Boris Bajic
Guest
I go back many years to my student years. I commuted to lectures in Bloomsbury by bicycle or motorcycle and in those far off days before parenthood and cycle computers, I had the time to fret about covering the distance at the greatest possible speed.
Bicycle was usually faster than motorcycle, but that's another story - and was only so because I felt able to ignore traffic signals when cycling.
But I digress... One of the pointless time-savers I was most pleased about was my route of entry into the Senate House Car Park via the NW corner of Russell Square. There was a car barrier in front of the SOAS building which it was a pain to ride round, so I swung a leg over the bike, squatted on the left side of the frame with my head next to the cross bar and my hands reaching up to the hoods and whipped under the barrier before swinging back into the saddle. The bicycle had to be cranked fairly far over to stay on two wheels, but it worked remarkably well. It could save as much as three or four seconds on a 30-minute journey.
I ride past similar barriers to this day without ever feeling the inclination to pass beneath them at speed.
I am now a former cycle commuter, but do any others recognise that things they did in their twenties are now simply either unthinkable or best avoided?
Bicycle was usually faster than motorcycle, but that's another story - and was only so because I felt able to ignore traffic signals when cycling.
But I digress... One of the pointless time-savers I was most pleased about was my route of entry into the Senate House Car Park via the NW corner of Russell Square. There was a car barrier in front of the SOAS building which it was a pain to ride round, so I swung a leg over the bike, squatted on the left side of the frame with my head next to the cross bar and my hands reaching up to the hoods and whipped under the barrier before swinging back into the saddle. The bicycle had to be cranked fairly far over to stay on two wheels, but it worked remarkably well. It could save as much as three or four seconds on a 30-minute journey.
I ride past similar barriers to this day without ever feeling the inclination to pass beneath them at speed.
I am now a former cycle commuter, but do any others recognise that things they did in their twenties are now simply either unthinkable or best avoided?