BorgBiker
Well-Known Member
I ride to work most days, even though people here think highs in the 60's and 70's is cold! 20 years ago while living in Austin Texas I rode to work 30 miles each way each day (starting at 6am) when the low was 10 and the high was 32. With a wind chill factor far south of 0 degrees, that's what I call cold (I know some of you have been through worse though!)
My ride to work is a whopping 3 miles, barely enough time to get the motor warm. For lunch, I sometimes take a ride out west where the traffic is minimal (by LA standards). The area I ride actually has natural greenery, and reminds me a little bit of Austin's Hill Country (only with bigger hills). If I don't have to turn around and go back to work, my ride eventually meanders toward the Pacific, and it's amazing to see such vastly different and wonderful scenery together- ocean, trees, hills, mountains, small pastures (sometimes with real COWS:surprise:!) and other non-city-like settings. Gotta love it.
Yesterday I had a great lunch ride, went back to work, eventually returned home to find a bug splattered on my helmet. Now I have had this helmet (a Shoei GT-Air in matte black) for just over a month, and it has almost 1000 miles on it. This is the first time I had to clean it of anything bug related - no gnats, no flies, not a thing till now.
I thought about how on a given day in Texas, I'd probably put an end to several hundred (maybe thousand) gnats, dozens of mosquitoes, and many other assorted flying menaces. The front of the bike would be covered, the front of my riding gear would be mostly covered, and my helmet faceshield would be pretty covered (in some cases, so much so that I'd ride the last few miles home with it up!). So here in the land of moderate temperatures, in about 34-35 day my dead bug evidence count starts and ends at 1 total. I cleaned what I think was a beetle's innards off the forehead area of my helmet, and actually missed this part of the post-ride ritual. It was always an excuse to spend some more time out in the garage with the bike.
I guess you could say for a moment I felt like a kid again - memories of my early days riding, when everything was new and exciting. The Beetle cleaned up easy enough, but memories it reminded me of will not fade so soon.
- the Borg
My ride to work is a whopping 3 miles, barely enough time to get the motor warm. For lunch, I sometimes take a ride out west where the traffic is minimal (by LA standards). The area I ride actually has natural greenery, and reminds me a little bit of Austin's Hill Country (only with bigger hills). If I don't have to turn around and go back to work, my ride eventually meanders toward the Pacific, and it's amazing to see such vastly different and wonderful scenery together- ocean, trees, hills, mountains, small pastures (sometimes with real COWS:surprise:!) and other non-city-like settings. Gotta love it.
Yesterday I had a great lunch ride, went back to work, eventually returned home to find a bug splattered on my helmet. Now I have had this helmet (a Shoei GT-Air in matte black) for just over a month, and it has almost 1000 miles on it. This is the first time I had to clean it of anything bug related - no gnats, no flies, not a thing till now.
I thought about how on a given day in Texas, I'd probably put an end to several hundred (maybe thousand) gnats, dozens of mosquitoes, and many other assorted flying menaces. The front of the bike would be covered, the front of my riding gear would be mostly covered, and my helmet faceshield would be pretty covered (in some cases, so much so that I'd ride the last few miles home with it up!). So here in the land of moderate temperatures, in about 34-35 day my dead bug evidence count starts and ends at 1 total. I cleaned what I think was a beetle's innards off the forehead area of my helmet, and actually missed this part of the post-ride ritual. It was always an excuse to spend some more time out in the garage with the bike.
I guess you could say for a moment I felt like a kid again - memories of my early days riding, when everything was new and exciting. The Beetle cleaned up easy enough, but memories it reminded me of will not fade so soon.
- the Borg