Saturday, April 28, 2012

30 Days of Biking - Cool off

We have had a wonderfully warm Spring this year in Minnesota, almost a month ahead in terms of temperature. I was looking back at some of last year's posts on this blog and we had snow on April 20th last year. Yikes. I would hate to give up the shorts at this point so when the forecast was calling for 'snow showers' last night I got a case of the hives. I am in a Summer biking state of mind already and the Winter bike is put away (well, in the garage awaiting the ritual tear-down and clean-up). When I woke up this morning, I saw that the forecast was more the weatherman getting his undies in a bundle than reality. It won't snow at 45 degrees! Right??!

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

30 Days of Biking - Cycling in Old Japan

Several years ago I spent a week in Japan and somehow the opportunity came up to rent a bike. We were in Kyoto, a city packed with old temples, gardens, and palaces. You could spend months seeing everything. I am into that kind of stuff and we were running out of time so using a bike to get around seemed like a great solution.


It turns out that it was. Many of the old parts of Kyoto are great for biking. The narrow streets lend themselves to slow cruising without fear of traffic. And you get attention as the gangly American cruising around on this little Japanese bike. My wife,  7-months pregnant, was riding behind and took this picture. We got a few friendly waves and probably a couple of chuckles.

Monday, April 23, 2012

30 Days of Biking - Mystery tunnels

Biking along the Mississippi - especially before the leaves come out - you can see mysterious inlets, ravines, and the dark entrances to caves near the waterline. Some of these are real caves and others are man made. In either case it isn't everyday that something new shows up on the cave map.

So, I was quite surprised to see that some new caves were being dug into the bluffs right along my bike route. Equipment started showing up a few weeks ago and they cleared two areas. Here, there was a need to excavate more above grade so they built a gravel driveway up to the site.


I assume the corrugated metal tubes are to stabilize the entrance. The limestone in the cliff is very convenient for free landscaping mater...I mean very loose.


At the second site (below) you can see the shattered rock around the entrance. Once past this initial stage, they started tunneling into the cliff. I will get some better photos since the work is pretty cool to watch. The tunnel itself has a rectangular profile and so far it looks like they are going to leave the walls natural stone.


I have tried to ask one of the construction workers what the project was about but they aren't too responsive over all of the drilling noise. My assumption is that since these two tunnels are just below the East Bank of the University of Minnesota campus that they are meant to service the buildings on top of the cliff. In fact, just upstream there is an underground archive that does just that. This stuff is quite cool! And, all on the bike route to work...

Thursday, April 19, 2012

30 Days of Biking - April showers

We have had light rain showers yesterday and today during the commute. In the morning there was just enough rain to make greens greener and bring out an earthy, damp smell in the air. Crossing the Lake Street - Marshall Avenue bridge between St Paul and Minneapolis there was this really dramatic sky as the rain moved off to the East.


I took a pic and then just stared for a minute as those low clouds cruised by. By the time I arrived downtown (you can just see the buildings peaking over the trees about 4 miles away), the sky had changed completely. It was bright, windy, and the ground completely dry by the time I returned in the evening.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

30 Days of Biking - Bike switching

I rode the same bike year-round when I started commuting, come rain, slush, snow, salt, and all the other gross stuff that messes up a bike in Minnesota. I would go through a few chains a Winter and usually burn through a set of brake pads, rust through a fender bolt, and cause other sundry damage. This isn't Iron Man, this is just grubby streets takin' it out on the machine. I finally figured out that having a separate Winter bike would allow me to spread out the wear and give me time to get the main bike in shape for next season.

This year, my Winter maintenance took much longer on the Bianchi since it is 6 years old and there were quite a few things that needed cleaning and replacement. Here is an odd picture I took last year showing, in part, how chewed up the bar tape was getting on my handlebars. (The bike is standing still but I took this to show how my wireless bike computer would go haywire near this particular building on my ride.)


So, this year the Bianchi got: new front derailleur shift cable, brake pads, and miscellaneous bolts (not chainring, although I noticed later it could use a new set). The bike got a thorough cleaning. 


And...drum roll...new bar tape.


A few of these projects were new for me so certainly the next time I go through this I will be faster.


A quick job will be to hit the Brook's seat with proofide. You can see where the seat got banged up on a bike-car incident last year downtown. The proofide doesn't seem to take out the gouges...oops. 


Friday, April 13, 2012

30 Days of Biking - Windy Spring

We have been enjoying a very long Spring in Minnesota, one that started early and has continued to bring us warm temperatures. No complaints here, even from a Winter biker. The last two days we have had a really consistent weather pattern: a huge wind out of the South, grey skies, light rain, cool temperatures. What does this sound like? A normal Spring in Minnesota.


Here is a sunrise looking South over the Mississippi. The sky looked more pink than shows up in this picture. We are starting to get to the time of year where it is light as day when I leave in the morning. As much as I love the sunrise, it is great to not have to be concerned about visibility to vehicles. Happy Spring riding!

Monday, April 9, 2012

30 Days of Biking - More metal shoes

I mentioned the other day how much I love these sculptures of shoes on the Midtown Greenway. I still don't know who created these but I love the concept. When you cruise by on the trail unless you look closely you might think someone has just abandoned a pair of shoes.


I stopped today to look more closely at these since they also look like a pair of beat up hikers I own. 


The detail is great and adds to the realism. I am the kind of person who likes to see how things are made and, yes, there are little drain holes in the soles to let rainwater out!