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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    392

    2 Questions...?

    What is MUT, and what is a pedicab?

    Oh, and squirrels, we have prarie dogs here, by the THOUSANDS that love to nest by the path here on base, right along with these little owls. As you ride by you can hear them....eeeekkk...eeeekkkk, as you approach as they all stand at attention by their holes, I know they are saying...(OMG...guys, here she comes again,duck! )
    Then there is always one that will wait, I SWEAR it's like the Geico commercial with the squirrels, and at the last second dart right in front of you! YES, I hate to say it, I'm an animal lover, so I'll take a HIT before I hurt a little furry.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95
    Quote Originally Posted by Jenn View Post
    What is MUT, and what is a pedicab?

    Oh, and squirrels, we have prarie dogs here, by the THOUSANDS that love to nest by the path here on base, right along with these little owls. As you ride by you can hear them....eeeekkk...eeeekkkk, as you approach as they all stand at attention by their holes, I know they are saying...(OMG...guys, here she comes again,duck! )
    Then there is always one that will wait, I SWEAR it's like the Geico commercial with the squirrels, and at the last second dart right in front of you! YES, I hate to say it, I'm an animal lover, so I'll take a HIT before I hurt a little furry.
    I know there are folks who think of them as pests, but prairie dogs are adorable, like meerkats!

    A MUT is shorthand for a multi-use trail (or path) where peds, cyclists, rollerbladers and the like mix it up.

    As for pedicab, I'm certain that's not the correct term for what I'm referring to. My local rec area has these things they rent where there's a sort of cab built around a bike frame, like a surrey with pedals instead of horses. It seats two to four, with the front occupants pedaling their little hearts out to make the thing move forward at all. Seriously, I think I might go to the rental place sometime and offer to pump up all their tires and service all those creaky drive trains. Maybe I could earn community service points in advance of some potential future misdemeanor, which is bound to be the result of cycling road rage.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    392
    Oh,ok PinBike, thank you for the descriptions, I haven't seen those pedicabs, they sound neat though, except when you get stuck behind one...haha
    MUT's hmm...Now, I know I'm probably going to get in ALOT of heat for this comment. However, I know when DH and I were riding like I stated earlier, 90% of people are walking on the dirt path NEXT to the paved path, then you have those few that walk on the path, wearing headphones, and they are NOT speed walking, oblivious to the fact that there are cyclist, rollerbladers (with dangerous skiing poles flying out....we almost got hit) etc..... I just think if it says "bike path"....hmmm maybe I'm wrong, but I would think that means,....bike path.
    I don't care how fast or slow you go, if it was just bikes on them and people were courteous and used caution,....ahhh...life would be grand wouldn't it?
    Oh, and I forgot to mention beside the snake, we also had to dodge the horse...poo....which happend to be under a dark bridge and coming out of the sunlight and you can't see....mmmmm DH was cleaning off his back and bike last night...

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95
    I'm often tempted to tell walkers and joggers, helpfully, not angrily, that the dirt path will be much kinder to their feet, but I suspect I'd get more hostility than thoughtful consideration in return.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    392
    Quote Originally Posted by rapid cycler View Post
    I'm often tempted to tell walkers and joggers, helpfully, not angrily, that the dirt path will be much kinder to their feet, but I suspect I'd get more hostility than thoughtful consideration in return.
    If they only knew what they were missing out on by riding!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Dallas, TX
    Posts
    2,716
    Quote Originally Posted by rapid cycler View Post
    I'm often tempted to tell walkers and joggers, helpfully, not angrily, that the dirt path will be much kinder to their feet, but I suspect I'd get more hostility than thoughtful consideration in return.
    Well, I am a runner... who runs on a path with bikes... the very paths I also bike.

    I can tell you that I have tried running in the grass/dirt... but the ground is so uneven, I am constantly in fear of twisting an ankle.

    So, I wouldn't want to be in the dirt/grass. But I also make sure that I run on the edge of the pavement, and I constantly look behind me. If I see a situation with a tight squeeze for a cyclists, I do get on the grass for a short while.

    The key here is that the walkers/runners pay attention to what is going on around them and try to be courteous to everyone using the path. Unfortunately, most are off in la-la land and don't really pay attention.
    "Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather, to skid in broadside thoroughly used-up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming: WOW WHAT A RIDE!!!!"

  7. #7
    Jolt is offline Dodging the potholes...
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Southern Maine
    Posts
    1,668
    Quote Originally Posted by KSH View Post
    Well, I am a runner... who runs on a path with bikes... the very paths I also bike.

    I can tell you that I have tried running in the grass/dirt... but the ground is so uneven, I am constantly in fear of twisting an ankle.

    So, I wouldn't want to be in the dirt/grass. But I also make sure that I run on the edge of the pavement, and I constantly look behind me. If I see a situation with a tight squeeze for a cyclists, I do get on the grass for a short while.

    The key here is that the walkers/runners pay attention to what is going on around them and try to be courteous to everyone using the path. Unfortunately, most are off in la-la land and don't really pay attention.
    You sound much more reasonable and courteous than a lot of the people described in this thread, even if you run on the paved path rather than the dirt! Personally, I would actually prefer to run on the dirt/grass and wouldn't be worried about twisting an ankle, but then I hike and run trails pretty regularly so maybe I'm just used to uneven ground. The dirt and grass are a better surface for running since they're not as hard. I agree that the real problem is people not paying attention and not showing any consideration for other users.
    2011 Surly LHT
    1995 Trek 830

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    2,506
    that's when Mr. Defiant Eye Contact lunged back into my path saying, "Go ahead and hit me. I want to die!" I managed to spit out "I don't!" as I lurched between him and his friends.
    Sounds like a good time to see how well your can of Halt works.

 

 

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