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  1. #46
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    129

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    Quote Originally Posted by azfiddle View Post
    I love all the pictures- beautiful. How do you guys get the full size pics in your posts? Mine just come out as thumbnails.
    It took me a while (and some googling) to figure out the pictures. Mine are on flickr, and basically you have to get a flicker link that is a direct jpeg address. On flickr, if you click on a photo's share button, then on the BBCode option, you can choose photo size, and then get a line of code that (leaving aside the brackets and the actual addresses) reads something like

    url=httpstuff img httpstuff /img /url

    followed by url=httpstuff and photo title /url by url my flickr id /url on flickr

    I copy and paste all that, then delete the second half of it, so I have the url img /img /url part, and voila, the photo appears.

    That's how it works for flickr photos. I've also used photos from my blog, and in that case, I just insert the photo's specific address (I just click on the photo in the blog entry, then copy/paste the web address that the photo itself has) using img /img (plus appropriate brackets).

    If you hit "reply with quote" to someone's post (with photos you like), you'll see in the quoted section how it works. The basic idea is that you need a stable web address ending in .jpg for your photo, either by it being hosted on flickr or similar, or on your own website, and you insert that with proper html, and then the image gets retrieved in the process of posting to the forum. And that is the workaround I have figured out for posting something larger than a thumbnail.
    1980-something Colnago
    2010 Jamis Quest
    2013 Wabi Classic

    mebikedolomitesoneday.wordpress.com

  2. #47
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    129
    Quote Originally Posted by azfiddle View Post

    I rode ALL the way up Mt. Lemmon last Saturday- 65 miles round trip, over 7000 feet of climbing. A little chilly up at 8000 feet! I was glad I brought an extra layer and knee warmers. I rode solo- and it took 4 1/2 hours of riding time going up (more because of various stops) to get to Summerhaven at the top (skipped the last 2 steep miles to the ski lift). A little over an hour to go back down. I shaved off 5 miles and met my husband by the base instead of riding home.
    By the way, nice ride! It only took me once to learn to bring *warm* things on a mountain climb, no matter how warm the weather at the bottom. It gets really cold up there, especially when that air starts rushing by you at 30+ mph!
    1980-something Colnago
    2010 Jamis Quest
    2013 Wabi Classic

    mebikedolomitesoneday.wordpress.com

  3. #48
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Location
    california
    Posts
    1,232
    Hoping you’re having a great anniversary weekend khg!!!....and that was a good description of your rides. thanks

    Azfiddle….you've been doing some good climbs!!!! I’ll second Flickr….easy to sign up, just getting a yahoo email address that you never have to use. I’ll also re-sign up getting a new email for just a days/event photos I want to share with certain people who may want to download an original file for a print, which you can’t do on my main flickr site because I have settings that won’t allow it. As khg explained it’s very easy to get the code to just copy and paste into a post for showing a photo the size you want. The santa monica photos kgh posted look like 800 pixel size and I post 1024 pixel one’s for more detail.


    Doing some work in Portland so friends (my STP riding friends) set me up with a bike (a beautiful purple Sweetpea) and we went for a ride. Drove south to the Champoeg state park and then we did a round trip bike ride to the Ankeny wildlife refuge south of Independence Or. on the Willamette Valley scenic bikeway. The bikeway is a wonderfully scenic route that follows the Willamette river, is 135 miles long and ends just north of Eugene Or. I’d really like to do the whole route someday. Wonderful pastoral settings with farmland, hop fields, some vineyards, grazing alpacas, sheep, cows to moo to, covered bridges, a 250 year old black cottonwood, a Blue Heron at the wildlife refuge that unfolded its huge wings and flew away when we accidentally startled it and a quaint small ferry ride. We rode through a few small towns and the larger Salem. No real climbing, mostly rolling hills and some short climbs up river bluffs. Weather was in the high 50’s to middle 60’s with the occasional cross wind but mostly tail winds going south and slight headwinds by the time we headed back north….109 miles total. It was nice not worrying about where the route was as I just followed my friends who have done the whole route a few times. A farmer had put a large hand painted sign in his field close to the road that said ‘life is an adventure’…..indeed

    Rewarded myself with some ice cream at Salt and Straw when we got back to Portland. They opened a store in LA around 6 months ago so I knew how good it is…..Chocolate gooey brownie ice cream ftw
    ‘The negative feelings we all have can be addictive…just as the positive…it’s up to
    us to decide which ones we want to choose and feed”… Pema Chodron

  4. #49
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Unlike all of you doing big climbs and 50-100 mile rides, I am just getting back into the season. Even though 12 weeks is not a long time to be off the bike, and I certainly did enough x country skiing/snow shoeing/gym work to stay fit, every year it's the same for me. I have to go through a few weeks of suffering, even on short rides. It's mostly my legs, not my endurance.
    Yesterday we had snow showers all day. Today is about 40 and bright sun. Waited until it hit 40 to go out, so a 16.5 mile ride that is sort of flat, except for the beginning and the end, about 800 feet of climbing. Monument St. in Concord is full of dangerous pot holes; the town just fixed these last year, and now it's worse. I am so glad we changed the location of a group ride we lead in early May, because I don't want to take a group of people I don't know down this hill.
    Speed was better than Wednesday, but way off my average on this particular ride. I am going to ride to work Tuesday and do a group ride Wednesday.
    2015 Trek Silque SSL
    Specialized Oura

    2011 Guru Praemio
    Specialized Oura
    2017 Specialized Ariel Sport

  5. #50
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Katy, Texas
    Posts
    1,811
    and I'm sure that you thoroughly enjoyed Californias brief 10 day spring green period which can be so clearly seen in all of your beautiful photos. Amazing, a car free ride. If only.
    marni
    Katy, Texas
    Trek Madone 6.5- "Red"
    Trek Pilot 5.2- " Bebe"


    "easily outrun by a chihuahua."

  6. #51
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    129
    We had a lovely weekend up on Whidbey Island. It was a 27 mile ride from Seattle to the Mukilteo Ferry, and it was a better ride than I anticipated. The Interurban trail has been much improved since I last rode it, and even a lot of the suburban unfriendliness of Snohomish County has a bike lane or a reasonable shoulder. Then, after a short ferry ride, just 6 more miles or scenic island roads, and we were at vacation!

    The best part was even though the bike ride wasn't too strenuous (we both took it easy, and had a huge tailwind), it was just enough to help work up a good appetite for the wonderful dinner we had reservations for.

    Though I took no ride photos (the Mukilteo Speedway just isn't that scenic), here's my bike on the balcony of our room:



    And a couple of the views we had:







    Biking into a monster headwind today to get home seemed like an appropriate way to be welcomed back to real life... But headwind and all, it was really fun to get there under our own power. I foresee more trips like this in the future!
    1980-something Colnago
    2010 Jamis Quest
    2013 Wabi Classic

    mebikedolomitesoneday.wordpress.com

  7. #52
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    491
    Beautiful pics! And looks like you had gorgeous weather, too. I'm moving back to Seattle in a few weeks and your pics make me happy
    2014 Surly Straggler
    2012 Salsa Casseroll - STOLEN

  8. #53
    Jolt is offline Dodging the potholes...
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Southern Maine
    Posts
    1,668
    19 fairly hilly miles today, with quite a bit of wind at times. I've decided crosswinds are worse than headwinds...headwinds make me have to work harder, but crosswinds are just nerve-racking! At one point as I was going down a hill, I felt like I was about to get blown into the crapload of sand on the side of the road, which might well have resulted in a wipeout. Other than that, the ride felt pretty good for being about the third one of the season so far. Only averaged 12.5 mph though...I guess the headwind at the beginning and my slow climbing really brought down the average, because I felt like I was really cruising along nicely during the second half of the ride.
    2011 Surly LHT
    1995 Trek 830

  9. #54
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    129
    Quote Originally Posted by Jolt View Post
    19 fairly hilly miles today, with quite a bit of wind at times. I've decided crosswinds are worse than headwinds...headwinds make me have to work harder, but crosswinds are just nerve-racking! At one point as I was going down a hill, I felt like I was about to get blown into the crapload of sand on the side of the road, which might well have resulted in a wipeout. Other than that, the ride felt pretty good for being about the third one of the season so far. Only averaged 12.5 mph though...I guess the headwind at the beginning and my slow climbing really brought down the average, because I felt like I was really cruising along nicely during the second half of the ride.
    I totally agree about crosswinds--they can be really scary! On one climb I did, the wind was strong and unpredictable/gusty, and before I knew it, I was riding perpendicular to the road in the downhill (opposite) lane. It was just luck that there were no cars or cyclists coming down at that moment. After a couple more moments like that, I decided that walking my bike up the rest of the way would be just fine. Better to swallow my pride and still be alive to tell about it.

    Did you see any of the highlights from Gent Wevelgem? It was so bad that even the pros were getting blown off the road



    Only 39 finished out of almost 200 starters...
    1980-something Colnago
    2010 Jamis Quest
    2013 Wabi Classic

    mebikedolomitesoneday.wordpress.com

  10. #55
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    I did my first commute of the year today, a whole 10.4 miles RT. 36 degrees in the AM at 9, 46 on the way home at 6:20. Slow, but fun. Only one big pot hole from the storms had to be avoided on the way home, as the rest have been filled. Anything else was there last year! Been wearing my heated gloves, which work very well. We got them at half price, and that pretty much solves my cold weather riding problems. Any other gloves/mittens that kept me warm compromised my shifting and made my hands feel strangulated. I've had everything else dialed in for a couple of years.
    Don't think I'll be commuting again this week, but I am going on a hard group ride tomorrow.
    2015 Trek Silque SSL
    Specialized Oura

    2011 Guru Praemio
    Specialized Oura
    2017 Specialized Ariel Sport

 

 

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