Friday, March 12, 2021

In Which Spring New Tyre Season Continues

Bike shadow
Spring bike ride shadows. On a Sunday late afternoon ride, above and below.

Bike shadow

In case you missed a brief note months ago, I spell “tyre” the British way on this blog just to honor British bike technology---they invented the rubber tyre, so, just on this blog, I use their spelling.

I’ve biked in England and I really like to do that there—maybe someday I’ll bike in London, which is one of my favorite big cities. All of my British biking has been around Norwich, the city were my oldest daughter and family reside.

Anyway, back to Iowa. Snow is possible Sunday—we may be grazed by a massive winter storm that will be much more serious off to our west. The weather is turning wetter and cooler for a while, just in time for spring break.

Afternoon light
Spring shadows in later afternoon on March 7 ride.
Trail snow
March 7--as far north as I go. Need a bit more melting.

Next week is break at the university where I teach. I have a mountain of back work to get done, so it’s not really a week off for me—still, I will have time for, I hope, my first longish ride of the year. There will be some sunny days next week.

The spring rides will go better if I fix my bike. I made the switch from the Fancy Beast, my winter beater mountain bike, to my hybrid bike Clarence now that it’s warm enough for warm socks to keep my feet OK on the rides to work. As I noted in the previous post, last Saturday I took some grandsons for rides using the Tag-A-Long seat hooked to Clarence.

Parked at MMU
March 8, parked by library Monday morning. I figured hybrid bike rides are the new norm. Until the next day, when I had a flat tyre.


Then, last Sunday, I used an hour I didn’t have and rode my bike to the Cedar River Trail, where I then headed north towards Robins on the Cedar Valley Nature Trail. I didn’t plan to go far, but went a bit less far than I had planned, as I ran into snow still covering the trail. So it was not hybrid-bike friendly. I bet it has all melted by now, so I may try a northern ride next week.

I enjoyed my commuting ride Monday, but on Tuesday afternoon the back tyre of Clarence was flat. I don’t often get flats, and this was the second in recent weeks. I don’t know if the combination of derecho last summer and the abundant snow this winter has left more puncture crud on the streets, although honestly I just think it was poor luck (and worn tyres).

I called my wife, but her phone was off, so Tuesday afternoon I started walking the bike home. It’s 3.5 miles. I made it about a mile when I called her again, and this time she saw her phone light up. She told me to stop strolling since I was by a park she could easily find, so I waited. It had been a cool walk, and it was proof of concept that, in a worst case scenario, I could probably manage this commute route as a walk should there be no rescue available, but it would be a long walk.

So I felt lucky for the rescue. And I’m back on the mountain bike for now, although I’ve already purchased the new tyre for the hybrid bike.

Still, I only drove once this week, due to rain. The crocus and snowdrops are in bloom, the dark is still longer than the light but the nearest star is shining longer and from a more direct angle. Spring! Spring bike rides! Worthy of an exclamation point or two.

Bike
Three views of mountain bike from March 11 ride. Parked on a grey morning (above) and afternoon views (below).

Afternoon sun and bike

Bike



Sunday, March 7, 2021

In Which Spring Rides Officially Arrive

Grandson
The youngest of the three grandsons who went on a ride with me, coming out of the house to get on the Tag-A-Long seat on March 6 (above). Early in the ride (below) a pause to watch water in Dry Creek.

Grandson on bridge

March—I was out on a ride this morning with a grandson, who observed that March is between winter and spring. Snow still littered the ground, hanging out in less sunny areas and where it was piled off of driveways and walkways. More ground is showing as more snow melts, and winter cold mornings are giving way to afternoons in the 40s.

In September, a day in the 40s feels like winter is coming. In March, a sunny day of the same temperature is a promise of future greenery, indeed, today, in one of my gardens snowdrops are in bloom, the first flowers of the new season even as the old season hasn’t quite given up.

And this week of biking was full of spring firsts. My first rides in “regular” shows as I don’t need the insulated winter boots.

Bike in morning
March 4--Sunny morning--Fancy Beast in morning sunshine during the commute (above) and at the Mount Mercy University campus (below).

Bike and sunshine


After riding the mountain bikes all week long to work, on Saturday there was another first—I got out the hybrid bike and Tag-A-Long seat, oiled their chains and aired their tyres. Late in the morning I took three grandsons on three short rides.

I wore regular shoes for those rides, which probably totaled 4 or 5 miles.

March 6--Lindale Trail on a sunny Saturday morning as I ride with a grandson suing Clarence, my hybrid bike.

Bike (above and below) in Lowe Park on afternoon ride, March 6.


After lunch, I again took the hybrid bike out for the first real spring ride wearing the bike shoes. My bike shoes aren’t at all insulated and I don’t wear them when it’s cold—today I rode on the faster bike with the fancy bike shoes wearing a bright sweatshirt rather than my winter jacket and a reflective vest.

It was, in a way, the first Saturday of spring. There may be some winter rides ahead, and the grass that has just escaped its winter snow cover is still winter brown. But snowdrops are in bloom, the hybrid bike is out and the next season of bicycle riding is beginning.

Hybrid bike with Tag-A-Long seat, how I rode with grandsons in the morning, rode the bike without the seat attached in the afternoon.




Tuesday, March 2, 2021

In Which Here Comes the Sun and It’s All Right

C Avenue Pond Feb. 23
Feb. 23--Sunny morning at C Avenue Collins Aerospace pond.

Bike on street
Pause on the Feb. 23 morning ride--street is a bit icy, and I have to ride slowly, but I don't really have any problems. Pause at street in front of Kenwood School, mostly just to shoot street and bike image.

It does seem like years since it’s been here. In the last week of February, we got well above the melting point of water—on a sunny day one week ago, the ice was slowly melting.

I didn’t ride a week ago on Monday—it was the first day of this melt, and there was way too much snow on too many streets, we did get some new snow Sunday.

But Monday Feb. 22 was a change—after a grey morning, the sun came out and the melting began.

So by Tuesday Feb. 23 I was again on the bike. After an icy morning, the sunny afternoon represented a change that brought many people out of winter hiding:

Sidewalk
Taking some care on sidewalk on C Avenue early in ride.

Streets are a bit iffy in the morning--this is residential street late in the morning commute.

Bike on plaza
Bike on Rohde Family Plaza, MMU. I have arrived. Still cold, but the sun is pretty and will warm up during the day.

Road closed
Street near campus closed--trees damaged in storm last August are still being cut down.

Walkers
Relatively warm--in the 30s--afternoon draws people out for walks. Seen on Prairie Drive during bike ride home.

Bike lane
C Avenue bike lane--it had been blocked by snow, but is slowly melting clear. Good enough to ride with care--still lots of winter crud on the surface.

Collins Road
A few places--like Collins Road--where plows left snow barriers.

C Avenue sidewalk
C Avenue sidewalk, my route home. Still ice and snow, but passable with mountain bike.

Unfortunately, on Thursday, Feb. 25, on the morning ride to work, somewhere in that cruddy, messy surface left by melting snow, the back tyre of The Fancy Beast managed to roll over something sharp.  I rode to work that morning and, but the back was flat that afternoon and I had to have my wife come rescue me.

I don’t get all that many flats, and it had not been that long since I had fixed this back tyre. I wondered if wear and tear on the back tyre might be contributing to issues—it was well past its prime and I thought the edge that goes inside the bike rim looked a bit worn in spots when I fixed the last flat. So when I got this second flat, I decided to get a new tyre.

So on the final Friday of February, I took a side trip to the bike shop. The tyre I bought there is much fatter than the previous one and very knobby, but the woman who sold it to me assured me it would fit my wheel.

You may recall that my injured left index finger meant I needed my wife’s aid last time I changed my tyre—I’m happy to report that, although it was a sometimes uncomfortable struggle, I did manage on my own this time—although my wife was still partly due credit because she found me a tool I was having trouble locating.

Morning sun
Morning sun, Feb. 25. Rode to work, but had to get a ride home--flat tyre.

Bike in hallway
Bike hall by my office. Bikers get the best parking places!

Sunshine and bicycle
Pretty image Thursday afternoon, but I am waiting for my wife to pick me up--the bike has a flat tyre. On the loading lane at Warde Hall.
Bike
Changing the tyre.

Well, once the new tyre was on the bike, I've been treated to some great biking days here in Iowa. The final two days of February and the first two days of March have seen me in the saddle, which is where I want to be. The first two mornings of March were cold enough for long underwear, but the afternoon sun has been slowly warming my part of Iowa.

Feb. 28--Sunday night ride is a bit late, working into the evening with college newspaper staff. My ride, and the moon, when I get home.

Pretty view of Dry Creek valley as I start my morning ride March 2.

March! In Iowa, it’s a transition month that can be very wintery or very springy. It’s starting cool, but we’re getting an ideal snow melt—cool nights that freeze things again followed by afternoons warm enough that bare ground is starting to appear and early flowers are starting to knife through the chilly ground as the sunshine grows more powerful.

Many more images from these rides, I hope you like them. The Feb. 27 ride to campus was via Cedar Lake, and I was OK with some image-making pauses:


computer
Feb. 27--I have holders for my bike computer on my road and hybrid bikes--but improvise one for longer ride on mountain bike when winter streets are not ready for the other bikes.

Train
Feb. 27-Unexpected pause at 42nd Street on Cedar River Tail. Luckily, the train was not a long one.

Bridge
Feb. 27--This bridge had been pretty rough. City recently replaced many of the rougher boards and it's pretty nice now.

Detour
Feb. 27--Some project just north of the lake has the trail closed--but the city has placed in a bike detour down to H Avenue. Nice.

Detour sign
Feb. 27--Down by Cedar Lake, looking north at closed trail.

Trail by Cedar Lake
Feb. 27--Sunny final Saturday afternoon brings lots of traffic to trail by Cedar Lake.

Birds on lake
Feb. 27--Above and below, birds cluster on ice of frozen Cedar Lake--they are near the one patch of open water at the lake's north end. Gees taking off.

Birds on lake

Snow plow
Feb. 27--Passing by MMU athletic complex on trail on the way to campus--facilities at work clearing snow.

Bike at MMU
I assumed I would have to take bike inside library building, but no, snow has melted enough I can park at bike rack by Regina Hall.

Lady bug
Feb. 27--In the sunshine on some snow near bike--a lady bug slowly crawls. First bike ride bug of spring!

Flowers near libray
Feb. 27--Daffodil emerges near library on campus.

Dripping
Feb 27--Melting snow cascades off of front of library.

Hawk
Feb. 27--As I head home, I pass by Warde Hall, guarded (above and below) by this hawk.

Hawk

Feb. 27--Corner of Boyson and Coucil Street on ride to Cedar Rive Trail. Snow blocks.

Feb. 27--Warm enough this Saturday to bike in sweatshirt rather than winter coat.

I decide crowds by lake justify the biker bandito look.

Feb. 27--Daniels Park has far fewer trees after storm-damaged ones cleared away. Riding by park on J Avenue on way to campus.

Feb. 27--Ride is slow, but hey, it's mountain bike in winter. The 2 hours of pause included 90 minutes working on campus.