Category: cycle touring

Illustrated bike tour pack list

Loved this… from Amelia Greenhall with a hat tip to Elly Blue. I would normally retweet this, but it was too cool not to give the sketches extended props. I also really liked the efficiency and lack of “extras” that I so often drag around with me on tour.

illustrated pack list

 

Since my next tour is a working tour, I’d need to add a few more electronics to this list… hopefully just the iPad though! I’ve long advocated being ok with a heavier or bulkier item if it brings that much more functionality (i.e. my ridiculously big foot pump or my enormous stove) but I might reconsider for this trip…

Hacking my vintage touring bike

Longtime readers* of the blog know I own a “west coast” bike called the Goblin, purchased ostensibly so I could avoid paying outrageous flying fees to various airlines, and take up space in my brother’s NE Portland garage.

Behold, the Green Goblin!
Behold, the Green Goblin!

The Goblin is a bit of a project… to call it vintage may not be totally accurate, but it’s pretty old. It got a good makeover from the shop I bought it from (used) and I also bought a new rear wheel in Brookings, Oregon since said bike shop missed the fact every spoke was chewed up. These wheels are 26 inches, which is pretty standard for a mountain bike, an old touring bike like the Goblin, but not modern road or touring bikes.

Dilemma: I would like to get a dynohub wheel on the Goblin to keep my electronic gear in the juice for this summer’s ride.

Dilemma 2: I am very, very cheap.

Wait… maybe that’s an overstatement. I’m frugal when it comes to the Goblin. While I’d love to  drop $300 on a new wheel with a dynohub, that’s more than it would cost to fly my good bike back and forth. The whole point of the Goblin was to save money, but have a good bike out west I can tour on.

Solution: I have a wheel with a dynohub… but it’s a 700c wheel… on my bike out here. 700c wheels are slightly bigger than 26″ wheels:

26v700c
700c (left), 26″(right)

The problem with just slapping a 700c on a 26″ frame is the brakes don’t match up. Like at all. And I like front brakes. I really do. They’re super handy descending some of the crazy ass hills between Portland and San Francisco, so for my cheaper side to win, I need to fix the brake problem.

Et voila: the brake converter:

brake adapter

A similar looking little bracket is the ticket. It bolts to the frame and allows one to attach the standard brakes higher, hitting the rim on a 700c wheel. At $41 with shipping, this isn’t cheap, but way cheaper than a new wheel. PS, these were apparently easy to find a few years ago. Mavic made them and so did Xtracycle. Now, the only place in the known universe that seems to carry them is (maybe) a shop in Arizona I found. I’m sure they’re around, but given the ease I can generally procure things online, I was a bit surprised at how oddly… gone… these were.

I’ll bring my 700c dynohub wheel and the front fender with me. Since it’s just a wheel, the airline won’t get me for the bike fee as long as I can get it into a bag properly. I’ll also bring the front fender since a 26″ fender won’t fit a 700c wheel. Swap the wheels, refit the brakes… boom.

Weird part: the bike will ride off kilter – a 26″ wheel on the back and a 700c on the front. I’ll try this out a bit before I leave to make sure it’s not ridiculous, but I don’t expect it to be a problem. I’m sure it’s “geometrically problematic” or something else that would bother an ounce-phobic roadie, but I’m hauling 40 lbs of gear… methinks that’s more strain than this can cause. Also, better to be higher in the front for all sorts of obvious reasons.

Plus… brakes!

*I’ll have you know this blog goes all the way back to 2012.

Final route and thoughts

San Francisco to China Camp State Park…. About 50 miles round trip, some nice climbs and amazing views. Great camping there, complete with a hiker-biker spot reserved (although we didn’t exactly have to fight off hoardes of campers, bikers or otherwise!). On the return we took a very cool route through the Presidio rather than through the gut of the city. Highly recommended alternative as you avoid the touristy spots near Pier 39 and you get rewarded with amazing views.

Here’s my chicken scratched approximation of the adventure…

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Grind, paused

So, the week-long escape that started as a trip to the Keys, then to Arizona, and then Portland has now morphed into a week in San Francisco. The great news is the weather is looking to be about as good as you can ask for this time of year: sunny and in the low 60s. Looks like a little mini-tour is happening on a rented bike… more to come on that, but it’s looking like a late week trek to somewhere in Marin County.

Kind of a crazy week. Somehow I need to jam all of these things in:
– Bike trip
– Meet up with old DC friends
– Go down to Palo Alto/Mountain View for a hello to my friend’s family and maybe checking out the Google campus
– MacWorld
– Super Bowl party (go Niners… and I apologize if my rooting for them causes the opposite result)
– A lot of SF biking, coffee drinking and the usual with MJ (with whom I’ll be staying)

Meanwhile, in addition to all of the things happening at KW Omniglobal* (January in the fitness industry is crazy, plus new products, website relaunch, e-courses coming, daybooks, a print version of Tranquilologieet cetera), I’m starting to come into focus on a few business ideas I intend to launch in the spring. Between that and getting the cabin ready for some renters (including the website launch, which became the bane of my existence in the fall) I’ve got a lot of things to keep me busy.

But first… I’m hitting the pause button on the grind.

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*my shorthand for the 4 LLCs and one nonprofit under the Kimberly banner… Not the real name, and certainly not a real umbrella company. Despite that, I want to make KW Omniglobal tee shirts.

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Generating green energy by bike

If you were one of the people following my limited edition miniseries blog Climate Ridin, you know I’ve been obsessed with the concept of generating electricity as I bike to charge up my gear. I tried doing it on the cheap for the 2011 California Climate Ride with a bottle dynamo hooked up (poorly) to a headlight with a battery backup and USB port. You would think a bunch of fellow tree-hugging greenies on bikes would embrace my attempt at alternative energy production, but the ones that commented mostly complained it was too noisy. This was fine because the ferocious resistance the bottle dynamo had on my tire meant I couldn’t keep pace with them to annoy them through the redwoods. The wire leads were also incredibly wonky… For the most part, the only thing reliable about them was the metaphysical certainty that they would pull out of the dynamo connectors every mile or two. Additionally, the current was incredibly inconsistent, which iPhones don’t like (to anthropomorphize an Apple product, which has never been done before). Experiment was over after Day 1, and the dynamo became the problem of the thief who stole my bike a month later.*

sanyo dynohub

So, for 2012 I chose storage over generation: an enormous 12000 mAH battery was enough to charge an iPhone 4 from 0-100% close to three times. It was plenty for the OR/CA trip with MJ (which reminds me… MJ update below), but still required awkward campsite bathroom outlet recharges or extended coffee shop pitstops. When you are sitting on something that can generate power as you pedal, and you’re a tech tool like me… Well, I had to revisit bike-based electrical generation again.

I give you… the dynohub. Forget the old fashioned bottle dynamos… Dynohubs are integrated into your wheel so there’s no more fiddling with tensioners or worrying about friction melting your tires or your generator. Electrons flow with every revolution of the wheel.

That, however is just step 1. You see, most devices are finicky about their electricity. They need those little electrons to come in a particular way or they won’t fire up (or they’ll fry, but that’s another story). Also, because the current coming from a dynohub is necessarily inconsistent (stop, start, go, fast, slow… This all changes the flow), just having a dynohub is not enough to be useful for the gadget charging wannabe. Many lights can hook directly into them, and until recently that was about it.

LightChargerA few crafty manufacturers tapped into the dynohub-as-a-power generator-for-devices idea, most notably Busch and Muller‘s eWerk (love the Germans) and Tout Terrain‘s The Plug and The Plug II: Electric Boogaloo (not really on the electric boogaloo part, but let’s face it: that was a TOTAL missed opportunity). Both devices act as power converters; the eWerk is super sophisticated while The Plug is super elegant. Both were available in Europe only for a while, then found their way stateside last year. I nearly bit on the purchase of The Plug in France, but backed off… Pretty pricey and I wasn’t totally sure I wanted an integrated solution.

As the interest seems to be climbing amongst touring and commuting cyclists, cheaper dynohubs are coming on the market and a few US companies are taking a crack at converters. I found CA-based Bike2Power‘s LightCharge recently and was amazed at how much less expensive it was compared to the European alternatives. Paired with the well-reviewed, but substantially cheaper Sanyo dynohub on a new wheel (thanks eBay seller guy!), what was once a $400+ venture with a SON dynohub and an eWerk dropped to about $150. That was worth the flier…

A few thoughts so far after a yet ride:

it works

– dude, it totally works.

– the connections are standard Shimano connections, so no need to buy anything else. You’ll want to be a little handy with wiring, but by no means do you need to have an engineering degree.

– the LightCharge has a dual switch system that allows for charging either a USB device OR wired lights. I still like my current light system enough as is, so I didn’t hook anything up to that wiring system. Nice to have that option if I change my mind.

– iPhones are finicky beasts. If you slow down to a point where the voltage threshold drops below what the phone needs to charge, it will throw up the dreaded “this device isn’t made to charge me” alert and seems to refuse to charge. I say seems because I believe a speed up will resume the charge, but the charging indicator doesn’t come back – so it’s hard to know for sure. I found switching the LightCharge from USB to lights and back again at speed reset things, as evidenced by the ever pleasant “hey I’m charging!” bleep coming from the iPhone.

– I plan on acquiring a USB chargeable battery to act as a power sink rather than directly charge the phone. This way I know every rotation of the wheel will be converted into energy I can use later. It also gives some charging flexibility for other devices that can hook into the battery, plus if there’s an issue I’d rather fry a battery than a phone.

iPhone charging from dynamo

– Security is a bit of an issue. Dynohubs are obvious to a thief that knows what he’s looking for. I’m considering a Pitlock combined with a cable lock for the wheels. The LightCharge is the thing I may need to leave exposed. It’s possible to remove every time, but it would be a pain. I may consider splicing the line up by the main device and putting in plug connections so I can unplug and leave just the wiring, but that might be more trouble than it’s worth. I’m open to thoughts on that.

– I went with a cheaper option, so it’s entirely possible the hub or the LightCharge could die on me sooner than a higher priced component. We’ll see. The Sanyo gets consistently great reviews (see here, for example) and although the LightCharge doesn’t have the same volume of reviews, I haven’t found one that says it sucks. So there’s that.

– unlimited juice means I can run battery sucking GPS apps and stream audio like a fool. If I have a signal, I can do a whole hell of a lot more on tours now.

Basically, it rocks. Looking forward to testing it for real this winter.

Quick MJ update… MJ’s off to greener pastures in San Francisco come January. The good news is I’m sure we’ll ride together again on tour… The bad is our rides will be far less frequent. We both started bike touring about the same time, and if I’ve learned one thing it’s that you may separate from the people you cross paths with on tour, but you oddly tend to find them again down the road. I think the same will be true with the mysterious one. Also, I think he’ll probably let me crash at his place, and I love me some San Francisco.

Happy holidays… I’m taking a week off between Christmas and New Years so maybe I’ll write another stupid long post that week too.

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*This along with the busted saddle. I hope that hurt, jackass.

Two big trips for 2013

As this year is winding down, I’m looking at a couple of big adventures in 2013…

– Some kind of January or early February thing. I pulled the trigger on an ill-fated plan to bike the Florida Keys until I found the camping was totally booked or outrageously expensive. So that’s scrapped. I’m now toying with an Arizona loop starting and ending in Tucson (might be too cold) or a Portland trip that is more about snowshoeing and urban biking. I suspect it may rain.

– The bigger deal is my summer. I have about 6 weeks to play with following WDS in Portland, so I know things start there. Option one is a loop from PDX to Seattle to visit friends and family, then a turn south to San Francisco, and then a return to PDX. Option two is bike east…. as far as I can… in 6 weeks. I thought this might be the year I could do a full cross country tour, but it’s just not enough time if I want to try to sneak in some work and keep the pace reasonable.

So, that’s the deal. I’ll probably overthink both options for both trips and I’ll likely write about the thought process. Apologies in advance.

In other news, I tried to convert my dog Louis into a bike touring dog. It did not go well:

adventure by bike

Hey, this looks cool… I’m game!

do NOT take me biking again

do NOT take me biking again

couch > bike

couch > bike