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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Albany, NY
    Posts
    65
    Thank you! The experience you have is really helpful. I was thinking of straps for her for now- between the rate of growth and the amount of our shoes that the dog manages to find when she leaves them around- that's more investing than I care to even think about!
    I put in place a rule about no serious questions while going up hill last year when she started asking me about planetary alignment and gravitational pull while climbing a steep hill heading into a major intersection- she was most definitely not working hard enough!
    And yes, it is the best investment ever for us as a mother daughter team. When she was younger we always did adventure weekends, a weekend in NYC, a weekend camping alone, etc. Last year I told her we were going to bike in tandem across NYS and we did and she now wants do to it every year. She has been studying field guides all year to make sure she can identify every bird, wild flower, and tree. So much better than spongebob!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Wellesley, MA
    Posts
    361
    Can I ask a follow up to this? I'm considering so half-toeclips for my impending commuter- anyone used them and have comments? I don't like the idea of being 'strapped' in during a commute and want to wear my sneakers, etc.
    Support me in my fight against MS as I ride the Cape Cod Getaway MS150! Marian's Marauders Team Page

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    755
    Quote Originally Posted by mayanorange View Post
    Can I ask a follow up to this? I'm considering so half-toeclips for my impending commuter- anyone used them and have comments? I don't like the idea of being 'strapped' in during a commute and want to wear my sneakers, etc.
    That's what I use. I'm pretty happy with them; they're great for commuting. They are MKS brand, found 'em on eBay.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Limbo
    Posts
    8,769
    I use half-clips on my city bike. I LOVE them!
    2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
    2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
    2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Albany, NY
    Posts
    65
    oooh, I like those half clips! How do you think it compares to clipless as far as how much extra power you get from them?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    755
    Quote Originally Posted by hipmama View Post
    oooh, I like those half clips! How do you think it compares to clipless as far as how much extra power you get from them?
    I haven't done clipless, so I can't say for sure. I like the half-clips 'cause I can wear any old shoe and still jump on my bike. But I recently acquired a pair of Exustar mtb shoes from a fellow TE-er, and I've found that it's the stiff sole from a cycling shoe that makes all the difference as far as extra power in my pedal stroke. (There are no cleats installed on the shoes, so I just use 'em with my regular pedals & half-clips.)

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Albany, NY
    Posts
    65
    alrighty, I got my new bike today! Pedals are SPD- so from what I gather, I can get pretty much any cycling shoe, and just have to have the SPD cleats put in, yes?

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    271
    Wahoo! Very exciting. Bet you can't wait to get out on that puppy!

    If they are SPD pedals you can just get pretty much any shoe as long as they are drilled for a two bolt cleat. It may be best to take the SPD cleat with you when you go to buy them so you can check for sure that the holes line up, because sometimes you get a knucklehead of a shop assistant who just assumes they'll be ok and gives you that "yeah it'll be fine" thing with the airy wave. And then you get home it it isn't really fine!

    An MTB shoe will probably be better just from the point of view that the SPD cleat recesses into the sole and does not usually protrude beyond the tread of the shoe. This makes it a bit more stable for walking in and it doesn't scratch your floor! Also if you end up getting SPD pedals for your tandem you will be able to wear them for touring on it too and still be able to walk around like a normal human at the end of the day (not like a duck)! I only take one pair of shoes when we tour - the MTB ones.

    The only down side of an MTB shoe is that if you decided later that you wanted to go all hardcore roadie and buy a more roadie-style pedal and cleat system it is quite likely that the roadie cleat will be too large to fit on the MTB shoe. It' a one way thing.... plenty of roadie shoes will take SPD cleats but most SPD style shoes won't take roadie cleats (well the three bolt ones anyway)!
    Last edited by pinkbikes; 04-17-2009 at 03:48 PM.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    271
    Quote Originally Posted by hipmama View Post
    I put in place a rule about no serious questions while going up hill last year when she started asking me about planetary alignment and gravitational pull while climbing a steep hill heading into a major intersection- she was most definitely not working hard enough!
    And yes, it is the best investment ever for us as a mother daughter team. When she was younger we always did adventure weekends, a weekend in NYC, a weekend camping alone, etc. Last year I told her we were going to bike in tandem across NYS and we did and she now wants do to it every year. She has been studying field guides all year to make sure she can identify every bird, wild flower, and tree. So much better than spongebob!
    Oh - that is wonderful! We have a bike tour each year run by our state cycling association (Cycle Queensland) which runs for 9days and travels from one obscure place to another! It is catered and they carry your bags and tents for you. We did it last year with DH (but he rode a lot faster and so we spent a lot of quality time with just the two of us).

    It was such fun but the questions while climbing a particular mountain range were amusing (if she wasn't asking you of course). I think I got "So Mum... what's cerebral palsy and how does it happen and what does it do?" and "So Mum...why were those people petitioning for that dam not to get built and why does the dam have to be there and what will the petition do?"

    I'm learning to shy away from anything that starts with "So Mum..."

    And always when I'm just about scraping my lungs up off the ground straining up some monster hill!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Albany, NY
    Posts
    65
    Off topic, but pinkbikes, do you ever have a hard transition from riding solo to getting on your tandem? I find that the more I'm riding alone now the harder it feels on the tandem with all of that extra weight. It makes me feel like we're doing something wrong, but in reality I assume it's the difference from one on a lightweight to two on a 45 lb bike... might help if I know I'm not alone!

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    271

    You are NOT alone!

    Quote Originally Posted by hipmama View Post
    Off topic, but pinkbikes, do you ever have a hard transition from riding solo to getting on your tandem? I find that the more I'm riding alone now the harder it feels on the tandem with all of that extra weight. It makes me feel like we're doing something wrong, but in reality I assume it's the difference from one on a lightweight to two on a 45 lb bike... might help if I know I'm not alone!
    Oh good golly yes! I kind of fell into the whole tandem thing because we wanted to cycle tour and our daughter wanted to come too and I got advice from a lady who tours with her kids that it was THE way to go. It certainly was the way to go but I will probably never be a huge devotee of the tandem for a tandem's sake!

    With the best intentions and encouragement in the world, 10yo girls are not powerful partners or sensational stokers! I hear people say "Oh tandems - they really get up hills well! Two lots of muscle and one lot of drag!" But I think they are overlooking the fact that little girls do not have a massive power to weight ratio and tandems are not light bikes! Maybe they are weapons when you have two strong blokes on one, but for me they are a slow-moving means to an end!

    That is not to say that with a tailwind or down hills we don't really motor sometimes (and she loves it then) but uphill or with a headwind I find it a real slog!

    I wear a heart rate monitor when we ride and I find riding the tandem a really good workout. Not sure why, but I do tend to ride in a bit higher gear on the tandem than my roadie, and so I find I burn my legs pretty well when I ride it. Often my legs feel quite dead for a few days afterwards.

    When we did our big cycle tour last year our longest day was about 94km (just under 60mi) and we had to do quite a bit of training beforehand. I found my legs were tired all the time! When we came back I used this to my advantage and jumped straight into some hill work on my mtn bike and did a metric century as well on my road bike. I have never felt so strong on a bike in all my life! So the tandem is certainly good power work!

    The down side of all that is that it feels like wading through custard when you first get back on it after a while of not riding it! We did a social ride on the weekend before Christmas (a reunion of the people on the bike tour) and dressed the tandem up in tinsel and fairy lights to take it for a ride. The ride was flat but I kept wondering if I'd messed up putting the wheels on and had dragging brakes!! It felt like such hard work after riding the roadie!

    We will be starting our preparation for this year's cycle tour soon (we're really bitten by the bug now) and I slightly dread how my legs are going to take it for the first few weeks, but look forward to the strength it will give to my other cycling. Boy is the roadie ever going to feel light and fast then!

    So yes - I think it feels like crap to everybody! You are NOT alone! But I will share some advice that the lady who set me on this course in the first place shared with me. I was struggling up some hills on a training ride and she asked if I had tried getting my daughter to stand up and pedal on the hills. Frankly it had never crossed my mind! Now she has a 13yo boy behind her, so I expect she gets a bit more of a push along, but I can assure you it is well worth it on those big sucker hills once you get used to how the bike moves a bit more! And a couple of times I've even stood up on a climb myself(but never both of us together)!!

    I have found on longer days I have to do a few things to keep DD going. You probably do all these already but just in case...

    • I usually keep a few jelly lollies/candy (like snakes?) in my back pocket in case she needs a sugar hit. She enjoys the treat.
    • I am getting her a computer of her own so she can track how fast we are going and how far we've come and work out how far to go, because it drives me nuts when she asks me every ten minutes and it'll give hersomething to think about other than sticky questions for me to answer up a hill!
    • I try to make her conserve energy and not pedal hard on flats. I try to do most of the work then and just get her to pratice spinning. That way she saves her energy for the hills where we really need it. Note to self: Maybe this is why MY legs are always toast!?
    • On the big hills I try to just roll up them as steadily as I can but when I really need a kick along I get her to stand up and do ten or twenty pedals and then sit for ten or twenty etc. It really helps on the stinkers.
    • We wear hydration packs rather than use our waterbottles when we ride long trips. This is because on our tandem it is really hard to get the water bottles out without being stopped and there are very few traffic lights to stop at in outback Queensland! I try to remind her to drink on every downhill.
    • She tends to flag a bit in early afternoon and I sometimes have to get an energy drink or some type of a soft drink (soda/pop?) into her to pep her up to get the job finished. Works a treat because she sees it as a treat!


    If you have any other good ideas - please share, as we can use all the help we can get! Otherwise - just enjoy how light that solo bike feels!
    Last edited by pinkbikes; 04-11-2009 at 05:36 AM.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Albany, NY
    Posts
    65
    Thank you thank you thank you!
    Yes, I have been running through- are the brakes grabbing? Do I not have enough air in the tires? Am I pathetic?
    I love the idea of the bike computer for her! I bet she would love that. She spent the bulk of winter studying field guides so she could identify birds, trees, plants, flowers while on the back and that's exciting to her, she's quite the pro now.
    One tip we have found to help on the long days is we got speakers that mount on the bike that hook up to our Mp3 player and I have some of her favorites on there, some recorded book readings, sing along songs, etc. and that really helps. Nothing to make me feel hot like toodling along on the bike with the Sound of Music blaring!
    We did get the camel backs this year- as yes, reaching for the bottles can suck and land us up dehydrated quickly- we both drink a lot more with the packs on the back.
    We keep the nuts and dried fruits etc. around for anytime snacking- neither of us feel very good with refined sugars in our system but I do have her drink a gatorade type drink at rest stops when on tour for the sodium- but more than one a day and she has a stomach ache... not cool!
    Thanks for sharing your pain, it really helps a lot- I felt really defeated today after a ride yesterday..

 

 

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