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-   -   Pub 51 (https://www.bikeforums.net/fifty-plus-50/876247-pub-51-a.html)

David Bierbaum 07-28-13 07:27 PM


Originally Posted by JanMM (Post 15897861)
One of each side would help him with helmet balance.

It would also make him look like an insect or Mickey Mouse...

JanMM 07-28-13 09:07 PM


Originally Posted by David Bierbaum (Post 15898380)
It would also make him look like an insect or Mickey Mouse...

Would really like to see a pic of the motorcycle-mirror-on-a-bicycle-helmet man.

JanMM 08-05-13 08:07 PM

Wife/stoker and I were really screamin' on the Screamer yesterday. We probably coulda hit 60 on the downhills except it was all flat........

http://i189.photobucket.com/albums/z...M/IMG_1925.jpg

Biker395 08-22-13 03:55 PM

Must ... resist!

http://ep.yimg.com/ay/bicyclinghub/s...y-retro-24.jpg

rdtompki 08-23-13 10:18 AM

One of the milestones in life occurs when you can no longer kick your sons' butts at cycling, running, whatever. For myself, in my late 60's, that occurred a long, long time ago, but a new opportunity has arisen. One of my twin sons is local and was a Cat 2 last year, so you can imagine that not a pretty picture cycling-wise. His twin, however, has just moved back to California with wife and 2 y/o son; he is overweight and out of shape. I have every intention of humbling him at every opportunity. Unfortunately, the 30 year difference in our ages means that the slightest effort on his part to get in shape will find me getting crushed. I'm sure others have had similar feelings and experiences.

Wildwood 09-04-13 11:40 PM


Originally Posted by rdtompki (Post 15991716)
One of the milestones in life occurs when you can no longer kick your sons' butts at cycling, running, whatever. For myself, in my late 60's, that occurred a long, long time ago, but a new opportunity has arisen. One of my twin sons is local and was a Cat 2 last year, so you can imagine that not a pretty picture cycling-wise. His twin, however, has just moved back to California with wife and 2 y/o son; he is overweight and out of shape. I have every intention of humbling him at every opportunity. Unfortunately, the 30 year difference in our ages means that the slightest effort on his part to get in shape will find me getting crushed. I'm sure others have had similar feelings and experiences.

Rather than try to compete with young-uns, I chose to introduce/guide them to my sports where experience and lower-intensity endurance is beneficial -- hiking, backpacking,ocean kayaking, snow skiing, and distance cycling.

Anybody got 1st hand experience rowing? I'd be safer in a dory than a skull as the 65+ sub-sub-forum is calling to me soon.

Condorita 09-09-13 04:25 PM


Originally Posted by Biker395 (Post 15989197)

Gold for Command, not Engineering. Engineering should be red. (Yesterday was Trek TOS' 47th anniversary.)

Sculptor7 09-28-13 08:23 AM

Stacking Wood is Soooo Borrring!
 
Here it is a beautiful Fall day and I am stacking wood in the basement. The old saying about there being two seasons in Maine ("Winter" and "Getting Ready for Winter") is unfortunately too true.
Would much rather be out getting in a nice long ride.

rydabent 09-28-13 08:44 AM

Has anyone else noticed
 
Here on the 50+ threads most of the posts are pretty civil. Maybe it is because that us mature and older riders are not always trying to prove something. We ride what what we want to ride, not the latest $5000 unobtainium bike of the hour, unless that is what we want to ride. We ride where, and at what speed feels right to us. And that includes what pedal cadence feels right.

I guess what Im trying to say is that most of us are not trying to prove anything, and there are some things about getting older is really a good thing.

PS If you try to suck in your gut when some pretty young thing walks by you are not quite there yet!!!! :)

Retro Grouch 09-28-13 09:08 AM


Originally Posted by rydabent (Post 16112119)
Here on the 50+ threads most of the posts are pretty civil. Maybe it is because that us mature and older riders are not always trying to prove something. We ride what what we want to ride, not the latest $5000 unobtainium bike of the hour, unless that is what we want to ride. We ride where, and at what speed feels right to us. And that includes what pedal cadence feels right.

I guess what Im trying to say is that most of us are not trying to prove anything, and there are some things about getting older is really a good thing.

PS If you try to suck in your gut when some pretty young thing walks by you are not quite there yet!!!! :)

Yeah - I think that we might be too civil.

The moderators don't have anything useful to do so they move our posts around.

Robes 09-28-13 09:10 AM

Had the bike rack rigged on the truck,... bikes all loaded.... had all my gear on and ...the phone rings. The last wagon of hay is ready to be picked up. Buggers..... unload the bikes... take the rack off (hitch mount) and head off. At least that was the last wagon (50 tons this year). When I got home... I loaded the rack and the bikes back on. From the looks of the weather prognosticators.... this will be the last of the truly warm days. I'm good with that... got the cool/cold stuff out and ready....

otg 09-28-13 09:14 AM

It makes an interesting background for pictures!
http://i482.photobucket.com/albums/r...y/DSCN0376.jpg

http://i482.photobucket.com/albums/r...y/DSCN0379.jpg

Robes 09-28-13 09:19 AM


Originally Posted by Condorita (Post 16048132)
Gold for Command, not Engineering. Engineering should be red. (Yesterday was Trek TOS' 47th anniversary.)

Where can I get one of those!!!

TromboneAl 09-28-13 09:36 AM

Tell me about it! And I'm only half done.

http://i.imgur.com/GjmGDfG.jpg

Sixty Fiver 09-28-13 09:56 AM

Consider it to be good exercise... there are people who pay money to go to places called gyms to stay in shape.

Wogster 09-28-13 10:46 AM


Originally Posted by Sixty Fiver (Post 16112262)
Consider it to be good exercise... there are people who pay money to go to places called gyms to stay in shape.

+25.... Now if ya had to cut it, split it and stack it, all by hand, that's real exercise....

sam21fire 09-28-13 11:08 AM

Out here on the opposite corner of the country we're getting ready for winter by...um... well... riding. Sorry.

berner 09-28-13 11:13 AM

Not meaning to rub a sore spot Sculptor7 but today was, indeed a fine day for a ride. I did 40 miles in SE Massachusetts - crisp and clear early in the ride and warming nicely by mid morning. Many cyclists out today, I believe doing a fund raiser for cancer. Consider that you are healthy and able to stack wood. I will be 75 next month and am delighted to say I'm getting faster (slightly) each year. I'm still feeling a bit high from the ride.

Sixty Fiver 09-28-13 11:24 AM

I always enjoy splitting and stacking wood... I find it to be a very meditative activity.

Artkansas 09-28-13 11:32 AM

Work is what you make of it.

http://media.englishrussia.com/11201...odfun001-9.jpg
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-SbIqFWy6BF...1600/image.jpg
http://static.neatorama.com/images/2...-wood-pile.jpg

ModeratedUser150120149 09-28-13 11:51 AM


Originally Posted by Artkansas (Post 16112483)
Work is what you make of it.

]

EXCELLENT!


One of the things I miss is the firewood process. I have always enjoyed the cutting, limbing, rounding, splitting, stacking, using and ash disposal process. Didn't enjoy climbing up on a steel roof to clean the chimney. But, that was just part of the price.

As a side note: Wonder how many practice starting a fire? Especially when sub-zero and a tall chimney it can take some skill. Or, like one of my friends, he sends his elementary school kids out for the propane torch. It is their job to get the campfire, wood stove, or whatever going after he puts in the fuel.

Wogster 09-28-13 02:31 PM


Originally Posted by Sixty Fiver (Post 16112468)
I always enjoy splitting and stacking wood... I find it to be a very meditative activity.

Last time I split wood, it was with a gas powered log splitter, much easier then doing it by hand..... You wouldn't have felt like it here today, sunny and 19℃. Wonderful riding weather, got in longest ride of the year.....

NVanHiker 09-28-13 02:37 PM

No sympathy here - I love splitting and stacking wood, especially on a crisp fall day!

fietsbob 09-28-13 03:05 PM

NaturalGas heats my pretend wood stove .. it came with the house, as such.

Dudelsack 09-28-13 05:06 PM

This is just me.

When I climb on a bike, I think of it as laborious as chopping wood. It's a chore.

However, if you get on some Kentucky rolling roads, you can fire down one hill and darn near coast all the way up the next roller.

I call this free wood.

So when I'm padding my climbing numbers by going up and down rollers, I think of it as getting free wood.

I'd use this expression, but no one would know what I was talking about, and someone would make a dirty joke about it.

BTW, I got no free wood today. I had to earn what few feet I climbed.


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