Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Ode to Bicycles-Pablo Neruda













I was walking
down
a sizzling road:
the sun popped like
a field of blazing maize,
the
earth
was hot,
an infinite circle
with an empty
blue sky overhead.

A few bicycles
passed
me by,
the only
insects
in
that dry
moment of summer,
silent,
swift,
translucent;
they
barely stirred
the air.

Workers and girls
were riding to their
factories,
giving
their eyes
to summer,
their heads to the sky,
sitting on the
hard
beetle backs
of the whirling
bicycles
that whirred
as they rode by
bridges, rosebushes, brambles
and midday.

I thought about evening when
the boys
wash up,
sing, eat, raise
a cup
of wine
in honor
of love
and life,
and waiting
at the door,
the bicycle,
stilled,
because
only moving
does it have a soul,
and fallen there
it isn't
a translucent insect
humming
through summer
but
a cold
skeleton
that will return to
life
only
when it's needed,
when it's light,
that is,
with
the
resurrection
of each day.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Best Ride of the First Half of 2008

Sandwhich, New Hampshire








We rolled out of Center Sandwich in the late morning after a good helping of coffee and farm fresh eggs (purchased 100 yard down the road). The plan was to do a counter clockwise century that would take us through Conway, across the whole length of the Kancamangus Highway, Lincoln and then back home.










The air was cool and the traffic light as we spun our way up to Conway on the flatter terrain of the day. After a quick snack at the turn off for Kancamangus we started the gentle climb to the peak. The Highway is 38 miles with no gas stations, restaurants, shops, nothing. The climb itself wasn’t terrible, with no significantly steep sections. It was just a long grind to the top and a fun but safe drop to the bottom.










Next up was a misreading of the map, which tagged 15 extra miles and 1000 feet of climbing onto the ride when we thought we were close to home. The finish was the true epic adventure of the whole day though. We had planned to take Sandwich Notch road back into town, but when we turned onto it was gravel and rocks on what must have been a 15% climb. Unsure of our detour options we decided to press on. It was an hour of pure heaven or hell depending on your point of view. The road was not a road, the pitches were steep and relentless, and the descent necessitated a cyclocross style tripod the whole way down.










We rolled home in a super-bonk induced state of euphoria. 120 miles. 8 hours in the saddle. Epic.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Cheap Fuel

















I've always taken it as a given that riding my bike is cheaper than driving my car. Recently though, a friend of mine wondered aloud if riding could actually cost you more once you considered the increased food consumed to power all that pedaling. At first I laughed, but then I decided I should take an objective look at the situation. What follows is a quick comparison between the cost of fueling 25 miles worth of driving a car fueled by regular gasoline and 25 miles worth of riding a bike fueled by bananas (every cyclist's best friend, but apparently an atheist's worst nightmare).

First, some assumptions and values. For the sake of calculation, we'll assume that the car in question gets 25mpg around town. Additionally we'll say that the cyclist in question can cover 25 miles in two hours at a light to moderate riding intensity.

AAA has the national average for a gallon of gas pegged at $4.087 per gallon today. So there is our price per 25 miles for driving.

Health A-Z.com estimates that 2 hours of riding burns 750 calories for a 150lb person.
My last grocery receipt shows bananas at $0.69 per pound.
FitDay.com estimates there are 315 calories in a pound of bananas.

Divide the calories per hour by calories in a pound of bananas and multiply by the cost per pound and we get a cost of $1.62 for 25 miles of riding ((750/315)*.69).

So it turns out that riding is indeed considerably cheaper than driving when looking purely at fuel costs ($2.44 cheaper every 25 miles!). In future posts we'll take a look at other considerations such as start up cost, equipment, maintenance, and insurance to get a more complete look at the financial benefits of the beautiful machine. Reactions, ideas and questions are always welcome in the comments or at legpowered@gmail.com.