Smoking & riding at the same time
#76
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 1,834
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From: Minneapolis, MN
Bikes: 05 Trek 5200, 07 Trek 520, 99 GT Karakoram, 08 Surly 1X1
I'm a former smoker but not militant about it. Like many other former smokers the smell is probably more irritating after quitting. Outdoors I just quietly remove myself from the cloud whenever possible.
However the sight of smoking while riding a bicycle just rankles me. It's like watching a kid pick his nose. Stopping and lighting up doesn't even cause me a second glance.
It's clearly my problem. Completely illogical. Don't even know why I'm posting this. There.. I said it.
However the sight of smoking while riding a bicycle just rankles me. It's like watching a kid pick his nose. Stopping and lighting up doesn't even cause me a second glance.
It's clearly my problem. Completely illogical. Don't even know why I'm posting this. There.. I said it.
#79
Barbieri Telefonico
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 3,522
Likes: 2
From: Albuquerque, New Mexico
Bikes: Crappy but operational secondhand Motobecane Messenger
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Giving Haircuts Over The Phone
Giving Haircuts Over The Phone
#81
I believe that ex-smokers like myself have very little right to criticize smokers. We all did exactly the same things that we get so sanctimonious about with current smokers. I find I am much LESS able to tolerate cigarette smoke AFTER quitting than I was before I smoked. Yet even so, the whiff of cigarette smoke i get from passing cars is no more than another bad smell to me. Some people here have the attitude of a guy who wrote a letter to editor of the local paper back when there were separate smoking and non-smoking sections in restaurants. The writer wrote self-rightiously about how he and his wife were at the last table of the non-smoking section. He complained that smoke from the first table in the smoking section was bothering his wife-a non-smoker. He asked the smoker to stop and when he refused, saying he was in the smoking section, the letter writer freaked out, causing a scene in the diner. The writer bemoaned that he was a smoker for 20 years and that HE was able to quit, and why couldn't the guy in the diner stop, since it was causing his wife so much distress? Apparently, it never dawned on this pinhead that maybe 2 decades of him fouling the house where his wife lived with HIS cigarette smoke, was the REAL issue. So, I am slow to criticize the smoker, especially when he/she is obeying the rules.
Last edited by fredgarvin7; 10-10-09 at 11:11 AM.
#82
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 14,277
Likes: 3
Just because you have an opinion doesn't make it right.
#83
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 14,277
Likes: 3
I believe that ex-smokers like myself have very little right to criticize smokers. We all did exactly the same things that we get so sanctimonious about with current smokers. I find I am much LESS able to tolerate cigarette smoke AFTER quitting than I was before I smoked. Yet even so, the whiff of cigarette smoke i get from passing cars is no more than another bad smell to me. Some people here have the attitude of a guy who wrote a letter to editor of the local paper back when there were separate smoking and non-smoking sections in restaurants. The writer wrote self-rightiously about how he and his wife were at the last table of the non-smoking section. He complained that smoke from the first table in the smoking section was bothering his wife-a non-smoker. He asked the smoker to stop and when he refused, saying he was in the smoking section, the letter writer freaked out, causing a scene in the diner. The writer bemoaned that he was a smoker for 20 years and that HE was able to quit, and why couldn't the guy in the diner stop, since it was causing his wife so much distress? Apparently, it never dawned on this pinhead that maybe 2 decades of him fouling the house where his wife lived with HIS cigarette smoke, was the REAL issue. So, I am slow to criticize the smoker, especially when he/she is obeying the rules.
#84
"Incorrect. We have all the rights to criticize having been there ourselves."
Yup, just like the guy who's too old to carry on anymore, who "sees the light" and now trys to stop others from doing what he LOVED to do when he was able.
Yup, just like the guy who's too old to carry on anymore, who "sees the light" and now trys to stop others from doing what he LOVED to do when he was able.
#85
Newbie
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 3
Likes: 0
Interesting, indeed! I quit smoking over 5 years ago, but when I did smoke I would occasionally ride with a cigarette. But mostly not, because I found it a distraction. The vast majority of the time I would light up after a ride.
Luv the handlebar mounted ashtray.... looks like something I would put together.
Luv the handlebar mounted ashtray.... looks like something I would put together.
#86
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 14,277
Likes: 3
lol
Now use the quote button.
#87
Kaffee Nazi
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 1,374
Likes: 0
From: Richland, WA
Bikes: 2009 Kestrel RT800, 2007 Roubaix, 1976 Lambert-Viscount
I'm a former smoker but not militant about it. Like many other former smokers the smell is probably more irritating after quitting. Outdoors I just quietly remove myself from the cloud whenever possible.
However the sight of smoking while riding a bicycle just rankles me. It's like watching a kid pick his nose. Stopping and lighting up doesn't even cause me a second glance.
It's clearly my problem. Completely illogical. Don't even know why I'm posting this. There.. I said it.
However the sight of smoking while riding a bicycle just rankles me. It's like watching a kid pick his nose. Stopping and lighting up doesn't even cause me a second glance.
It's clearly my problem. Completely illogical. Don't even know why I'm posting this. There.. I said it.

Go figure. Times have changed.
Never smoked cigarettes, but enjoy a good cigar once in a while. I already enjoy riding helmetless past a group of helmeted riders uphill (sometimes it's the other way around
).But I think adding smoking a cigar to the routine is just the right touch. You have to admit that the image of an old fart, sans helmet, puffing on a cigar and passing a bunch of lycra clad helmet wearling kids uphill is a sweet picture. Of course, pulling it off is another thing.
#88
Warning:Mild Peril
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,170
Likes: 3
From: Seattle Refugee in Los Angeles
Bikes: Cilo, Surly Pacer, Kona Fire Mountain w/Bob Trailer, Scattante
Cyclists getting amped about cigarette butt litter is hilarious. I don't smoke, but butts are cotton and paper. How long do you think your worn out tires sit in a landfill, your stretched out chains, and worn saddles? Oh sure you don't throw them on the side of the road, but they don't magically disappear when they hit the trash.
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Non semper erit aestas.
Non semper erit aestas.
#90
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 1,834
Likes: 0
From: Minneapolis, MN
Bikes: 05 Trek 5200, 07 Trek 520, 99 GT Karakoram, 08 Surly 1X1
Cyclists getting amped about cigarette butt litter is hilarious. I don't smoke, but butts are cotton and paper. How long do you think your worn out tires sit in a landfill, your stretched out chains, and worn saddles? Oh sure you don't throw them on the side of the road, but they don't magically disappear when they hit the trash.
Cigarette butts are made from a type of acetate that never fully breaks down.
#93
Warning:Mild Peril
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,170
Likes: 3
From: Seattle Refugee in Los Angeles
Bikes: Cilo, Surly Pacer, Kona Fire Mountain w/Bob Trailer, Scattante
#95
Warning:Mild Peril
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,170
Likes: 3
From: Seattle Refugee in Los Angeles
Bikes: Cilo, Surly Pacer, Kona Fire Mountain w/Bob Trailer, Scattante
#99
Besides, automotive tires can be recycled - its just a little bit of a complex procedure, still much better then stockpiling them, or throwing them into landfills.






