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I think I forgot to mention: My commuter bike has toe clips. I can get away with wearing leather Skechers most days, so I ride with the shoes I wear during the work day.
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Originally Posted by JPprivate
(Post 10764093)
sounds like I'm one of few who actually rides in work clothes (business casual). A little over 7 miles. As the OP writes, it works great except for summer (or morning temperatures in the high sixties). I am lucky then also, because our company has a special (casual) dress policy during the summer months, so I always have a couple of jeans at work and bring with me fresh underwear and t-shirt.
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Originally Posted by Doohickie
(Post 10764346)
I rode to work in work clothes at the old office (when the commute was 7 miles) occasionally in the beginning. But it was rare that the temp was just right and I just got into the habit of changing so I did that most of the time.
another thing I forgot to mention: having a dry cleaner close by work can really help. Fewer clothes to carry around. |
I really cheat. I have a fairly large office with all the comforts of home (tv, dvd, stereo, 46 gallon aquarium etc, etc) I also have a two drawer lateral file cabinet that is stashed full of clothes. Top drawer clean, bottom drawer dirty. I swap the clothes out every week but I could survive two weeks easy. Only thing I don't have is a shower and I am going to come up with that sooner or later.
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I change at work, but not because of the ride (3 miles, mostly downhill), but because of the hour-and-a-half train ride at the end. I wind up rumpled and dishevelled crammed into those little seats for that long. Also, when it rains, it's nice to have some dry pants.
Mostly I bring in my clothes on Sundays, when the trains don't run and I have to drive in. If I have a sunday off, I use a pair of 15" Eagle Creek Pack-It folders. I can bring in two pairs of pants and a shirt, or two shirts and a pair of pants, and they arrive mostly wrinkle-free, and I have clothes for the week (I have a (very) small closet in my cube). Both folders can fit into my Detours Uptown pannier, along with a change of socks. The Jandd Commuter pannier can fit a few 18" Pack-It folders, and the Caradice Bike Bureau and North St. Woodward can each hold a pair of 15" folders - these turn easily into off-the-bike bags, which might be a concern if you have a bus ride, train ride, or long walk as part of your commute, where the Uptown is more of a bike-only kind of pannier. I can't stand wearing a messenger bag or backpack on a bike. For those of you who claim it doesn't move around on you or toss you off balance, god bless you, because you're way more talented and/or lucky than I've ever been. The pannier's been a godsend, and the reason why I still commute year 'round. |
Originally Posted by RI_Swamp_Yankee
(Post 10765479)
I can't stand wearing a messenger bag or backpack on a bike. For those of you who claim it doesn't move around on you or toss you off balance, god bless you, because you're way more talented and/or lucky than I've ever been. The pannier's been a godsend, and the reason why I still commute year 'round.
It's been awhile since I've done much riding with a backpack but as I recall once I got a pack with both a sternum and a waist strap, any shifting problems were taken care of. |
the tom bihn super ego is a great messenger bag that has several strap options. the messenger strap with the cross-strap keeps it sturdy. pricey though, but i have one and the quality is tip top. very durable bag.
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