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- Newsgroups: rec.bicycles.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!destroyer!news.iastate.edu!vincent2.iastate.edu!freshair
- From: freshair@iastate.edu (James W Gregory)
- Subject: Re: Bike-only Households
- Message-ID: <freshair.727903387@vincent2.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames IA
- References: <C1AMno.26x@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> <1jrl9vINNc1f@uwm.edu>
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 19:23:07 GMT
- Lines: 63
-
- In <1jrl9vINNc1f@uwm.edu> thelma@csd4.csd.uwm.edu (Thelma Lubkin) writes:
-
- > I'm interested in the transport solutions of bike-only households.
- > My husband and I both bike to work (he doesn't count: he goes all of 5
- > blocks); we use our tandem w/ panniers and a cardboard box on top of
- > them, along with my free arms, for grocery shopping; we have 2 old style
- > Moultons with the serious carriers for carrying truly heavy things
- > (my husband once carted home a steel, 4-drawer filing cabinet on the back
- > of one of them, using a lawn mower w/o its handle to balance the weight
- > in the front.)
-
- I bought a small, somewhat dilapidated house a few years ago that I'm
- in the process of fixing up. Since I needed to be able to carry
- lumber home from the hardware store for my house, I built my own
- trailer for carrying lumber (I, too, don't have a car).
- I soon started using it to carry groceries home from the food
- store. It began to irk me that everyone else was driving their cars to
- the supermarket, forcing the food stores to cover our fine city with
- oceans of asphalt parking lots so people would have a place to park.
- I decided to start using my trailer to carry groceries for other
- people. A home grocery delivery business was born.
- Since that time I've built three other trailers, each time
- improving on the original design. My current trailer, which I made
- using aluminum tubing, carries four weatherproof containers, each of
- which can carry two bags of groceries at a time. The containers lift
- out of the trailer frame, allowing me to carry lumber (a necessity!),
- bicycles, yard waste, cases of food, etc. (all of which people have
- paid me to carry at one time or another).
-
- > Our most serious problem is parking: we won't take a bicycle unless
- > there's a reasonably safe place to park it, which means that we walk to
- > many events like concerts.
-
- I can understand your concern. My recommendation: pull a trailer.
- No one will steal a bike pulling a trailer--a theif would be too slow
- when he tries to ride it away, and he would be too readily noticed.
- (I speak from experience. I've had two bikes stolen in the past two
- years. Both times I did not have my trailer connected.)
-
- > I'm not an all the time rider either: I can't handle snow, and I won't
- > start out in heavy rain, so the fact that everyone else has a car is very
- > helpful: I've found people quite willing to cart me, and often my bike too,
- > home.
-
- For snow and ice, I highly recommend studding your tires with
- automobile tire studs. Last week, when a serious ice storm had
- cancelled classes at the university and had shut down the bus system
- (a very, very rare event), I was out delivering pizzas for a local
- pizza restaurant. The studs on my tires allowed me to get around
- without any difficulty whatsoever (and earning me $65 for the day!)
- while everyone else was stuck at home.
- Getting by with just a bike alone is not difficult, it just takes a
- little imagination and a lot of committment to go against the
- status-quo...
- Good luck.
-
- -Jim
-
- --
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Jim Gregory freshair@iastate.edu | "10,000 lemmings can't be wrong"
- Dept. of Plant Pathology, ISU (by day) | - anonymous
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