Archive for the ‘Bicycle’ Category

Training Status

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

A week from today I will, hopefully, be writing about my first tour ride or 48 miles. This post is coming from the tiny Acer Aspire One Netbook that I got for that purpose. Of course, I’m using the 28″ monitor and not the 9″ built in.

Everything is coming together well. There are a couple of things on my list that I don’t have. Notably, rain gear. The tent is packed along with the sleeping bag, pillow, 1/4 the clothes and most of the electrical gear.

This weeks miles were lower than last week; 102 vs 125. It’s not for lack of time. I’m just uninterested some days. It’s not fresh any more. I’ve been on the same route for quite a while. My alternative training route is blocked off by recent detours between Amarillo and Canyon. The miles, wind, cold, and terrain aren’t a challenge. Time is the biggest concern. In the face of this, my body is still improving. The past two rides are over 13 mph. One with wind and one without. Though my miles are missing the target I’m not too concerned.

Also, I’m training heavy. Without support, I carry an extra water bottle, arm warmers, 2 tubes, 2 air pumps, tools, shirt, jacket, and food in a trunk bag on a rack. The trip will have specified stops and a mechanic. So, about 10-15 lbs of crap is unnecessary. I still need a larger trunk bag than I have. And Walmart, oddly, seems to have the best bag. This is also the strategy I used in the century ride last year and my speed was 2 mph higher than average.

The great weather holds till Tuesday. Then it turns below 50 the rest of the week. My cutoff is about 60F. Two long rides over the next two days and then yoga and indoor bike.

Friday, I’ll come home to having everything packed except the car and take a nap. Set off for Tucson, AZ about 11:00 pm. Check in is 1:00pm Saturday. I guess I get an hour crossing into NM.

The ride was originally targeted to about 40 people and has expanded to 50 and now says waiting list. The company’s magazine profiles a similar tour in Washington last week and raves about the food. I noticed another tour in this area that is happening this week. It seems like a popular spot at this time of year. At the bike shop, I ran into a guy who got back from mountain biking there about 2 wks ago and all agog about it.

Still have to true the back wheel. Don’t forget.

BTW, Tucson is predicting 75/50F all week.

Bike Upgrades

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

A few minor bike upgrades came in today and I immediately applied them. One that I had considered for some time was the longer stem. In the crouch position my bike seems too short. So, I ordered the longest stem possible, 130mm. It is much longer, maybe twice as long, as the original. Surprisingly, it’s lighter too. The angle isn’t has high as the original Bianchi stem making the handlebar height the same.

When I removed the old stem I found a hex nut inside. It was really loose and I tightened it till snug. On the ride afterwords there was no front wheel wobble at 16+ mph. Though there is some kind of jitter in the front wheel when speeds are over 20mph that I can’t pin down.

The handlebar extensions that protrude outwards like a rams horn from the handlebars was mounted level with the ground. I didn’t installed the forearm holders, because they look bulky and in the way. Using the extension always put my wrists at an odd angle. So I lowered the front end down so my arms will lie level and lay on the handlebars. This is a good improvement. Should have done it sooner.

The bike trip requires a shoe that can walk around without stomping on the clipless cleats. I got a leatherish shoe and some sandals. The shoe works Ok. It’s a bit long and some adjustment to the cleat position needs to be made.

The leather saddle seems to be coming into shape, finally. I can’t feel it, but the sheen isn’t even anymore. There are definitely surface indentations.

Training Status

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Two Weeks. One more weekend. The weather forecast for this week looks fantastic! 76F+ all week after a cool weekend. I took good advantage last week with 6 out of 7 riding days and yoga every(3) times. Weekending miles were 125 and February miles were 267. This is the most miles back to back that I’ve ridden in a long time. All of Feb about the number of miles on the weeklong ride, which concerns me a little. My legs are very firm.

I Love My Bike

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

She’s a green ‘07 Bianchi Volpe. Still young at 750+ miles. The derailleurs Shimano Tiagra/Deore had to be adjusted once, out of the box. They slip a touch now on a certain pair of gears, 650 miles later. I had to replace front wheel after I ran over the original with my car. The investigation is still pending whether the car was involved in hiding the wheel from view. It’s been replaced with a rock solid Mavic Open Pro/Shimano Ultegra. The original rear wheel is in bad need of truing, again after 750+ miles. The saddle is a leather B17 Narrow. It’s not broken in yet, but seems more malleable. The frame seems an inch or so too small at times since I had to raise the seat and the headset quite a bit. It sounds like I’m complaining, but all of these are minor. She just flies down the road super quiet and super smooth. With all the baggage stripped off, she’s incredibly light. Most of the time within the first 30 minutes I’m lovin’ on my bike.

my bike
I know in this pic she is leaned against a building, but she has a kickstand now that is invaluable. Yes, it would be nice if it were lighter or unnecessary, but who wants a scratched up expensive bike.

Training Status

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

I got two low-medium rides this weekend; a 19 and 24. A bit of a disappointment, but I change my mind about distance when I’m out there and sometimes it means longer and sometimes shorter. Last week was a big disappointment. Only one real training ride and a couple of hours on the indoor bike.

There are three weeks left to go. Weather looks fantastic this week. Low 70s all week. In Tuscon, it’s in the high 80’s and low 90’s. I’ve been so worried about planning winter clothes it never occurred to me that it might be more like June weather.

The Bike Log has some deficiencies. It lists the events in a list, but aggregates the monthly miles at the top. I would like a format that shows a calendar with values actual training and planned sessions and whether they matched.

Eventually, I’ll post the source code on here. It’s c# in VS2005. Records are in a text file (dumb as dirt). Data entry is through a Windows app. HTML is rendered on demand and pasted into the Wordpress page. Without a ton of research and time in AJAX on a good table data entry form this will have to do.

The Kinky Llama

Monday, February 16th, 2009

This is a good little video.

The Kinky Llama delivers sex toys, products in a jiff
John Keilman
Feb 3, 2009

Inspiration can strike at odd times. Anthony Mikrut got the idea for his business about 3 o’clock one morning, when he and a girlfriend were in search of some … uh … products to enhance their … er … special evening.

“We figured you can get pizza any time of night,” he said. “Why can’t you get [sex] toys?”

Thus was born The Kinky Llama, a purveyor of adult goods that promises one-hour delivery—by bicycle, no less — to most places in Chicago. Mikrut, 33, said the company has been around for 21/2 years and that, despite the recession, he’s busier than ever.

“I think people like to have a little fun when they’re not having the best time in the market,” he said.

His West Town home office holds about 1,500 items, from videos to marital aids to specially designed furniture, and he tosses his wares into a bag or bike trailer when it’s time for a delivery. So far, he said, all of his rush orders have come at night or in the early morning — and almost all have come from women.

Training Status

Sunday, February 15th, 2009

This last week was shitty. Only one commute ride. When it only get’s to mid-50’s it’s too cold for anything longer than an hour with the clothes I have. Not to sound like a snob. Getting the clothes right is hard. Too many and you literally melt, consume more water than you carry, and have no place to shed them. Too few clothes and you freeze, constantly cold, and it interferes with the large leg muscles.

This coming week looks better. ~59 tomorrow and ~70 Tuesday with another ~59 later in the week. The wind will blow hard on Tuesday with the warm weather. Wind is my mountain training. It’s just too bad that you have to “climb” it 2 hr straight without a break.

Update 2/16/2009:
It was frackin’ cold out there today. At the end of the ride my legs can’t maintain the minimum heat. Any break in pedaling, even a few seconds, makes them stiff. I would guess it was 20F with wind chill. Pretty good ride though.

Yoga for the Urban Cyclist

Sunday, February 15th, 2009

BTW, I looove pigeon pose. Last weekend’s 40 miler let me dig deeper into Warrior 1/2 than I’ve been in many months. Just don’t have the muscles to hold it there for long. I’m working on the dissociative mindfulness for when there’s 10 miles to go and I just want to get off and walk.

Yoga for the Urban Cyclist
Tara Irwin

Cycling, a source of pleasure for so many people, can also be a source of pain. While low impact and strengthening, cycling is a one-dimensional and repetitive activity, which means certain muscles are being overused and potentially strained. The urban cyclist often also carries a bag, frequently twists to shoulder check, and is possibly tense from cycling in traffic. All of these variables compound the likelihood of muscle strain and pain.

Ellee says cyclists often come to yoga seeking relief from chronic aches and pains. When asked if she could choose a top five list of stretches for active cyclists, she responded that the “best remedy is a complete yoga practice.” However, she provided the following typical problem areas in the cyclist’s body and suggested related stretches to start with:

Chest openers: the camel, wheel, cobra, upward facing dog, and bow pose.

Hip openers: the pigeon as well as warrior 1 and warrior 2, which are also great for the quads.

Hamstring stretches: forward bend or the wide leg forward bend. Ellee stresses taking at least a minute on each pose “focusing on relaxing into the posture.”

Abdominals: straight leg double leg lifts work well for increasing abdominal strength and are essential for cycling. Ellee suggests that doing at least three minutes of abdominal work a day can improve your riding and has overall stabilizing impacts.

Training Status

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

This week I got in about 95 miles. Pretty good for a first week. Six weeks to go. About 4 really, since the last 1-2 are either ramping up or down the mileage. Weather this week was excellent. It was 60+ most of the week with a record 79F on Friday.

Monday was cool and I woke up late.

Tuesday was a short ride from Work to the Car Shop, about 5 miles. I would have commuted that day, but car really need the safety sticker and it turns out a headlight and taillight were out. Luscious Red (my car) was just begging to get pulled over. That ride kind of sucked, because the spring seat is a bit bouncy and I took a header downtown when I mistook a curb for ramp. The brakes work fantastically well at low speeds. I couldn’t get home in time to ride the bike to yoga so I drove and had a good session.

Wednesday was an early to work-early off work day and a ride out to Wildorado (29 miles). A pretty good headwind at 3:40, when I started, was challenging and put my speed down to 8 or 9 mph. This sucked, but it’s time on the bike and not speed I need to be concerned with at this stage. Still, the whole week I average about 10 mph. When the season ended last year I was doing 15+ mph. At the turn around point the wind was still blowing and I made 16 mph without effort, but as the sun set the wind died leaving me wondering why the wind can’t be as much a help back as it was a hindrance fore.

Thursday was an off day. The yoga and 30 miles was getting to me and I needed a break.

Friday, I had looked forward to all week. A record high was set. It felt warm. Really warm like summer mornings. I pedaled out 19 miles at got back at 6:10 pm. It gets really cold at 6:30. The wind on the way out was even harder, slowing me to 6 mph most of the way.

Saturday, I waited till it warmed up and set out at 1:20 pm. My intention was to ride 40+ miles. Standing still there was not wind, but heading out it seemed like there was a slight headwind. This was the first good test of the new iPod Nano. Battery life is incredible and the size and weight make it unnoticeable while riding. The trunk was packed with a Kleen Kanteen of refill water, yellow cycling jacket (light weight, highly reflective, and the arm pits are open), spare cotton T-shirt, baseball cap, and scarf. I was wearing two layers of bicycle and workout shirts and bike shorts.

The sun was behind the clouds most of the time, which made it significantly cooler. The trip out was long and generally boring. The bike feels good as does the seat, pedals, and shoes. The rear derailleur slips a little bit in the middle gears, but not enough to adjust yet.

Leaving Wildorado you pass an Interstate overpass 2-3 miles out and then it’s 7 miles out to the turn around. This is far enough you can’t see were you came from nor the turnaround ahead. This is a lonely and tough stretch. Usually, the excitement has faded at this point, I’m looking forward to turning around, and yet wishing I had the gumption to push on just a little further (5 miles, 10 there and back) to Vega. At the turnaround I stopped and stretched, to put off getting on the bike again, refilled the water bottles, and returned the ogling stares of the curious cows.

Back on the bike, I rode the only sizable hills on this route, the highway overpasses. That’s when I discovered I had had a tailwind on the way out. The new headwind was very disheartening. With two hours minimum in front of me and a headwind that could turn that into three my bladder started really bothering me. The other thing about this route is the complete lack of hiding places to take a piss. You actually have to ride 1-3 miles off the highway on dirt roads to become unnoticeable. Traffic, including a lot of high-sitting 18 wheelers with good visibility, never lets up.

I tried to concentrate on my front wheel, reducing my profile, and just pedaling through the minutes. Thirty minutes at any speed puts you considerably further than your starting point, but it can be some of the longest time of your life. Thirty minutes should put me near Wildorado again and I would definitely feel the progress. Like the rest was “downhill all the way” (Amarilloan inside joke).

Peeing had been an issue on another training trip last summer. I think it was the first time I road this route and the first time I expected to leave my car in Gander Mtn’s parking lot for 4+ hours unattended. Riding in the drops puts a fair amount of weight on your prostate and bladder. Running your legs around constantly doesn’t help. Even though the amount is minor, because your sweating the whole time, it is insistent. That other time took two hours to find a spot, an abandoned collection of gas station and mobile homes, which sometimes serves as a DPS speed trap making it an unpredictable spot.

This time the Highway Dept came to my aid with a huge mound of scrapped together earth stored next to the first overpass out of Wildorado. When I was done and had stretched again a car availed itself of the overpass. Five minutes earlier and I could have given them a show.

Back on the road and 20 minutes later I stopped in Wildorado and rested on a dilapidated trailer. I was definitely ready for this ride to be over. My seat hurt and I was constantly moving it over the saddle. The cycling shoes aren’t wide enough for my feet and attempt to ignore the existence of my little toe. It was about 4:00. I had been out 2 and half hours. Can you imagine going to the gym for that long? Not me. The last of the refill water went into the bottles.

The wind was pissing me off. A starting headwind I could deal with, but a return headwind is just very disturbing. All I wanted to do was go home. I was stuck 15 miles from my car and 21 from home. Doesn’t sound like much in a car, 20 minutes. On the bike, that’s 1 and a half hours.

About three miles away from Wildorado, I cross the highway and stopped again. Two more stops to go. I was at Adkisson Road, the turn around for Wednesday’s 19 mile ride. Next was Bushland just past the Ag research center, then the Love’s, and Gander Mtn. I put on a podcast. It was to run 1 hr 9 minutes. That’s about how long I had left.

The 3+ miles to Bushland are a little tough mentally. Similar to the stretch outside Wildorado. I found out that one of my favorite podcast hosts, of Net at Night, is pregnant and due in two weeks. That show will change with a new girl temporarily or permanently. The guest was a guy who servers as a good example of an Internet career. He makes ringtones, podcast themes, sings at a piano bar, streams live over uStream, etc.

At Bushland I stopped and stretched. Now, everything is very familiar. I’ve ridden the 13 mile route a lot and I’m on the home stretch. Unfortunately, that means I know how long it’s going to take to get in. My speed is running about 12+ and my legs are straining. The wind died down somewhere before Bushland, though I didn’t notice till I made it to the car.

The next stop is the Love’s store about 3 miles away. I was quite surprised to get passed by someone along this stretch. Then at loves I walk my bike across the road instead of stretching and get passed again. I always wonder how these guys do it. I carry a trunk bag with clothes, tools, pump, etc. They have a tiny underseat bag. No one ever has a rack. Ever. It’s a little weird.

A ways down at the Justice of the Peace, I stop and stretch. My legs feel like they are just moving the pedals. Spinning I guess they call it. It’s at these times they feel the most efficient. I don’t have to think about picking up my foot, ie pulling up, as part of the stroke. All the down energy is gone and my legs push and pull alternately instead of just jamming down and letting the other foot push them up with the pedal.

It’s definitely cooler now. The cold front has moved in. The sun is hidden behind layers of clouds and spreads a diffuse, long-shadowed, winter light on everything. The weeks’ good cycling weather is ending in the next few hours.

All I can do is spin the pedals. My legs ache. My ass is sore. My hands are sorely missing my cycling gloves and the palms are numb. My arms are tired of holding my chest up and constantly moving around. My neck is tired of holding my head up in the drops. Oddly, my speed picks up and I’m moving through 12 to 13 and 14 mph.

Then I’m at the overpass. On the other side is my car. Still there. The cycle computer reads 43.8 and the cell phone says 5:37. The sun’ll be gone in an hour. I made it in good time. Four plus hours is what I wanted and I’m done. Can’t believe I was out that far. Two hours ago I turned around. The bike dissassembles by removing the front wheel, turning the front wheel and slipping the whole thing in just right. The front wheel goes on top with water bottles, helmet, jacket, and unused trinkets scattered around in piles. I’m off to get my reward. Over 40 miles gets ice cream to replenish the calories from 4+ hours of working out.

It’s raining as I right this and the weather for this week seems iffy. On days I can I’ll probably commute. I may be luck to get in more than one ride this week.

A Good Bike Day

Friday, February 6th, 2009

It’s supposed to be 77 today and 70 tomorrow. Fantastic riding weather for Feb. I got to work at 7:00 this morning to leave earlier to ride like Wed. Been looking forward to this all week.

My First Attempts at Riding a Bike for Transporation in Amarillo

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

With the arrival of the Dahon D7 folding bike I was looking forward to commuting to work. And I spent a lot of time sunday night outfitting it with a back, bungee cords, spare tube, pump, lights, a bell, etc. Monday morning was 15F. That kind of killed my gumption. Then it snowed Tuesday. We have had snow precisely once this season. Wednesday warmed up quite nicely to 50F and when I got home I loaded up the bike and rode a practice ride to work. Doing things like checking the route, traffic, street width and direction, etc. The results were encouraging. I arrived in 45 minutes completely soaking through my shirts. On the way back I got lost and checked out a back up route across the train tracks, which took an hour and 20 minutes. The longer story is here.

Thursday, I rode to yoga. The double mat fits well with three bungee straps. I was about 5 minutes late. It takes 30 minutes to get there and not 20. So, I got to practice in my windbreaker pants. Very hot. Literally. I start sweating in yoga at the 20 minute mark and this time I was already primed. My clothes were we for 2 hours. Yoga lasts an hour and it took 45 minutes to get home. Cycling at the end of the day can really take it out of you.

Friday, jean day, I got up at 6:00 and left at 6:50 expecting a 45 minute trip..

Continued on the next post.

Work Commute

Friday, January 30th, 2009

I rode to work on the bike today in 29F still weather. More to come.. Other posts are already outlined.

Bicycle Commuting and the No-Car Life

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

Date: 2008-07-28 By: Laura E. Kreger
From Llewellyn’s 2009 Green Living Guide
Bicycle Commuting and the No-Car Life

When I moved from the rural Midwest to Portland, Oregon, I entered a metro area of 2 million people with more breweries than anywhere in the country and more strip clubs per capita than Las Vegas. My Minnesotan family collectively raised their eyebrows, but I had faith I wouldn’t do anything drastic.

Between its pints and dancers, the City of Roses sways heavily toward environmentalism. This sentiment weaves through a culture of fleece-covered yuppies, dreadlocked beat poets, hipster rock stars, and the homeless man who picks up trash in the neighborhood park. When a co-worker said he didn’t recycle, battle cries flew up from a four-cube radius. Somewhere all these groups merge to create a city recognized as one of the most environmentally-friendly, and, as a result, most bike-friendly cities in the country.

After just two years in the Pacific Northwest, I found myself making New Year’s Resolution 2007: Sell car, buy bicycle.

When I made the announcement, my parents worried that Portland hippies were ruining their daughter, but still didn’t believe I would take the plunge. Even my roommate, who supported the idea, figured this would go the way of “Do a handstand,” which ended with me sprawled on my new yoga mat, laughing at myself. I wasn’t coming into this adventure an urban biking expert. In fact, I hadn’t even sat on a bike in two years. When the car-free plan didn’t die in four days (like most of my resolutions), the questions started flying:

“Why on earth would you want to be without a car?”
“What would you do in the winter?”
“What if you get sick?”
“How will you carry groceries?”
“How will you bring us to the ocean if we visit in five years?”

All valid questions.

Dahon Speed D7 and Stuff

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

A couple of packages arrived this week. One was the spring B67 Brooks for the touring bike and the other was the folding bike. The pictures of the D7 are uploading now. Oh, and the trekking handlebars.

The Brooks saddle feels great. Much better than the Narrow B17. I can feel the spring and the much (twice?) wider back end. It also feels like it would be less comfortable ride in the drops, but I haven’t tried it yet. It makes the Bianchi look better. Older, more classic, laid back,.. It’s hard to say exactly, but I like it.

I’ve spent a bit of time with the Dahon assembling it and outfitting it. The initial tires seemed Ok, but the back one got a flat or something. The chain and gears are completely dry, which is a first for me. The seat is good, a well padded rubber covered seat. No need to change it.

Changing things is what I’ve been doing. Front and back lights, a small bag on the rack, and most of all the tires. It came with some rather nice looking 1.5″ wide tires that I upgraded to Schwalbe’s. A 1.75″ on the front and a 2″ Big Apple on the back. Also, the back tube since it didn’t seem to hold much air.

The ride. That’s what it all comes down to. It’s completely different from any bike I been on. The wheel base feel shorter, like there’s hardly anything behind you. It accelerates much faster than most bikes, but hits a max speed pretty quickly. A lot of internet posts mention a harder ride, but that’s not how I would characterize it. You can feel more bumps, but they are pretty well muted by the tires. You get much more feedback about the road surface than a regular bike. Surprisingly, turning at speed isn’t as tight, because the bike is so low you can’t peddle through it. It feels really light. I can feel that I’m not pushing a wide surface area and I wouldn’t be as afraid about being able to stop or running into things. Stops and starts are much quicker and easier. Gearing is good. You do need it. Or at least I do.

The most striking aspect is the lack of bike you are riding. My Bianchi is in my face. Unavoidable. On long rides I stare a the front tire for hours. This guy is about 1 foot or more lower, on the edge of my peripheral vision. The front tire is hardly there. I feel a bit silly on it. Maybe not silly, but self-conscious. It looks like an odd toy bike or something from a circus. That’s just my bias. It should pass. The size means that it’s a naturally pass-through frame. No lifting the legs or beating my unborn children’s DNA on a steel bar.

It was 40F during the warm part of the day, so riding was limited to around the block. I need to find the right clothes that would make this feel relatively comfortable.

Oh, one immediate positive was the trunk space. I worried over how to attach my yoga mat to my touring bike most of last night. It’s too wide, massey/heavy, and too thick. What the D7 lacks on side space for panniers it makes up in a huge trunk space. A normal bike would have about 10″ from the top of the tire to the top of the saddle. This is a high center of gravity over a bouncing wheel. The D7 has maybe 2 feet of space in the same area. The yoga mat easily fits on the rack by itself and doesn’t look like it would fall off.

I look forward to testing out the spring saddle and the trekking handlebars. Now, I just need to figure out how to attach and wrap the new handlebars.

Bike Gear

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

I made a number of bike purchases last night and have some more to go for the March trip. The research is a lot of fun. Two of them have been planned for months. A sprung Brooks saddle, the B67, and the folding Dahon Speed D7. Everything else was support. Quality spare tires and tubes for the Volpe and D7. For the D7 I got tires nearly as fat as possible; 1 3/4 and 2 inches wide. I have a fetish for fat tires as the cheapest and most natural shock absorber.

Oh, and I ordered a trekking handlebar. The two typical styles are “straight” bar mountain bike and the curvy, underslung drop bar for racing. I use the latter, because it gives me 4 hand positions and I can pull myself out of the wind. One thing I can’t quite manage is folding my arms on the handlebars. The geometry isn’t quite right. A trekking bar is shaped like a rounded, cursive W. It allows 4 hand positions. No drops, but you can stretch forward more and get out of the wind. The wind can change my speed by 2 mph or 20-30 minutes on 30 miles.

The sprung seat should cut down on major knocks, but not the everyday little road vibrations. That’s for the B135 and B73. It should be interesting to try. I like by B17 Narrow, but I can’t sit upright for very long at all. Really hurts the sitbones and I end up in the drops most of the time which is a test on my lower back.

The saddle is good and I actually like applying mink oil and proofide for the break in. It’s funny. One a few rides I imagined the perfect bike seat. The ideal qualities being good contact with my sitbones, which thanks to Yoga I know where they are, and a certain flexibility even through the overall stiffness. Ideally, I would take a cast of my but under the pressure of riding and get a seat made from that. It turns out that leather seats have all of these qualities. Though they appear hard in the store you are looking at blank. With care the leather makes permanent indentations according to the rider’s anatomy. and maintains overall stiffness. One advantage I never predicted was the slickness. I often rub my ass to massage it, which isn’t very reasonable on modern seats. Leather on lycra is like greased lightening. The new sprung seat is for the width, allowing a more upright position, and for the pothole/curb size bumps that exceed the limits of the leather.

The folding bike opens up commuting a bit more. Right now the weather is generally cool to cold in the day and cold at night. So, I want a hat, gloves, and scarf in addition to the spare tube and pump. I’m afraid of leaving a bike outside with a bag on it containing these items and I don’t want to take the bag on and off, because I might not secure it well, letting it fall of en route. And the bike could just walk off on it’s own. It would just make me feel better to fold the whole thing and set it in a corner.

Now, for the sweating thing with commuting I hit on a novel idea. At least I haven’t read anyone else suggesting it. I love the new Nike Dri Fit and similar material that wicks sweat away from the body and lets it dissipate quicker. This works good on my recent rides to keep from getting sweaty and my torso is the worst offender. A number of these used as undershirts should be good on the ride and for my existing underarm sweat problem. The one that seems to overwhelm nearly all antiperspirants.

We’ll see if any of this is worth a damn or I’m just crazy.

BTW, Sheldon Brown’s site has and excellent guide on handlebars and the various shapes and advantages/disadvantages.