This is the creature to get, tho' now they are getting so popular they're hard to find.
(here's mine: )
You can put it on the bike you have. Turns the back of hte bike into the back seat of a car.
This is the creature to get, tho' now they are getting so popular they're hard to find.
(here's mine: )
You can put it on the bike you have. Turns the back of hte bike into the back seat of a car.
Sue- You're my idol. Actually that is pretty darn cool.
The store is still a year or more from completion, so it is not any time soon. I might convert my mountain bike to an errand bike with a rigid fork and do the BOB trailer. My mountain bike was always intended to be a starter. She doesn't see the trail enough but she does get me to the community swimming pool! It is so odd all the neighbors will drive the .5 mile to the pool. It is a 10 minute walk from any house in the neighborhood, takes us 2 minutes or less to bike!
I met another commuter today who has just started. He was lamenting that I was riding way too fast to keep up.On Mondays I usually see Mr. Gary Fisher, that is what I call him since he rides his Gary Fisher and talks to me. He just started for this year, did some last summer.
Last edited by Aggie_Ama; 06-13-2008 at 02:29 PM.
Amanda
2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"
You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan
Geonz, I love that!
I've just started commuting myself. A 22 mi one-way trip biking with still a half hour or so 30 mile drive. I posted in another commuter thread earlier. I have a 104 mi/day roundtrip to work. I saved 88 miles of driving this week. I see several commuters on the road, but I am probably new to them as I've just started.
Unfortunately there are no buses and trains where I am. The nearest commuter train is still a 25 minute drive and it wouldn't take me northwest to Lowell where I work, but due east into Boston.
I know many people I talk to are very conscious on saving trips, thinking twice about that trip to the store until they can bundle it up with other errands nearby. I think it really is on the forefront of people's minds. Although these people I know wouldn't get groceries with a bike.
My nearest really good has everything grocery store is about 14 miles in either direction. There is one closer convenience store for emergencies that is about 6 miles although there is a 3 mile hill between me and it on the way back. If I wanted yogurt or anything good like that I'd have to go the 14. I make a lot of things from scratch just to save me a trip to the store.
Since I still am driving for my commute to work I always stop to get groceries on the way home. But I am going to refurbish my old mt bike and make it into a commuter of sorts. It has a broken sun-tour derailler, now obsolete (now you know how old it is - front suspension, what is that). A friend actually sold me an entire xtr used gruppo for $60 so I'll overhaul with that. I have an old rack with panniers from the early 90's which are still in excellent condition.
Right now there are quite a few existing rail trails throughout the state here in MA. Some link to each other, some link to those in NH. The longer ones seem to go north-south. There are a few proposed rail trails. My company is bidding to do the environmental permitting on a 26-miler that goes from Danvers through Newburyport past Salisbury Beach up to the MA-NH line. I would be jealous over that one. There is also one that is proposed in Townsend. Unfortunately here in MA, several abutters are contesting the rail trails. NIMBY, Not in My Backyard.
Even though our state budget is hurting like everyone else's, I think there is a new mindset as there is funding for these rail trails. As gas prices increase I believe there will be pressure for things to happen.