Recumbent stories and CLC Ride #6

“The Groom of the Stool” was a male servant in the household of an English monarch who, among other duties, “preside[d] over the office of royal excretion,”.

I have been asked to look after the Bike E and so in a similar style have adopted a title :  : :  “The Custodian of the Recumbent“.

BIKE E 001

As reported previously, K of Huonville brought the Bike E to Longford as part of his recent caravan trip north in the company of the delightful D.  While K & D were staying in the neighbourhood, K took the Bike E out for a ride around the quiet, flat Longford streets but found the task hard going.  That evening I was offered the Custodianship, provided the recumbent stays in my shed at Longford.  I rather think Mrs K didn’t want it cluttering up the place in Huonville any longer!

Brief Bike E History.  The bike is an American 2-wheel recumbent which is said to be one of the easiest ‘bents to ride.  It is not radically low and the rider sits at a reasonable height for visibility.  It was built for comfort and not speed.  They were last made in 2002 for in that year the company went bust so this one is approx 16-18 years old.

I spent an hour or two adjusting the gears.  Initially the hub gear was having difficulty engaging more than gear 2 but after some work with the control cable and adjusters it now works well in gears 1, 2 and 3.  The 7 speed derailleur worked OK so there is now a set of 3 x 7 SRAM gears available.  I also changed the seat position.  I had an idea we were sitting too far away from the pedals and this proved to be the case.  It is much easier to start off and put power onto the pedals when sitting closer.

I met up with K in the local supermarket car park early on the day of their departure and he had another ride.  Although pleasantly surprised at the improvement, K reckoned the bike should remain with me.  For now.

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While most of the riding interest for the week has been with the Bike E, I have also listened to the whinging of the other two bikes complaining about being stuck in the shed and took them out for some spins around the area.  This included a return to Four Springs Lake with two friends who were interested in the ride.  We stopped at the Give Way sign with the weather station mounted on it mentioned in my last post.

Four Springs Lake 10 small

I can now report more.  It looks like there is a wind direction indicator, a wind speed calculator and a unit containing other stuff which we couldn’t properly identify mounted on the post.  Next to that is a box from which runs a cable – probably the battery.  I suspect the things we could not identify were a thermometer, hygrometer and a WiFi link to a nearby house.  After our study period we rode the dirt road to the Lake and I can report the others were not impressed at all by riding on corrugated and then rocky gravel !

And now to CLC Ride #6.

Windy Day 1

Overnight Friday we had an electrical storm with plenty of thunder and lightning plus wind and rain, or so I am told.  Fancy sleeping through a great weather event!  There was going to be little time for a ride today as the weather radar was showing plenty more water heading our way.  The winds had already arrived.

A short ride was called for.  I selected the Brom and set off, heading out to support the Newsagents and the bottle shop.  My first picture of the main street and Newsagent was hopeless as the sun washed out the screen on the phone.  Sun, yes at this point the sun was out.  The winds were north easterly and so it was a battle to the shop.  Once in the main street, the buildings provided some cover from the wind and I cycled along the footpath.  Doing this meant I could cycle slowly against the wind and look like I was a citizen concerned with the well-being of pedestrians – which, of course, I am.

Continuing on the footpaths after buying the Saturday papers, it was still a fight into the wind down to the Village Green and on to the quiet road around it.

Windy Day 2

At the bottom of the green is the row of houses pictured above.  They are the “Spinster Cottages”.  Erected by a philanthropist to house the “Spinsters of the Parish” he also set up a Trust to manage them.  Great efforts are being made to end the Trust and to sell the cottages or knock them down as we don’t have too many Spinsters these days.  On the other hand they do provide much needed low-cost housing.  I think others are eyeing off these prime position sites for non low-cost housing.

On down past the Velodrome and caravan park we come to the boat ramp area.  Here the  lack of hedges and buildings let the wind hit in full force.  It was quite strong.

Windy Day 3

You can’t see it of course but the trees were copping a bashing and Brommie had already been blown off it’s parking wheels at the previous stop.  The sky began to look menacing.

Windy Day 4

It was going to be a race against the rain.  I cycled on a little further and then turned  .. and stopped pedalling .. and was blown up a small rise – accelerating as we went!  Great.  Up the road to climb the short sharp climb over the levee bank and, with wind assist, 4th gear was used up the levee.  Turning right and down to the bottle shop – what’s this?  Too early.  Shut.  But I couldn’t wait as the rain had started.

Cycling back up the main road with the wind behind was a buzz.  I passed the cyclists cafe at full speed (34kph) in 5th gear – but they weren’t fooled, they knew it was the wind enabling this!

Got home as the rain began in earnest – heavy and wet and cold.

Windy Day 5

The evidence for today’s purchase.  The papers were dry as they had been in the front bag – which was soaked.

Total for week :  109 k            Total for year :  1,601 k 

Vivente :  51  k                          Brompton :   23 k                    Bike E : 35 k

End of Week Report – 105 kilometers

The Four Spring Lake ride was the “special” ride of the week.  Most other kilometers were gained riding to Bishopsbourne and the Deloraine Friday ride.

Just a few “top-up” rides occurred on Sunday when I rode them on K’s Bike E recumbent. K & D came up to Longford and stayed in the caravan park in their new  caravan on a shake-down trip.  The rather lengthy Bike E was brought up lying on the bed in the van.  Luckily an old blanket was under it as the rather lengthy chain left a bit of oil decorating it.  On Sunday it looked like rain and we thought it would be best to get the bike under cover as it had been kicked off the bed the previous evening and stood in the corner outside for making a mess.

The plan was to put it in my garage and so I walked down to the caravan park on Sunday morning to pick it up.  I pushed it out of the park, away from prying eyes and then took off.  After my wobbly attempts at Huonville I was expecting another round of difficult “take offs” but things went quite well.  I could have started in the caravan park after all and not looked a complete novice!  The recumbent feels very strange after a “normal” bike and, when pedalling, it doesn’t feel very lively.  I used, I think, 4 of the gears on the derailleur but didn’t try to change gear in the hub (it is a 3 (hub) x 7 (derailleur) SRAM gearing system).  Steering the device is odd because you can’t lean into turns in the same way as on a “normal”.  On a tight turn you have to use the trick of flicking the steering the opposite way to the way you want to go and use the “fall” in the other direction to go into the turn.  Or, if that doesn’t work, panic brake, put your feet down, lift the bike off the ground and turn until it points the right way and then pedal on – but that’s not a cool look.

On Sunday afternoon I played with the gearing and found the hub gears do actually select gears 1, 2 and 3.  Gear 1 – the lowest – can only be used if you keep the twist grip changer hard on the low position – probably due to slackness in the cable.  There is no more adjustment at the twist-grip end so this will take a little bit of work to sort out. More of a test ride showed that, when used with the lowest hub gear setting, low on the derailleur results in a lot of pedal twiddling or, in cycling terms, a very high cadence – so hill climbing on the bike should be possible.  That’s good because it would be an awkward lump of a thing to push up a hill.

K and I plan to spend a morning with the Bike E tomorrow (Monday) and see if the working of the gears can be improved.  Then it goes back to bed for the journey south to Huonville.

And so another week in cycling draws to an end ………..

Totals for week :

Total for week :  109 k            Total for year :  1,492 k  

Vivente :   81 k                          Brompton :   17 k                    Bike E : 11 k