knarF wrote
...snip

...snip
>I love the small life preservers attached to his fork....

I thought they were tires/tubes folded over & wrapped for protection.

Kenneth Waller
http://www.tinyurl.com/272u2f

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "frank theriault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Re: OT: A cyclist who pedalled the world for more than 40 years 
hasbeen killed by a hit-and-run driver


On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 5:32 PM, Bob W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sad story, but an interesting life:
>
> http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article4673693.ece
>
> Bob
>

His early (for such a fit and vibrant man) demise is indeed sad, but
it sounds like he had a rich and happy life, doing what he loved.  How
many of us can say that?

I love that photo of him.  The classic touring bike, all decked out in
panniers and carrying-bags.  I love the small life preservers attached
to his fork - quite humourous given the desert locale!  ;-)

I like the list of advantages of cycling at the end of the story.  A
rough conversion to Imperial indicates that a bike gets the energy
equivalent of 2,600 miles to the gallon.  I'd read that the bicycle is
the most energy-efficient form of transportation yet invented, and
that statistic gives credence to that!

— A cyclist can travel 1,037km (644 miles) on the energy equivalent of
one litre of petrol

— Regular cycling can make you as fit as someone who is ten years younger

— A cyclist consumes 1/50th of the oxygen of a car making the same journey

— A twice daily half-hour commute will, over a year, consume the
energy equivalent of 24lb of fat

— In 1949, 34 per cent of all mechanised journeys were made by
bicycle. Fifty years later that figure had fallen to 2 per cent

— The rate of serious heart disease for civil servants who cycle 20
miles or more a week is 50 per cent lower than for their sedentary
colleagues

Thanks, Bob, for an inspiring story!

cheers,
frank





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