday morning. So now people who survived the tornadoes are dealing with flood water on top of everything else.
The MUP I usually take was already underwater yesterday morning, so I didn't even bother trying to go that route. My route choices were somewhat limited as other streets are closed for flooding as well. I picked one that I sometimes used last spring, which is high enough that water wasn't a concern at all. The downside was this route contains some pretty busy roads, and is very hilly. I left an hour earlier than normal to try and get ahead of most of the traffic.
Temp was 54F, and there was a pretty stiff headwind.
I have to ride to a meeting this morning at my son's school to talk about him not showing up for classes. (Ugh. That's a topic for it's own thread.) So I would have had to stay late tonight to make up the time lost. Arriving at the office an hour early has the added bonus that maybe I won't have to stay as late after 5 PM.
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Visit me at the Tundra Man Workshop
Visit me at the Tundra Man Workshop