If it is really chucking it down before I leave, I will stay indoors. Do some people love cycling so much they don't care if they get soaked or slip on ice?
Look, I just have to say this.<rant>Skin is NOT WATERPROOF. Skin is Semi-Permeable Membrane</rant>![]()
The only bad point was the soaked shoes and gloves, these can take ages to dry out so I might invest in a second pair of gloves and some overshoes for the commute. There are no radiators or convenient drying points at work, my clothes go on the back of the chair, but when it comes to shoes I am stuffed!
No, the epidermis is waterproof. Otherwise you could correct dehydration by sitting in a bath rather than drinking water.
On many occasions when it is absoloutly chucking it down with rain I still see cyclists in Lycra, or wearing shorts above the knee with no waterproof footwear.
I know it can rain at anytime, but before you leave your house you can tell if there is a strong chance of it raining if you look outside.
I have seen cyclists regularly and I'm sure they have left thier house wearing minimal clothes in adverse weather conditions.
Over the past few years when we have had extreme snow and ice and cold, I have still seen cyclists bombing about on sheets of ice risking life and limb.
If it is really chucking it down before I leave, I will stay indoors. Do some people love cycling so much they don't care if they get soaked or slip on ice?
I don't bother with waterproofs they make you too hot, my partner does but then he doesn't go as fast as me - possibly something to do with the age difference.
I too have to cycle to work, not being able to drive & no convenient buses. I cycled all through the bad weather & added a lot more layers than any other winter.
I never even had a clue you could get studded tyres it would have saved me from the massive bruises when the bike threw me off before I was ready. I 've now added that link to my favourites ready for this winter.
Like you, if it's really raining i.e. what we on this side of the pond call a "gully washer" I'll stay at home. If however it's just a light sprinkle I'm likely to still head on out. If while I am out riding and it starts to rain, again the degree of how hard it's raining as well as how close I am to my destination, dictates how I am going to respond. Again, if it is just a light sprinkle I'll continue riding, if it increases in intensity I'll look for a "safe harbor." If I am close to my destination, I'll keep on going until I get there.
If im just out and about and it rains I'll just grin and bear it. I understand that some people may not have a car or access to good public transport.
I'm lucky as I live in London. If it is just mild sprinkling rain then I'm fine with it, but when it is really tipping it down the journey becomes less enjoyable each to thier own![]()
you're both sort of right semi permeable means it goes out one way not the other, hence skin is waterproof but you can lose moisture through the skin. which is why you go wrinkly in the bath or being out too long in the rain. I believe the term is osmosis, If I remember my biology correctly.
I don't bother with waterproofs they make you too hot, my partner does but then he doesn't go as fast as me - possibly something to do with the age difference.
I too have to cycle to work, not being able to drive & no convenient buses. I cycled all through the bad weather & added a lot more layers than any other winter.
I never even had a clue you could get studded tyres it would have saved me from the massive bruises when the bike threw me off before I was ready. I 've now added that link to my favourites ready for this winter.