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#16 |
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Guest
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"Pat" <infox@tmail.com> wrote in
news:651l3cF2djtedU1@mid.individual.net: > I am seeing posts on this and other places where the topic is about > the trip but all anyone wants to do is brag on the mileage and I don't > get it. I rode around County Clare and the Dingle peninsula for 12 > days and I was doing it for the experience, not to come back and brag > about how many miles per day I covered. > > Now, I am planning to ride the Katy Trail and there are many posts > saying things like "I did the entire 225 miles in 4 days" or "it > didn't take me but 6 days" and I want to ask "why?" Doesn't anyone > ride to experience the trip or is it all about bragging when you get > home? What is the point of going to a new place if all you do is > maintain a 100 km per day distance level? If you're doing a tour, you can't approach it like that clueless idiot on the Fat Tire Beer commercials. You have to plan how many miles to ride, where you are going to stay, where to get food and water, what and how much to carry, and so on. If you don't, you could be find yourself in a bad way. -- Larry Dickman <LDickman@comcast.net> |
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#17 |
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> If you're doing a tour, you can't approach it like that clueless idiot on > the Fat Tire Beer commercials. You have to plan how many miles to ride, > where you are going to stay, where to get food and water, what and how > much > to carry, and so on. If you don't, you could be find yourself in a bad > way. > > -- > Larry Dickman What I do is sketch out general guidelines. I figure out things like...if I'm in this area at nightfall, then here are my options for spending the night...,etc. I get a general idea but from then on out, I like to be spontaneous. For example, I carried camping supplies into Ireland, but it rained 1/3 of the time, so I opted to stay in hostels instead. I rode to the coast to see the Cliffs of Moher, but there was a storm at sea and all I could see was rain and fog. So, I turned southward and used a second option of things I wanted to see if I had the time. If I limited myself to a set itinerary, it would not "fit" my idea of a good time. I like being able to react and go in a totally different direction if need be. |
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#18 |
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I generally plan far fewer miles per day than I know I can cover. That way,
I can be relaxed every inch of the way, knowing that a flat tire or a sudden downpour isn't going to thrust me into panic mode. It also gives me more time to stop and visit interesting sites along the way. Of course, the down-side is that I will often talk myself out of a trip because I have a limited amount of time and cannot squeeze the trip in with the amount of "extra" time I like to have. "Pat" <intex@tmail.com> wrote in message news:669iskF2f508iU1@mid.individual.net... > >> If you're doing a tour, you can't approach it like that clueless idiot on >> the Fat Tire Beer commercials. You have to plan how many miles to ride, >> where you are going to stay, where to get food and water, what and how >> much >> to carry, and so on. If you don't, you could be find yourself in a bad >> way. >> >> -- >> Larry Dickman > > What I do is sketch out general guidelines. I figure out things like...if > I'm in this area at nightfall, then here are my options for spending the > night...,etc. I get a general idea but from then on out, I like to be > spontaneous. For example, I carried camping supplies into Ireland, but it > rained 1/3 of the time, so I opted to stay in hostels instead. I rode to > the coast to see the Cliffs of Moher, but there was a storm at sea and all > I could see was rain and fog. So, I turned southward and used a second > option of things I wanted to see if I had the time. > > If I limited myself to a set itinerary, it would not "fit" my idea of a > good time. I like being able to react and go in a totally different > direction if need be. > |
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#19 |
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Ron Wallenfang wrote:
> From Nevada desert to Utah salt flats to Illinois cornfields to the > north woods in which I grew up, there's a lot of territory you can > take in quickly, from an aesthetic standpoint. Very kindly put, Ron. ![]() |
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#20 |
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Papa Tom <TomMontalbano@optonline.net> wrote:
> Also, very good point about how "smelling the roses" is relative. If all we > wanted to do was get from Point A to Point B as quickly as possible, we > would drive there. ANYBODY who takes a bicycle instead of a car likely > prefers to smell the roses to SOME extent! There's a principle called "Fletcher's Law of Inverse Appreciation," named after the guru of backpacking. It sez that the amount of detail you see is inversely proportional to the sophistication (and hence, speed) of your means of transportation. You'll see more driving than you would flying, more biking than driving. And if you're REALLY more interested in rose-smelling than in destination-reaching, your best option is to walk. Going that slow also has its drawbacks, of course. A bike is one of the best compromises between covering ground and still seeing something. Charles Kuralt commented, when the last segment of I-80 was finished, that "It is now possible to travel from coast to coast without seeing ANYTHING." I've driven much of that highway, and I'm sure Ron has seen many more interesting things along it than I have. Bill __o |Weaning our nation from fossil fuels should be understood as _`\(,_ |the most patriotic policy to which we can commit ourselves. (_)/ (_) | -Robert Redford |
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#21 |
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D_Frumious_B@ndersnat.ch wrote:
> Papa Tom <TomMontalbano@optonline.net> wrote: > >> Also, very good point about how "smelling the roses" is relative. If all we >> wanted to do was get from Point A to Point B as quickly as possible, we >> would drive there. ANYBODY who takes a bicycle instead of a car likely >> prefers to smell the roses to SOME extent! > > There's a principle called "Fletcher's Law of Inverse Appreciation," > named after the guru of backpacking. It sez that the amount of detail you > see is inversely proportional to the sophistication (and hence, speed) of > your means of transportation. You'll see more driving than you would > flying, more biking than driving. And if you're REALLY more interested in > rose-smelling than in destination-reaching, your best option is to walk. > Going that slow also has its drawbacks, of course. A bike is one of the > best compromises between covering ground and still seeing something.[...] I would choose a recumbent trike if I really want to see things. The riding position does not naturally have the rider looking down. Road hazards that could cause the single-track [1] vehicle rider to lose balance can easily be ignored, if the trike has properly wide and durable tires. [1] Reference to the vehicle, not narrow "technical" off-road trails. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia The weather is here, wish you were beautiful |
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#22 |
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Tom Sherman wrote:
> > I would choose a recumbent trike if I really want to see things. The > riding position does not naturally have the rider looking down. Road > hazards that could cause the single-track [1] vehicle rider to lose > balance can easily be ignored, if the trike has properly wide and > durable tires. > > [1] Reference to the vehicle, not narrow "technical" off-road trails. > I've been casting long glances at the upcoming Sun delta trikes, in particular the $1700 X-3 AX: http://www.bentrideronline.com/inde...Id=388&blogId=1 However I'll have to see it in person first, or at least see one of the others that uses the same frame. ....Also I am curious about the width, or lack of it. I noticed with the current models that the rear wheels are considerably narrower than the front wheels of tadpole trikes. Of course tadpoles need room for their front wheels to turn, and on a higher-seat delta you are free to lean your upper body a bit in turns--but I'm wondering now--why all deltas seem to be built with relatively high seating and all tadpoles are built with relatively low seating. ..... So it seems that delta trikes have the advantage of being narrower, but the disadvantage of not turning under power equally well both ways--as on most delta trikes, only one rear wheel is driven, and when turning hard the inside rear wheel tends to lift.... -------- The only "high" tadpole I can recall is the Cycle Genius Phoenix: http://www.cyclegenius.com/trx.html Which has been discounted 20% lately, and is a model that I don't see much talk about so it may not be selling very well. It doesn't look very agile, it'd probably get you more questions about being disabled than any other trike around I think. Does anyone make a lower-seat delta at all?.... Certainly running a chain under a low-set seat cannot be an impossible task; most of the tadpole trikes do it.... ~ |
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#23 |
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Doug Cimper wrote:
> Tom Sherman wrote: >> >> I would choose a recumbent trike if I really want to see things. The >> riding position does not naturally have the rider looking down. Road >> hazards that could cause the single-track [1] vehicle rider to lose >> balance can easily be ignored, if the trike has properly wide and >> durable tires. >> >> [1] Reference to the vehicle, not narrow "technical" off-road trails. >> > > I've been casting long glances at the upcoming Sun delta trikes, in > particular the $1700 X-3 AX: > > http://www.bentrideronline.com/inde...Id=388&blogId=1 > > > However I'll have to see it in person first, or at least see one of the > others that uses the same frame. > > ...Also I am curious about the width, or lack of it. I noticed with the > current models that the rear wheels are considerably narrower than the > front wheels of tadpole trikes. Of course tadpoles need room for their > front wheels to turn, and on a higher-seat delta you are free to lean > your upper body a bit in turns--but I'm wondering now--why all deltas > seem to be built with relatively high seating and all tadpoles are built > with relatively low seating. > .... > So it seems that delta trikes have the advantage of being narrower, but > the disadvantage of not turning under power equally well both ways--as > on most delta trikes, only one rear wheel is driven, and when turning > hard the inside rear wheel tends to lift.... > > -------- > > The only "high" tadpole I can recall is the Cycle Genius Phoenix: > > http://www.cyclegenius.com/trx.html > Add the Anthrotech to the list of high seat tadpoles: <http://www.anthrotech.de/Pages-e/index-e.html>. > Which has been discounted 20% lately, and is a model that I don't see > much talk about so it may not be selling very well. It doesn't look very > agile, it'd probably get you more questions about being disabled than > any other trike around I think. > > Does anyone make a lower-seat delta at all?.... Certainly running a > chain under a low-set seat cannot be an impossible task; most of the > tadpole trikes do it.... > ~ The "Chain Weasel" has a relatively low seat: <http://www.hase-bikes.com/ens/kettwieselal/index.php>. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia The weather is here, wish you were beautiful |
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