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Riding in the street in a city with buildings and street lighting nearby makes the chance of being struck on the street pretty remote. Lightning takes the path of least resistance and that is almost always athe highest/best-grounded object in the area. Make sure that isn't YOU! Also, most people who are struck by lightning survive the encounter. There are even a few people who have been struck multiple times and survived.
Most people who are killed by lightning are killed when they were near a higher object that took the strike and they were nearby when the object (such as a tree) exploded into deadly shards or simply fell on them.
That said, as an electrician, I have a lot of respect for the elctromagentic forces of nature and electrocution is not the way I plan on dying if I have a choice. If I were forced to choose, and dying in my sleep at a ripe old age was not an option, I think I would choose sexecution by either Natalie Portman or Summer Glau. Other than that I think I'll just pass. As John Meloncamp said, "Dying, to me, don't sound like all that much fun...'
Since a tropical climate is apparently our new reality, I think I need better rain gear.
A few years ago a man in Vancouver was running during a thunderstorm, listening to his iPod, when lightning struck a nearby tree. The electricity was conducted through the wet ground and into the runner, throwing him about eight feet from the tree. The electricity, focused on the metal wires of his earbuds, caused linear burns on his chest, neck, and ears. Both of his eardrums were ruptured, too, although this may happen with any lightning strike, not just a lightning strike while wearing earbuds.
For days like today cycling sandals are great. Your feet get wet but the rubber sandals don't mind getting wet. You don't have any socks to get wet and a towel at your destination is all you need to feel dry.
JeffB said:
Has anyone come across shoe covers that are actually waterproof? I splurged on the Sugoi ones at REI and they're really only effective if its a light shower on a <30min ride. They're open on the soles, so eventually water spraying up from the pavement seeps in along the base of your shoe.
these are ugly, and not exactly sporty, but guess what...on a deluge like this morning...my feet and shoes were perfectly dry:
http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/SERVUS-Overboot-4CY13?Pid=search
JeffB said:
Has anyone come across shoe covers that are actually waterproof? I splurged on the Sugoi ones at REI and they're really only effective if its a light shower on a <30min ride. They're open on the soles, so eventually water spraying up from the pavement seeps in along the base of your shoe.
NICE on LFP today! A little headwind, but hey, that's just a better workout, right?
Agreed. I haven't ridden to work in a couple of weeks and I was rather surprised by how many people were on the path at 7 a.m. A bit more than there were when it was only 50 degrees at 7 a.m.
in it to win it said:
NICE on LFP today! A little headwind, but hey, that's just a better workout, right?
And they'll protect you from lightning too!
I used Riv Splats this winter and can't complain. They work great with normal shoes. They're are open on the bottom, but since i have fenders it's not a problem.
You can always use plastic bags...
JeffB said:
Has anyone come across shoe covers that are actually waterproof? I splurged on the Sugoi ones at REI and they're really only effective if its a light shower on a <30min ride. They're open on the soles, so eventually water spraying up from the pavement seeps in along the base of your shoe.
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