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Tag Archives: Commuting

The Reborn Commuter

2
Filed under General Cycling

I used to cycle a lot. In my twenties I was working 38 km from my home and I was a fairly keen cyclist. So cycling to work seemed like the logical thing to do; I got very fit very quickly and soon started to ride audax events at weekends. I was probably doing an average of 400 km a week without much discomfort. My weight was down to just under 12 stone, which for a strapping six footer like me is pretty good. I could eat and drink what I liked and never put on weight. I wasn’t carrying an ounce of spare fat. In short, I was as fit as a butcher’s dog and built like a racing whippet.

Fast forward twelve years…. I’m 38 now (near enough) and have had a gradually diminishing cycling career. I carried on doing the occasional audax after I left my 23 mile commute job, but the last one I did was worse than most of the traditional bad things that have happened to me – it was freezing cold, it rained and by the halfway stage, 100 km from home, I was looking and feeling like that photograph of Tom Simpson on Ventoux - so I stopped doing long rides, and it wasn’t too long before a 200Km audax was no longer an option anyway. Or at least, the only reason I could tell myself I could do one if I wanted was – rather like the heavy smoker who says he could give up tomorrow but never seems to - that I wasn’t daft enough to prove to myself that I couldn’t by trying it. If you see what I mean. I did, however, continue to commute by bicycle.

First I had a 20Km each way spin to West Bromwich from Wolverhampton, which was a good workout but not a pleasant ride, certainly not compared to my 38 km jaunt through the lanes of rural Shropshire which had been my previous experience of cycle commuting. Then I moved on from that job – I was working for an agency at the time, so I was forever working in different places – to somewhere a bit nearer home. And so it seemed to go on, until I was commuting about 10 km each way once or twice a week. Then, I moved away so my commute was too long to cycle (and at 75 miles, even the most hardcore cyclist would think twice about it) and that was the end of my cycling career. For three years. Oh, I thought of myself as a cyclist, even when I started smoking, and as long as I never actually went near a bike, I could persuade myself that I was still a giant of the road. Well, that last bit was probably right, but only in terms of the “giant” bit: it’s amazing how you put weight on when you eat enough to fuel regular cycling without actually doing any. And it’s amazing how hard it is to find the time to do any exercise at all when you’re working a 70 hour week and sleeping four nights in a lorry.

So … eventually I got to the point where I felt I had to do something. I always said the thing that would make me give up smoking was cycling regularly, and I also always said that the thing that would make me start cycling regularly was having a job nearer home that I could cycle to. So that’s what I’ve done. Now I’m working 12 miles up the road and am doing some sensible hours. You don’t make money as a lorry driver by working sensible hours, so as well as wanting to get fit again, I have a financial motive to bike it; last time I looked, Weetabix was cheaper than petrol. And as well as the financial and fitness motives, I’m going to need something to write about in this space every so often. Next time I’ll tell you the story of my first few commutes – not that there’s much to tell – and, with any luck, I’ll have pedalled it at least once more by then.

Till next time,

Reborn Commuter.

Cycling in the Midwest.

0
Filed under Commuting, Places

Ann Arbor is a Michigan college town a few miles outside of Detroit. As the home of Google’s AdWords division and Domino pizza you might not immediately associate it with a healthy cycling community. However Ann Arbor positively welcomes cyclists so wherever you look there are people on classy road bikes, sturdy MTBs and, the most popular of all, ‘sit-up-and-beg’ town bikes.

Whilst on a recent trip to Michigan I bumped into a fixed rider and asked him about what kinds of cycling the area offered. 70 mile excursions along the wide open roads seemed to be his ride of choice. With more space on the tarmac, and fewer cars per mile than in the UK, I could see the appeal. Personally I was surprised by the poor condition of the roads. They say everything is bigger in the USA and that also includes potholes.

Although I didn’t find many mountain bikers in downtown Ann Arbor I discovered the next best thing… mountain bike beer. The local brewing company teamed up with a nearby Ypsilanti bike shop to support local trails through the sale of beer. I was able to express my ‘support’ for the mountain bikers several evenings running.

On the wide sidewalks on Ann Arbor and the leafy university campus sit-up-and-beg bikes intermingled at low speeds with pedestrians. Cycle paths are conspicuous by their absence. Cyclists actually use their bells and pedestrians seem to respond appropriately. Very strange. Of course it wasn’t all idyllic and one taxi driver rattled off the familiar shouldn’t be on the road tirade. However two factors seemed to make cycling more appealing to the citizens. Firstly the weather is quite settled, so although the winters are very cold, the summer is relatively dry so people spend less time worrying about packing waterproof clothing. Secondly Ann Arbor is a relatively low crime area and the fear of bicycle theft was a minimal concern. Londoners would laugh at the puny bike locks Ann Arbor residents use.

A graduate student at the nearby University of Michigan said she bought a cheap mountain bike from Target due to rumours of quality bikes being stripped for parts. But on the whole people seemed happy to take their bicycles pretty much everywhere. Some commutes were surprisingly short which seemed to free people up to take less clutter with them – afterall who needs a puncture repair kit, pump, multitool, water and so on when the commute is only two miles?

Back in England I find myself wondering if more people would take up cycling if it weren’t for the fear of theft or vandalism? Unfortunately whatever we do the weather is one thing we really can’t fix.

Ferry across the Thames

2
Filed under Commuting, Recumbents, Touring

Yes we all know about the Woolwich ferry service and very good it is to, I always find that when I use the service, they put me and the trike at the front of the queue and if I am going into London I often use it, but what if I want to go from the wilds of Kent to the mystical world of Essex? A land of mystery and magic (and few hills and the occasional white stiletto), it also is the gateway to Suffolk and the ferry to the Netherlands, and lest we forget, Lakeside shopping centre. 

There are a couple of options, drive, go to the Dartford crossing and they get a Landrover with an iffy trailer to take you across or the fabled (until now), Gravesend Tilbury ferry.

I heard about the ferry four years ago when it was in the news after being rammed by the navy, while berthed. At that time I was led to believe it was just for foot passengers, I was unsure if it was suitable for cycles and getting information about it is near impossible, as it turns out it may be one of Kent/Essex’s best kept secrets, as not only does it take cycles but also solo motorcycles.

After many unsuccessful attempts to find out fare prices and timetables I put it to the back of mind and forgot about it, but recently decided to renew my search, to that end I decided the best course of action was a visit and Tuesday 15th July 2008 was the day.

The plan was to call into the site of the new workshop and sign the lease then head to Gravesend, get the ferry to Tilbury and ride to Lakeside, have some lunch, pop into the bookshop and Decathlon then head back the ferry, back across to Gravesend and on to home, when I got to the workshop they had messed up the lease so I spent two hours sorting that out, I then had lunch at the cafe on site, still, not to be deterred, I decided to go to Gravesend and at least check the timetable, location and prices. The timetable on line is a few years out of date.

At this point I made my usual mistake of heading off to Gravesend on National Cycle Route one, which starts off fine and follows the old canal and railway line, so is direct and straight, all sounds good but in practice, it is overgrown, swamped in insects and has the worst installed barriers in the world, to narrow for a trike, to narrow for a wheelchair and to narrow for a loaded touring bike, Gravesend council take note.

People have asked me why they have been told not to stop in Gravesend and the reason is, you will get mugged or robbed or killed, the local “yoof” are like the cast of extras from “Dawn of the Dead”, seemingly calm but prone to bouts of violence and opportunist crime, especially after a few cans of “wife beater”, however they cannot handle a moving target so as long as you keep moving they leave you alone, interestingly they seem to have a healthy respect for recumbent trikes for reasons I have not yet fathomed.

I traversed the cycle route, lifting the trike over four barriers, (ah, aerospace aluminium, nice and light), and made my way into Gravesend proper, at this point I noticed a noise from my offside front wheel, I could not see anything caught there so I assumed (correctly), that I had a loose spoke which I decided to investigate at the ferry. Finding the ferry was relatively easy, I traversed the town centre and headed onto the one way system and it was sign posted on the left of the road, (West street), at first I was confused as it looked like the entrance to private flats, and indeed it is the car parking for said flats, but to the rear of the building there is a wrought iron gate which leads to a pontoon where the ferry docks.

The ferry was visible on the other side of the river, there was no information available so I waited for the boat to cross so I could ask for details, I say boat because the word “ship” would be a huge exaggeration, still, a few people were waiting so it seemed as if it was a used service. The ferry made it’s way across dodging between tugs towing barges and came along side the pontoon, it smoothly slid into place before the stern (that’s the bit at the back), hit the pontoon with the force of a small torpedo, I could see some sort of contraption on the rear deck which I thought could be a recumbent trike, which would be odd as I had only seen one other in this part of Kent in the last five years. When the ferry tied up I could see it was indeed a recumbent tandem trike, not to miss the opportunity, as they unloaded I made sure my trike was out of sight and declared “that’s a funny looking bike mister!”, I saw the heckles of the rider go up, “funny looking bike?, Funny looking bike?”, at that point ready to educate me all about recumbent trikes he saw my Catrike and realised he had been set up, we spent a few minutes chatting and I suggested I ride back with them as they only lived about five miles from me and it would be pleasant to ride with another trike. I then checked the ferry details and timetable, it runs every half hour and costs £2.70 one way or £4.10 for a day return, cycles are carried at no extra charge, seems very reasonable to me. Pensioners go for a £1.

I made the return trip with the couple on the recumbent tandem trike (Trice, no longer made), before taking my leave and heading home, I am looking forward to actually using the ferry crossing, now that I have checked it out, a very useful service for cyclists that means you do not have to go all the way to Dartford or London to cross the Thames, when I cycle to Suffolk next month for the HPV world championships I will be using the service.

In total for the day, I cycled for just over three hours, averaged only 10mph due to using the cycle route and had a maximum speed of 35mph. The weather was overcast but later turned to sunshine, I found the information I wanted and made some new friends, a successful day.

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