MrSteve
Zen MBB Master
Mark B wrote: There are some things about commuting to work by bicycle that are not attractive. You have to get up earlier than usual, you do not have the creature comforts of the car, you cannot make impromptu trips out for lunch. The weather can be spotty, there are people to contend with, both in and out of cars. Some days, it can be really, really tempting to skip riding. Some days, it can't be helped; you wake up late, there are issues that need to be dealt with and as I've said before, life just gets in the way. Most days, though, if I just get on the bike and start rolling down the street, I'm good to go. I can count on one hand, in all the years of on again, off again commuting to work by bicycle that I have actually turned around and gone back home. I would say pretty safely that most, if not all of those days have been rainy days. Living in Southern California, there are too many nice days to ride to suffer through a rainy day if you don't have to.
There are many great things about cycling to work, too. Some people will tell you they think you're crazy, but deep down, I believe most have quiet admiration for what you're doing. Whatever your cause or reasoning; be it saving gas, personal health, "going green", or any combination thereof, people respect what you're doing. I take a fair amount of ribbing about my spandex and lycra cycling attire, but that's to be expected. I'm certain that; to the layman, I look pretty rediculous. But, when they think about what I've done, pedaling 20 miles to work, they know that takes some constitution. The jokes on them, though. That hour and ten minutes is some of the greatest quiet time I get throughout my day. Couple that with the magic of the pre-dawn morning; the sights, sounds and smells as the world wakes up and you have the beginning of a great day. There is nothing more beautiful than the snowcapped mountains, illuminated by the light of the moon, the city lights in the valleys below and the first hint of daybreak. As I wheel into work, the satisfaction is incredible. I feel alive and ready to begin my day. Not so on the days I drive. It's a different mindset altogether.
I know I'm "preaching to the choir" with a few of you. You know what I'm talking about. This is great stuff and while it can be challenging to get up some mornings and get going, the fact that I have will provide me with a lifetime of memories. There will come a day when I can no longer ride, be it due to health issues, or age... Hopefully I stave that off as long as possible, but when that day comes, I'll be able to look out my window at those same pre-dawn hours and think about the days I did.
Mark
There are recumbent trikes: I hear that even old people can ride those.
Then, of course, there are industrial-type upright trikes. I used to see those parked here and there inside huge industrial complexes. Like Lockheed.
Some are available with hand-cranks.
Even carbon-fiber!
Not to mention, those fully-enclosed velomobiles.
Electric assist!
Hey, it need never end...until it ends.
Bike on, dude!
-Steve