Biking through the Winter in Wisconsin
I started really biking a lot last year. This is my first winter after having been bitten by the bug. I was told that you cannot bike all winter, so I put my bike away after Thanksgiving. However, I have been noticing people still biking away, even through the cold and snow. In fact, I have seen bikers out there in ZERO degrees, and through storms where we have accumulated 14 inches of snow. Last night, a biker arrived to the gym after having biked through a very windy snow storm, in which the temp was in the low 20s and the wind chill was below zero! I said to my friend, "I am so jealous that he biked here." You guys understand, I am sure, but I was looked at as though I was crazy.
We have 3 to 4 months of this left, and I have to get back on my bike! But, I don't have much for gear, and I don't even know where to get started. I have some mountain bike tires I could throw on, but I understand you really need studded tires for this kind of riding. I am also thinking about getting some snap-on fenders for when it is slushy.
I am also not very visible, so I need to work on that as well. I think I have enough clothing to keep warm - except for shoes. I don't clip in, but I don't have warm non-bulky shoes or boots that would work on the bike. Is there any other gear I would need for the bike itself?
My winter riding strategy
I ride all winter ... Saturday it was 20 degrees and seven of us showed up for our regular 9am breakfast ride. We reduce our miles when it gets below 30-40 but we still ride. I'm a person who hates to be cold but hates the indoor trainer more (I lasted four minutes on Friday with a Coach Troy Spinervals DVD). Here's what I wore for 20 degrees ...
- A combination polartec neck warmer / lighter weight cap (under my helmet)
- A base layer long sleeve tee, a second layer (a jersey), and a third layer (a wool jersey)
- A bike jacket or my new favorite - it's a Nike jacket for cross country skiing or something that has a thin layer of thinsulate (quilted) - not at all bulky - and even has zip off sleeves. It just doesn't have back pockets like a bike specific design. Bought on sale at a sporting good store for less than $60. It is working better than my $200+ Goretex bicycle jacket.
- Winter riding tights
- Wool socks, Toastie Toes (toe warmers), and winter riding boots (an investment but I bought mine on sale for $150)
- Cheap ski gloves that I found at an outlet for just $2.99
On New Years Day I had a fleece second layer and I got too hot trying to keep up - you don't want to sweat and get wet inside because then you'll definitely get cold.
I ride my touring bike and replace its normal road tires with fatter tires (I think they are about 1.5 inches). I do everything I can to avoid a flat tire - so I use Slime rim tape in the winter. If there is a lot of snow/ice I switch to my mountain bike. And although I am comfortable riding alone the rest of the year, I ride with at least one or two other people in the winter. Last year we had a flat on a cold winter ride on our tandem, and it was great to have extra people (one even went home and met the group back at the end with hot chocolate).
One other tip - we do use more lights and try to be more visible. The winter conditions mean it is darker, often foggy or overcast, plus cars see few cyclists so they aren't expecting you (maybe another reason to ride in a group with greater "mass"). But riding in the winter is a blast.
PS There's a big payoff come spring when you are still in shape and everyone else is struggling.