Great piece, Anne!

I am in Borneo now (been here a week, will be here for 103 more weeks)
with my AHH.  I bought (but didn't try it out until I arrived here) a
large Sackville sack for use on my bike.  My first trip I hauled, a
box of cornflakes, a tin of dutch cookies, a bag of powdered milk (a
goat just walked into my house as I was typing this....), two Anker
beers (Iarge) and a bag of oatmeal.  My favorite trip though has been
to the beach: two towels, a cold beer, sunscreen bottle, concert-sized
Fluke ukulele (neck sticking out the side).

Love the Sackville sack and absolutely adore my S&S coupled A Homer
Hilsen!

As to bike life - the town here is MAYBE 4000 people, the loop of road
is a little under 5 miles and for the most part is nicely paved, yet
people ride motorcycles and drive cars to do errands.  To be fair,
there are a good number of cycles on the road, but it depresses me to
see so many people riding motorcycles that they have financed at 18%
to go to the beach and run other short-distance errands.  Arrrgh.

A little OT, I suppose.  But I enjoyed your post.

Roberto

On 18 Okt, 01:30, Anne Paulson <anne.paul...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Don't know how this got sent before I finished it. Here's the complete 
> version:
>
> ***************************************************
> I usually ride Saturday mornings with some cycling friends. They're
> great guys and I alwa sys have fun riding with them, but these are guys
> who not only won't ride when it's raining, they won't ride-- I am not
> making this up-- when the roads are wet. Which not exactly my
> attitude. I'm more of a bike anywhere for any reason kind of person.
>
> Yesterday morning was sunny and warm, but I didn't feel like getting
> up so the ride went without me. So there I was at 3:00 this afternoon,
> heading out on my Atlantis. Without the boys on their dainty carbon
> bikes with fragile 23mm tires, I was free to enjoy some dirt, so I
> turned off the standard paved loop to the fire road up Windy Hill. I
> was determined to get all the way up to the top cleanly, trying to use
> all the dirt suggestions you guys have been giving this week. All was
> going well until I got to the very steepest pitch and for some reason
> they'd put a load of loose gravel on the bottom section. Too slippy
> for me, though I tried twice. But next week I'll try again. I think
> maybe if I just try to spin faster up the bottom part of the steep
> section I can get past the gravel, then hope to have enough energy to
> continue as it gets even steeper for a few tens of yards.
>
> On the top of the ridge it was getting late and and the wind was
> blowing. OK well, I guess that's why it's called Windy Hill. Happily I
> had taken the elementary precaution of bringing along an Ibex wooly
> zip-tee. All of you should buy one or more of those woolies-- they are
> absolutely fantastic for an extra layer when it starts getting cold,
> and they wad up so small. Not that carrying capacity is an issue on
> this particular bike, as we will shortly see. Feeling a bit peckish, I
> pulled out the bag of Quadratini cookies and munched a few.
>
> More climbing on pavement, and then it was time for the long descent.
> With the low
> clouds and the late hour, I was glad that the Atlantis has a generator
> hub wired to head and taillights. No need to worry about approaching
> darkness or dead batteries, I just flipped the light switch and I was
> good to go zooming down the hill.
>
> At the bottom it was time to go home to cook dinner, but I had to buy
> it first. Would my new Saddlesack, the arrival of which consoled me
> for having to missing the RBW garage sale, be able to swallow up two
> gallons of milk, five pounds of potatoes, pound and a half of chicken,
> two onions, some garlic, a loaf of French bread and some other
> assorted groceries? This was my first time using it for such a big
> load. I was delighted to discover that the straps can reposition for
> big loads. Everything fitted easily, with the French bread stuck
> sideways on the outside under the straps. I put my lock in an outside
> pocket, snapped the little wallet holder pocket back on top, and rode
> home.
>
> My non-Riv friends just don't understand the biking life.
>
> --
> -- Anne Paulson
>
> My hovercraft is full of eels
>
> --
> -- Anne Paulson
>
> My hovercraft is full of eels

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