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Thread: Odd Bike Cargo

  1. #16
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    848

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    Hmmm..

    I once rode home with my puppy under one arm from the Davis farmers market. Balanced her so her back legs were on my hip whilst I held her front.

    hmm...

    How bout riding to class with my parakeet on the handlebar. He loved it. he'd get all aerodynamic and hunch down )

    hmm..

    For those of you with grocery stories.. how bout a watermelon in a doublebagged plastic bag. think it was 7-10 lbs or so.


    Hmm..

    Anyone been to Asia???? OMG they carry whole families on bikes in crazy traffic.


    Oooh i like the xtracycle. I've been wondering how I might combine golfing and biking!
    Last edited by roguedog; 01-23-2007 at 07:40 AM.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Pendleton, OR
    Posts
    782
    I wish you had a picture of the parakeet! I can just visualize that--how funny!

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    West Milwaukee
    Posts
    281
    Many years ago a friend and I were very into playing the non-electronic hockey game that had the players which you moved by pulling and pushing in a series of levers on both ends. The game was about 4 feet long by two feet wide. We decided that we really needed to bring it over to her house since we were spending the night there. We each took an end and rode with it between us. It did take a bit of skill to keep the distance equal without knocking one or both of us off our bikes....and of course we didn't get the bright idea to try this until 10:00pm and without lights on our bikes.

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Switzerland
    Posts
    2,032
    A violin and a viola, each in their separate cases. With just a strap around my chest to hold both of them.
    It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.

    2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
    2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
    2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Aberystwyth, Wales
    Posts
    659
    As seen in my avatar....taking the cat to the vet, in her cat carrier, strapped to a backpack, strapped to my back. As soon as we got off the road with the heavy traffic onto the bike path through the allotments, she calmed down and just watched the birdies. And it couldn't have been too traumatic because she still likes going in the box.

    Oh, and doing fieldwork in Botswana I transported three big crates of mouse traps (live capture traps...about 200 of them) balanced on a very clunky old bike...

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Eustis, Florida
    Posts
    77
    Oh...I just have to reply to this one. The looniest thing I ever hauled on my bike (old Schwinn mountain bike....early 90's) is a HUGE load of firewood for my campfire. I had parked my little class C motor home in a park....and the source for firewood was about a mile away.

    By the time I got back to my campsite....my back tire was flat as a pancake.

    Duh.

    Best to all:
    Maureen

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    Quote Originally Posted by uk elephant View Post
    As seen in my avatar....taking the cat to the vet, in her cat carrier, strapped to a backpack, strapped to my back. As soon as we got off the road with the heavy traffic onto the bike path through the allotments, she calmed down and just watched the birdies. And it couldn't have been too traumatic because she still likes going in the box.

    Oh, and doing fieldwork in Botswana I transported three big crates of mouse traps (live capture traps...about 200 of them) balanced on a very clunky old bike...
    I'd love to see a bigger version of this picture, UK!
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    On a regular bicycle - some poster board that tried to become a sail. As I recall, I somehow had it balanced across my handle bars and I discovered that I couldn't go very fast. But did not crash.

    On a funky delivery bicycle (looked sort of like this: http://www.industrialbicycles.com/platform%20trike.htm)
    - instead of a front fork and wheel, there's a large platform on two wheels, a reverse tricycle, and you TRIED to steer the whole platform.
    So on this thing, I carried 5 gallon buckets of water with larval salmon. I was working at a large fish hatchery at the time, and we had an odd assortments of bicycles to get around.
    I discovered that 1) the bike is hard to steer, 2) even harder on curves, 3) worse yet going up or down hills while making a turn. Some baby fish died as a result....
    Beth

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    California
    Posts
    488
    A fresh out of the oven, home made Dutch apple pie. It was still hot when I got to work and every one, including my DH was very impressed that I rode to work with the pie instead of driving. I just kept syaing "what kind of bike commmuter would I be if I let an apple pie stop me?"

    Jones

 

 

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