Things I've learnt from commuting
#17
Posted 30 August 2011 - 08:25
#18
Posted 30 August 2011 - 08:29
Oh...and another thing I've learnt...REMEMBER to take your wet cycling kit out of your bag after showering...nothing worse than having to put cold wet sweaty kit on in the arvie. I won't make that mistake again!
#19
Posted 30 August 2011 - 08:37
DJR, on 30 August 2011 - 05:51 , said:
I have to agree. I've sat in an open plan office wondering how to hide my Defeet Eyeball socks on my ankles.
The look very cool on the bike, but peeping out from between a pair of black trousers and shiny shoes they are not.
They looked something like this. Defeet don't make the Eyeball ones anymore. Good news for commuters.
http://www.defeet.co...duct.php?id=559
I hope all you Mayans have a prescription for Prozac
#20
Posted 30 August 2011 - 08:50
#21
Posted 30 August 2011 - 08:50
cat-i, on 30 August 2011 - 06:31 , said:
#23
Posted 30 August 2011 - 09:12
#25
Posted 30 August 2011 - 09:30
Master a solid bunny-hop and it may save your life one day
Make eye contact with drivers that are about to turn, you can tell a lot looking in someone's eyes (ie wether they know you are there or not)
Use the full lane when turning in a traffic circle, this way the cars cannot ride you off the road
Hand signals mean very little, but keep using them.
There is a pecking order when commuting:
1. Busses and trucks have right of way
2. In the absence of Busses and trucks, Taxis have the right of way
3. In the absence of Taxi's BMW's have right of way
4. In the absence of BMW's, the most aggressive driver has right of way
5. The cyclist have right of way
6. The pedestrian have right of way
If you have to choose between confronting a motor vehicle or a pedestrian while riding, choose the pedestrian.
#26
Posted 30 August 2011 - 09:35
I commute home in the afternoons and then back in the mornings. This way I have a car at work, and my wife's at home if I need to go somewhere. Its also not that easy to bail out of a morning commute if you feel a bit lazy, as the wife works in Pinelands and I work in Tyger Valley
#27
Posted 30 August 2011 - 09:39
but during the coarse of the interview, i asked about the required personal transport in the one contract they sent me a few days before.
" thats just to make sure you get to work on-time they said"
" ok cool ' i replied so you don't mind if I cycle to work" (edenvale to germiston)
"no but that distance you'll never make it" came the reply
well not only did i make it .. i do it fairly often ....
my biggest problem with commuting is not the ride, the traffic, the odd puncture, but rather the attitudes of the couch potato collages. who think that cycling, or for that matter any form of exercise is for the mentally handicapped.
i enjoy the ride. the freedom, the fact that i get ride out all my frustrations. how often through traffic I'm faster than those in cars.
things i have learnt
1: you can never be seen enough.. 1 light is not enough
2: be loud.. my 155db hooter saves lives (mine)
3: protection is key. Your helmet is as important as the bike itself for a good ride.
4: nobody can think. so you have to think for them
5; it doesn't matter what you ride.. as long as it gets ridden.
Only thoses with narrow minds fail to see that the difinition of impossible is " lack of imagination and incentive"
- Serena Butler
#28
Posted 30 August 2011 - 09:50
MorewoodMad, on 30 August 2011 - 09:35 , said:
I commute home in the afternoons and then back in the mornings. This way I have a car at work, and my wife's at home if I need to go somewhere. Its also not that easy to bail out of a morning commute if you feel a bit lazy, as the wife works in Pinelands and I work in Tyger Valley
Where do you commute from?
#29
Posted 30 August 2011 - 10:20
Do people who cant ride bikes find the saying ,'it just like riding a bike' , offensive ?
#30
Posted 31 August 2011 - 08:51
Hairy, on 30 August 2011 - 05:01 , said:
Well I have two issues with that one..... firstly his ride was flat(ish) - I will be riding from Wellington to Gordon's Bay = 67.55Km with 407m of climbing. Secondly, the ladies in the office won't be too happy with a smelly male in the office
Kit: Bell helmet, Rudy Noyz ImpactX Photochromic, Rock Racing jersey, Jaggad bib, Sidi Energy Comp 2, Garmin Edge 800
#31
Posted 31 August 2011 - 09:05
Pieter1, on 30 August 2011 - 10:20 , said:
I try wearing denims, but I have found that you can "roll" your clothes up and they crease less. Pack well because if you get a mechanical and need the tools from the bottom of your back pack you will unpack everything and it will not go in as neatly.
I found carrying a plastic shopping bag folded neatly is useful for broken tubes, chains or whatever went wrong.
#32
Posted 31 August 2011 - 11:01
Pieter1, on 30 August 2011 - 10:20 , said:
Yes, ideally clothes all waiting for you at the office when you get there. Helps if you have an office. If not, and you have no private place to store clothes, follow the format that some of us do: drive in to work and leave the car there, then your first ride is the one home that evening. Next day, up early and back into the office. The car is waiting for you there (with bag of clothes & toiletries). Depending on how fit you are, and how far from home you work, you can start this once a week, building up to multiple times.
I usually have a few sets of everything at the office (jocks, socks, shirts, belt, pants, etc.) to make sure I don't forget something.
With commuting, preparation makes or breaks it all.














