Reasonable commute length?
#26
EDIT for those who say it is too far, well everyone has a different threshold. My commute is only 2 miles, but I often take the 40 mile "shortcut" on the way home. I ride early mornings too, 50-80 miles 3 days a week and am home before the kids go to school. Yeah I have been doing this for years, but it is certainly doable, just depends on your level of commitment (or whether you should be "committed.")
zac
#27
I think the consensus is that it's a little far to do every day. Many people have suggested alternate days or other solutions. I'd also say that there's big difference between riding 30 or 40 miles to work and a 30 - 40 mile rec/training/group ride unless you have a pretty stellar route to work.
Commute with your wife! It's a double bonus. You get to spend some quality time with her, makes the commute less stressful for both of you, and that last 5 miles is an ideal bike commute length.
Blah, blah, blah
Hey, Good luck! let us know how it works out. I like the option of commuting in with her and riding home several times a week. But don't just wait for the warm weather: Riding in the winter isn't so bad, you can dress for the cold as long as you can keep your feet/hands and head warm; Riding in the rain sucks, Riding in the snow is peaceful, but difficult and I certainly wouldn't want to do 31 miles on those roads in the snow; However, riding in a headwind is the worst, and we are headed into wind season right now, so don't get discouraged if you end up with an evening commute into a 20mph+ headwind the entire way.
zac
Blah, blah, blah
Hey, Good luck! let us know how it works out. I like the option of commuting in with her and riding home several times a week. But don't just wait for the warm weather: Riding in the winter isn't so bad, you can dress for the cold as long as you can keep your feet/hands and head warm; Riding in the rain sucks, Riding in the snow is peaceful, but difficult and I certainly wouldn't want to do 31 miles on those roads in the snow; However, riding in a headwind is the worst, and we are headed into wind season right now, so don't get discouraged if you end up with an evening commute into a 20mph+ headwind the entire way.
zac
__________________
trans female, out and proud!
Hammer Nutrition 15% Referral Discount
MassBike.org - Same Road, Same Rules
trans female, out and proud!
Hammer Nutrition 15% Referral Discount
MassBike.org - Same Road, Same Rules
Last edited by zac; 03-16-10 at 12:17 PM.
#28
steel lover
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,316
Likes: 0
From: Houston
Bikes: Bianchi Alloro, Miyata 710, Fuji Espree Fixie convert

I would drive in with wifey, and ride home. Assuming timing works out, that sounds ideal to me.
#29
Senior Member
Joined: May 2009
Posts: 351
Likes: 0
From: Boston, MA
Thanks for all the advice so far. Sounds like i'ts smarter to do the alternate day thing which isn't that big a deal as my wife works nearby and would have to drive anyway. The ride over to her is only five miles over back roads so that's ok even if I'm tired or it's wet.
...
...
#30
You gonna eat that?
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 14,917
Likes: 543
From: Fort Worth, Texas Church of Hopeful Uncertainty
Bikes: 1966 Raleigh DL-1 Tourist, 1973 Schwinn Varsity, 1983 Raleigh Marathon, 1994 Nishiki Sport XRS
Me too. Unfortunately, I have 17 miles each way.
#31
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,982
Likes: 11
From: Puget Sound
Bikes: 2007 Rocky Mountain Sherpa 30 (bionx), 2015 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Ultegra
I think a 31 mile each-way commute would be perfect for me! That's if I didn't have kids and a family to worry about. I just don't think I could get away with 4 hours per day on the bike. I have a 15 mile roundtrip commute. It's OK. It gives me about an hour per day of bike time.
#32
steel lover
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,316
Likes: 0
From: Houston
Bikes: Bianchi Alloro, Miyata 710, Fuji Espree Fixie convert
I think a 31 mile each-way commute would be perfect for me! That's if I didn't have kids and a family to worry about. I just don't think I could get away with 4 hours per day on the bike. I have a 15 mile roundtrip commute. It's OK. It gives me about an hour per day of bike time.
Oh yeah.... if I could still leave home at 6am, and return home by 5pm I'd definitely be down with a longer commuter. Oh... can i still get my fridays off? Maybe I'll do something other than ride.
#33
Senior Member

Joined: May 2005
Posts: 1,890
Likes: 59
From: Fairhaven, Massachusetts
Bikes: Giant easy e, Priority Onyx, Scott Sub 40, Marin Belvedere Commuter
I have been commuting to this job in Taunton for seven years. I have two spots to park, one is 11 miles away and one is just over 5. The short is the winter commute and occasionally on a Friday I will drive to the office, ride the 32 miles home. Saturday morning ride back to the office and pick up the car.
Thirty one daily is a lot. Shorter rides leave us wanting more. We tend look for the finish line on long rides and doing that daily is difficult.
Thirty one daily is a lot. Shorter rides leave us wanting more. We tend look for the finish line on long rides and doing that daily is difficult.
#34
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 416
Likes: 0
Bikes: 2006 Raleigh Mojave 2008 Specialized Roubaix Elite
my commute is 22 miles each way- as i worked up to doing a full day of commuting i would put my bike
in my car, drive to work and then ride home. the next day I'd drive in. eventually i was able to do a same day round trip
and rest the next day. now i can do 4 days in row however by the end of the 4th day i'm tired from
having to get up earlier and not going to be early. last year i'd keep on riding on my home and spin out a metric century
every once in a while just for fun.
in my car, drive to work and then ride home. the next day I'd drive in. eventually i was able to do a same day round trip
and rest the next day. now i can do 4 days in row however by the end of the 4th day i'm tired from
having to get up earlier and not going to be early. last year i'd keep on riding on my home and spin out a metric century
every once in a while just for fun.
#35
Member
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 31
Likes: 0
From: Amsterdam, Netherlands
I actually have a 48km one-way commute and it is do-able. This morning it took 1:45 total and this evening 1:35 total, with a headwind and rain it takes just over 2 hours. So it does take some time, but it is does not take over my life. It took me a few months to acclimatize, where I would get home, eat as much as I could stomach then fall asleep, but now it doesn't really effect me much at all. There are two other guys who I see in the mornings and evenings who go the same distance, and all of us kept going through the rather brutal winter we had in Europe. So if it is something you really want to work up to, then it is totally possible, it just takes some time to train your body. Good luck!
#36
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 961
Likes: 0
From: the Georgia Strait
Bikes: Devinci Caribou, Kona Dew Plus, Raleigh Twenty
There's your answer right there. Start out with just commuting back and forth from your wife's work. 10 miles/day, 5 days a week is the perfect starting point. Do just that for 6-8 weeks and then you'll suddenly come up with various and creative ways to do more miles.
#37
I Can Quit Any Time
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 55
Likes: 0
From: Louisville, KY
Bikes: 1994 Specialized Allez; 1997 GT Legacy ('Swift'); 2008 Schwinn Avenue ('Traveller')
I think the 'ride part way with the wife, then ride home with the wife' plan is an ideal way to start. (Also give you an excuse to buy an nice bike rack, if you don't already have one
) That way you can ramp up the distance a little at a time, and make your daily ride as long or short as you want it to be (and if you're like many bike commuters, you'll soon find yourself wanting it to be longer ... and longer...).
My commute, these days, ranges anywhere from the bare-minimum 4.5 miles to 15 or more, depending on whether I have time to play around on the bike (I often leave early in the morning so I can do 8.7 miles instead of 4.5). I like the idea of the '40 mile shortcut' someone mentioned above!
) That way you can ramp up the distance a little at a time, and make your daily ride as long or short as you want it to be (and if you're like many bike commuters, you'll soon find yourself wanting it to be longer ... and longer...).My commute, these days, ranges anywhere from the bare-minimum 4.5 miles to 15 or more, depending on whether I have time to play around on the bike (I often leave early in the morning so I can do 8.7 miles instead of 4.5). I like the idea of the '40 mile shortcut' someone mentioned above!
#38
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,982
Likes: 11
From: Puget Sound
Bikes: 2007 Rocky Mountain Sherpa 30 (bionx), 2015 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Ultegra
While my commute is 15 miles round trip, from April through September I have club rides twice a week in addition to the commute that are 25-40 miles. Those 40-55 mile days are more difficult but very enjoyable.
#39
Thread Starter
Newbie
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 46
Likes: 6
From: Salem, MA
Bikes: 2000 Habenero Road, 2022 Habnaero gravel, 2005 Spicer touring
So far...
I ended up doing the commute on Friday (nice weather here in New England then- now it's 40 and pouring
As predicted it was rather exhausting but worked out ok. My legs don't get tired but my hands and feet fell asleep as they always do when I'm out of shape.
I did a steady 23-26km/hr and the distance ended up being 48km going up Rt62 to 225 through carlisle and westford then 119 into Pepperell. I was more than happy with that as I rode my commuting bike with fenders, panniers and the lot. Luckily the bridges were all open so I didn't have to wade through any rivers. I'll give it another shot when the weather improves.
I think one day a week- maybe two until I get conditioned will be OK. I'll try to update the thread with news on how it goes. Figure that would be useful for others who might be searching on the topic.
If any locals have ideas for a better route I'm all ears- here's how I went:
As predicted it was rather exhausting but worked out ok. My legs don't get tired but my hands and feet fell asleep as they always do when I'm out of shape. I did a steady 23-26km/hr and the distance ended up being 48km going up Rt62 to 225 through carlisle and westford then 119 into Pepperell. I was more than happy with that as I rode my commuting bike with fenders, panniers and the lot. Luckily the bridges were all open so I didn't have to wade through any rivers. I'll give it another shot when the weather improves.
I think one day a week- maybe two until I get conditioned will be OK. I'll try to update the thread with news on how it goes. Figure that would be useful for others who might be searching on the topic.
If any locals have ideas for a better route I'm all ears- here's how I went:







