Tuesday, October 16, 2012

My Review


light as a feather, and a great fit

By maplover from griffin, georgia on 10/16/2012

 

5out of 5

Pros: Light Weight, Saddle, Ergonomic Grips, Easy shifting, Color

Best Uses: Commuting, Rail trails, Weekend Rides

after 15 years on the 7500 hybrid, i finally let myself buy a new trek, my 4th over my lifetime. the FX7.4 is so light weight, well specked for women's torsos, has comfy grips, well formed saddle and lovely pearl color with eggplant + gold accents and all trimmed out in black vs. chrome. i commute daily and ride weekend rail trails or charity rides. bike has mounts for future rack w/panniers and a wireless bike computer (no more messy wires!) the ride is smooth, fast, shifts well, and if i enter another duathlon with my partner i bet i'll even place better. i love it. oh, and its so much easier to lift this to my subaru roof rack than the last 15 years. i'll probably need a replacement arm workout now. :) oh, and with the bomber kevlar tires, lets just say i wont be stressing any flats. all this for $799, only $150 more than i paid 15 years ago. Way to maintain a bargain on a fantastic product over the years Trek.

taking the new ride home

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Tags: Picture of Product

bike commuter parking...if you're the only one

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(legalese)

Monday, October 15, 2012

a new ride, after 15 years...and new homes for the others

15 years! at this rate it means i'll have this beauty til I'm 60-65. that's okay, i'm content just thinking i've laid the foundation to still be moving at 65...the bonus will be this beautiful set of wheels lasting til then. oh, and it will. i'm a trek devotee, and they've all lasted quite a while. i recalled all my previous bikes today and here's the purchase history:


  • 1st trek = 420 touring bike, bought in DC at citybike in 1987...oodles of miles
  • 2nd trek = 7500 hybrid bike, bought in Berkeley at missing link in 1997...~800 miles per year commuting for 15 years
  • 3rd trek = 1000 road bike bought from YHC pal paige in Athens in 2010...barely tried it
  • 4th trek = FX7.4 hybrid bought in ATL Trek southside in 2012...we shall see
an interesting part of the story to me, is not just how long they lasted me and where they went, but who they went to for the 'next' chapter of their lives.

  • i sold the touring bike to a para-athlete at lake tahoe who wore a blade on one leg; she needed a bike without those clipless pedals, in other words, an old fashioned pedal cage was best suited to balance her prosthetic on the pedal and not trap her
  • i still have the hybrid bike, and as recently as this weekend, she was my go to ride. but admittedly she was much heavier than aluminum or carbon fiber frames, with a welded seat post, and well worn shifters, and thus holding me back a bit. she'll serve as a bike for weekend guests
  • i sold the shiny red road bike to my pal Ilka who loves her and prefers the road style ride whereas i could no longer hunch over and knew pretty quickly after i rescued her from paige's dusty garage, that i  preferred a sit-up straight style and there was no use denying it.
  • that brings me to the new pearl hybrid beauty that i will commute on, and do charity rides, rail-trails, and as of last weekend,  perhaps a few more events, like the duathlon jeff and i entered in griffin, which was great fun. and she only weighs 24 lbs. so i will finally find it easy to load my bike on top of the subaru for travelin.



Thursday, October 11, 2012

a bicycling event in October, thank you!

Finally someone got it right, or listened to other Georgians on the seasons/weather down here. it's a bicycling event with lots of interest and opportunities to participate from all over the state NOT held in the scorching summers we have here in the deep south. bravo! and yes' i'm in. and blogging it.
http://www.cleanaircampaign.org/Blog/Biking-to-Work-It-s-Not-Just-Economical-it-s-a-Lifestyle

what's great is october is truly autumn here and colorful, crisp, and sunny which is such a welcome relief from swampy, hot, humid, sticky summers. so holding a bicycling challenge now might actually get some participants...AND more importantly they'll like it and do it again. this one is called:
Bike to Work Challenge by the Clean Air Campaign.

update: our little team in griffin, georgia placed 7th in the state! now that frickin rocks, all of ATL was competing and a few outlying cities, anyone could, but most thought it was an ATL thang. well, we are only 45 minutes south or so and on some days even get included in the metro ATl boundary, so we entered.
we rocked it, Traci H on our team even placed 7th individually!!! go october.

but alas, there are other, not so brilliantly timed events:
  • BRAG - bike ride across Georgia held every year in early June when the asphalt cant get much hotter...and then it does.
  • Peachtree Road Race - hot July 4th, but mostly for the slow cabooses b/c at least the race does start early.
  • Bike Tour de Farm - held on Memorial Day weekend, fabulous event but even the organizers were in the SAG van by the end of it, too hot.
  • Athens Triathlon Tri to beat Cancer- held annually now in late August, probably just b/c one dare not challenge the fall SEC calendar dates.
and luckily we have a few on the horizon that seem to have consulted the farmers almanac:
  • Cohutta Springs Triathlon, which given that it was at the extreme northern border of GA, might be borderline cool if staged early October, reported 2 chilly dudes last weekend
  • cLips of Faith bike/beer/film tour by New Belgium, runs all summer, but doesnt get to GA til October (smart)
  • Presidents and Patriots bike ride / camp out across peanut country in way south GA and thru 2 state parks in early November :)
  • Atlanta Beltline tour by bike - held in early May before it heats up
  • Firefly Trail tour - held in late march in Athens to inspire folks to dust off the wheels and spring out
And the coup de grace, just to prove how brilliant October is for gathering and holding events in Georgia...the statewide annual bike summit is held mid month. i'm so glad we got that right! see you there. Oh, and dont mind me, I just like to whine about the heat...meanwhile I ride yearround, admittedly slower and with less layers in summer.
peace.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

but how do you dress for work and cycle?

Me and Jeff biking w/Muscogee indians in Macon, 2012
its easy once you embrace it. just buy a-line skirts, boots, skinny leg pants, lots of fun $1 gloves at target, and scarves for winter. a good jacket with windbloc is pretty key to winter riding. i dont deal so much with the rain gear b/c i dont live in seattle or portland. if i did, i'd be gettin some new gear.
meanwhile i leave enough time to cover my 2-4 mile ride such that i roll leisurely thru my community, check out folks mailbox gardens, wave at neighbors, and enjoy the cruise to work. i'm not sweaty b/c i'm not rushing, even in summer. now i do have a desk fan at work just in case a commute gets sticky. but really a quick freshen up with say a lovely scented baby wipe, a moment in front of the fan and one is ready to go.
oh, i also have crazy curly hair and i havent met a helmet yet that can defy it, so no muss with the hair.
all in all, you have to want to be out there on the bike, you dress for it, you ride like you own it, and you love it. pave your own way, and fill it with your own style. it gives you a good excuse to transform a wardrobe with a specific goal in mind. oh, a some velcro leg wrap bands are key for keeping the cuffs outta the chain. and those 'slap band' styles, wrap right around the bike tube when not is use. keep it all loaded and a bike station by the door of your house so when you head out you have all you need.
here's some facebook album pix over the years of how i've dressed for commuting to work, my bike (a hybrid with city tires), and a link to the real cycle chic going on over in copenhagen. enjoy the ride!