How committed are you to riding in the rain?
#26
According to a quick search, Seattle gets about 38 inches of rain across 155 days per year. That's a lot. I live in Memphis where it rains on about 107 days per year, but we get 57 inches of rain per year. In other words, it doesn't rain on as many days, but we still get a lot of rain here. When it rains, it really pours.
I'd say I'm pretty committed to riding in the rain, but two rainy conditions will keep me inside. First, I don't ride in active lightening. Second, I don't ride in blinding rain. Fortunately, my work hours are pretty flexible, so i can usually wait for a downpour to lighten up before heading out.
I'd say I'm pretty committed to riding in the rain, but two rainy conditions will keep me inside. First, I don't ride in active lightening. Second, I don't ride in blinding rain. Fortunately, my work hours are pretty flexible, so i can usually wait for a downpour to lighten up before heading out.
#27
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,647
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From: Sudbury, ON, CA
Bikes: 2012 Kona Sutra, 2002 Look AL 384, 2018 Moose Fat bike
My drop off points are "am I going to be wet and really cold?" along with "will I also be riding home in the rain after putting on cycling clothes/shoes that are still wet from this morning's ride in?"
I have a good cycling raincoat, helmet cover and waterproof lobster mitts but no rain pants and a poor excuse for shoe covers so if it is less than 10C/50F and raining, I won't ride until I add those items to my kit allowing me to stay drier and warmer on both journeys. I can deal with getting wet in mild to warm rain temperatures and I can deal with cold if I am dry (ie., winter snow) but right now, I'm waiting for next fall's purchase of proper commuting rain pants and shoe covers before I will ride in cold rain.
I have a good cycling raincoat, helmet cover and waterproof lobster mitts but no rain pants and a poor excuse for shoe covers so if it is less than 10C/50F and raining, I won't ride until I add those items to my kit allowing me to stay drier and warmer on both journeys. I can deal with getting wet in mild to warm rain temperatures and I can deal with cold if I am dry (ie., winter snow) but right now, I'm waiting for next fall's purchase of proper commuting rain pants and shoe covers before I will ride in cold rain.
#28
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2007
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From: Puget Sound
Bikes: 2007 Rocky Mountain Sherpa 30 (bionx), 2015 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Ultegra
I commute with my bike or scooter everyday. I prefer the bike and I've been riding it 4-5 commutes per week all year. So, I'm committed to riding in the rain. 36 degrees, rain, and wind today made it tough. Add "dark" to the equation for the ride home this evening. It will make me appreciate the 75 degree sunny commutes in July.
#29
Francophile

Joined: Nov 2015
Posts: 4,793
Likes: 2,105
From: Seattle
Bikes: Lots
I am in Seattle and I enjoy riding in the rain. But even so, there are days when I just can't get up the energy to get togged up. On those days, I stay home and berate myself for being a wimp. ;-)
When end I lived in San Diego, though, I wouldn't go out in the rain. It was usually pouring when it rained, and people really did not know how to drive safely in wet conditions. Besides, the rain rarely lasted more than a day or two.
When end I lived in San Diego, though, I wouldn't go out in the rain. It was usually pouring when it rained, and people really did not know how to drive safely in wet conditions. Besides, the rain rarely lasted more than a day or two.
#30
Thread Starter
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Joined: Jan 2008
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From: Beaverton, OR
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According to a quick search, Seattle gets about 38 inches of rain across 155 days per year. That's a lot. I live in Memphis where it rains on about 107 days per year, but we get 57 inches of rain per year. In other words, it doesn't rain on as many days, but we still get a lot of rain here. When it rains, it really pours.
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#31
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 6,431
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From: Minneapolis, MN
This year it's been raining all week lol...
#32
Senior Member
Joined: Dec 2014
Posts: 2,751
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From: Seattlish
Bikes: SWorks Stumpy, Haibike Xduro RX, Crave SS
According to a quick search, Seattle gets about 38 inches of rain across 155 days per year. That's a lot. I live in Memphis where it rains on about 107 days per year, but we get 57 inches of rain per year. In other words, it doesn't rain on as many days, but we still get a lot of rain here. When it rains, it really pours.
I'd say I'm pretty committed to riding in the rain, but two rainy conditions will keep me inside. First, I don't ride in active lightening. Second, I don't ride in blinding rain. Fortunately, my work hours are pretty flexible, so i can usually wait for a downpour to lighten up before heading out.
I'd say I'm pretty committed to riding in the rain, but two rainy conditions will keep me inside. First, I don't ride in active lightening. Second, I don't ride in blinding rain. Fortunately, my work hours are pretty flexible, so i can usually wait for a downpour to lighten up before heading out.
#33
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 619
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From: The Big City
Bikes: Brompton M3L, Tern Verge P20, Citi Bike
Funny you ask, it's pouring right now. I will ride the short three miles home tonight. However, tonight is trivia night, which is 10 miles uptown, and then another 13 miles back down. If I really had to get there, I would take the subway, but since half the fun of trivia is riding there and back, and the train is particularly unpleasant on a rainy night, I decided to give it up. Last Thursday was my day off, and it rained then too (it does always seem to rain on the most inconvenient day). I had some errands to run, a series of short trips. I decided to do that on a bike, and got wet, as that was more convenient that trying to find some other way of getting around.
So that about sums up how committed I am to riding in the rain.
So that about sums up how committed I am to riding in the rain.
#34
Day trip lover
Joined: May 2009
Posts: 813
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From: capital city of iowa
Bikes: '16 Giant Escape 3 (fair weather ride), Giant Quasar (work in progress), 2002 saturn vue (crap weather ride)
I can't say that I'm overly committed to riding in the rain. Sure, in the morning if its light I'll usually just suck it up, but if its not, well, there's always the bus. And in the evenings I don't really tend to care if it's raining or not, I just don't want to work in soaked clothes all day. For instance, today it was cold (35F) and raining and was expected to be like that all day, but not lightly raining, so I took the bus. Now, if I had proper rain gear I might have rode my poor weather bike any way.
Last edited by mr geeker; 12-23-15 at 09:03 PM. Reason: Originaly posted from my phone
#35
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Joined: Sep 2015
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From: Twin Cities, MN
Bikes: Surly CC
Cold, rain and snow won't stop me, and today in Mpls we had two of those. It does suck to put wet clothes on at the end of a day, and if it's cold enough it's downright dangerous. I don't mind biking in the rain, even every day in a week, as long as my clothes can dry out.
#36
Senior Member


Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 9,201
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From: Vancouver, BC
Being from Vancouver, I'm used to rain. We only get a handful of days a year where it is coming down hard and it almost seems comical to ride. In Dec I've driven about once a week and ridden the rest of the days. It doesn't rain steadily very often so if I get wet in the morning it's often not raining on the way home.
I keep extra socks, tights and gloves at work so if I get soaked I can come home with dry clothes.
I won't ride on the weekend if it's raining.
I keep extra socks, tights and gloves at work so if I get soaked I can come home with dry clothes.
I won't ride on the weekend if it's raining.
#37
Unlisted member
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 6,192
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From: Chicagoland
Bikes: Specialized Hardrock
I don't mind the physical discomfort that comes with riding in the rain after riding my motorcycle in the rain for years (I used to tell people it's not a Harley, motorcycles will run in the rain) but with wanting to keep my indoor parking privileges at work and not wanting to mess up the spare bedroom I use to park my bike in I try and avoid riding my bicycle in the rain. I did ride to work last week when I saw it was drizzling after I left and just said the heck with it but usually I don't now.
#38
Cold, rain and snow won't stop me, and today in Mpls we had two of those. It does suck to put wet clothes on at the end of a day, and if it's cold enough it's downright dangerous. I don't mind biking in the rain, even every day in a week, as long as my clothes can dry out.
Spring and Fall we might see rain on consecutive days but probably not more than three in a row and in those cases it's usually a pretty light rain, - which is OK.
I realized last week that if I lived someplace where it was likely to rain 5 days straight then I'd need better gloves. Otherwise my clothes are OK.
It was hovering in the low to mid 30's today so we had rain and snow. As I said before, I'll take the snow in these temps over rain any day (except Spring, - don't like snow in Spring).
Last edited by tjspiel; 12-23-15 at 07:29 PM.
#39
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 5,331
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From: Kent Wa.
Bikes: 2005 Gazelle Golfo, 1935 Raleigh Sport, 1970 Robin Hood sport, 1974 Schwinn Continental, 1984 Ross MTB/porteur, 2013 Flying Piegon path racer, 2014 Gazelle Toer Populair T8
Here in the Puget sound region it's not unusual to have a week or more of rain. The amount of rain in Seattle isn't really significantly more than many other major cities, but is rarely heavy, often more of a falling mist, so it sticks around for a long time with occasional breaks.
#40
Senior Member
Joined: Dec 2015
Posts: 148
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From: PNW
Bikes: Holding steady at N
I live in seattle, and I know what you mean. Last year I rode reliably in the rain, but I've driven to work more often than I've biked over the past few weeks of heavier rain. I've even walked outside with the bike twice, then just noped right back into the house.
#42
I thought of this thread and decided to drive in today. Trees down, lightning, flooding in places and it's going to go on all day, I can feel my storm-riding commitment fading ...
#43
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 136
Likes: 1
From: Valley of the Sun AZ
Bikes: '88 Centurion Ironman, '97 Jamis Eclipse,'84 Ron Stout, '89 Miyata 1400, '82 Miyata 1000,'88 Schwinn Tempo, '84 Fuji Touring Series IV
Kudos to all of you that ride in the rain on a regular basis. I bought fenders this year to handle the handful of rainy days we have here in AZ. I grew up in the PNW and lived in SE Alaska before moving to a drier climate. The challenge here is riding in 100+ degree temps for a hundred days a year, but I'll take it over 35 degrees and raining anytime.
#44
Senior Member

Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 1,280
Likes: 322
From: Sherwood, OR
Finding a fender with enough "front extension" is the hard part. I like a fender that extends past the highest vertical peak of the front wheel and starts to curve downward. This assures that the spray is directed downward and not up where I just ride into it.
The other nice thing about aluminum fenders is the rolled edge. Instead of dripping off the sides and onto my feet or rear mech, the runoff generally drips off the front or rear of the fenders. This keeps things much cleaner.
#45
Senior Member

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 2,252
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From: Kansas
Bikes: This list got too long: several ‘bents, an urban utility e-bike, and a dahon D7 that my daughter has absconded with.
I am not committed to riding in the rain; but when it rains I still have to get to work.
#46
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 12,948
Likes: 9
From: England
How committed is the rain?
38" is a medium amount of rain. In the UK, the S.E gets 20", the SW: 30-40", and NW, 40-60"
When does the rain fall?
In NW, it can rain hard, all day, for days on end. In SE, we get those rainy days once or twice a year, sometimes never.
How frequently and hard does it rain during commuter hours? We seem to get rain in early afternoon, which clears up by 5:00 commute. Rain often falls as light, but steady.
Rain becomes easier to handle if you are equipped with fenders, good waterproofs, rain socks or boots etc. Cool rain is easier than warmer summer rain since you don't overheat. Really cold rain, just above freezing, is horrible but rare. If it is that cold, it is usually dry.
38" is a medium amount of rain. In the UK, the S.E gets 20", the SW: 30-40", and NW, 40-60"
When does the rain fall?
In NW, it can rain hard, all day, for days on end. In SE, we get those rainy days once or twice a year, sometimes never.
How frequently and hard does it rain during commuter hours? We seem to get rain in early afternoon, which clears up by 5:00 commute. Rain often falls as light, but steady.
Rain becomes easier to handle if you are equipped with fenders, good waterproofs, rain socks or boots etc. Cool rain is easier than warmer summer rain since you don't overheat. Really cold rain, just above freezing, is horrible but rare. If it is that cold, it is usually dry.
#47
Banned
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 43,586
Likes: 1,380
From: NW,Oregon Coast
Bikes: 8
Right On the coast .. the Grundens Cycle rain cape was the best Purchase I've Made ..
Grunden's Bike Poncho (other than a House close in to old town center on the Leeward side of the Hill .
It was really good when I Had a 30min ride from an apartment on the windward side , along the Young's Bay Shore .
The company is well Known by the Fishing community , on the Job. https://www.bethebadger.com/wp-conten...s-Clothing.jpg
Grunden's Bike Poncho (other than a House close in to old town center on the Leeward side of the Hill .
It was really good when I Had a 30min ride from an apartment on the windward side , along the Young's Bay Shore .
The company is well Known by the Fishing community , on the Job. https://www.bethebadger.com/wp-conten...s-Clothing.jpg
Last edited by fietsbob; 12-24-15 at 12:28 PM.
#49
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 192
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From: Northwest Missouri
Bikes: Takara Deluxe Touring 12 speed, Trek Tracklight 730
I had a feeling the OP would be from the PNW. I was committed to riding in the rain yesterday, it started raining as soon as I left the grocery store parking lot. Bizarre winter so far, no snow or extreme cold yet, so I haven't had to really test myself. My regular wool clothes are more than warm enough for cycling so far.
#50
Seattle rider here: I've recently committed to becoming a bad-weather-biker. At work I can hang up the wet stuff for the work day. A change of clothes for work from a convenient locker makes it easier to be committed to it.
Tomorrow's Christmas day ride might be in mid 30's temps.
Tomorrow's Christmas day ride might be in mid 30's temps.



