Friday, May 16, 2008

I can has munny!

I got my Economic Stimulus Payment from the IRS today. This is why it's good to do your taxes early.

The amount was slightly more than what I actually paid for the Absolute DX. At this point I probably will get another bike anyway from a friend of a friend (which one, and how much I pay, depends, since my dear potato boy has lined up several people who could sell, lend, or give me one).

So that means some bastard is riding around town on my economic stimulus payment.


I was walking along Babcock today with Steve's bike, scanning the bike racks. Then some guy zoomed by on a silver blue hybrid with skinny tires. I chased him halfway up Bascom Hill, hid behind a tree while he parked and went into a building, then went to scout his bike. It turned out not to be - it didn't have a distinctive cosmetic flaw that mine came with, and had much more "honest" wear and tear than anyone could have put on mine in a week. Call me crazy, but that bike really isn't a popular model in Madison. That's the only specimen other than mine I've seen so far, while there are plenty of Fuji road bikes and the "Crosstown" comfort bikes.

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Cycling-related trauma

Someone nicked my new bike from the racks at the side of Steve's house some time between Saturday evening and Sunday morning. It was a terrible crash since I'd been having a nice weekend for the first time in a long while. And given how emotionally attached I get to my bikes (not to mention how much I depend on them as my sole means of independent transportation), I'm still feeling upset and paranoid.

I'm not completely stupid, it was locked up. The "not completely" part is because I didn't realize a 1/2 inch cable lock isn't a sufficient deterrent against thieves with bolt cutters.

Anyway I'm borrowing Steve's Trek 820 hybrid for now to get to work (this link is to the 2008 model; his is much older and looks substantially different). Working on fixing the direct-pull brakes was a good way to calm down emotionally. I also bought a big U-lock but was having trouble figuring out where to put the mounting bracket:

Seriously, it wouldn't go anywhere else on the bike. The top tube and seat tube have shifter and brake cables running along them, the down tube is too fat to screw the bracket down and the lock flopped to the side when I tried clipping it on there anyway, and trying to mount it horizontally behind the seatpost was a disaster - the lock flopped onto the wheel and acted as a "spoon brake". This way, it's resting on the side of the seat stay and chainstay and doesn't go anywhere. I was a bit worried that the bracket would get in the way of the wheel spokes but there's about half a cm of clearance. (Which may not sound like much but if that distance changes for some reason, I've got more to worry about than the mounting bracket, i.e. a severely bent wheel.)

If I catch the bastard who took my Fuji I'm going to beat them over the head with the U-lock.

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Monday, May 05, 2008

New bike!!!!!

I don't want to spend a long time blogging tonight so I'll just say that my old Motobecane Nomade, which was my friend David's mum's bike and is probably older than us, has gotten to the point where I was ploughing more labour and money into it than it was worth. The final straw was when several of the rear wheel spokes broke this Sunday and I was told by the Budget Bicycles guys that the wheel was a write-off.

I think I'll miss that old bike. When you start to love a machine, you begin to impose a personality on it and that's how you think of it, as a person...here she is riding a bus.

And next to a very snazzy-looking cousin outside of Agricultural Hall (kind of hard to see but the down tube does say "MOTOBECANE").

Anyway today I couldn't stop thinking about it all day at work and even though I've got a big animal study to deal with tomorrow, I thought I'd go crazy without a bicycle.

For me it's not just a thing, not just a consumer product to be desired. The bicycle is a symbol of freedom - from the tyranny of the bus schedule, imprisonment in a metal box, selling one's soul to petroleum. It's all about the wind in your face, nothing between you and the world, nothing pushing you forward but the strength of your own body. I feel trapped without two wheels. That's why I kept the old one as long as possible.

So I went to Budget Bicycles' new bikes showroom and asked how much I could get for the Nomade on a trade-in. The supervisor told me twenty dollars. I argued with him a bit but he didn't budge. "It might not even be worth fixing." One of the younger mechanics piped up, "What are you talking about? It's a Motobecane!" which was kind of flattering. Yay classic French bikes.

I told the guy I wanted a light hybrid - I hate chunky bikes and specified that I wanted one with a light frame and "skinny tyres". I'd earlier had my eye on a Gary Fisher Wingra (some of the Fisher bikes are named after lakes around Madison!) because I saw someone on the street with it and liked it. Anyway I also test-rode a Fuji Absolute DX, and an Absolute 4.0.

Turns out with bikes at least you do get what you paid for. After I rode the 4.0, I started to say "Well, it kinda..." and the shop guy interrupted with "It's kinda noisy when you shift?" Heck yeah, and a squeaky drivetrain makes me crazy. (Even on my old bicycle I always made sure it was lubricated, even if I didn't get around to cleaning it.) He explained that for models in a series of bikes, as the price goes up the components get better at each step, but the frame gets better every couple of steps. So the DX and the 4.0 have more or less the same frame, but the DX is just better.

I ended up going with the DX because it was fifty dollars cheaper than the Wingra, I liked the twist shifters better than the triggers, and the toe clips on the pedals, while entirely new to me, felt good when I tried them. "That's a lot of bike for that price," the guy told me, explaining that it was on sale because it was a 2007 model.

So I've replaced my Old Lady with an Ice Lady. Although the effect is rather spoilt by the fact that she's carrying my same old rack and plastic basket, plus tool pouch and an added kickstand: Rather like a triathlete in a unitard laden down with grocery bags.

The view from the front:

It's great. I feel like it's running on rails when I go along a smooth stretch of road. I have an extra chainwheel and THREE more gears - incredible.

On the serious side, it's a reminder of the kind of privileged life I have, that I can spend $400 on a bike and not worry about what I'm going to eat tomorrow...that I have the power to invest in a good new bike rather than spending dribs and drabs of cash trying to keep the old one going as long as possible. Sometimes when the privileged ask why poor people make bad choices, they don't realize it's because there is in fact no choice to be made.

Last thought: looking at the standover height and recommended height range of rider for the size I got - I seem to be addicted to riding bikes taller than I should (the shop guy said it was fine though). I hate being low to the ground in traffic! In college it had the nice side effect of preventing other girls from asking to borrow my babies though.

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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

2008 New Year's Resolution

I don't normally make New Year's resolutions (e.g. "I will not bite my nails" has been a historical failure since age eight or so) but I've come up with what I think is a viable one this year:

  • To match any amount I spend aside from regular groceries, household, and toiletry supplies with donations to NGOs doing food aid, health, education, social justice, or women's issues - both secular and Christian.
  • To match ALL spending on my cat with donations to animal welfare (not animal rights) and wildlife conservation organizations.
This way I'll probably spend less money this year on silly stuff and waste less time Internet shopping.

Maybe it sounds a bit extreme to some people but I've found since leaving home and starting to earn my own money at age 18, that the less stuff I buy, the less stuff I want. Materialism is a self-perpetuating lust, and most of the hobbies I really enjoy require very little material.

Other things I'd like to do:

  • Write at least 2 short fiction stories and submit at least 1 to Writers of the Future or a science fiction magazine.
  • Draw more, and spontaneously.
  • Reinstall Creatures 3/Docking Station on my computer and start tinkering with the CAOS (Creatures Agent Object Scripting) language.
  • Call parents and sisters and "small" boy more often (sometimes I forget my brother has a phone because he never calls me...)
  • Clean my bike more often.
  • Cook for my boyfriend and make him take his vitamins regularly.
  • Watch more movies.

It's gonna be a personally interesting year...my project is going to get into animal studies...I'll have to write a thesis and hopefully graduate...my parents just got transferred to Penang...two of my London cousins are getting married in the summer so I'll finally have a chance to go to England...a couple of Phases kakis are getting married in Malaysia...another couple is having a baby, which makes them the first friends my age to reproduce...my boyfriend is taking 2/3 of a year off school for an internship...his mum wants to show our respective cats in the summer (TICA lets you show household pets)...

Et cetera. 'Tis life. =)

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Bikes are street AND sidewalk legal...morons

Bikes are street and sidewalk legal in Wisconsin. We get yelled at by both ignorant drivers and ignorant pedestrians. As long as we're obeying the rules of the road in the first case and the rules of courtesy in the second, SHUT UP.

If you're driving you are required BY LAW to give us 3 feet of room, not to attempt to run us off the road.

(just got home. cranky because the cyclist behind me and i both got honked by this stupid cow in an SUV. the driver actually tried to pick a fight with the other cyclist despite her explaining that we were in the left lane because the right lane was "right turn only". wah lau, what a moron.)

If you don't believe me here are the laws.
Road
Sidewalk


Image from BitterCyclist.com 's story on how "SUV Drivers Never Pay Attention".

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Wednesday, February 28, 2007

It's not like they didn't travel backwards before anyway

(totally unrelated: This morning I took the bus - because I was too lazy to put my new fender on last night and it's slushy on the roads - and there was this guy on a bicycle going the same way as the bus. The problem is, crusing speed for a cyclist is apparently the same as the average speed of a bus which loads passengers at every stop. So the bus would stop, the cyclist would overtake it, then when the bus started again it would swing into the next lane to overtake the cyclist. It seemed to me that the driver was swerving out far more than necessary, but I don't know how to drive a bus.

After about three or four repetitions of this, the bus driver was completely exasperated and shouted and threw the finger at the cyclist. The cyclist, watching the road as he should have, didn't notice at all. He did swing onto the sidewalk a bit later though.

Funniest road rage I've seen in a while...driver flipping off a cyclist. Seriously, we get no love. If we go on the road the drivers try to kill us, if we go on the kakilima the pedestrians act like we're trying to kill them.)


And now for something completely different: they're going to make a new Star Trek movie with Kirk and Spock as young men, i.e. a prequel to TOS. And Adrien Brody is going to play Spock.

*all the nerdy girls swoon*

Some fler on Gizmodo called nzruss made a great comment about casting speculations:

I'd seen a suggestion of Keanu Reeves playing Spock role, but it was later determined (by group consensus) that he didn't have the range of emotion required to be a convincing Spock.
Explanation for non-scifi-fans - Spock is [half] Vulcan; Vulcans are supposed to be emotionless.

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