General Cycling Discussion - How many of us enjoy beer during a ride?

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geoduck
12-01-04, 06:04 PM
Yeah, I said it; beer during a ride! Sure, anybody can partake after a ride, but it takes a true soldier to drink 'n' ride!

Last weekend, a friend and I did a short loop from Martinez, CA (SF Bay Area) out to a little dead-end town on the water called Port Costa. There appear to be three commercial businesses in Port Costa: a bar, a restaurant, and a post office.

We found the pub at the end of the main drag, facing the Carquinez Straits section of San Pablo Bay, just across the railroad tracks. This bar had great atmosphere: it is in the bottom story of a 100+ year old building (attached to the post office), and they serve a few selections of tap beer in 14-ounce canning jars.

The real splendid bit is ordering off of the bottled beer menu: OVER 400 BEERS! Being in Northern California, all the usual suspects were accounted for in terms of local microbrews, but they had many selections in 22-ounce bottles, and scores of European imports.

The best part was how you order the beer: all the bottled stuff is stored in coolers spaced throughout the bottom story of this building. So, following signs, you find the cooler you want, pick out your beer, and go pay for it. Then, drink it in the bar or go drink it outside.

For the record, we each had a jar of Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, and split a 22-ouncer of Moylan's Kilt Lifter. Tasty! Just the thing to get us back home. Most of the rest of the ride is along a road overlooking the Straits, closed to vehicle traffice because it is slowly sliding into the ocean. Total distance is something like 12 miles, maybe 1,000 total feet of climbing.

Nearly all my cycling is off-road, and I wouldn't want to get too schnockered before riding in traffic, but in this case it really hit the spot.

What about y'all? Any good stories about drinking and riding? :D


Avalanche325
12-01-04, 06:06 PM
Your free vasectomy coupon is in the mail.

geoduck
12-01-04, 06:08 PM
Your free vasectomy coupon is in the mail.


Too late, procreation complete, sir. :beer:


seely
12-01-04, 10:35 PM
Double deuce? Bring on the forty! I don't drink and ride, but I have been known to use my 100oz Camelbak backpack to sneak beverages into stadiums, concerts, etc. Actually I take it back, on the REALLY cold days in the winter we sometimes put a couple shots of tequilla in our Camelbaks to "keep them from freezing" yeah... freezing... thats it...

Rowan
12-02-04, 03:02 AM
Got to the 250km mark on a toughish 300km randonnee. The stop point was in a town with a pub. I had an overwhelming need for: (1) A beer; (2) A lemonade, in that order. The pub obliged. The beer was ice cold and was like nectar. So was the lemonade. Contrasts in taste and very satisfying.

lrzipris
12-02-04, 05:26 AM
As a public defender (representing indigent criminal defendants), whose clients include people charged with DUI, I apologize if I appear negative, but I would like to add, as a tangent, that in Pennsylvania, where I live, work, and ride, a bicycle is a "motor vehicle" for DUI purposes. So be careful out there, folks.

Swimjim
12-02-04, 05:38 AM
Hey that sounds like a great place. I don't normally drink during rides. However, when I'm on vacation and doing a Bike Florida or a SAGBRAW which are week long rides I've been known to stop for a cold one.
As one previous poster points out, as far as the law is concerned a bicycle is just another motor vehicle and they will haul you away on a DUI rap. So do it responsibly.
Save a Guiness for me!

Cheers

Jim

Juha
12-02-04, 06:00 AM
I have had mixed experiences. Sometimes it's exactly what you need (as described by previous posters), but I almost managed to mess up a double metric century weekend once.

I was already a good 70 kms into it when I decided to visit a roadside pub in a small village. Had one beer (0,5l) which turned out to be a mistake. As I started riding again general fatigue set in, forcing me to stop soon at the nearest service station. I knew there was a nice cafeteria further down the road, but I could not continue. I had to eat a sandwich, drink soft drinks and rest for more than half an hour before I felt good enough to tackle the final 20kms. I don't blame the beer alone, there was obviously something wrong with my fuel intake in general.

I arrived to my destination and had a great party with lots of beer later that evening. I did not feel too hot the next morning, but hesitantly set on the bike. The ride back was an absolute joy. I even took a 15km detour to check out a beautiful backroad, and enjoyed every minute of it. Weird.

--J

giant99
12-02-04, 06:18 AM
My brother was stoped for being loaded on a bike. The cop said if he locked the bike up and walked everything would be ok. My brother said he would walk the bike home and not ride it. The cop said know becuse it was care and control and he could still be charged.

shokhead
12-02-04, 08:25 AM
Beer,yak. Gag me. Cant stand the smell of it.

WorldWind
12-02-04, 09:13 AM
Plenty of times, but they aren’t bear during a ride, they are riding your bike to the brewery or pub to drink bear.

Some of the best outings were with friends that didn’t race but wanted to come on a ride.

We would meet up at the Exploritorium parking lot and ride through the Presidio over the Golden Gate and up the bay through Sausalito, around the edge of Richardson Bay across to El Campo and out to Tiburon.

Of course you had to do something while you waited for the fairy to Angle Island and if it was a warm sunny day Beer was the drink of choice. If it was cold and foggy, then espresso and shots of brandy were in order.

Angle Island allows bicycles and has a very nice bike path all around it’s perimeter.

This ride is all very flat and easy, a very good ride along for a novice and a way to get to know someone and gauge their bike handling skills, while being scenic and enjoyable for seasoned riders.

MichaelW
12-02-04, 10:09 AM
There used to be a high degree of overlap in the membership of my local cycle club and the Real Ale Society. After one member passed on (not bike related), we opened a memorial bike rack, outside his favourite pub.
Its std practice for touring rides to stop off for a pint at lunchtime and I don't know of anyone who has come to any harm. This is quite different to the case of someone riding whilst completely blatted out of their mind. I can ride a bike on 1 pint, but I would never get behind the wheel of a car, nor would I ride anything too technical, like a big mulit-hairpin mountain descent.

Portis
12-02-04, 10:37 AM
There used to be a high degree of overlap in the membership of my local cycle club and the Real Ale Society. After one member passed on (not bike related), we opened a memorial bike rack, outside his favourite pub.
Its std practice for touring rides to stop off for a pint at lunchtime and I don't know of anyone who has come to any harm. This is quite different to the case of someone riding whilst completely blatted out of their mind. I can ride a bike on 1 pint, but I would never get behind the wheel of a car, nor would I ride anything too technical, like a big mulit-hairpin mountain descent.

That sounds far too sensible and fun to happen in America.
:beer:

Beer is a favorite libation of mine. However, much like S.E.X., i really don't like to mix it with riding. Each has it's place but I don't mix them. Ride bike in the morning, Beer at night, and S.E.X. every total Solar Eclipse. ;)

Swimjim
12-02-04, 11:24 AM
That sounds far too sensible and fun to happen in America.
:beer:

Beer is a favorite libation of mine. However, much like S.E.X., i really don't like to mix it with riding. Each has it's place but I don't mix them. Ride bike in the morning, Beer at night, and S.E.X. every total Solar Eclipse. ;)

Yeah, mixing sex with a bike ride could be dangerous. You might fall off. Think of the road rash! Ahhh!

Jim

ajkloss42
12-02-04, 11:46 AM
I find the carbonation in beer to be a bit annoying while riding. In summer, if I'm in the mood to drink and ride, I prefer white russians or painkillers in a polar bottle. In the other 9 months of the year a bit of scotch or irish can take the edge out of the wind/rain or whatever ails me during a late-night ride. I vaguely remember once riding with a plastic to-go cup from a party pinched between my teeth with some rum concoction in it. I recall thinking that worked surprisingly well, just a tip of the head back to get a nip. The consequences were unpleasant though.

CMcMahon
12-02-04, 01:07 PM
I may have ridden ramps on a few occasions after drinking.

ngateguy
12-02-04, 01:38 PM
when getting ready for my fist STP we did a ride where we rode for 10 miles drank a beer, rode 10 miles drank a beer etc. we never really even got a buzz going. I have been known to have a beer on my commute home. Rarely do I do it on my weekend rides.

junioroverlord
12-02-04, 07:55 PM
Beer,yak. Gag me. Cant stand the smell of it.

blasphemer!

Rowan
12-02-04, 08:22 PM
Beer,yak. Gag me. Cant stand the smell of it.
Not of drinking age, yet, shokhead? :)

midwestmntnbkr
12-02-04, 08:54 PM
As a public defender (representing indigent criminal defendants), whose clients include people charged with DUI, I apologize if I appear negative, but I would like to add, as a tangent, that in Pennsylvania, where I live, work, and ride, a bicycle is a "motor vehicle" for DUI purposes. So be careful out there, folks.

One in every crowd...

Anyway, I used to ride regularly with a local club that on their jerseys it said "ride some where have a beer, and ride back" That pretty much sums up their motto. It was a fun group to hang with. I haven't ridden with them for a while though. Schedule conflicts and things. :)

HereNT
12-02-04, 10:55 PM
I quite often have beer in my bag. Jameson is better for fuel. Burns quicker, less bloat. Lighter per calorie, too.

There's a guy on our Sat ride that has a handlebar beer cozy... Basically a cup holder style thing with insulation and a handlebar mount. He drinks while he rides... But it's actually while he's riding, not stopping somewhere. Most of the rest of everyone on that ride has to put liquor in their bottles if they want to drink while moving... Although I have seen one rider take a beer from someone's bag and hand it to them. Probably a recipe for disaster.

Mtn Mike
12-02-04, 11:23 PM
when getting ready for my fist STP we did a ride where we rode for 10 miles drank a beer, rode 10 miles drank a beer etc. we never really even got a buzz going. I have been known to have a beer on my commute home. Rarely do I do it on my weekend rides.

I do recall you and I stopping at a Seattle pub to put down a few during that Saturday ride last spring :D
here's to beer and biking :beer:

catatonic
12-03-04, 12:58 AM
I drink after the ride....like now....Steel Reserve....cheap and potent!

iceratt
12-03-04, 01:26 AM
I used to like Delerium Tremens, until I had two at The Bryant Lake Bowl, after work, then got on my bike to ride home. Riding drunk is no fun for us lightweights.

PWRDbyTRD
12-03-04, 03:30 AM
cryogenic got hammered off some mixed drinks and cycled home

lrzipris
12-03-04, 05:32 AM
[QUOTE=midwestmntnbkr]One in every crowd...

Hey, midwestmntnbkr, gimme a break! I didn't say not to drink and ride. I just suggested that people use some common sense because, being in a recession-proof field, I am already plenty busy, thank you very much!

HereNT
12-03-04, 08:40 AM
I used to like Delerium Tremens, until I had two at The Bryant Lake Bowl, after work, then got on my bike to ride home. Riding drunk is no fun for us lightweights.

You should have known by the name. I'm pretty sure mixing that with Glenfiddich at the Triple Rock is the cause of some of my scars. And that time that a pedestrian was moving faster than me because he wasn't falling over on Franklin. He made me walk the bike for awhile, but I eventually rode the rest of the way. I think there were a few more wrecks after that, but don't really remember.

If it wasn't the Tremens, it was some other beer with way to much alcohol in it. They tend to have some really strong Belgians on tap at the Rock..

geoduck
12-03-04, 09:14 AM
You should have known by the name. I'm pretty sure mixing that with Glenfiddich at the Triple Rock is the cause of some of my scars. And that time that a pedestrian was moving faster than me because he wasn't falling over on Franklin. He made me walk the bike for awhile, but I eventually rode the rest of the way. I think there were a few more wrecks after that, but don't really remember.

If it wasn't the Tremens, it was some other beer with way to much alcohol in it. They tend to have some really strong Belgians on tap at the Rock..



HereNT, it sounds as though you are in Berkeley (*that* Triple Rock?). If so, that is my old stomping grounds during college days. Many fond memories of meeting up with friends for Critical Mass on Friday, doing the ride, and stopping off at places like Bison or Triple Rock to quaff a beer before catching up with the group. Tons of fun.

Berkeley, between the bike-friendly bars and the UC campus has to be one of the best cities for bike-based bar hopping.

:beer:

HereNT
12-03-04, 09:26 AM
Minneapolis Triple Rock. I live only a few blocks from the bar Iceratt was mentioning...

ajkloss42
12-03-04, 12:14 PM
As a public defender (representing indigent criminal defendants), whose clients include people charged with DUI, I apologize if I appear negative, but I would like to add, as a tangent, that in Pennsylvania, where I live, work, and ride, a bicycle is a "motor vehicle" for DUI purposes. So be careful out there, folks.

Yes indeedy I suspect a DUI on a bicycle would be no fun to deal with. Fortunately in Minneapolis the cops are just like the rest of the motorists: they don't even see you.

bryan6
12-03-04, 12:27 PM
Extra dry Martini, please . . .