@MarkBrigham has a poll:
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite Perhaps you need to do another poll with lower temperatures for our scandinavian and nordic biketooters like https://mas.to/@pekkatahkola/109392939516261678 and for canadian cyclists, too.
Video what to wear when cycling in -25 °C: https://mas.to/@pekkatahkola/115849743090863552
️ @pekkatahkola @ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite @pekkatahkola @radaufheber
#bikenite Don't forget us Minnesotans. -
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite @pekkatahkola @radaufheber
#bikenite Don't forget us Minnesotans.@MartyCormack Oh sorry!
(had hoped to include all colder temperature regions with the word "nordic", my bad)
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @pekkatahkola -
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite
-18C, but not by choice. Only if I have errands I have to do. Living in a small town helps with that. -13.33C is my true limit where it becomes too uncomfortable. -7.77C if I don't have warming socks or ski goggles. On the other end of the temperature 40C in a dry climate is my limit. 35C in a humid climate.
-
@MartyCormack Oh sorry!
(had hoped to include all colder temperature regions with the word "nordic", my bad)
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @pekkatahkola@ascentale @MarkBrigham @pekkatahkola @radaufheber
#bikenite
Given the number of folks here with Swedish or Norwegian ancestry, "Nordic" might seemingly apply to Minnesota too. (My Minnesota born wife is part Swedish.) -
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite Perhaps you need to do another poll with lower temperatures for our scandinavian and nordic biketooters like https://mas.to/@pekkatahkola/109392939516261678 and for canadian cyclists, too.
Video what to wear when cycling in -25 °C: https://mas.to/@pekkatahkola/115849743090863552
️ @pekkatahkola @ascentale @radaufheber @pekkatahkola @bikenite The sub-zero heroes could be an entirely new poll, and one I will not participate in. 🥶
-
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite Going "Zero hero", though I haven't actually gone that low and would probably consider just not. However, I've done in the low teens F (slightly regrettably) and would go lower with the right gear.
Fortunately frozen tears make a pretty solid wind cover.
-
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite
A3. I'll go pretty cold, mostly because it is still far more pleasant than either driving or taking the bus. Having the right gear makes a huge difference!
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite
-18C, but not by choice. Only if I have errands I have to do. Living in a small town helps with that. -13.33C is my true limit where it becomes too uncomfortable. -7.77C if I don't have warming socks or ski goggles. On the other end of the temperature 40C in a dry climate is my limit. 35C in a humid climate.
@cainmark @ascentale @bikenite I’m impressed that your cold-weather-bikeability gauge is calibrated to one one-hundredth of a Celsius. #BikeNite
-
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite I find that the temp doesn't matter too much, so long as you don't have exposed skin and stay moving. Below -10°C I put thermals on under my pants to stop the wind, but other than that I'm pretty comfortable.
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite Problem is not the cold but the bad maintenance of cycling infrastructure surfaces: https://bildung.social/@lutz_/115994979092536283
(Video: https://youtu.be/ngCw3YxxMOg )
@ascentale @bikenite @radaufheber I agree, but I’d also say it’s both. I hate cycling in sub-freezing temperatures. Much respect to those who make it work, and I strongly believe our walk & roll infrastructure should be as fastidiously maintained as car infrastructure. But I just don’t enjoy cycling when the Celsiuses have all flown south.
-
@bikenite @cpm @ascentale I do too. In my Boy Scout years, I winter camped in sub-zero (Fahrenheit) temperatures, horribly under-geared, and thus “earned” a BSA Zero Hero honor. I borrowed the term from that experience
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite
When I lived somewhere we reached these temperatures I had some rules: if it was first thing in the morning it had to be above ~20F, if it was going home from work (and the bike was already at work) it had to be above ~10F. It has to do with the convenience of having my bike where I'm located (don't want to walk it somewhere or leave it somewhere) and whether I was showering in the morning and would have wet hair. My hair might be pretty short, but even pretty short hair will literally freeze if it's ~10F and you ride for 15 minutes. It was kind of disturbing to take my helmet off and have my hair feel crackly as the ice broke up.
TLDR: The difference from 32F to 0F is pretty big from a comfort perspective.
@bikenite @SRLevine @ascentale Agree. It’s a massive difference. Could split it up finer. Could also step down in ten degree increments to -41 degrees (where °C & °F intersect). But that’s for the comments, or another poll developed by someone way more masochistic than I.
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite A3. It doesn't get below freezing where I live now. In my time in Minneapolis, though, 32°F/0°C was my cutoff for riding for pleasure. On a rare above-freezing day in January, I would go for a long ride to savor it. Below freezing, I would only ride where I needed to go as quickly as possible and then hurry inside to warm up; that, I still did as low as 8°F (it was a relatively mild winter). #BikeNite
@scott @ascentale @bikenite In grad school at UMN, I lived 2 miles from my building on campus. Fair weather, I rode my bicycle. Cold, rainy, or otherwise horrible weather, I walked.
Cycling offers efficiency and speed (conditions allowing); walking offers near insurmountability in a wider array of weather conditions.
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite A3. As a rule of thumb, I won't ride in below freezing temperatures, because in Portland, that usually means the roads are sheets ice, and my e-bike back tire likes to slide out from under me if I brake too hard when it's slick.
@yantor3d I'm the same way up here in Seattle. I'd get studded tires, but they're needed so infrequently that I'll just stop riding on these rare days. Tho I am curious to see how well they work. Would still be cautious as I don't trust drivers in such conditions.
-
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite
25f don’t know how I settled on that but lower is too cold!!
-
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite #BikeNite A3. This is my 5th car-free Winter in New England. If I have to go out, there is no choice but to bike or walk.
If it's below 0°F, I still go, but although it has gone as low as -25°F here, with -50°F wind chills, it doesn't usually go much below 0°F. Tomorrow night, the forecast low is -6°F, with wind chills as low as -30°F.
Sunday's forecast high is 9°F, and I have at least 3 events to attend downtown. No worries, so long as the roads are dry.
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite
25f don’t know how I settled on that but lower is too cold!!
@bikenite @MCDuncanLab @ascentale Agree, but my cutoff is higher. You’re tougher than I am.
-
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite #BikeNite A3. This is my 5th car-free Winter in New England. If I have to go out, there is no choice but to bike or walk.
If it's below 0°F, I still go, but although it has gone as low as -25°F here, with -50°F wind chills, it doesn't usually go much below 0°F. Tomorrow night, the forecast low is -6°F, with wind chills as low as -30°F.
Sunday's forecast high is 9°F, and I have at least 3 events to attend downtown. No worries, so long as the roads are dry.
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite I'm going to a local bar for the Superb Owl, but because the bar is close to my home, I will probably leave the bike home, so I can walk home tipsy, and don't have to worry about the fact that the bar doesn't have a decent bicycle rack, anyway.
Oh, and FTR, I *still* haven't bothered putting on my Winter tires.
-
@ascentale @bikenite @radaufheber I agree, but I’d also say it’s both. I hate cycling in sub-freezing temperatures. Much respect to those who make it work, and I strongly believe our walk & roll infrastructure should be as fastidiously maintained as car infrastructure. But I just don’t enjoy cycling when the Celsiuses have all flown south.
@MarkBrigham @ascentale For short trips up to 5 km I don't really care, but longer than 10 km is also not my pleasure at all. Depends very much on the road conditions (as you said) and how warm & cozy is the place at the end.
-
@MarkBrigham has a poll:
Q3. How low do you go? (Coldest temperature in which you willingly cycle).
#BikeNiteQ #BikeNite #BikeTooter #Cycling #MastoBikes cc @bikenite
@ascentale @MarkBrigham @bikenite #BikeNite A3: I cycled at somewhere between -6℃ (21℉) and -8℃ (17.5℉) for at least 10km (6 miles) during my winter holidays. I would try cycling with even colder weather, but I haven't tried yet, so I actually can't tell my lower temperature limit. For the mentioned -18℃ I probably need some more clothes, maybe something Neopren-like…