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Is your commuter ready for Armageddon?
Hi all,
Just wondering how many of you have your commuter set up for national emergencies or any type/form of armageddon. Do you have any sort of contingency plans for using your bike in a situation where cars will not be useable? Im thinking of stocking up on a few extra tubes and small parts just incase if anything ever happens I could be prepared. |
Don't forget "pepper spray". :D There will be others who will want your stuff.
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Originally Posted by macteacher
(Post 8225364)
Do you have any sort of contingency plans for using your bike in a situation where cars will not be useable?
I assume that you are talking about something more serious than a bad snowfall. Most bikes I have are really solid enough that beyond lubrication and flats, they could probably go for a year or more. If you are proposing a situation where parts are completely unavailable for over a year. I think you will have far bigger problems than that. :eek: :twitchy: |
I'm building a 72 hour emergency hiking pack that I plan on using a BoB type trailer to carry. In the emergency pack I have 3 sets Slime tubes, but no other parts. Haven't thought this part out very much though.
The recent snow storm here in Oregon and then the flooding a couple weeks later really made me think about emergency use of a bicycle. |
Originally Posted by knobster
(Post 8225440)
I'm building a 72 hour emergency hiking pack that I plan on using a BoB type trailer to carry. In the emergency pack I have 3 sets Slime tubes, but no other parts. Haven't thought this part out very much though.
The recent snow storm here in Oregon and then the flooding a couple weeks later really made me think about emergency use of a bicycle. What kind of catastrophe are people worried about? |
Originally Posted by Roody
(Post 8225470)
What kind of catastrophe are people worried about? |
:thumb::roflmao2::roflmao: Classic, I love it, especially the assless chaps and the flipping the bird, classic. |
Originally Posted by Roody
(Post 8225470)
What kind of catastrophe are people worried about?
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Originally Posted by Ziemas
(Post 8225723)
Who knows, but I've noticed a rash of these uber paranoid posts on various forums as of late.
It's people projecting their fantasies onto the Obama Presidency. http://wonkette.com/assets/resources...0411023197.jpg |
No Armageddon plans here (not really), but I do keep plenty of spares for many of my bikes on hand. I live over 20 miles from the nearest LBS. We live a bit off the beaten path so we always try to keep plenty of things on hand.
As far as using the bike to outrun the zombies...I have used my bike(s) to my advantage after a couple of hurricanes, specifically Fran in '97 and Katrina in '05. During Fran I was in Fayetteville, NC the neighborhood I lived in was completely cut off due to massive trees down across all the roads in the area. I was able to move about freely on my MTB/Commuter. During Katrina I was Jacksonville, FL where I had evacuated to from Mobile, AL. I was back in Mobile within 2 days. The biggest problem was a fuel shortage. Many of my coworkers were spending every other day in gas lines for up to 4 hours to get 5 gallons of gas. Me? I had stocked up on fuel prior to the hurricane, and had brought my bicycle along. I parked the truck and road my bicycle to and from work. FWIW I usually take my bike with me when I go to out of town job sites, people always ask me why...I tell them it is my dingy/lifeboat.:lol: In the US we are seldom more than a day or two away from a gas shortage. I keep my truck tanks at least half full or if working way out of town, I keep them full. If the crap hits the fan I will head for home ASAP, drive as far as I can and cycle the rest of the way. Of course I live right next to a huge military base that probably would be on the primary target list. So if that is the flavor of Armageddon it probably would be pointless to head home.:o Aaron:) |
Hmm, I have a small emergency medical kit in one of my panniers. You know, with bandaids and single servings of advil. Does that count? The kit came in really handy last year on a school field trip when we discovered a tick in the scalp of one of the girls I was chaperoning.
Oh, and I live 3 blocks from the LBS... he stock piles the tubes for me, and I buy them on an as-needed basis. Besides... if it came to that, I think I'd be more worried about getting food than about getting tubes. Keep your priorities in order for goodness sakes. |
Honestly, I consider my three "real" (not parts) bikes to be in good working order, with solid mechanicals and rubber. Like Lizzy, I keep a small medical kit with me in my saddle bag, with a couple snickers, two tubes, a patch kit, a small pump (enough to get me rolling again) and a spoke wrench. Since one of them is a hub-shift, one is friction shift, and the other is soon to be friction shift, and everything is QR on all but the Free Spirit, I don't bring along screwdrivers or wrenches usually, because in 99% of the instances, they're just not necessary.
With bikes, I'm not too concerned. Think about it. Relatively, they're cheap. They're reliable, they don't need much maintenance, and you don't have parts moving at 4,000 RPM, so you won't have mechanical failures due to that either. I'd be much more concerned about enough flooding to submerge the bottoms of my cars' transmissions and oil pans. |
Nah. When the apocalypse comes, I'm goin' down.
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I assume that, should Armageddon arrive, as an atheist, I will not be part of "The Rapture". I have, therefore, put aside a supply of helium cartridges whith which I will fill my tyres and happily float up alongside the Chosen Ones.
It has just occurred to me that I will need to make further arrangements: since the bike will obviously invert itself (the tyres being the lightest part of the bike), I will need to fit some sort of safety harness from which I can hang, lest the bike depart into the celestial orbit without me. Should this prove ineffective, I will rapidly seek out a similarly sex-starved pensioner and bonk my way into eternity. |
Originally Posted by mijome07
(Post 8225419)
don't forget "pepper spray". :d there will be others who will want your stuff.
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I carry a wad of bills for hookers and blow. Might as well go out in style.
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I'm caught in a web of indecision. See, we're having a big debate at work right now about zombies: what a zombie really is, what causes them, what they want to eat, how they can be killed, etc. I figure there's no point in assembling an emergency kit unless you know these things, because what would be the point? You could load up on gasoline and butane lighters only to find out that zombies don't burn that well.
Be prepared, definitely, be prepared for Armageddon, it's a great thing to do if you don't have a hobby. |
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Originally Posted by lil brown bat
(Post 8226147)
I'm caught in a web of indecision. See, we're having a big debate at work right now about zombies: what a zombie really is, what causes them, what they want to eat, how they can be killed, etc.
http://forbiddenplanet.co.uk/blog/wp...ing%20Dead.jpg And yes, Zombies really are in black and white. ;) For something a bit lighter, check out Wristcutters by Goran Dukic. They are not exactly zombies because everyone in their world has arrived there after committing suicide. It's an after-world where everything is slightly worse. http://www.ifc.com/ifc/img/10152007_...er_article.jpg |
My bike shop is ready for when the ship sinks.
Why stock up on parts (even though I do) when you can stock up on bikes? The way I see it, I have 8 bikes. It's kinda of like a dog sled team. When the food runs out, you take the slowest, lamest dog and feed it to the others. Humm......I should stalk up on dog sled teams.......they could pull my bike, even without gears and with a flat. In all seriousness. I would assume any somewhat serious cyclist would have a fair number of tools/supplies. My shop always has 6-7 extra tubes, a chain or two, random spare parts, pumps. Makes life easier. |
Phooey, now I have to go back to thinking about getting a Pugsley type of bike for those go anywhere in any season type of rides.....:winter2:
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In the event of civil unrest and rioting, I will riot my way to the LBS and quickly grab what I need while stupider people are still trying to get gasoline.
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Just make sure the wheels on your shopping cart don't wiggle back and forth.
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Originally Posted by dewaday
(Post 8226373)
Just make sure the wheels on your shopping cart don't wiggle back and forth.
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Originally Posted by lil brown bat
(Post 8226147)
I'm caught in a web of indecision. See, we're having a big debate at work right now about zombies: what a zombie really is, what causes them, what they want to eat, how they can be killed, etc. I figure there's no point in assembling an emergency kit unless you know these things, because what would be the point? You could load up on gasoline and butane lighters only to find out that zombies don't burn that well.
Be prepared, definitely, be prepared for Armageddon, it's a great thing to do if you don't have a hobby. |
I'm an atheist and a skeptic, so I'm really not worried about armageddon.
Not really prepared for national emergencies or evacuations. How exactly do you "prepare" for that? I do want to get a small medical kit for the bike. If I ever have to evacuate this area, there's no way I'm doing it by car. I always like how in those disaster films, everyone tries to evacuate the city or whatever by car, on the highway. Of course, there's inevitably a traffic jam throughout the city and on the highways. Screw that, I'm throwing some cans of food and a few supplies in my backpack, running out of the building with my bike, and riding out on the backroads. :roflmao2: This topic is amusing. |
During World War II, people in Europe rode bicycles without tubes or even tires (right on the rims) and made it through five years with bikes intact. Bicycles are among the toughest devices out there.
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I stocked up on condiments. If turned into a zombie, I refuse to eat human brains without a good salsa.
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wow...a lot of interesting responses. The fact is folks we never really do know when or if **** will hit the fan. Its good to be prepared. I am in the process of now starting to put together medical kits, tubes, basic wrenches, small propane gas tanks (camping kind) flashlights, batteries. Its all going into one big bag. If or when the day comes, it is a matter of opening the bag and im good to go.
What if a massive earthquake hit destroying the california coastline? Im sure that would disrupt services somewhere. Couple that with flooding from the snow, possible massive hurricanes destroying the texas pipelines? ...its Chaos. Although those are bad conditions..God forbid we have to endure a dirty nuke or chemical bomb by some lunatic somewhere. Point is...we just don't know when, how or if something will happen. Its good to be prepared. much like the folks from Belgium below were...lol http://www.benvanhelden.nl/Condorclu.../ABBLBikes.jpg |
I've considered if we had an evacuation for some kind of atttack that I would load both cars with stuff as well as bike racks with our 4 bikes (family of 4) just in case ...
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