Ganymede
Veteran
- Location
- Rural Kent
I once had a terrible old pump nicked. It was almost as if someone was saying "see.... this is what happens if you leave stuff on your bike, even cr@p stuff, I'll nick anyfink, me".
Buy cheap lights and leave them on the bike. Try to keep a very basic backup in my bag in case one gets pinched (not happened yet). If someone takes them, well they are sad gits but they can't flog them for much anyway.
I don't understand why some cyclists spend so much on lights though, especially for mostly city riding. Fair enough if your commute takes you into the sticks and it is pitch black, but £100s of pounds for a glorified torch seems a bit bonkers.
Occasionally take them off if I know it is going to piss it down all day as cheap lights tend to not be entirely waterproof.
Same for cycle computers, no point having a fancy Garmin for the daily commute, I have a £10 jobby which tells me my speed and that's about it.
Even in cities you can easily cycle in unlit sections, near my old house was a lane that was privately owned but open to the public which didn't have any street lights and until 5 years ago it had craters to rival the moon. It was useful to me and cars as it allowed you to make a turn that was forbidden at the junction. Cycle paths aren't always lit either, though they did part of the Bristol and Bath path last year, and are in the process of doing the ring road path at the moment. Hence why I have lights I can see with.Buy cheap lights and leave them on the bike. Try to keep a very basic backup in my bag in case one gets pinched (not happened yet). If someone takes them, well they are sad gits but they can't flog them for much anyway.
I don't understand why some cyclists spend so much on lights though, especially for mostly city riding. Fair enough if your commute takes you into the sticks and it is pitch black, but £100s of pounds for a glorified torch seems a bit bonkers.
Occasionally take them off if I know it is going to piss it down all day as cheap lights tend to not be entirely waterproof.
Same for cycle computers, no point having a fancy Garmin for the daily commute, I have a £10 jobby which tells me my speed and that's about it.