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The reality of living in a world where someone would steal your stuff if you take your eye off it for a second...
Tom A.K. said:
V W, these are the realities of being a "cyclist".
The grease chain line on many of my pants, getting flats 3 times in a week, the way cycling seems to destroy my clothes, the need to cycle and wash clothing after one short sweaty ride, no I can't join a warehouse club because I can't ride home with 36 rolls of toilet paper.
Personally I think cycling, despite the drawbacks, is a blessing. A while ago I had to take a bus+train and it was basically traumatic. Between the crammed people, the stink, the grinding crush of people, the noise, the stuffy air. It was a route that would have taken me a relaxing, mind clearing half an hour to bike in the fresh air and it took an hour between waiting at the stops, the added walking, listening to people yell at their phones and more.
In the whole plus/minus I put cycling way head of the other options. Sure, a car in the cold would be nice but if I don't get regular exercise I get depressed, when I had a car and drove back and forth between the desk and the couch I was utterly miserable
But the real issue here is - that if people don't know your trials and tribulations it's that your not complaining enough. People will say "I can't complain" NO one can always find something to complain about. Let your angst out and stop suffering in silence.
The longer list would be the opposite, crap you don't have to deal with or befits if the ride: Not needing to find a parking space or paying for it, not putting up with public trans, the solitude of the ride (underrated), the self sufficiency and more.
This only compares to driving. You'd run to the same issues if you took PT.
- that feeling when you are running errands (ie like getting produce from the farmers market and then running into CVS for shampoo or whatever) on your bike and you have to make more than one stop, but you cant just leave the groceries on your bike, so you have to unload everything and carry it in with you and then people look at you like you're an old bag lady.
Also applies to when I'm taking my clothes to the dry cleaners and I stop at my bank beforehand and I walk in with this big garment bag full of clothes and they look at me with suspicion as if I'm coming in to rob the place.
And all I can think of is "maybe if more of you were bikers you'd understand."
Having a pigeon fly past your face. Riding past geese/squirrels/rabbits and hoping they don't freak out. Hitting squirrels/rabbits probably won't end with a crash, but I think a goose might.
Adding to taking all your packages/bags with you, the frustration of taking all your lights with you because anything not locked down WILL get stolen. I don't know how people can leave their helmets outside, because I can see people being evil and messing with it.
People treating your basket/pannier as a garbage can. I've found cigarettes, coffee cups, and a STICKY LOLLIPOP. Adding insult to injury, there's a street garbage can a few feet away.
Being in a collision and having a police report completed by an officer who does not know the law.
I just have the big Orlieb and it comes on and off in a second. It is an engineering marvel. I routinelyu put 30-35 lbs in it (estimate) and carry with the shoulder strap with no problems. I bring it to bars, restaurants..not sure anybody gives me a second look.
The saddest thing is that many supermarket cashiers can't understand that somebody doesn't need bags. A nice by product of Pannier...food goes right in!
yai danche said:
Having a pigeon fly past your face. Riding past geese/squirrels/rabbits and hoping they don't freak out. Hitting squirrels/rabbits probably won't end with a crash, but I think a goose might.
Adding to taking all your packages/bags with you, the frustration of taking all your lights with you because anything not locked down WILL get stolen. I don't know how people can leave their helmets outside, because I can see people being evil and messing with it.
People treating your basket/pannier as a garbage can. I've found cigarettes, coffee cups, and a STICKY LOLLIPOP. Adding insult to injury, there's a street garbage can a few feet away.
I'm probably in the minority opinion on this, but I'm not looking forward to the plastic grocery bag ban coming this year.
Shopping for me is often spur-of-the-moment, so how am I supposed to get my groceries home when I haven't planned ahead and brought bags with me. Paper bags with handles are a disaster waiting to happen, and I'm not going to buy a reusable bag every time I come unprepared.
Some officers really get it, are sympathetic, and write tickets on drivers. Others are either clueless about laws regarding bikes or openly hostile. Some of the latter write really bad crash reports.
Jeff Schneider said:
Being in a collision and having a police report completed by an officer who does not know the law.
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