Saturday, 19 August 2017
Thursday, 17 August 2017
One of a million great things about Sydney
And there are so so many things to like about Sydney. Its amazing. This morning run is one such example - the time in the top of the screen is HK, it was 6.20am, caught an AMAZING sunrise over the harbour, with the opera house in the background. I don't know any city anywhere where you can run a 10km along a waterfront like this (of course the route was under the harbour bridge - the gps track bounces miraculously over it). It was so so cool. I am so so excited about seeing you - 3 days and a flight ...
Sunday, 13 August 2017
The other sides of rides - and what these used to be like
I pretty rarely take pics of rides, such a schlep to stop, get the phone out, sweating like a beast, etc; so if I have in the past, like the one in the previous post, it's usually out on the road to the country park or Po Toi O. So here's the other side of the ride, down from the hills and through the flatlands out the back of Tseung Kwan O - or put another way, the outer edges of The Dark City. I stopped at a garage for a water top-up, and took these pics. It's super urbanised - and the reason to get up early - you don't want to be sharing the streets with all the folk still asleep in these buildings. If you look closely at the building on the right hand side, about two-thirds of the way up, you can see a bit of bamboo scaffolding sticking out - someones getting a new aircon, so there's some bloke who's working out there installing it. Pretty terrifying stuff. Contrast the two pics below, with the third on the bottom. I took that pic last week from the window of Jacques' office - its the 1960's version of the modern housing estates. Pretty incredible. Much higher density, and almost a city of its own.
Saturday, 12 August 2017
Important stuff - feature on my new touring bike
I've been super-keen to go bike touring again. I have a couple of mates here who have been on supported tours in Asia and Europe, where you show up, are given a bike to ride from A to B, and the company who organises it all carts your stuff there for you. They are pretty amazing, typically in very cool places (Doug Morton has recently ridden around the circumference of Iceland, which turned out to be pretty brutal by all accounts - at times 100km/h winds, which would be a total spoiler - Simon Osborne, incidentally, has walked across Iceland - which had similar hardships as I recall) - but of course are also high cost - more so than I am able to justifiably afford. So the alternative is to get a bike (this one cost half of the cheapest Asian supported tour) and just go on your own, so-called unsupported tour, carrying all the stuff you need - which is what I used to do, 25 years ago. In a sense I've come full circle. So I did some serious research (interestingly, when I last did this you had to do your research in the library :-) and settled on the real deal of all touring bikes, the Surly Disk Trucker (modern incarnation of the cult Surly Long Haul Trucker). It's a brilliantly simple formula, designed by people who deeply understand, built around a proverbial brick s-house chrome-moly 4130 frame. Because this is your sort of thing, specifically 4130 is Molybdenum (Mb): 15 -.25%, Manganese (Mn): 40 -.60%, Chromium (Cr): 80 - 1.1%, Carbon (C): 28 -.33% - yielding an ultimate tensile strength psi of 97,200, yield strength psi of 63,100, and a Rockwell hardness of B92. I have no idea what that means - but in the bicycle world it's long-hand for relatively cheap, relatively heavy and bloody strong. This makes for an affordable bike, that can be loaded to hell and back, and with the right components, won't fail. If you crash it hard, it can be welded by a regular bloke with a regular welder - though of course the same does not hold true of your person.
Now if I have half a chance I will find myself pounding the Shenandoa National Park's Skyline Drive, between Washington DC and Charlottesville - just like this bloke, also on a Surly (video's best at 1.12, I can feel that).
Finally, here's my rig from the early 90s after a clean and new set of tyres at Anne and Hannelie's place in Salt River - including the saddle that did all the damage.
As with the hubs, so with the derailleur and the gears - XT. |
Now if I have half a chance I will find myself pounding the Shenandoa National Park's Skyline Drive, between Washington DC and Charlottesville - just like this bloke, also on a Surly (video's best at 1.12, I can feel that).
Finally, here's my rig from the early 90s after a clean and new set of tyres at Anne and Hannelie's place in Salt River - including the saddle that did all the damage.
Tuesday, 8 August 2017
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)