Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Long Time Yes Bike

I have been biking, just have not been blogging.

I rode to school on my second-to-last day of classes because the weather was glorious. The dam looked very impressive as I biked over the bridge on my way home - had to stop and take a photo:
I had a presentation in my second class so I work a classy dress. The downside was that it is not a flowy dress so it ended up being VERY short as I was biking (to allow for enough movement to pedal) and I flashed a LOT of thigh as I passed by people.

I finished The Toss of a Lemon and I really enjoyed it. Family saga, along the lines of Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, maybe, only I liked this better. The book challenged me - I felt sympathy for the main character even as I disagreed with her beliefs. It was interesting to read a book that tripped me up like that.

But since then I've been unmotivated to read. So I'm reading Terry Pratchett's Going Postal since I've heard a lot about it and it was at my local library. I'll blog again soon I promise! I actually rode to Wistariahurst today, and I did a bike-a-thon (50 miles) a few weeks ago, but I forgot my camera! If I can scrounge up some photos I'll post them.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Days Off

  • What with Patriot's Day and Easter this week, I had last Monday and Friday off, and I have this coming Monday off as well. Final projects for school are keeping me busy so I spent my time off doing work in my "mobile office" as Miss Sarah of Girls and Bicycles calls it.
AKA I went to the Dam Cafe. It's basically the only cafe in my whole town. I miss having the options of Rao's or Amherst Coffee or Cushman when I was doing my undergrad, but I like the atmosphere and they have really good lunch food if I don't feel like going home for lunch.

Monday looked like this:
Baseball game going on in the park.
Loving riding in the bike lane.
Obligatory panda shot.
And then here's Friday:
A stack of library books, a latte, my notebook and my favorite pen. I was incredibly productive. I'm also thrilled by the fact that not only can I get books from any public library in Western Massachusetts through interlibrary loan (I just requested Neil Gaiman's The Sandman: Dream Country to join in the I Will If You Will book club at Monkey See), BUT I can also take out any book from Mt. Holyoke library since I'm a Simmons GSLIS West student, and from Amherst College and UMass libraries because I'm a resident of one of the counties adjacent to them. It's great! So I currently have 4 library cards and I have books checked out from 3 different libraries.

It was a little chilly on Friday, so here were my shoes of choice:
If you're wondering what I've been reading lately (aside from textbooks and articles about library research) the answer is The Mysteries of Udolpho, a gothic novel with suspense and the supernatural and castles and romance, which I liked but didn't love; The Space Between Us by Thrity Umrigar which I absolutely adored, go read it; My Best Friend is a Wookie, a memoir about being a diehard Star Wars fan which I couldn't get into because I am not a huge fan of Star Wars; and now I've just started The Toss of a Lemon by Padma Viswanathan which is about a Brahmin woman who is widowed in the early 1900s and challenges the rules about widowhood that existed at that time.

In college I took a course on South Asian women writers, which I loved, and I still really enjoy reading books about India and Pakistan and the like, so I'm sort of on a "fiction about Indian women" kick. I'll let you know how Toss of a Lemon turns out.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Some people have class.

I'm currently taking grad school courses on Saturdays. One is online half the time, so I usually do that class from home in the morning and then drive in to school after lunch. Last week, though, was one of our few face-to-face classes for my morning class, and it was a beautiful day, so I decided to try biking to school for the first time.

But here's the thing: to get to my school, I have to cross a river, and there are only 2 bridges I can take unless I want to ride like 12 miles out of the way, which is not happening. One bridge is in a bad part of town (although during the day it's usually fine), and the other leads to a busy rotary/roundabout that doesn't feel safe.

I decided to take the rotary, since I know my way around in that part of town better, only to be confronted with this:
I know it's a little hard to see, but that sign is showing "no pedestrians, no bikes, no horses" basically. Oops. I took that way anyway and made it to school fine, but I knew I couldn't go back that way, so I rode home through the bad part of town known as "the flats". And of course I got lost. Thank goodness for brothers, though - I called my brother and he looked up a the route I needed to take to get home. I didn't encounter any trouble in the flats.

Funnily enough, it was when I was almost home that a guy yelled out his car window at me "It's called a sidewalk, a**hole!" On a road that has a designated bike lane. Sigh. Some people just don't have class.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

New Basket

Sorry for my long absence, blog, it's been winter! But now the weather is warming up and I've biked to the grocery store twice and to my classes once.

I finally attached my new basket to Marin! It was a little harder than I imagined it would be since the metal parts meant to attach to my rack were a little small and I had to bend them out of shape to get them to work. But eventually, success!
The main basket covers up the side one a little, so I have to take it off to put full bags into the side and then put it back on, but it works. My mom and Brian have asked if I felt off-balance having a basket only on one side now, but I actually feel much more balanced than when I used to carry heavy things just on my 1 rear basket! I think because this is lower to the ground it gives me a lower center of gravity?

Anyway, with the warmer weather I can wear shoes like this:

and my feet weren't even cold! This Sunday when I went grocery shopping I regretted taking a coat.
The side basket folds up. It's nice that when I'm not using it I don't have to have it in the way. Here's what I can carry now with my additional cargo space. This is what went into the rear basket:
  • 3 fresh beets
  • gallon of milk
  • full-size orange juice
  • family-size Kashi Go Lean Crunch cereal
  • large container of arugula
  • carton of vegetable stock
And here's what went into my side basket:
  • 5 small yogurts
  • 1 jar of pickles
  • small bunch bananas
  • 5 cans of cat food
  • 1 can corn
  • bottle of white wine vinegar
  • 1 orange
  • 1 onion
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 2 pears
  • 2 pickling cucumbers
So if the weather is nice where you are - get out there and bike or walk or do something outdoors. I can't wait for sundresses!

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Snow Day

What with the Snowpocalypse going on all over the US I took some time to read last week. Living with my sister and her fiance is sort of like having my own mini library. They both read a lot and their taste in books, while similar to mine, is different enough that they own things I wouldn't normally buy. Thanks to that I'm currently reading The History of Love by Nicole Krauss. Liking it so far. Anyway, here are just a few of the bookshelves in our house:


But even with the snow I did get some activity in. We shoveled. A lot.
And then Joni and I decided to go for a snowshoe about town. It was my first time snowshoeing and it's not easy - I thought I would be more prevented from sinking into the snow than I was - but it was certainly a good workout! And a good was to get around without a car in weather my bike can't handle.
As you can see the snow was quite deep. And we just keep getting hit! It snowed a lot again this Tuesday and Friday, and I heard we're getting more this coming week. I want it to melt so I can bike again.
Now, I certainly am capable of biking now, the streets are cleaned up and not that wet, but because of the sheer volume of snow we've gotten, the snowbanks are sticking out into the road more than usual, which forces me to bike more in the road since the shoulder has all but disappeared, and I feel less safe in traffic now.
But we had a great time nonetheless and I will try to enjoy the snow while it lasts instead of lamenting it.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Madame Bovary and Winter

It's winter, which means I ride my bike significantly less than I would like to. I miss the fall when I could dress like this:
and truly be warm enough. Now I need a heavier coat, some tights under my jeans, a scarf, thicker mittens, and a big ol' hat. I do still bike to Wistariahurst every week since it's so close, and they say "I can't believe you rode your bike! It's freezing out!" But then I think about people in Canada and Denmark biking in snowstorms and much colder weather than here so I feel guilty if I don't brave the cold at least sometimes. I will admit that it's way too cold to ride the 18 miles to work. Plus, with the short days the sun is right in drivers' faces when I leave work so I wouldn't want to risk getting hit by a car. Even a bike-aware driver can't see you if the sun is in his face.
But I will long for days like the one above. I saw this girl locking up outside the Dam Cafe while I was working inside. Fabulous red fall coat and I was happy to see a fellow biker. Here's what my table looked like:

For Christmas I got a new basket for my bike as well as a new light, so I'll have to set those up on a warmer day. I'll post pictures soon. I'm very excited to be able to haul slightly more groceries now!

You would think that with winter here and me holed up inside more often, I would be reading a TON. Nope, I have instead been spending a significant portion of my time playing Scribblenauts and the Professor Layton games on my Nintendo DS. However, last night I finally finished reading Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert. I wasn't sure I would like it at first since I didn't like Madame Bovary herself (and the last time I didn't like the main characters - in Lady Chatterly's Lover - I hated the book and it took a lot of work to get through it) but I ended up enjoying it.

It's actually a wonderful comment on "the grass is greener" viewpoints and the influence that novels can have on us. Emma Bovary is so miserable in her life because she thinks that all love must be like the love in novels and that fine things will make her happy. She is just so deluded that when she is confronted with reality it completely unravels her. This is the kind of book I wish I had read in college so I could discuss it with other book-lovers with the guidance and insight of a professor.

And I think even now people can be influenced like that by novels. If I expected love to be like novels I would probably be disappointed with what I have with Dave because it's not a constant torrent of passion and heightened emotion. Most of the time we are simply content together, but I'm a realist and I like it that way.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Day Off

This Thursday was Veterans' Day, and everyone in my house (me, my sister Joni, my sister's fiance Brian) had the day off. Brian had some videos to return to Northampton, so we decided to all take a ride up there since the weather was beautiful.

Joni's bike in the garage.

Setting out!

We took Route 5 and even though it's a busy road (it IS a state highway, after all), I feel completely safe riding on it 95% of the time. There's one spot where the road narrows significantly, but most of the time it looks like this:
Just look at how wide that shoulder is! You could bike four across in that shoulder.

We locked up in some bike racks when we got to Noho. I hate this kind of rack since you either have to lift the wheel up over the top or do some tricky lock work to get more than just your front wheel secured. Joni chose both over-the-top AND fancy lock work.

Lock up that bike!

By the time we got to Northampton we were starving so we made a quick stop at Bueno. For anyone who ever went to school at UMass Amherst, Bueno is a must. I always feel a little like a cheater when I go to the Northampton location because Amherst feels like the true Bueno y Sano to me. And just before heading back home we decided we needed a little warm up. Hot cocoas at La Fiorentina solved that problem.

On our way home we decided to bike around Whiting Reservoir. It's a great place to walk or run or ride a bike. Joni and I often do "bike-runs" up there (as in, I bike and she runs).
Whiting Reservoir

Sometimes when I'm reading fellow bike bloggers' posts it seems as if every trip they make by bike is to get from point A to point B. And while I commend that they're trying to show how biking can really be a viable mode of transportation for most trips, isn't it just nice to ride your bike for fun sometimes? I hope even bike commuters still go for bike rides. I had read something from Mikael over at Copenhagen Cycle Chic that when he visited San Francisco he went for a bike ride with the women of Change Your Life Ride a Bike, and he said something along the lines of "bike rides are what people do in countries that don't have a strong bicycle culture." Does that mean people in Denmark don't ever just ride their bikes for the sake of riding? Yet here in the US it's not unusual to simply "go for a drive," so I don't see why it's such a novel idea to go for a ride. All you bikers out there don't forget that you don't have to know where you're going to ride your bike! Riding a bike is FUN!