milestones
Oct. 29th, 2009 01:08 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Temps in the low 40s this morning, so I broke out the booties for the first time this season, in addition to the silk long undershirt and the lovely but increasingly tattered silk undergloves. Soon it will be time for the heavier undergloves, and maybe tights instead of shorts.
A coworker asked how long into the season I keep riding. I really don't know the answer to that question. I didn't ride yesterday or the day before because of the wet -- cold and wet is worse than snow in my opinion. I won't ride the Ciocc once they start to salt, even if it's nice out, and with morning coming later my rides are getting me in to work later than I'd like to arrive. The time change will help with that, but even so sunrise in midwinter will be as late as it is now in local time for much of January, and that has already been enough to keep me from riding a couple of times this season. Riding the (slower) Cannondale will add to this effect. And of course there is the snow. The parts of the bike path that I ride aren't plowed, and of course it's a much longer ride than I was doing to Kendall Square. Will I, or won't I? Will driving turn out to be just as bad, or will it be a nice toasty warm half an hour listening to NPR? I have no idea.
A coworker asked how long into the season I keep riding. I really don't know the answer to that question. I didn't ride yesterday or the day before because of the wet -- cold and wet is worse than snow in my opinion. I won't ride the Ciocc once they start to salt, even if it's nice out, and with morning coming later my rides are getting me in to work later than I'd like to arrive. The time change will help with that, but even so sunrise in midwinter will be as late as it is now in local time for much of January, and that has already been enough to keep me from riding a couple of times this season. Riding the (slower) Cannondale will add to this effect. And of course there is the snow. The parts of the bike path that I ride aren't plowed, and of course it's a much longer ride than I was doing to Kendall Square. Will I, or won't I? Will driving turn out to be just as bad, or will it be a nice toasty warm half an hour listening to NPR? I have no idea.
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Date: 2009-10-29 05:34 pm (UTC)Anyhow, any advice you have would be appreciated.
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Date: 2009-10-30 04:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-10-30 05:29 am (UTC)i wuss out at about 25 to freezing, below that it just isn't much fun for me. i also wuss out when the roads get salty and grungy or snowy and icy.
in past years when i was cycling more heavily, i'd pretty much hang the bike up from sometime in december till late march, but last year i was riding to work on occasional nice days all winter.
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Date: 2009-10-30 02:09 pm (UTC)I grew up in Montreal, where they mostly remove the snow from the streets and the rest sublimates off. In Ottawa, they clear down to pavement only downtown and on major roads. On the rest, they plow down to an inch or two thickness. Also, it's only downtown that they remove it (elsewhere it is just pushed to the gutter) so there is almost always some melt-water on the roads. Twelve years after moving, I'm still annoyed.
As I get older, it seems that it takes me longer to get the blood flowing strongly in my extremities. When I used to wear knit gloves with fingerless cycling gloves over, I now wear a pair of thin, wind-breaking gloves, then insulated gloves, and then, sometimes, another pair of overgloves. Then again, I don't usually ride for more than 30 or so minutes at a time in winter, these days (commuting and errands). My inner thighs sometimes feel uncomfortably cold, nowadays, too.
I'm seriously thinking about trying a thinner lube for winter. Regardless, I've got to find a way to remember to lubricate more often.
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