The worst part of the commute
#26
I commuted today and I have to get up earlier than normal. The first day was hard for me to get up, but this morning, the thought of biking got me out of bed on time. Although my girlfriend was still in our warm bed peacefully sleeping, which was hard for me as it is still kind of cold in the mornings here.
Coffee did help as I fired the Mr. Coffee up as soon as I stepped out of my room and I feel better and more alert in the morning.
Coffee did help as I fired the Mr. Coffee up as soon as I stepped out of my room and I feel better and more alert in the morning.
#27
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 278
Likes: 0
From: Ann Arbor
Bikes: Voodoo Wanga, Waterford RS, Gitane SS
Originally Posted by Corsaire
Coffee is actually good for bikers. Releases caffeine into the system, allowing the body to release fat into the bloodstream, giving you that extra surge of energy, specially on long rides.
Corsaire
Corsaire

Thats great!! Hey, can you justify any of my other chemical addictions, like beer maybe?
#28
Proshpero
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 712
Likes: 0
From: Phoenix, AZ
Bikes: Fixed Surly CrossCheck, Redline Conquest Pro
Originally Posted by noisebeam
jnbacon,
Have your cycled in both manhattan and phoenix? If so just curious how you compare the two. My guess is that one must dymanically deal with far more moving and stationary obsticals in M, but can better work with traffic flow and ride like a vehicle vs. dealing with high speed cars in P where it is harder to ride and get treated like a vehicle. A different kind of mindset, but likely more relaxing in P
Al
Have your cycled in both manhattan and phoenix? If so just curious how you compare the two. My guess is that one must dymanically deal with far more moving and stationary obsticals in M, but can better work with traffic flow and ride like a vehicle vs. dealing with high speed cars in P where it is harder to ride and get treated like a vehicle. A different kind of mindset, but likely more relaxing in P
Al
I'd say the main difference is that traffic in NY always seemed so interactive: a look, an engine rev, a lurch in a direction, tons of subtle and not so subtle cues that you need to read and give in order to successfully navigate the cars. In Phx, people seem to be either polite to the point of being scared, or just completely amoral/willfully unaware and lacking any regard for how bicycles fit into the traffic scheme. Those are exagerrated descriptions, but they fit pretty well with my experience.
#29
Arizona Dessert

Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 15,029
Likes: 2,170
From: AZ
Bikes: Cannondale SuperSix, Lemond Poprad. Retired: Jamis Sputnik, Centurion LeMans Fixed, Diamond Back ascent ex
Originally Posted by jnbacon
The only biking I did in NY was as a teen, mostly to the park or friends' apartments on my ten speed. ...
I'd say the main difference is that traffic in NY always seemed so interactive: a look, an engine rev, a lurch in a direction, tons of subtle and not so subtle cues that you need to read and give in order to successfully navigate the cars. In Phx, people seem to be either polite to the point of being scared, or just completely amoral/willfully unaware and lacking any regard for how bicycles fit into the traffic scheme. Those are exagerrated descriptions, but they fit pretty well with my experience.
I'd say the main difference is that traffic in NY always seemed so interactive: a look, an engine rev, a lurch in a direction, tons of subtle and not so subtle cues that you need to read and give in order to successfully navigate the cars. In Phx, people seem to be either polite to the point of being scared, or just completely amoral/willfully unaware and lacking any regard for how bicycles fit into the traffic scheme. Those are exagerrated descriptions, but they fit pretty well with my experience.
I agree that phx-metro drivers are either overly cautious or overly unaware/uncaring. But it is the high speeds I find most difficult, one moment you see a gap, then a second later its gone. The speed makes it hard to tell if a car is slowing or not to let you in a gap.
Al
#30
Right calf grease tattoo

Joined: May 2004
Posts: 200
Likes: 0
From: Alpharetta GA
Bikes: '02 Alpe D'Huez
Besides arriving at work on a nice day, the worst part of my commute is pulling into traffic during rush hour. Although I work such odd hours this occurrance is rare, when I do have to take that left into heavy traffic, it is disturbing.
#31
Junior Member
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 5
Likes: 0
From: Northern CA
Bikes: 1982 Austro Daimler, 2003 Bianchi Veloce, Trek mountain bike
Exactly! How about the mornings I've weakened and driven to work because I stalled around til it was to late to ride...first thing I see is some other rider out there doing it right.
#32
Senior Member

Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 915
Likes: 1
From: NYC
Originally Posted by slvoid
Ahahahaha! I live in new york city. I can wake up LATER cause it's faster by bike than anything else. Suckers.


You are damn right. 1 hour and 7 minutes by bike. 1 hours and 20 minutes by subway if the train is on time arriving and leaving each station.




