martin540
Active Member
- Location
- North Oxfordshire
Good luck, I've just started giving it a try too
X2 on this point. I feel quite lethargic if I drive to work but cycling wakes me up and for some reason this lasts all day.I find I feel less tired cycling to work than if I get the bus.
I feel quite lethargic if I drive to work but cycling wakes me up and for some reason this lasts all day.
And you can get panniers designed for carrying suits etc or take the car once a week with a weeks worth in assuming you have somewhere to keep them ?Consider kitting your bike upon with a pannier rack so you can carry the load in a pannier bag rather then on your back if the overall weight on your shoulders and sweaty back syndrome starts to bother you
I second that: I'm perilously close to turning 50, and have a 36 mile round-trip commute with about 2000 feet climbing, plus I've just returned from the Alps and Pyrenees, having done a huge amount of climbing. You really can get used to anything, if you get enough practice.Enjoy - I don't commute by bike everyday but the days I do are the best.
Don't use age as an excuse - I'm early 50s and have a proper hilly commute - great for getting the extra miles and climbing in your legs for those weekend adventures.
Someone will come along shortly and tell you that headwinds are good trainingJust by way of an update, I've kept it up so far and loving it, despite a flat tyre and some annoying headwinds last week and a guy washing his car this morning who also washed me as I went past.