The Pootle Thread
#351
Bike Nerd
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 579
Likes: 1
From: Mid- Michigan
Bikes: mid 80's Fuji Supreme (commuter), LeRun unicycle thingy Raleigh Centrurion
Continuing on
Now time to see some new sights.

Stopped in the middle for the view.

As folded as my baby gets.

Svelte profile

View down river

I had never been down this trail, leads behind the local disc golf course along the river bank.

Stopped in the middle for the view.

As folded as my baby gets.

Svelte profile

View down river

I had never been down this trail, leads behind the local disc golf course along the river bank.
#352
Bike Nerd
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 579
Likes: 1
From: Mid- Michigan
Bikes: mid 80's Fuji Supreme (commuter), LeRun unicycle thingy Raleigh Centrurion
Down the Trail

Hanging out on an old bridge footing.

obstruction ahead

Low Bridge!

YIKES! that was a bit scary on a new bike with twitchy handling.
#353
Bike Nerd
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 579
Likes: 1
From: Mid- Michigan
Bikes: mid 80's Fuji Supreme (commuter), LeRun unicycle thingy Raleigh Centrurion
Keeping on

Looking up river. After this the trail turned into a mess of broken beer bottles and other things. This is evidently the local "party spot" for the young folk. I jumped up onto the Disc Golf course and cut across a couple fairways to the nearest road.

Smooth sailing now, I may have broken the Pootle speed limit on this stretch.

Stopped at hole 18 of the disc golf course to talk to some folk. Not playing today but we will be down here quite a bit.

Back over the Tridge, the area down here is a cycling hotspot with the parks and rail trail. You can see several folk getting ready for a ride in the background and this is a weekday after noon, on weekends and evenings it is crazy with bikes.

Stopped at my bikes birthplace to say hi, and express my contentment with my new ride.
#354
Bike Nerd
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 579
Likes: 1
From: Mid- Michigan
Bikes: mid 80's Fuji Supreme (commuter), LeRun unicycle thingy Raleigh Centrurion
Last little bit

Local Veterans Memorial

City Hall

My town has many nice little "pocket parks" very impressive sculpture in this one.
All in all a very nice ride, only about 3 miles total, but I was happy with the little guys performance. It's not quite a "real" folder, but it solves my issue of hauling it up and down my stairs. I was pleasantly surprised at the overall peppiness of the bike.
#355
Senior Member

Joined: May 2007
Posts: 793
Likes: 0
From: Vancouver, Canada
Bikes: Brodie Force w/ Xtracycle, Dahon Helios, Merida Folding, Pacific Carryme, Softride Classic
Last Saturday, my friend and I went for a ride around Richmond (a suburb of Vancouver) in British Columbia.

This is the view looking into Vancouver from mid span on the new bicycle & pedestrian bridge which is slung underneath the rapid transit train called the CanadaLine.

This is my buddy approaching from the Richmond side. Note th high railings and special extra traction surface.

The ubiquitous sign of capitalism. Note the Dahon Helios in the background.

This is the view looking into Vancouver from mid span on the new bicycle & pedestrian bridge which is slung underneath the rapid transit train called the CanadaLine.

This is my buddy approaching from the Richmond side. Note th high railings and special extra traction surface.

The ubiquitous sign of capitalism. Note the Dahon Helios in the background.
#357
Erudite white trash
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 202
Likes: 0
From: Omaha
Bikes: Rivendell Clem Smith, Jr. Low, Rivendell SimpleOne, Schwinn Super Sport ('87), Velo Orange Campeur
lexm's quasi-lomorific urban pootling adventure: Chicago style, part I
Living just off Chicago's Magnificent Mile, my pootling has a decidedly urban flavor. And what could be more flavorfully urban than the Billy Goat Tavern, on Hubbard right by Lower Michigan Avenue? Immortalized by John Belushi on the original Saturday Night Live, the Billy Goat is quite real - "No fries! Cheeps!" - and a traditional journo-hangout.
IMGP0937..jpg
Turning right on Lower Michigan, I approach the lower span of the Michigan Avenue Bridge. The bridge crosses the Chicago River, which separates the River North neighborhood (where I live) from The Loop.
IMGP0944..jpg
Not wanting my teeth rattled out of my head by the metal grate bridge, I opt for the sidewalk adjacent. No one (except lost tourists and vagrants) walks here, so it's a nice place to view the river (facing west)...
IMGP0945..jpg
...and the Wrigley Building (Chicago is!).
IMGP0949..jpg
Safely across the river, I now take to the pedestrian walkway the city laughably insists is also a bike path. Looking over my lovely new Brompton's handlebars, we see the Wrigley Building (Chicago is!) and (to its right) the Tribune Tower.
IMGP0951..jpg
Riding slowly, I pass under the Michigan Avenue Bridge, on the south bank of the Chicago River.
IMGP0954..jpg
Here are gathered many people waiting to board the Chicago Architectural Foundation's tour boat. The architectural boat tour is a gem. It comes in at about 90 minutes, they hit dozens of major landmarks, and there's a bar on the lower deck. If they could just find a place to put these people between when they buy their tickets and when they board the boat, it'd be perfect.
IMGP0963..jpg
I continue my quasi-lomorific ways: What are those eye-poppingly yellow shoes I'm wearing? Old school Onitsuka Tigers.
IMGP0980..jpg
Bad bikes for rent - especially the universally hated quadricycle.
IMGP0971..jpg
At last clear of the crowds, I approach the Lake Shore Drive underpass.
IMGP0987..jpg
What's on the other side? Find out in lexm's quasi-lomorific urban pootling adventure: Chicago style, part II.
IMGP0937..jpg
Turning right on Lower Michigan, I approach the lower span of the Michigan Avenue Bridge. The bridge crosses the Chicago River, which separates the River North neighborhood (where I live) from The Loop.
IMGP0944..jpg
Not wanting my teeth rattled out of my head by the metal grate bridge, I opt for the sidewalk adjacent. No one (except lost tourists and vagrants) walks here, so it's a nice place to view the river (facing west)...
IMGP0945..jpg
...and the Wrigley Building (Chicago is!).
IMGP0949..jpg
Safely across the river, I now take to the pedestrian walkway the city laughably insists is also a bike path. Looking over my lovely new Brompton's handlebars, we see the Wrigley Building (Chicago is!) and (to its right) the Tribune Tower.
IMGP0951..jpg
Riding slowly, I pass under the Michigan Avenue Bridge, on the south bank of the Chicago River.
IMGP0954..jpg
Here are gathered many people waiting to board the Chicago Architectural Foundation's tour boat. The architectural boat tour is a gem. It comes in at about 90 minutes, they hit dozens of major landmarks, and there's a bar on the lower deck. If they could just find a place to put these people between when they buy their tickets and when they board the boat, it'd be perfect.
IMGP0963..jpg
I continue my quasi-lomorific ways: What are those eye-poppingly yellow shoes I'm wearing? Old school Onitsuka Tigers.
IMGP0980..jpg
Bad bikes for rent - especially the universally hated quadricycle.
IMGP0971..jpg
At last clear of the crowds, I approach the Lake Shore Drive underpass.
IMGP0987..jpg
What's on the other side? Find out in lexm's quasi-lomorific urban pootling adventure: Chicago style, part II.
#358
Erudite white trash
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 202
Likes: 0
From: Omaha
Bikes: Rivendell Clem Smith, Jr. Low, Rivendell SimpleOne, Schwinn Super Sport ('87), Velo Orange Campeur
lexm's quasi-lomorific urban pootling adventure: Chicago style, part II
When we left our story, Brompton and I had crossed the Chicago River and dodged pedestrians, quadricycles, and the odd wine bar along the south bank of the river. We were approaching Lake Shore Drive when the ten photograph limit kicked in.
Crossing under Lake Shore Drive, Brompton and I turn south to find boats in the harbor and a bike path.
IMGP0994..jpg
Chicago's lakefront bike path offers urban cityscapes - made all the more attractive when framed by a parked Brompton. The tall one on the left is the Sears Tower. The seemingly taller one on the right is one of the South Loop's newer luxury highrise condo buildings. (It only seems taller because it's closer.)
IMGP0996..jpg
Note the footpath on the water and the bike path about thirty feet away, with a stretch of grass in between. The inability of Chicagoans and tourists to respect this easy-to-understand division of thoroughfare is the most maddening thing about the lakefront. (Note also that although I photographed my Brompton on the footpath, I didn't ride it there.)
The Buckingham Fountain, as viewed from the segment of bike path that tracks Lake Shore Drive:
IMGP1000..jpg
Those of you who recall the opening sequence of the Fox situation comedy Married, With Children are doubtless getting misty-eyed.
My inner Sir Mix-a-Lot is stirred from his slumbers:
You can do side bends or sit ups
But please don't lose that butt!
IMGP1068..jpg
The woman on the left has a pleasing thickness and motion in her ocean. (I'll forgive her running on the bike path.)
After I regain my composure, Brompton and I pass said motion and said ocean and speed down a hill. We encounter the Shedd Aquarium:
IMGP1007..jpgIMGP1004..jpg
Out on a point, the Shedd Aquarium offers dazzling views of the city. The lakefront bike path goes around the perimeter of the Shedd, mere inches from the water, affording photo-ops like this one:
IMGP1012..jpg
After crossing under a bridge going to the Adler Planetarium, Brompton and I climb a small hill. At the top of this hill we meet Soldier Field:
IMGP1017..jpg
Home of the NFL Bears, those Monsters of the Midway, Soldier Field was once a stately, dignified stadium in the old style. Then the crowd that likes to sell naming rights to every square inch of anything sports-related got ahold of it. The original plan was to raze the whole thing and build a gleaming, sterile, modern edifice that would have borne a name like SoldToTheHighestBidder.com Stadium. However, veterans groups demanded that a stadium dedicated originally to the fallen maintain the name Soldier Field. Meanwhile, architectural preservationists demanded that Soldier Field's signature columns make no date with the wrecking ball. In a deal that could only have been brokered by the Daley Machine, the name and the columns stayed. The rest was razed and the architects designed an even uglier, larger, modern stadium that would fit within the bounds of the old columns and then spill over once it had cleared their height. My wife calls the result The Toilet Bowl.
Inner Sir Mix-a-Lot intervenes again:
Give me a sista-I-can't-resist-her
Red beans and rice didn't miss her!
IMGP1020..jpg
The one on the right more fits the lyrics, but either will do for my Inner Sir Mix-a-Lot.
Past McCormick Place, Chicago's convention center, I tire. Brompton waits patiently as I take on water and take a photograph:
IMGP1023..jpg
What will happen when we turn back north? Find out in lexm's quasi-lomorific urban pootling adventure: Chicago style, part III!
Crossing under Lake Shore Drive, Brompton and I turn south to find boats in the harbor and a bike path.
IMGP0994..jpg
Chicago's lakefront bike path offers urban cityscapes - made all the more attractive when framed by a parked Brompton. The tall one on the left is the Sears Tower. The seemingly taller one on the right is one of the South Loop's newer luxury highrise condo buildings. (It only seems taller because it's closer.)
IMGP0996..jpg
Note the footpath on the water and the bike path about thirty feet away, with a stretch of grass in between. The inability of Chicagoans and tourists to respect this easy-to-understand division of thoroughfare is the most maddening thing about the lakefront. (Note also that although I photographed my Brompton on the footpath, I didn't ride it there.)
The Buckingham Fountain, as viewed from the segment of bike path that tracks Lake Shore Drive:
IMGP1000..jpg
Those of you who recall the opening sequence of the Fox situation comedy Married, With Children are doubtless getting misty-eyed.
My inner Sir Mix-a-Lot is stirred from his slumbers:
You can do side bends or sit ups
But please don't lose that butt!
IMGP1068..jpg
The woman on the left has a pleasing thickness and motion in her ocean. (I'll forgive her running on the bike path.)
After I regain my composure, Brompton and I pass said motion and said ocean and speed down a hill. We encounter the Shedd Aquarium:
IMGP1007..jpgIMGP1004..jpg
Out on a point, the Shedd Aquarium offers dazzling views of the city. The lakefront bike path goes around the perimeter of the Shedd, mere inches from the water, affording photo-ops like this one:
IMGP1012..jpg
After crossing under a bridge going to the Adler Planetarium, Brompton and I climb a small hill. At the top of this hill we meet Soldier Field:
IMGP1017..jpg
Home of the NFL Bears, those Monsters of the Midway, Soldier Field was once a stately, dignified stadium in the old style. Then the crowd that likes to sell naming rights to every square inch of anything sports-related got ahold of it. The original plan was to raze the whole thing and build a gleaming, sterile, modern edifice that would have borne a name like SoldToTheHighestBidder.com Stadium. However, veterans groups demanded that a stadium dedicated originally to the fallen maintain the name Soldier Field. Meanwhile, architectural preservationists demanded that Soldier Field's signature columns make no date with the wrecking ball. In a deal that could only have been brokered by the Daley Machine, the name and the columns stayed. The rest was razed and the architects designed an even uglier, larger, modern stadium that would fit within the bounds of the old columns and then spill over once it had cleared their height. My wife calls the result The Toilet Bowl.
Inner Sir Mix-a-Lot intervenes again:
Give me a sista-I-can't-resist-her
Red beans and rice didn't miss her!
IMGP1020..jpg
The one on the right more fits the lyrics, but either will do for my Inner Sir Mix-a-Lot.
Past McCormick Place, Chicago's convention center, I tire. Brompton waits patiently as I take on water and take a photograph:
IMGP1023..jpg
What will happen when we turn back north? Find out in lexm's quasi-lomorific urban pootling adventure: Chicago style, part III!
#359
Full Member
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 498
Likes: 13
From: Yokohama, Japan
Bikes: Marin Muirwoods 29er, Yuba Mundo, Dahon Boardwalk D7
Wow - At long last the sun came out today! To celebrate, I cut out of work early and took the new Carryme out for a trial spin around Yokohama.
First stop - Sakuragicho Station , a view of Landmark Tower and a quick cup of coffee at "Bubby`s".


Can`t pootle past the old "Nippon Maru" without snapping a shot.

Now down to the waterfront and the Pacifico Hotel and Convention Center where the APEC economic summit will soon be held. WooHoo! A few more photos taken in the area quickly attract attention from some hyper diligent police officers, so I vamoose over to Aka Renga AKA Red Brick Warehouse.



Next I enjoyed the lovely harbor views at Zo no Hana Park (Elephant`s Nose Park) -


Finally, a shot of the Carryme next to the Yokohama Archives of History. This building was built on the site where, in 1854, Commodore Perry and representatives of the Tokugawa shogunate, signed the treaty which ended Japan`s 200 years of seclusion.
First stop - Sakuragicho Station , a view of Landmark Tower and a quick cup of coffee at "Bubby`s".


Can`t pootle past the old "Nippon Maru" without snapping a shot.

Now down to the waterfront and the Pacifico Hotel and Convention Center where the APEC economic summit will soon be held. WooHoo! A few more photos taken in the area quickly attract attention from some hyper diligent police officers, so I vamoose over to Aka Renga AKA Red Brick Warehouse.



Next I enjoyed the lovely harbor views at Zo no Hana Park (Elephant`s Nose Park) -


Finally, a shot of the Carryme next to the Yokohama Archives of History. This building was built on the site where, in 1854, Commodore Perry and representatives of the Tokugawa shogunate, signed the treaty which ended Japan`s 200 years of seclusion.
__________________
Yuba Mundo v3
https://www.flickr.com/photos/1257542...7625172858328/
Bikes in Japan
https://www.flickr.com/photos/1257542...7621962738106/
www.yokohamaliving.blogspot.com
Yuba Mundo v3
https://www.flickr.com/photos/1257542...7625172858328/
Bikes in Japan
https://www.flickr.com/photos/1257542...7621962738106/
www.yokohamaliving.blogspot.com
#360
Spring (almost) ride around Marquette Michigan USA on the sunny southern shore of Lake Superior. It was darn near 40 degrees F today so I went for a short spin on my R20 with the new shiney bits in place.
Here's the gate to the community garden. My plot still has a foot of snow on it. No weeding yet!

Upgrades include SA 8 speed hub, Origin8 crankset, Un72 bottom bracket and MKS Lambda pedals


You can sell your blood here and use the money to buy some Phil Wood Tenacious Oil.
And you thought no blood for oil was a good idea.....

Here is the world's largest wooden dome. They covered it in a rubber membrane so everyone calls it the con-dome.

Still easier to walk than swim out to picnic rocks

Not quite beach weather yet but you can keep your beer cold.

I put the chainguard back on after the ride. I needed to add some plumber's tape to the front mount because the rear sproket is bigger.
I know my bike looks dirty but it was all shined up with 2 coats of wax before I started.
cheers!
Here's the gate to the community garden. My plot still has a foot of snow on it. No weeding yet!

Upgrades include SA 8 speed hub, Origin8 crankset, Un72 bottom bracket and MKS Lambda pedals


You can sell your blood here and use the money to buy some Phil Wood Tenacious Oil.
And you thought no blood for oil was a good idea.....

Here is the world's largest wooden dome. They covered it in a rubber membrane so everyone calls it the con-dome.

Still easier to walk than swim out to picnic rocks

Not quite beach weather yet but you can keep your beer cold.

I put the chainguard back on after the ride. I needed to add some plumber's tape to the front mount because the rear sproket is bigger.
I know my bike looks dirty but it was all shined up with 2 coats of wax before I started.
cheers!
#362
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 323
Likes: 2
From: Carlisle, in England's Lake District, just a few miles south of the border with Scotland.
Bikes: A Bianchi C2C road bike, a steel framed touring bike and a Xootr Swift folder which has made the rest redundant!

Autumn is arriving in the UK and the leaves are just starting to change colour. I have had a poor year for cycling due to a very bad summer - weatherwise- domestic duties (renovating a house) and work! I seem to have missed most of the best days for riding. However at the end of September the sun came out and we had warmer days than the summer could provide! I managed to slip out for rides on three consecutive days. Day one was just a very short ride to ease my legs back into pedalling. Day two was a little longer - when I took the photo above - and day three clocked up 30 miles along the local estuary road.

I've described this ride before in an earlier posting but it is one of my favourites. The road hugs the narrow channel of the Solway Firth which separates England from Scotland and provides a home to many wild fowl, both home and migratory. The tide is dangerous as it comes in and out at great speed. On my last ride along the route the water was coming in so fast that it was like a mini tsunami as the tidal bore raced up the channel. It was a great ride to round off September and my legs are just about ready for another adventure!
#364
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 3,027
Likes: 3
From: York UK
Bikes: 2X dualdrive Mezzo folder,plus others
I went on hollidqay in mosehole slight turn off at 3.47 mins is where I stayed. Love cornwall. By the way this is the MAIN road through mosehole!! Its a two way road, buss come down it and every thing. I once accidentially took a minor road and was praticaly doing a 56 point turn in someones door way!
#365
Just out for a quick ride around town.......

The building in the background has been renovated into condos but before that the very first outboard motor was developed here.
The Savings Bank building

First National Bank and Trust building. This was the first bank to put 'and Trust' in its name. This building was the most expensive per sq. ft. in the world when it was built in 1927. This bank financed the Empire State Bldg. during the depression. Both the marble exterior and the bike came from Italy.

Enjoyed a pint of Galaxy Quest IPA

In 1959, the film "Anatomy of a Murder" was filmed here. **** Preminger had the courtroom painted twice to get it the right color. (movie is B&W) Stars included Jimmy Stewart, Eve Arden, Lee Remick, and George C. Scott.

One of these bikes doesn't fold.

Boat bike


The building in the background has been renovated into condos but before that the very first outboard motor was developed here.
The Savings Bank building

First National Bank and Trust building. This was the first bank to put 'and Trust' in its name. This building was the most expensive per sq. ft. in the world when it was built in 1927. This bank financed the Empire State Bldg. during the depression. Both the marble exterior and the bike came from Italy.

Enjoyed a pint of Galaxy Quest IPA

In 1959, the film "Anatomy of a Murder" was filmed here. **** Preminger had the courtroom painted twice to get it the right color. (movie is B&W) Stars included Jimmy Stewart, Eve Arden, Lee Remick, and George C. Scott.

One of these bikes doesn't fold.

Boat bike

Last edited by social suicide; 10-12-11 at 08:23 AM. Reason: won't let me write ****
#368
Junior Member
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 17
Likes: 0
From: flintshire
Bikes: Raleigh Shopper and a Townsend folder
















