Nice first ride in the COLD.

 

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If you ever needed an excuse to get a second bike for commuting, this is it. Act on it.

in it to win it 8.0 mi said:

Yes. 

Montrose to Addison.  Back caliper LOCKED up hard.  Rode dragging brake back home (not fun), changed and got on the train...

Unplanned trip to UBS tonight...

Compression shorts MAY help both glutes and hamstrings:



Michelle said:

Any (cheap because I'm pretty much broke buying winter clothes/bike stuff) good suggestions for keeping the butt warm?Anyone besides me have this problem? 

For the neck and face, have you tried Turtle Fur?  Possibly a bit too warm for it this morning, but the ride started out toasty.

Anyone have suggestions on fingertips?  I'm currently wearing Smartwool liners and Head running gloves and I just couldn't get my fingertips to warm up.

Thanks 

Michelle said:

I am on the "bundle and maybe be a little sweaty but not be cold" camp - was perfectly content today, at least for my upper 1/2. My neck was cold (which I can solve with a warmer of some kind, I just had a fashion infinity scarf on hand...) and my face was... which is what winter is like... but the one part of me that was too cold was my glutes/hamstrings. I had on fleece lined leggings AND workout leggings, but was still cold. Any (cheap because I'm pretty much broke buying winter clothes/bike stuff) good suggestions for keeping the butt warm?Anyone besides me have this problem? 

But weirdly, Milwaukee was nearly empty this morning. Maybe everyone took a day off?

Divvy is a good backup bike, too.

Duppie said:

If you ever needed an excuse to get a second bike for commuting, this is it. Act on it.

in it to win it 8.0 mi said:

Yes. 

Montrose to Addison.  Back caliper LOCKED up hard.  Rode dragging brake back home (not fun), changed and got on the train...

Unplanned trip to UBS tonight...

I really like silk glove liners. They're light, thin, and very surprisingly effective.  I would imagine they'd go nicely under those wool liners, too.  Cabela's has 'em, you can get 'em online, and they're not expensive.  OBTW, silk sock liners and long underwear are mighty nice, too. 

Bez said:

For the neck and face, have you tried Turtle Fur?  Possibly a bit too warm for it this morning, but the ride started out toasty.

Anyone have suggestions on fingertips?  I'm currently wearing Smartwool liners and Head running gloves and I just couldn't get my fingertips to warm up.

Thanks 

Michelle said:

I am on the "bundle and maybe be a little sweaty but not be cold" camp - was perfectly content today, at least for my upper 1/2. My neck was cold (which I can solve with a warmer of some kind, I just had a fashion infinity scarf on hand...) and my face was... which is what winter is like... but the one part of me that was too cold was my glutes/hamstrings. I had on fleece lined leggings AND workout leggings, but was still cold. Any (cheap because I'm pretty much broke buying winter clothes/bike stuff) good suggestions for keeping the butt warm?Anyone besides me have this problem? 

But weirdly, Milwaukee was nearly empty this morning. Maybe everyone took a day off?



Linocln Ave. had some commuters. I picked up a pack of 4-6 that pretty much rode together from about Belmont to the loop. The cold weather only leaves the dedicated on the road. Nobody shoaled, nobody talked, nobody ran intersections. It was nice. I wore a pair of mittens today.  I have been using my road bike on a trainer for the last couple weeks and it was nice to get outside today. It was weird to have it cold but the wind out of the south. I hope it stays that way throughout the day to give a little push on the commute back north. The only time I felt cold was when the mittens were off and I was locking up.

But weirdly, Milwaukee was nearly empty this morning. Maybe everyone took a day off?

Bez, my fingertips get cold, too, so I do (while still riding) this: With your left glove still on your hand pull your fingers out of the glove-fingers and press them up to the palm of your hand. Hold them there for a few minutes. When they feel warmed up, place the fingers back inside the glove-fingers. At first they will feel cold, but will warm up right away. Now switch to the right hand and repeat. Cheap and easy solution.

Bez said:

Anyone have suggestions on fingertips?  I'm currently wearing Smartwool liners and Head running gloves and I just couldn't get my fingertips to warm up.

I wore my new Sugoi Firewall Lobster gloves today. Got them for $37.48 from Backcountry. My hands were almost hot! Really like them so far. I had glacier gloves, which were warm and water proof, but hard to keep dry on the inside. These seem way better.

I agree.  Glaciers are great when it's really wet, but do get pretty icky inside.

Mark Newald said:

I wore my new Sugoi Firewall Lobster gloves today. Got them for $37.48 from Backcountry. My hands were almost hot! Really like them so far. I had glacier gloves, which were warm and water proof, but hard to keep dry on the inside. These seem way better.

re: cold fingers...

I like Bar Mitts. I'm out of town for a few days, but will likely put mine on shortly after I get home...

Do you leave them on your bike all the time (in the winter weather)? I really need to understand how these work!  Are they easy on/off to take with you when you lock up? 

I want some!!


Skip Montanaro 12mi said:

re: cold fingers...

I like Bar Mitts. I'm out of town for a few days, but will likely put mine on shortly after I get home...

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