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#31 |
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DC1999 wrote:
> On May 29, 10:45 pm, "Bill Sornson" <as...@ask.me> wrote: >> ...noggin! >> >> Flying down a steep, curvy road today, my front tire blew out just >> as I came around a turn. (4" of bead separated from the casing; >> fairly new Michelin Pro Race 2; no recent flats so not a "tube >> installation" issue.) >> >> I briefly thought I could save it, but as I headed down and left >> into the oncoming lane a car was headed right in my path so I had no >> choice but to try to steer the bike to the right. BLAM -- down I >> went on my right side at close to 40 mph. >> >> Immediate injury noticed was to my right shoulder. Probable torn >> ligaments if not rotator cuff (ripped previously so familiar with >> the pain). Road rash was surprisingly slight (knee, elbow, hip and >> shoulder -- the latter two protected a bit by Spandex so not visible >> until later). >> >> Another rider, Mike, came along and helped me. Started to fix my >> flat when he saw the trashed tire bead. (No pics yet.) Called my >> friend Miles (of world famous "Miles Todd crash video" fame) to pick >> me up. >> >> Then Mike said, "Well, your helmet sure did its job." I touched the >> outside shell and felt a scrape, but had no idea that I'd even hit >> my head, much less cracked the crap out of it: >> >> http://home.san.rr.com:80/billsornson/(server wouldn't allow more >> than these three pics). >> >> So now it's 8-9 hours later and other than a really messed up >> shoulder I feel pretty decent. Sure my neck is going to be sore as >> hell tomorrow, and may end up needing surgery on the wing (time will >> tell), but no concussion, cracked skull, or hood >> ornament/undercarriage action, so all in all I'm feeling pretty >> fortunate. I just wish it had been my own error instead of an >> obvious product defect (and why couldn't it have been the REAR >> tire?!?)... >> >> Beaten Up But Not Beat (Yet) Bill > > Glad to hear your episode had a decent (if not "happy") ending. So > did mine. Down hard as a result of a railroad track in the street in > San Francisco, and my helmet had a one inch crack all the way > through. > > Now the replacement helmet is four years old and I'm wondering if it's > time to get another new one. It's never been dropped or beaten up, > except from the sun and my sweaty head. > > What do you'all think? We think you'll get flamed (ridiculed) for even asking. Sad, but true. Personally, I like to have a few helmets in service so I can alternate their use. Gets complicated/expensive with mirrors if you use them, but otherwise, why not be fashionable? ![]() BTW, I just pulled the tire that failed from my wheel and will post pics soon. It was about a 2" separation (not 4"), with corresponding blown out tube. Glad you survived the RR track incident. People who slide out on those often get hurt pretty badly (broken bones mostly, plus concussions). Go buy a new lid, and keep the one you've got for backup use or easier rides. Bill S. |
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#32 |
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On Sat, 31 May 2008 10:06:57 -0700 (PDT), DC1999 <dc1999@gmail.com>
wrote: >Now the replacement helmet is four years old and I'm wondering if it's >time to get another new one. It's never been dropped or beaten up, >except from the sun and my sweaty head. > >What do you'all think? I'm wearing the same helmet I bought ~1976. It's been dropped, kicked, rolled over, thrown, beaten, stored for fourteen years, sat on, cleaned with phosphates and solvents and left out in the weather. It's stopped flying stones and repelled as many insects as it's caught. It's never been called upon to do what it was designed to do. That is, protecting a kayaker's skull from impact with rocks while still being able to drain water quickly enough for eskimo rolls without drowning. It was cooler than the Bell styrofoam lined hard-shells of the time. It also looked like a piece of serious gear. Styrofoam just didn't inspire any confidence with me. It's too cheesey. Today's shrink-wrapped foam beanies are lighter and truly disposable after one use. I'd not replace an old one solely because of its age. I've bought Bell VP1 Pro helmets and even used one once playing polo where my head was momentarily caught between the turf and a team mate's pedal. My ear was cut but I finished playing. Had I not been wearing a helmet I'd have possibly had scalp wounds too. That helmet is still in occasional service since it survived basically unscathed. I've jarred my neck and gotten a slight headache running into a brick wall on a wager but the old squash pot survived fine. I've replaced the foam sweat pad a few times and the foam filled leatherette rear strap parts with neoprene. It's old enough to get comments for its retro-coolness and it's still my favourite helmet. It has lots of surface area for reflective stickers and I added a Velcro patch inside to hold a braided blonde synthetic pigtail I often wear. (mental speed-bump) The hard shell skate pot I bought to be fashionable will sometime be replaced with another kayak hat http://tinyurl.com/2zheke or maybe a rock climbing helmet. Bicycle helmets are mainly about aerodynamics. The cheap helmets offer as much, and sometimes better, impact absorbtion as the most expensive wind-tunnel tested designs and skate helmets are built to take more than one crash. Disclaimer: I live in a MHL jurisdiction and resent mandatory helmet laws. I wear a helmet 99.5% of the time I ride, even since before there was a law and associated $75 fine. As you can see, since there is no stipulated SNELL rating written into the law, I no longer take helmets very seriously. <http://farm1.static.flickr.com/162/434309078_9f3b31b314.jpg?v=1174898166> -- zk |
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#33 |
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In article <lhu344laiiu7nuk5t17ejffd8p2uc2k70u@4ax.com>,
Zoot Katz <zootkatz@operamail.com> writes: > Disclaimer: I live in a MHL jurisdiction and resent mandatory helmet > laws. I wear a helmet 99.5% of the time I ride, even since before > there was a law and associated $75 fine. As you can see, since there > is no stipulated SNELL rating written into the law, I no longer take > helmets very seriously. > <http://farm1.static.flickr.com/162/434309078_9f3b31b314.jpg?v=1174898166> I've taken to forego wearing the bucket when I intuit I can get away with it. But since last week was Bike To Work Week, I anticipated a greater degree of MHL enforcement. When I leave the foam hat at home, it's not to make any socio-political statement. It just feels more comfortable without it, especially since I'm letting my hair grow out again, and it keeps getting tangled in the straps. Unlike the follically challenged, I can grow my own bicycle helmet. As my hair gets longer, it also gets thicker. I bet my hair's as good as any helmet one could buy from the cycling dep't at MEC. Maybe I could legally argue that I indeed /am/ wearing a bicycle helmet. OTOH my luxurious mane sometimes seems to evoke resentment in baldies much younger than myself, and it'd be just my luck to be hassled by a cue-ball cop. Tell ya what, though -- when I'm riding sans helmet I sense a greater application of caution on the parts of drivers near me. More so than when I'm (minimally) capitally "armoured" with egg carton material. <shudder> I just had a frightful thought -- maybe with my slim physique and ample hair, I look like a girl or woman to drivers behind me. Yikes! Suddenly I've got the heebie-jeebies. If I ever do get fined, I just might suggest raising my fine from $75 to $150 -- with the stipulation that the money goes to the B.C. Professional Firefighters' Association Burn Fund, which contributes so much toward the condolescence and recovery of burn victims. I might even wrangle the judge into matching my fine and contributing too. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |
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#34 |
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On Jun 1, 4:32*am, tke...@hotmail2005.com (Tom Keats) wrote:
> In article <29864bf3-5865-4f15-a2d9-084d14f14...@d1g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > * * * * landotter <landot...@gmail.com> writes: > > > > > On May 31, 8:20*am, Rob Lindauer <rli...@attglobal.net> wrote: [snip] > >> Following the above broadcast from the Twilight Zone, we will resume our > >> broadcasting from the real world... > > Again: groupthink. > > No evidence but a wittle little scratch--and a lot of hysteria. > > I do live Stateside, but Americans are the most bizarre cyclists--they > > are helmet bananas--but they ride like absolute assholes. > > Ya mean they (we North Americans) ride bikes like they (we North > Americans) drive cars? > > Heh *:-) > > > Spin those > > prayer wheels! Who needs evidence? > > You're reminding me of a couple of Twilight Zone episodes > involving the world being enshrouded in darkness. > > > *Who cares that statistically you're > > far behind lidless Euros in bike safety--nah, enjoy your smug foamy > > self-righteous panacea while you ride lightless and ride the wrong > > way! > > <shrug> sometimes the one, sole bike lane is on the other/wrong > side of the road *;-) > > Anyways it's good that there are people who ride at all. > Anywhere in the world. > > Please, let's support each other instead of tearing our > bicycling selves apart. > > It's such a wonderment that riders all around the world > can finally communicate via Usenet with each other. *Let's > apply that benefit to its maximum advantage. *Back in the > '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and the first part of the '90s, most > North Americans had no idea of what cycling was like in > Europe and other parts of the world. *Now we're blessed. > The worst sin is to dismiss & ignore a blessing that's > practically shoved in yer face. > > You've experienced the respective Euro takes on practical, > recreational and sport cycling, and have come away with > some useful insights. *That's great! *Please continue to > positively share. *We're all ears. You do know it's like the whole Labor/Tory, Baptist/Humanist, Republican/Democrat, authoritarian/libertarian schism--all of this, right? In various places of course. The bike helmet issue is moot. Put them on toddlers so they don't cry when they tip over and adults in winter when its icy--other than that--helmets are the new gay. As gay folks are becoming accepted, what better wedge issue to rile uneducated voters with than bike helmets? Image image image. I swear. My LBS sells more Electra Amsterdam and similar bikes than anything else. If more bike shops in the states did similarly, and also sold more low-speed accessories, such as plaid panniers, wool caps, baskets where stuff rattles out over 12mph, and less racy looking stuff in general--people wouldn't be pushed to ride their bikes like yahoos. There's your common sense. I do like to ride long and pretty fast a few times per week--but I never saw the point in doing so in tight formation with other riders in identical outfits while tailgating them, getting less of a workout, but raising my risk of having an accident, so that I could scratch my helmet...oh, never mind. NEXT, who wants to go apeshitbananas about fluoride and LSD in the water supply! |
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#35 |
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On May 31, 10:26 am, Ozark Bicycle
<bicycleatel...@ozarkbicycleservice.com> > http://preview.tinyurl.com/4je8g7 Very true. Unfortunately, the whole methodology of "tangential commentary, logical fallacy, and outright falsehood" are also the mainstay of the web site "http://cyclehelmets.org" of which he is a "patron" (which simply means that he's putting his money where his mouth is). As Scott McClellan's book (which should have been titled ("Everything We Already Knew") showed, eventually the outright falsehoods are exposed to a point that even those that pretend to deny the facts can no longer do so. Actually, since he has mentioned that there are riding situations where he would wear a helmet, it's possible that "flying down a steep, curvy road," would be one of those times. Unfortunately, you can't predict when a mechanical failure, a driver error, or something else beyond your control would make it beneficial to be wearing a helmet. |
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#36 |
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On Jun 1, 7:53*am, SMS <scharf.ste...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 31, 10:26 am, Ozark Bicycle > <bicycleatel...@ozarkbicycleservice.com> > > >http://preview.tinyurl.com/4je8g7 > > Very true. > > Unfortunately, the whole methodology of "tangential commentary, > logical fallacy, and outright falsehood" are also the mainstay of the > web site "http://cyclehelmets.org" of which he is a "patron" (which > simply means that he's putting his money where his mouth is). As Scott > McClellan's book (which should have been titled ("Everything We > Already Knew") showed, eventually the outright falsehoods are exposed > to a point that even those that pretend to deny the facts can no > longer do so. > > Actually, since he has mentioned that there are riding situations > where he would wear a helmet, it's possible that "flying down a steep, > curvy road," would be one of those times. Unfortunately, you can't > predict when a mechanical failure, a driver error, or something else > beyond your control would make it beneficial to be wearing a helmet. Nor can you predict when it would be beneficial to be wearing a neck brace or back protector to protect against paralysis in other types of freakish accidents. Stop wringing your hands, mom, it's a dangerous world out there--but regular bike riding isn't one of those really dangerous activities. To use your logic--you never know when it would be beneficial to be wearing a helmet at the Safeway because sometimes folks spill ice cream in the frozen foods aisle...let's just take it to the absurdist conclusion. You never know when you might get kicked in the bladder, so lets all just walk around with Depends on. Wee wee wee! <squirt!> |
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#37 |
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On May 29, 10:45 pm, "Bill Sornson" <as...@ask.me> wrote:
> ...noggin! > > Flying down a steep, curvy road today, my front tire blew out just as I came > around a turn. (4" of bead separated from the casing; fairly new Michelin > Pro Race 2; no recent flats so not a "tube installation" issue.) > > I briefly thought I could save it, but as I headed down and left into the > oncoming lane a car was headed right in my path so I had no choice but to > try to steer the bike to the right. BLAM -- down I went on my right side at > close to 40 mph. > > Immediate injury noticed was to my right shoulder. Probable torn ligaments > if not rotator cuff (ripped previously so familiar with the pain). Road > rash was surprisingly slight (knee, elbow, hip and shoulder -- the latter > two protected a bit by Spandex so not visible until later). > > Another rider, Mike, came along and helped me. Started to fix my flat when > he saw the trashed tire bead. (No pics yet.) Called my friend Miles (of > world famous "Miles Todd crash video" fame) to pick me up. > > Then Mike said, "Well, your helmet sure did its job." I touched the outside > shell and felt a scrape, but had no idea that I'd even hit my head, much > less cracked the crap out of it: > > http://home.san.rr.com:80/billsornson/(server wouldn't allow more than > these three pics). > > So now it's 8-9 hours later and other than a really messed up shoulder I > feel pretty decent. Sure my neck is going to be sore as hell tomorrow, and > may end up needing surgery on the wing (time will tell), but no concussion, > cracked skull, or hood ornament/undercarriage action, so all in all I'm > feeling pretty fortunate. I just wish it had been my own error instead of > an obvious product defect (and why couldn't it have been the REAR > tire?!?)... > > Beaten Up But Not Beat (Yet) Bill Frank K posted the following (partially edited) and then went on to say that there was no test evidence of degradation of helmets over time. I've seen and considered all the anti-helmet /pro-helmet discussion, and I choose to wear a helmet. Can anyone say that Frank is correct? Is there any evidence of degradation of the helmet over time? Frank Krygowski View profile More options May 31, 10:22 am Newsgroups: rec.bicycles.misc From: Frank Krygowski <frkry...@gmail.com> Date: Sat, 31 May 2008 10:22:23 -0700 (PDT) Local: Sat, May 31 2008 10:22 am Subject: Re: Helmet saved my... Reply | Reply to author | Forward | Print | Individual message | Show original | Report this message | Find messages by this author On May 31, 1:06 pm, DC1999 <dc1...@gmail.com> wrote: > [My] helmet is four years old and I'm wondering if it's > time to get another new one. It's never been dropped or beaten up, > except from the sun and my sweaty head. > What do you'all think? For a while, Bell Sports (and other manufacturers) recommended replacing helmets every three years "for your safety" or some such phrasing. Then their lawyers apparently realized the problems with that. So they switched to recommending replacing your helmet every three years "so you can take advantage of new features and styles," or something like that. Now they simply seem to say "replace it every three years; call us if you have questions." |
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#38 |
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On Jun 1, 9:14 am, DC1999 <dc1...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Frank K posted the following (partially edited) and then went on to > say that there was no test evidence of degradation of helmets over > time. I've seen and considered all the anti-helmet /pro-helmet > discussion, and I choose to wear a helmet. Can anyone say that Frank > is correct? Is there any evidence of degradation of the helmet over > time? > If the helmeteers do respond, they're much more likely to give wild guesses than to reference any sources; so I'd better give what little factual information that's out there. Here's a 2005 quote from a prominent pro-helmet website: "Way back in the 1980's the Snell Foundation tested a Biker for us that was about ten years old, and had yellowed from the sun. It still performed essentially like a new one at that time. ... Snell doesn't test for us any more, so you are on your own as to whether or not the EPS foam and Lexan shell have hardened or become brittle with age. I would guess that the EPS foam has not changed much if at all." Snell is not likely to test old helmets. Doing so would almost certainly generate more data showing that old helmets are just as (minimally) protective as new helmets. And that wouldn't sell more helmets, which is Snell's real goal. If you haven't stored your styrofoam in the same closet as your uncapped cans of acetone, your helmet is probably no worse at age 10 years than it was when new. Oh - except it won't be quite as stylish. Nothing says "fashion" like wearing _this_ year's psychedelic sculpture of a squid on your noggin! Last year's squid sculpture just isn't cool anymore! - Frank Krygowski |
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#39 |
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H*lm*t saved your life - pray to the helmet gods. Remember your head
hit the ground hard enough to crack styrofoam-- that indicates you were saved from death or coma. On May 30, 1:45*am, "Bill Sornson" <as...@ask.me> wrote: > ...noggin! > > Flying down a steep, curvy road today, my front tire blew out just as I came > around a turn. *(4" of bead separated from the casing; fairly new Michelin > Pro Race 2; no recent flats so not a "tube installation" issue.) > > I briefly thought I could save it, but as I headed down and left into the > oncoming lane a car was headed right in my path so I had no choice but to > try to steer the bike to the right. *BLAM -- down I went on my right side at > close to 40 mph. > > Immediate injury noticed was to my right shoulder. *Probable torn ligaments > if not rotator cuff (ripped previously so familiar with the pain). *Road > rash was surprisingly slight (knee, elbow, hip and shoulder -- the latter > two protected a bit by Spandex so not visible until later). > > Another rider, Mike, came along and helped me. *Started to fix my flat when > he saw the trashed tire bead. *(No pics yet.) *Called my friend Miles (of > world famous "Miles Todd crash video" fame) to pick me up. > > Then Mike said, "Well, your helmet sure did its job." *I touched the outside > shell and felt a scrape, but had no idea that I'd even hit my head, much > less cracked the crap out of it: > > http://home.san.rr.com:80/billsornson/(server wouldn't allow more than > these three pics). > > So now it's 8-9 hours later and other than a really messed up shoulder I > feel pretty decent. *Sure my neck is going to be sore as hell tomorrow, and > may end up needing surgery on the wing (time will tell), but no concussion, > cracked skull, or hood ornament/undercarriage action, so all in all I'm > feeling pretty fortunate. *I just wish it had been my own error instead of > an obvious product defect (and why couldn't it have been the REAR > tire?!?)... > > Beaten Up But Not Beat (Yet) Bill |
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#40 |
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On Jun 1, 1:13*pm, bigjimp...@gmail.com wrote:
> H*lm*t saved your life - pray to the helmet gods. *Remember your head > hit the ground hard enough to crack styrofoam-- *that indicates you > were saved from death or coma. <roaring laughter from the peanut gallery> |
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#41 |
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On May 31, 5:53 am, "Pat" <ex...@tmail.com> wrote:
> "Frank Krygowski" --why don't you and landotter start your own newsgroup? > You're isolated here as stubborn cases who refuse to believe anybody's > testimony or eyewitness accounts. In my own riding club, practically > everyone has either had an accident or witnessed someone's accident. > Evidently, you haven't had an accident. That's great, but don't keep > denigrating people who have first hand experience. Frankly, I wonder if you > would even have the guts to post anything after an accident, such as, "I > sure wish I had a helmet that day." Nah, that would be too much to ask > for.... My dad's life was saved. He put his head down going past low hanging limbs, put his head back up, and slam, there was a limb. His helmet was destroyed. The helmet convinced my non-helmet wearing friend to wear them. No question is saved his life. |
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#42 |
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On Jun 1, 1:47*pm, Beach Runner <LowHe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 31, 5:53 am, "Pat" <ex...@tmail.com> wrote: > > > "Frank Krygowski" --why don't you and landotter start your own newsgroup? > > You're isolated here as stubborn cases who refuse to believe anybody's > > testimony or eyewitness accounts. *In my own riding club, practically > > everyone has either had an accident or witnessed someone's accident. > > Evidently, you haven't had an accident. That's great, but don't keep > > denigrating people who have first hand experience. *Frankly, I wonder if you > > would even have the guts to post anything after an accident, such as, "I > > sure wish I had a helmet that day." *Nah, that would be too much to ask > > for.... > > My dad's life was saved. *He put his head down going past low hanging > limbs, put his head back up, and slam, there was a limb. * His helmet > was destroyed. *The helmet convinced my non-helmet wearing friend > to wear them. *No question is saved his life. No question? Did he try it again without the helmet and die to confirm? |
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#43 |
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On Jun 1, 12:00 pm, landotter <landot...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 1, 1:47 pm, Beach Runner <LowHe...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On May 31, 5:53 am, "Pat" <ex...@tmail.com> wrote: > > > > "Frank Krygowski" --why don't you and landotter start your own newsgroup? > > > You're isolated here as stubborn cases who refuse to believe anybody's > > > testimony or eyewitness accounts. In my own riding club, practically > > > everyone has either had an accident or witnessed someone's accident. > > > Evidently, you haven't had an accident. That's great, but don't keep > > > denigrating people who have first hand experience. Frankly, I wonder if you > > > would even have the guts to post anything after an accident, such as, "I > > > sure wish I had a helmet that day." Nah, that would be too much to ask > > > for.... > > > My dad's life was saved. He put his head down going past low hanging > > limbs, put his head back up, and slam, there was a limb. His helmet > > was destroyed. The helmet convinced my non-helmet wearing friend > > to wear them. No question is saved his life. > > No question? Did he try it again without the helmet and die to confirm? No, but at 82, battling cancer, he still rides several miles a day, something that takes his incredible tenacity and the fact he was smart enough to wear a helmet. |
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#44 |
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In article <e3bt1g.im3.ln@vcn.bc.ca>,
tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) writes: > -- with the stipulation that the > money goes to the B.C. Professional Firefighters' > Association Burn Fund, which contributes so much toward > the condolescence and recovery of burn victims. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ <embarrassment> Please make that: "convalescence." I guess I'm not very literate. I try not to litter, anyways. -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |
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#45 |
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In article <ff93efc5-76ad-4cab-97f3-5bc19367e5bd@l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com>,
landotter <landotter@gmail.com> writes: >> practically shoved in yer face. >> >> You've experienced the respective Euro takes on practical, >> recreational and sport cycling, and have come away with >> some useful insights. *That's great! *Please continue to >> positively share. *We're all ears. > You do know it's like the whole Labor/Tory, Baptist/Humanist, > Republican/Democrat, authoritarian/libertarian schism--all of this, > right? In various places of course. The bike helmet issue is moot. Put > them on toddlers so they don't cry when they tip over and adults in > winter when its icy--other than that--helmets are the new gay. As gay > folks are becoming accepted, what better wedge issue to rile > uneducated voters with than bike helmets? How 'bout legalizing cannabis, or restoring trade with Cuba? Designated "red light" districts, gun control, carbon taxes, traffic congestion fees, invoking The Guy Upstairs in schools, girls being demonstratively Muslim by dint of their attire in schools, photo radar, multiculturalism, abortion on demand, climate change, or anything that's a typical AM radio talk-show topic? > Image image image. I swear. My LBS sells more Electra Amsterdam and > similar bikes than anything else. We have a couple of those places here in Vancouver. Especially the Jorg & Olif folx. They're too up-market and too rich for my blood. Here, that stuff is all image, too: "Hey, lookit me! I'm Green! I'm Green!" > If more bike shops in the states did > similarly, and also sold more low-speed accessories, such as plaid > panniers, wool caps, baskets where stuff rattles out over 12mph, and > less racy looking stuff in general--people wouldn't be pushed to ride > their bikes like yahoos. There's your common sense. Plaid panniers might be too reminiscent of plaid golf bags, or worse. When I was a li'l younker, I had this ugly, plaid lunchbox w/ matching Thermos bottle which I was compelled to take with me to school. When all that mysteriously disappeared, it was replaced with a Hopalong Cassidy lunchbox & Thermos. That didn't mysteriously disappear -- it just eventually got donated to the Starvation Army during a spring cleaning jag. I wouldn't mind having a set of Hopalong Cassidy panniers. What I really desire is a couple of old, canvas Vancouver Sun paperboy sacks. One for my older brother, and one for me. Just for wall-hangers. > I do like to ride long and pretty fast a few times per week--but I > never saw the point in doing so in tight formation with other riders > in identical outfits while tailgating them, getting less of a workout, > but raising my risk of having an accident, so that I could scratch my > helmet...oh, never mind. Plaid helmet? If so -- do yer worst to it! > NEXT, who wants to go apeshitbananas about fluoride and LSD in the > water supply! If that's a choice, I suppose where my preference lies should be pretty obvious. cheers, & I like plaid shirts, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |
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