My commute is fifteen minutes if I hit every green light, but normally more like 18. Getting cold isn’t really an issue with that short of a ride...I start feeling a little cold, but half a mile in I’m comfortable. I’ve done it in the high teens without wind, and I think I could probably go mid teens with no wind, but that’s probably where the line will be drawn. I could wear just about anything sensible and be fine with that short of a ride, but I do employ lots of wool close to the skin and my favorite Winnipeg-made Raber Garbage Mitts.
It’s the snow and ice that are keeping me off my bike for my commute. We woke up to 4 inches on Saturday morning and I am terrified to ride tomorrow with melting and refreeze in the streets. I know my tires (42mm Shikoros) are not ideal for winter riding, but I don’t know that any tires will help me stay upright on a patch of black ice. Ben, who will be a reluctant motorist for the next few days On Sunday, December 13, 2020 at 4:27:34 PM UTC-6 Patrick Moore wrote: > About 25*F this morning when I left for church. I ride down to the upper > teens, if sun is bright enough and winds are light enough; this is, > generally, low humidity cold: 40*F in Atlanta is worse, worse worse than > 25* in Albuquerque. > > But this was one of those mornings when your oil turned to sludge > (slushbucket Sturmey Archer AM hub), your brake blocks rubbed, your Rene > Herse supple casings turned into thick-sidewalled studded knobbies, and > there was a headwind from every quarter. My quads burned at the slightest > rise. > > So what. This is what. I'm curious about: (1) how cold do you ride? > Meaning, tell us the lowest temperature you will ride in. (2) Do you find > you need more energy to maintain warmer-weather benchmarms? (3) Tell us > about bike or style or clothing or other adaptations for cold (I know this > is open to interpretation, but let's define it as sub 32*F) weather? > > One parting shot, an obersvation: The pit zips I had put into a cycling > shell are one of the best investments I've made for cold weather cycling. > This morning, I rode outbound in merino crewneck (dressy weight), Ibex wool > vest, and Leatt shell with pit zips closed and placket zipped to chin Came > home at 38*F with ditto, but placket open a bit and pit zips fully open; > big comfort. > > -- > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > Patrick Moore > Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/6c4e156e-16f5-4a6b-a6c8-e496b1f5c77dn%40googlegroups.com.
