#61
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Discs
No humiditty
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#62
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Discs
On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 9:56:40 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote:
On 2017-11-21 09:41, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 7:55:57 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-20 18:02, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, November 20, 2017 at 1:48:00 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: [...] As I am writing this I am wearing a T-shirt from PricePoint. It was about $5 on sale, good quality, 100% cotton, very small logo and otherwise gray. The logo is an inverted smiling shark, no idea what manufacturer it is supposed to represent. Some folks think higher priced stuff is better. Often not so. When I wore $80 running shoes on the bike they were totally worn and breaking up after a year. $30 shoes, same thing, same life span. $30 sandals show hardly any wear after a year. I have some sale-table Giro SPD shoes I got for $89 three or four years ago, and they're still going strong. I'm about to jump in them and ride home through about five inches of standing water. Gore booties, too -- which I'm going to dry and hit with some Scotchgard tonight. I got some seep through this morning -- but then again, it was storming, and I was riding through five inches of standing water. I just had to dry my running shoes in front of the wood stove. It said "Don't enter when flooded" but oh heck ... then ... oh darn! Once in you can't turn around. Also, I abhor any kind of locking pedals. Even removed the loop pedals from my road bike and mounted ... gasp ... oh horror ... MTB pedals. If you were a serious rider, you'd have a shoe drier. Drying shoes in front of the wood stove is not good for them. Nah, easy. I stuff crumpled newspaper in there. Of course, one should not set them so close to the stove that it could ignite when dried. Since I have several pairs of older running shoes I just take another for the next ride. Sandals during non-winter months don't have that issue, they are usually already dry by the time I get home even after a serious river crossing. I abhor platforms. I've been in some sort of cleat system for 45 years -- except on resort bikes or touring, although later in life I used SPDs for touring. We have very different opinions there. I met a seasoned MTB rider a couple of weeks ago who had a fast crash and couldn't get one foot out because of an obstruction. He consequently flew into a pile of rocks with his bike attached and broke a wrist. I prefer long-sleeved, non-cotton, tee-shirts for riding, and those do cost $10-12. Fortunately these are now widely available at local stores like Walmart. I can't stand long sleeves when cycling although it would certainly be better re skin cancer, poison oak brushings and all that. Don't you cycle in winter . . . in rain, snow? A short sleeve t-shirt and lumberjack shirt would work for approximately none of my riding this time of year. I'd look like a wet dog after three minutes of my commute. Cotton is a fair weather fabric. It grows in hot climates. Well, we are different. When I ride in the Sierra in the dead of winter I usually take off the lumberjack shirt once the first long uphill section shows. Do you only go up -- and is it always dry and sunny? You'd freeze your ass off around here descending a few thousand feet in a lumberjack shirt -- cut-offs and sandals, or whatever other homeless outfit you wear, particularly if its raining or snowing. That is what other riders ask me as well when they see me. The answer is no, I don't get cold easily. In winter I wear running shoes though. I don't believe for a minute that you are descending Sierra passes in the dead of winter in cut-offs, a lumberjack shirt and running shoes -- assuming you can stay upright. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE6q18tOfVg That's just October. If you can feel your hands after five minutes, more power to you. Personally, I wear appropriate clothes that keep me dry and warm, or as dry and warm as possible. My weekend rides frequently involve hours in the rain, and unless your lumberjack shirt has magical powers, it would be like a wet rug after five minutes -- throw in 35 degree temps and some wind, and you've got instant misery. Why would anyone do that . . . for anti-fashion? It's like the fixie dopes struggling up hill and then beating their kidneys to death on the way down. It's posing in its own right. -- Jay Beattie. |
#63
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Discs
On 11/21/2017 3:24 PM, jbeattie wrote:
On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 9:56:40 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-21 09:41, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 7:55:57 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-20 18:02, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, November 20, 2017 at 1:48:00 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: [...] As I am writing this I am wearing a T-shirt from PricePoint. It was about $5 on sale, good quality, 100% cotton, very small logo and otherwise gray. The logo is an inverted smiling shark, no idea what manufacturer it is supposed to represent. Some folks think higher priced stuff is better. Often not so. When I wore $80 running shoes on the bike they were totally worn and breaking up after a year. $30 shoes, same thing, same life span. $30 sandals show hardly any wear after a year. I have some sale-table Giro SPD shoes I got for $89 three or four years ago, and they're still going strong. I'm about to jump in them and ride home through about five inches of standing water. Gore booties, too -- which I'm going to dry and hit with some Scotchgard tonight. I got some seep through this morning -- but then again, it was storming, and I was riding through five inches of standing water. I just had to dry my running shoes in front of the wood stove. It said "Don't enter when flooded" but oh heck ... then ... oh darn! Once in you can't turn around. Also, I abhor any kind of locking pedals. Even removed the loop pedals from my road bike and mounted ... gasp ... oh horror ... MTB pedals. If you were a serious rider, you'd have a shoe drier. Drying shoes in front of the wood stove is not good for them. Nah, easy. I stuff crumpled newspaper in there. Of course, one should not set them so close to the stove that it could ignite when dried. Since I have several pairs of older running shoes I just take another for the next ride. Sandals during non-winter months don't have that issue, they are usually already dry by the time I get home even after a serious river crossing. I abhor platforms. I've been in some sort of cleat system for 45 years -- except on resort bikes or touring, although later in life I used SPDs for touring. We have very different opinions there. I met a seasoned MTB rider a couple of weeks ago who had a fast crash and couldn't get one foot out because of an obstruction. He consequently flew into a pile of rocks with his bike attached and broke a wrist. I prefer long-sleeved, non-cotton, tee-shirts for riding, and those do cost $10-12. Fortunately these are now widely available at local stores like Walmart. I can't stand long sleeves when cycling although it would certainly be better re skin cancer, poison oak brushings and all that. Don't you cycle in winter . . . in rain, snow? A short sleeve t-shirt and lumberjack shirt would work for approximately none of my riding this time of year. I'd look like a wet dog after three minutes of my commute. Cotton is a fair weather fabric. It grows in hot climates. Well, we are different. When I ride in the Sierra in the dead of winter I usually take off the lumberjack shirt once the first long uphill section shows. Do you only go up -- and is it always dry and sunny? You'd freeze your ass off around here descending a few thousand feet in a lumberjack shirt -- cut-offs and sandals, or whatever other homeless outfit you wear, particularly if its raining or snowing. That is what other riders ask me as well when they see me. The answer is no, I don't get cold easily. In winter I wear running shoes though. I don't believe for a minute that you are descending Sierra passes in the dead of winter in cut-offs, a lumberjack shirt and running shoes -- assuming you can stay upright. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE6q18tOfVg That's just October. If you can feel your hands after five minutes, more power to you. Personally, I wear appropriate clothes that keep me dry and warm, or as dry and warm as possible. My weekend rides frequently involve hours in the rain, and unless your lumberjack shirt has magical powers, it would be like a wet rug after five minutes -- throw in 35 degree temps and some wind, and you've got instant misery. Why would anyone do that . . . for anti-fashion? It's like the fixie dopes struggling up hill and then beating their kidneys to death on the way down. It's posing in its own right. -- Jay Beattie. If anything goes wrong, Joerg can wait for the steam train rescue in just a couple of days: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-Yew1UQuQE -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#64
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Discs
On 2017-11-21 13:24, jbeattie wrote:
On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 9:56:40 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-21 09:41, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 7:55:57 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-20 18:02, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, November 20, 2017 at 1:48:00 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: [...] I prefer long-sleeved, non-cotton, tee-shirts for riding, and those do cost $10-12. Fortunately these are now widely available at local stores like Walmart. I can't stand long sleeves when cycling although it would certainly be better re skin cancer, poison oak brushings and all that. Don't you cycle in winter . . . in rain, snow? A short sleeve t-shirt and lumberjack shirt would work for approximately none of my riding this time of year. I'd look like a wet dog after three minutes of my commute. Cotton is a fair weather fabric. It grows in hot climates. Well, we are different. When I ride in the Sierra in the dead of winter I usually take off the lumberjack shirt once the first long uphill section shows. Do you only go up -- and is it always dry and sunny? You'd freeze your ass off around here descending a few thousand feet in a lumberjack shirt -- cut-offs and sandals, or whatever other homeless outfit you wear, particularly if its raining or snowing. That is what other riders ask me as well when they see me. The answer is no, I don't get cold easily. In winter I wear running shoes though. I don't believe for a minute that you are descending Sierra passes in the dead of winter in cut-offs, a lumberjack shirt and running shoes -- assuming you can stay upright. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE6q18tOfVg That's just October. If you can feel your hands after five minutes, more power to you. I did it here on December-31, on a fat bike, and it looked like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwpUr7bUyio Fun! You just had to watch it especially on the downhill sections because there was a layer of ice under the snow. I did wear gloves the first miles but took them off because better feel for the brakes was needed. It's not for the faint of heart because everyone and their brother was trying out the guns they got for Christmas. Because it is closed to normal traffic in winter the road is a prime destination for target practice and that time it gets to be extreme. Personally, I wear appropriate clothes that keep me dry and warm, or as dry and warm as possible. My weekend rides frequently involve hours in the rain, and unless your lumberjack shirt has magical powers, it would be like a wet rug after five minutes -- throw in 35 degree temps and some wind, and you've got instant misery. Why would anyone do that . . . for anti-fashion? It's like the fixie dopes struggling up hill and then beating their kidneys to death on the way down. It's posing in its own right. I usually wear that shirt to protect my lower back. L4-5-6 aren't so great and can trigger bad muscle spasms which can be aggravated by cold. When it's pouring plus cold I wear a rain jacket, of course. When it's warm and pouring I don't. While waiting at a red light with a muddy puddle developing under my MTB a guy rolled down the window on the passenger side and said "Hey, dude, it's raining out there!". I was soaked but happy like a kid that got to play in the mud. Because I just did. It's got nothing to do with posing. I feel more comfortable that way. As a cyclist I have never felt the urge to conform to some fashion code. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#65
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REI sale
The desk girls called, a package arrived.9 4 REI 20% poly tech T's arrived plus my first beanie, n OR. BOttom end $$ in the REI list, perfectly explained by REI n fitting into my sched. Tree drapped solstice lights were on when I went down to the Oasis front desk for pickup. Jose n I carroled into the seaon. Wonderful. |
#66
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Discs
On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 1:52:27 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote:
On 2017-11-21 13:24, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 9:56:40 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-21 09:41, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 7:55:57 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-20 18:02, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, November 20, 2017 at 1:48:00 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: [...] I prefer long-sleeved, non-cotton, tee-shirts for riding, and those do cost $10-12. Fortunately these are now widely available at local stores like Walmart. I can't stand long sleeves when cycling although it would certainly be better re skin cancer, poison oak brushings and all that. Don't you cycle in winter . . . in rain, snow? A short sleeve t-shirt and lumberjack shirt would work for approximately none of my riding this time of year. I'd look like a wet dog after three minutes of my commute. Cotton is a fair weather fabric. It grows in hot climates. Well, we are different. When I ride in the Sierra in the dead of winter I usually take off the lumberjack shirt once the first long uphill section shows. Do you only go up -- and is it always dry and sunny? You'd freeze your ass off around here descending a few thousand feet in a lumberjack shirt -- cut-offs and sandals, or whatever other homeless outfit you wear, particularly if its raining or snowing. That is what other riders ask me as well when they see me. The answer is no, I don't get cold easily. In winter I wear running shoes though. I don't believe for a minute that you are descending Sierra passes in the dead of winter in cut-offs, a lumberjack shirt and running shoes -- assuming you can stay upright. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE6q18tOfVg That's just October. If you can feel your hands after five minutes, more power to you. I did it here on December-31, on a fat bike, and it looked like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwpUr7bUyio Fun! You just had to watch it especially on the downhill sections because there was a layer of ice under the snow. I did wear gloves the first miles but took them off because better feel for the brakes was needed. It's not for the faint of heart because everyone and their brother was trying out the guns they got for Christmas. Because it is closed to normal traffic in winter the road is a prime destination for target practice and that time it gets to be extreme. Personally, I wear appropriate clothes that keep me dry and warm, or as dry and warm as possible. My weekend rides frequently involve hours in the rain, and unless your lumberjack shirt has magical powers, it would be like a wet rug after five minutes -- throw in 35 degree temps and some wind, and you've got instant misery. Why would anyone do that . . . for anti-fashion? It's like the fixie dopes struggling up hill and then beating their kidneys to death on the way down. It's posing in its own right. I usually wear that shirt to protect my lower back. L4-5-6 aren't so great and can trigger bad muscle spasms which can be aggravated by cold. When it's pouring plus cold I wear a rain jacket, of course. When it's warm and pouring I don't. While waiting at a red light with a muddy puddle developing under my MTB a guy rolled down the window on the passenger side and said "Hey, dude, it's raining out there!". I was soaked but happy like a kid that got to play in the mud. Because I just did. That's a darling story. Now try it for six months with cars. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlCjMeEzuV0 Having a wave break over your head is thrilling! It makes me giggle, and people stop and say "dude, you're like soaked!" Now throw in some leaves -- and do it in the dark. http://bikeportland..org/wp-content/...aves-path1.jpg Gotta love those separate bike paths. This is why I wear appropriate rain gear. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CbZgr6nbFk -- Jay Beattie. |
#67
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Discs
On 2017-11-22 08:45, jbeattie wrote:
On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 1:52:27 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-21 13:24, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 9:56:40 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-21 09:41, jbeattie wrote: On Tuesday, November 21, 2017 at 7:55:57 AM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-11-20 18:02, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, November 20, 2017 at 1:48:00 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: [...] I prefer long-sleeved, non-cotton, tee-shirts for riding, and those do cost $10-12. Fortunately these are now widely available at local stores like Walmart. I can't stand long sleeves when cycling although it would certainly be better re skin cancer, poison oak brushings and all that. Don't you cycle in winter . . . in rain, snow? A short sleeve t-shirt and lumberjack shirt would work for approximately none of my riding this time of year. I'd look like a wet dog after three minutes of my commute. Cotton is a fair weather fabric. It grows in hot climates. Well, we are different. When I ride in the Sierra in the dead of winter I usually take off the lumberjack shirt once the first long uphill section shows. Do you only go up -- and is it always dry and sunny? You'd freeze your ass off around here descending a few thousand feet in a lumberjack shirt -- cut-offs and sandals, or whatever other homeless outfit you wear, particularly if its raining or snowing. That is what other riders ask me as well when they see me. The answer is no, I don't get cold easily. In winter I wear running shoes though. I don't believe for a minute that you are descending Sierra passes in the dead of winter in cut-offs, a lumberjack shirt and running shoes -- assuming you can stay upright. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE6q18tOfVg That's just October. If you can feel your hands after five minutes, more power to you. I did it here on December-31, on a fat bike, and it looked like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwpUr7bUyio Fun! You just had to watch it especially on the downhill sections because there was a layer of ice under the snow. I did wear gloves the first miles but took them off because better feel for the brakes was needed. It's not for the faint of heart because everyone and their brother was trying out the guns they got for Christmas. Because it is closed to normal traffic in winter the road is a prime destination for target practice and that time it gets to be extreme. Personally, I wear appropriate clothes that keep me dry and warm, or as dry and warm as possible. My weekend rides frequently involve hours in the rain, and unless your lumberjack shirt has magical powers, it would be like a wet rug after five minutes -- throw in 35 degree temps and some wind, and you've got instant misery. Why would anyone do that . . . for anti-fashion? It's like the fixie dopes struggling up hill and then beating their kidneys to death on the way down. It's posing in its own right. I usually wear that shirt to protect my lower back. L4-5-6 aren't so great and can trigger bad muscle spasms which can be aggravated by cold. When it's pouring plus cold I wear a rain jacket, of course. When it's warm and pouring I don't. While waiting at a red light with a muddy puddle developing under my MTB a guy rolled down the window on the passenger side and said "Hey, dude, it's raining out there!". I was soaked but happy like a kid that got to play in the mud. Because I just did. That's a darling story. Now try it for six months with cars. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlCjMeEzuV0 Having a wave break over your head is thrilling! That happened during my 1st year in this area. White Rock Road was flooded but I needed to get to work. Lots of cars behind me, all stopped. I have an SUV with good ground clearnance and knew where the road surface is supposed to be under there, so I went. Water shot over the windshield. I stopped at the other side and saw that they all turned around. ... It makes me giggle, and people stop and say "dude, you're like soaked!" Now throw in some leaves -- and do it in the dark. http://bikeportland.org/wp-content/u...aves-path1.jpg Piece of cake. I have that on almost every Sunday ride depending on season (a rail trail in the forest). I ride that with 770c*25 slicks. Gotta love those separate bike paths. This is why I wear appropriate rain gear. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CbZgr6nbFk That's extreme. Water is normal for many of us though, like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwfygHXzju0 This would be my dream but my wife would scream when I get home: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRyqq5s7g20 -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#68
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Discs
goo.gl/DWjYN1 every evening during rainy season coming back from the Library before sunset. Warm warm warm sleep in a damp poly bag outback at bird research station...with synthetic clothing, ball n yellow clip-ons.
I was in Wal this after n Wal was pre xmass stocked. A serious section hmmmm 30x20 adjacent the main checkout aisle stocked with Russell sport drip dry 65% poly 35 cotton, Cheap n cotton takes dye. Nice colors. But WTH, good for Wal. $11 Note that these shirts are lingerie without obvious breathability. The shirts are more coverall when raining or cool over a 100% poly T. In canoe kayaking these fabrics are worn under eg a wet suit trying to prevent rash n encourage support movement. At a substantially higher price n thickness |
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