Cool pic! Tandems are great fun. Sounds like you had great sites to see.
Cool pic! Tandems are great fun. Sounds like you had great sites to see.
What an incredible photograph!
Spiders are fascinating creatures, very talented engineers.
2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager
Sounds like a nice tour to me! I love the picture of the spider web.
Sarah
how did the tandem feel w/ the panniers? I am trying to get my sweetie to go on a tour (having just completed my first loaded tour on a vacation without him) and he says he'll do it, but only on a tandem. Which presents the issue of carrying a load on the tandem.
I ride with those panniers most of the time, so I'm quite used to them. It butts right up to my backside, but I'm sitting upright in my seat, so this too, is not a problem for me. We load down the sides and the center compartment and then bungey my towel to the top. For the mini-tour, we added a front handlebar bag and a middle handlebar bag for tools and first aid kit. The jury is still out on the front bag approach. And we're not quite sure how things will work once the weather starts cooling off and I need to bring more clothes in with me. I'll try and leave a jacket at work, but I have these matching outfits that I may try and bring in too. So I'm not sure. Daily commute includes: DH: shoes, shirt, slacks, socks, underwear, belt, and tie. he keeps a jacket and a towel at work, and does not shower once we get to town; Me: shoes, lingerie, toiletries and makeup, hair dryer, clothes for the day, and a towel. I've bought lots of stretchy fabric clothes that don't wrinkle as much in the panniers. On days I need to be more dressed, I take the Metro in...
Shelly's other half here. As far as the handling of the tandem goes with panniers and other loading.... I'm not sure if you are wanting a comparison to a single bike or to an unloaded tandem.
First, a comparison to a single. The first thing to realize is that it is long and the second thing to realize is that it is heavy. So nimble is not a word that you would use to describe the riding experience. The tandem wants to keep going in the direction that it is headed, at the speed at which it is already going. (Newton's 2nd law for any former Physics students out there). On the flats and downhill, it is a real joy to ride, stable and smooth. But uphill, unless both of you are strong riders, you will find that you are slower, perhaps considerably slower, on the tandem than either one of you separately.
Compared to an unloaded tandem - it's just like that, only more so. Heavier, less responsive, and harder to pull up the hills.
If the two of you are mismatched in riding ability I can't imagine a better way to share the experience without one or both of you getting frustrated by the differences in speed. Of course, I just may be spoiled because I have a very sweet-tempered stoker.
jeff