Tags:
I like your bee story, Mike! Nice idea for a post.
Coming home late one night recently, there was a coyote in front of me on Damen. This was right in Ravenswood. It turned left so I turned left - no one was around so I turned off my light for about half a block so as not to freak it out. Mid-block it looked over its shoulder, saw me and took off at a jog. Made my night! Healthy looking animal.
Pulling up to my campsite the first time I bike camped was also pretty amazing.
Oh, one more! Epic thunderstorm in 2010 and I took shelter under a freeway overpass for a bit. The acoustics there with the thunder and pouring rain were amazing. Then that area kind of flooded so a bus coming through kicked up a massive wave that I had to dodge. This all seemed to happen kind of slo-mo and was actually very fun. Then two good natured late teens guys rode through and I followed them out and they sang/chanted for the next few miles and we were all laughing and generally rejoicing in the extreme weather.
The first time I got caught in a downpour, some five years ago or more. It's funny, because it's happened plenty of times since then, but the first time is what I come back to. I think back to it any time I'm faced with undesirable circumstances that I'm in the midst of but can't change. Brings me peace of mind.
Riding home in the Bliz-ard a few years ago. The road wasn't that bad, by that I mean I was riding in the trenches that cars made. I also wasn't worried about any cars hitting me because there was absolutely no where for them to go. Then as I was about to go over the bridge on Damen I saw another crazy cyclist riding the same direction. We exchanged nods, and he said keep the wheels on the road.
Very nice. :)
Anthony Hammond said:
The first time I got caught in a downpour, some five years ago or more. It's funny, because it's happened plenty of times since then, but the first time is what I come back to. I think back to it any time I'm faced with undesirable circumstances that I'm in the midst of but can't change. Brings me peace of mind.
About 2 weeks ago I was on my usual route up and down the North Branch Trail around dusk. For some reason, it was bunny's night out - every 100 feet or so, there's Mr. or Mrs. Rabbit, just hanging out on the side of the path. I must have seen over a hundred.
A few weeks ago we had a really foggy morning. I mentioned then, and I repeat that it was like riding through a cloud with moisture condensing on everything including me. It was a cool and amazing ride.
Early last year I made an impromptu trip to LA to visit a friend. Another friend gave me a couple of loaner bikes, and the afternoon I spent riding his old Bianchi MTB on the fire roads and dirt Mulholland in the Santa Monica mountains was the best riding I've had in years.
About a year ago I was northbound on the North Branch Trail and as I crossed into Northlake near the school a hawk (falcon?) swooped down from its perch and flew alongside me for a bit. I'd like to think that we bonded though it was probably just sizing me up for a possible meal.
One evening around dusk while riding past the Montrose Cemetery on Bryn Mawr, a whole group of coyotes were on a mound in the cemetery howling at the sound of fire engine sirens. I stopped riding and stood there with three other cyclists listening and smiling.
Riding north on the "400" Trail in SW Wisconsin for the first time a few years ago ... came out of a cut through a hill and there was a pond surrounded by maples. The trees were blazing with colors in the bright autumn sunshine, and the pond was glassy calm and reflected the sky and its few puffy clouds. The scene was so ridiculously beautiful I started laughing.
Also, coasting into a rainy Dawes Park in Evanston after finishing my first-ever century ride. That sense of accomplishment was one of the high points of my life.
I saw a coyote half heartedly chasing a rabbit at Lawrence and Paulina recently. Might be the same one.
Anne B. said:
I like your bee story, Mike! Nice idea for a post.
Coming home late one night recently, there was a coyote in front of me on Damen. This was right in Ravenswood. It turned left so I turned left - no one was around so I turned off my light for about half a block so as not to freak it out. Mid-block it looked over its shoulder, saw me and took off at a jog. Made my night! Healthy looking animal.
Pulling up to my campsite the first time I bike camped was also pretty amazing.
Oh, one more! Epic thunderstorm in 2010 and I took shelter under a freeway overpass for a bit. The acoustics there with the thunder and pouring rain were amazing. Then that area kind of flooded so a bus coming through kicked up a massive wave that I had to dodge. This all seemed to happen kind of slo-mo and was actually very fun. Then two good natured late teens guys rode through and I followed them out and they sang/chanted for the next few miles and we were all laughing and generally rejoicing in the extreme weather.
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members