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#21
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
" wrote in message ... On Oct 25, 8:02 pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anybody got some ins and outs on clothes changing? I've been commuting for close to 20 years and my company last year moved to new digs with a locker room. I too find the locker room generally inconvenient after having spent most of the 20 years changing in a stall in the bathroom on my floor. I also work late often (journalism) and the cleaning crews are at work, which makes it hard sometimes to change in the bathroom or the locker room, as often they are being cleaned. So .... I go to another floor. It's closer than the locker room and I can take the stairs instead of the elevator, so I don't have to wait as long. I used to leave my slacks at work, which would mean I had to go to my desk midweek and collect them before changing. Now I often haul them around daily. Shoes can be a problem. One solution is to get some Chinese slip-ons -- the one's that are black with the thin brown plastic soles. They're nice and flat in a bag and you can use them to get to your desk and your dress shoes and belt. The new building doesn't have much going on on the first floor, but it has some nice bathrooms with handicapped stalls. Plenty of room and not much demand. The other thing is to change where you like to change and take a nice long **** when you're done to legitimize your use of the stall. My locker/shower room is close and convenient; however, it is small (one person at a time) -- and now with the high price of gas, I am actually having to compete with other cyclists (along with the usual cabal of runners and others who refuse to use the showers at the next door 24 Hour Fitness after working out). I hate sitting around, wating to get into my work clothes. I used to have a little wardrobe in my office and would change with my office door closed, but my new office has a window panel next to the door and basically no place to hide. I still get sh** about leaving my socks on the floor of the locker room or having shoes under my desk or walking to my office in bare feet (or walking out in racing garb -- I used to go to the weekly crit series straight from work) -- but I've been doing it for over 20 years at my current employment, and no one is going to get too wound up about it. Plus, when people know you are the designated office cyclist, you get the pleasure of listening to all their stories about the bad cyclists they see every day and how they just barely avoided hitting one, etc., etc., and how scary it is to ride a bike to work (notwithstanding the miles of bicycle lanes). One of life's little rewards! -- Jay Beattie. |
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#22
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On 10/27/2008 9:19 PM landotter wrote:
On Oct 25, 7:02 pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anybody got some ins and outs on clothes changing? Don't change! Get a proper bike that weighs 40# or so, and ride in wearing a three piece this time of year with some huge Savile Row shoes that engage the rubber block pedals more stiffly than most of Shimano's casual line. Don't forget your cycle clips and tweed cap. ;-) A pipe -- you also need a pipe clenched between your teeth. -- Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Bend, Oregon |
#23
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On Oct 28, 7:52*pm, "Jay Beattie" wrote:
" wrote in message ... On Oct 25, 8:02 pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anybody got some ins and outs on clothes changing? I've been commuting for close to 20 years and my company last year moved to new digs with a locker room. I too find the locker room generally inconvenient after having spent most of the 20 years changing in a stall in the bathroom on my floor. I also work late often (journalism) and the cleaning crews are at work, which makes it hard sometimes to change in the bathroom or the locker room, as often they are being cleaned. So .... I go to another floor. It's closer than the locker room and I can take the stairs instead of the elevator, so I don't have to wait as long. I used to leave my slacks at work, which would mean I had to go to my desk midweek and collect them before changing. *Now I often haul them around daily. Shoes can be a problem. One solution is to get some Chinese slip-ons -- the one's that are black with the thin brown plastic soles. They're nice and flat in a bag and you can use them to get to your desk and your dress shoes and belt. The new building doesn't have much going on on the first floor, but it has some nice bathrooms with handicapped stalls. Plenty of room and not much demand. The other thing is to change where you like to change and take a nice long **** when you're done to legitimize your use of the stall. My locker/shower room is close and convenient; however, it is small (one person at a time) *-- and now with the high price of gas, I am actually having to compete with other cyclists (along with the usual cabal of runners and others who refuse to use the showers at the next door 24 Hour Fitness after working out). *I hate sitting around, wating to get into my work clothes. *I used to have a little wardrobe in my office and would change with my office door closed, but my new office has a window panel next to the door and basically no place to hide. I still get sh** about leaving my socks on the floor of the locker room or having shoes under my desk or walking to my office in bare feet (or walking out in racing garb -- I used to go to the weekly crit series straight from work) -- but I've been doing it for over 20 years at my current employment, and no one is going to get too wound up about it. Plus, when people know you are the designated office cyclist, you get the pleasure of listening to all their stories about the bad cyclists they see every day and how they just barely avoided hitting one, etc., etc., and how scary it is to ride a bike to work (notwithstanding the miles of bicycle lanes). One of life's little rewards! *-- Jay Beattie. I get the comments about how dangerous it must be to ride a bike. Even from people who supposedly ride bikes! And others saying they only ride on the trails because its just too dangerous to ride on the road. And if its dark or rainy, its extra extra extra dangerous to ride a bike. |
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On Oct 27, 4:31*pm, Brian Huntley wrote:
On Oct 25, 8:02*pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anyhow... not to rant on and on... but does anybody have a workaround that works for them? Ignoring the impatient ones? Flush, and claim you were "multi tasking." This is my favorite reply so far. Personally, we don't have locker rooms @ my workplace, but I change in a bathroom that's somewhat inconvient. I do so because it's the only single-person bathroom here, so I can lock the door and wipe up a bit using the sink. I show up, walk to my desk in my cycling gear, get my work clothes, walk back to the bathroom right next to where I park my bike, clean up and change, punch in (since the time clock is right next to that bathroom and my "bike parking" and head back to my desk. Takes ~5 extra minutes, but it's worth it to me to be able to clean and desweat myself. Just because that's what I do doesn't make it the right answer for everyone. Personally I'd kill for a locker room with showers at work. However, if you want to change by your desk, by all means, do so! And if called out, flush and claim multi-tasking. What office manager can't appreciate that? My winter commute will be slow, on studded tires while bundled up nice. I think a nice pipe may be in order, although the closest to a jaunty cap I'd be able to pull off that would keep me warm enough would be one of these http://tinyurl.com/5guylk |
#25
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
wrote in message
... And others saying they only ride on the trails because its just too dangerous to ride on the road. We visited the US earlier this year, partly to do some MTBing. We picked up an MTB guide, and all the bits with road had big "danger danger don't even think about riding on this road you WILL DIE!!!" labels. Needless to say at one point after failing to find the unsigned and possibly non-existent side trail, we just went on the road and it was fine. |
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On Oct 29, 9:40*am, "Clive George" wrote:
wrote in message ... And others saying they only ride on the trails because its just too dangerous to ride on the road. We visited the US earlier this year, partly to do some MTBing. We picked up an MTB guide, and all the bits with road had big "danger danger don't even think about riding on this road you WILL DIE!!!" labels. Needless to say at one point after failing to find the unsigned and possibly non-existent side trail, we just went on the road and it was fine. Another journalist here..... we have lockers & showers as well as secure bike lock up rooms in the parking garage. What works for me is keeping a collection of clothes in my office. slacks, shirts, ties, one suit which I rarely need, etc....shut office door and change. In the locker I keep clean socks and underwear, a couple of weeks worth and what I call my transfer clothes. Black teeshirt & jeans & flip flops. Come in shower up, put on the jeans etc. leave bike clothes in the locker to dry, go upstairs change. Ever couple of weeks drive in late on a Sunday night and switch out the dress clothes and bring in clean socks and underwear. Amazing how many decent wearings you can get out of business clothes if you only wear them in the office and not out comuting to work. |
#27
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On 10/29/2008 9:10 AM Phil W Lee wrote:
" considered Wed, 29 Oct 2008 06:33:01 -0700 (PDT) the perfect time to write: On Oct 27, 4:31 pm, Brian Huntley wrote: On Oct 25, 8:02 pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anyhow... not to rant on and on... but does anybody have a workaround that works for them? Ignoring the impatient ones? Flush, and claim you were "multi tasking." This is my favorite reply so far. Personally, we don't have locker rooms @ my workplace, but I change in a bathroom that's somewhat inconvient. I do so because it's the only single-person bathroom here, so I can lock the door and wipe up a bit using the sink. I show up, walk to my desk in my cycling gear, get my work clothes, walk back to the bathroom right next to where I park my bike, clean up and change, punch in (since the time clock is right next to that bathroom and my "bike parking" and head back to my desk. Takes ~5 extra minutes, but it's worth it to me to be able to clean and desweat myself. Just because that's what I do doesn't make it the right answer for everyone. Personally I'd kill for a locker room with showers at work. However, if you want to change by your desk, by all means, do so! And if called out, flush and claim multi-tasking. What office manager can't appreciate that? My winter commute will be slow, on studded tires while bundled up nice. I think a nice pipe may be in order, although the closest to a jaunty cap I'd be able to pull off that would keep me warm enough would be one of these http://tinyurl.com/5guylk If you can find one, a deerstalker would provide the ear coverage, and complement the pipe very nicely. But just don't get a calabash pipe. Yes, that's the pipe they stuck in Basil Rathbone's mouth and has forever become the signature Sherlock Holmes pipe for stage and screen, but Doyle never mentioned Holmes using a calabash.* Calabashes have lousy aerodynamics anyway. Chart your own course in this matter. ============== * Or a deerstalker, for that matter, just an "ear-flapped traveling cap" in "Silver Blaze". -- Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Bend, Oregon |
#28
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On Oct 29, 12:10*pm, Phil W Lee phil(at)lee-family(dot)me(dot)uk
wrote: " considered Wed, 29 Oct 2008 06:33:01 -0700 (PDT) the perfect time to write: On Oct 27, 4:31*pm, Brian Huntley wrote: On Oct 25, 8:02*pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anyhow... not to rant on and on... but does anybody have a workaround that works for them? Ignoring the impatient ones? Flush, and claim you were "multi tasking." This is my favorite reply so far. Personally, we don't have locker rooms @ my workplace, but I change in a bathroom that's somewhat inconvient. *I do so because it's the only single-person bathroom here, so I can lock the door and wipe up a bit using the sink. *I show up, walk to my desk in my cycling gear, get my work clothes, walk back to the bathroom right next to where I park my bike, clean up and change, punch in (since the time clock is right next to that bathroom and my "bike parking" and head back to my desk. Takes ~5 extra minutes, but it's worth it to me to be able to clean and desweat myself. Just because that's what I do doesn't make it the right answer for everyone. *Personally I'd kill for a locker room with showers at work. *However, if you want to change by your desk, by all means, do so! *And if called out, flush and claim multi-tasking. *What office manager can't appreciate that? My winter commute will be slow, on studded tires while bundled up nice. *I think a nice pipe may be in order, although the closest to a jaunty cap I'd be able to pull off that would keep me warm enough would be one of thesehttp://tinyurl.com/5guylk If you can find one, a deerstalker would provide the ear coverage, and complement the pipe very nicely.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If I can find one of the ones with earflaps, that'd be perfect. Good call! |
#29
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Commuting: Changing Clothes?
On Oct 29, 12:22*pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel
wrote: On 10/29/2008 9:10 AM Phil W Lee wrote: " considered Wed, 29 Oct 2008 06:33:01 -0700 (PDT) the perfect time to write: On Oct 27, 4:31 pm, Brian Huntley wrote: On Oct 25, 8:02 pm, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Anyhow... not to rant on and on... but does anybody have a workaround that works for them? Ignoring the impatient ones? Flush, and claim you were "multi tasking." This is my favorite reply so far. Personally, we don't have locker rooms @ my workplace, but I change in a bathroom that's somewhat inconvient. *I do so because it's the only single-person bathroom here, so I can lock the door and wipe up a bit using the sink. *I show up, walk to my desk in my cycling gear, get my work clothes, walk back to the bathroom right next to where I park my bike, clean up and change, punch in (since the time clock is right next to that bathroom and my "bike parking" and head back to my desk. Takes ~5 extra minutes, but it's worth it to me to be able to clean and desweat myself. Just because that's what I do doesn't make it the right answer for everyone. *Personally I'd kill for a locker room with showers at work. *However, if you want to change by your desk, by all means, do so! *And if called out, flush and claim multi-tasking. *What office manager can't appreciate that? My winter commute will be slow, on studded tires while bundled up nice. *I think a nice pipe may be in order, although the closest to a jaunty cap I'd be able to pull off that would keep me warm enough would be one of thesehttp://tinyurl.com/5guylk If you can find one, a deerstalker would provide the ear coverage, and complement the pipe very nicely. But just don't get a calabash pipe. Yes, that's the pipe they stuck in Basil Rathbone's mouth and has forever become the signature Sherlock Holmes pipe for stage and screen, but Doyle never mentioned Holmes using a calabash.* Calabashes have lousy aerodynamics anyway. Chart your own course in this matter. ============== * Or a deerstalker, for that matter, just an "ear-flapped traveling cap" in "Silver Blaze". -- Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Bend, Oregon- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I was thinking corn cob. Simple, disposable, straightforward. Calabash never crossed my mind. |
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