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#51
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the sheep follow the herd
"donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... Jack May wrote: "donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... They are simply cool as well as more troublefree and cheaper. Too expensive in the cost of time. Very few people can afford to use a bike. More likely than not they are either afraid, or simply have given much thought to it. Remember, the sheep follow the herd, and the herd follows the SUV commercials. How much do you sins cost you? |
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#52
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the sheep follow the herd
trino wrote: Too expensive in the cost of time. Very few people can afford to use a bike. More likely than not they are either afraid, or simply have given much thought to it. Remember, the sheep follow the herd, and the herd follows the SUV commercials. How much do you sins cost you? My sins are on the cheap by now. No tobacco or even alcohol. Cheaper than confessing my sins and paying 10% of my salary to the church. |
#53
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the sheep follow the herd
"donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... trino wrote: Too expensive in the cost of time. Very few people can afford to use a bike. More likely than not they are either afraid, or simply have given much thought to it. Remember, the sheep follow the herd, and the herd follows the SUV commercials. How much do you sins cost you? My sins are on the cheap by now. No tobacco or even alcohol. Cheaper than confessing my sins and paying 10% of my salary to the church. I hear you. I should also add we cannot afford not to ride a bike. The energy crisis has cost millions of innocent lives because people are stupid enough to go to war to fill their gas tanks. |
#54
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Simply have an affair with the bike
On 18 Jul 2006 07:44:55 -0700, donquijote1954 wrote:
Just don't leave her. Simply have an affair with the bike. Or become a bigamist. -- Home page: http://members.westnet.com.au/mvw |
#55
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the sheep follow the herd
trino wrote:
"donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... trino wrote: Too expensive in the cost of time. Very few people can afford to use a bike. More likely than not they are either afraid, or simply have given much thought to it. Remember, the sheep follow the herd, and the herd follows the SUV commercials. How much do you sins cost you? My sins are on the cheap by now. No tobacco or even alcohol. Cheaper than confessing my sins and paying 10% of my salary to the church. I hear you. I should also add we cannot afford not to ride a bike. The energy crisis has cost millions of innocent lives because people are stupid enough to go to war to fill their gas tanks. Maybe not millions of ours, but the troop deaths are coming close to what the tower attacks totaled up to be. Solar cells are really not that expensive to produce, but there has been no competition between giants like Intel and AMD due to lack of customer interest. Let's hope that changes soon and the house with out a roof full of solar panels or a windmill is declared the neighborhood eyesore. That would sure **** of some of those high and might home owner's associations. My sister lives in a planned community on the outskirts of Phoenix and she has never mentioned even one house having any solar panels or water heating thee. I guess if you can afford the house, you are supposed to afford the power bill. A / C on an average 115 degree day with maybe 10% humidity really sucks up the KW/Hr.s Bill Baka |
#56
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Divorce Your Car --and get into a relationship with a Bike!
Dave Head wrote: On 17 Jul 2006 15:14:50 -0700, "Arif Khokar" wrote: John S. wrote: An interesting but very incomplete analysis of the true costs of commuting by bike. Take the average commuter that lives 20 miles from work. To make an 8-4 work schedule that commuter will have to get up at 4:00 to begin riding at 5:00 to arrive at work by 8:00. Are you saying you can only average 6 to 7 mph on a bike? I'm not very fast, but I can average 15 mph on a bike. That means I can make the commute in about 80 minutes give or take. Try 20 miles each way in Virginia today. 100 degrees out there. Just takes a little getting used to. I'm in Maryland for the summer but I spend most of the year living on Hainan Island in the South China Sea. If it its only 100 degrees I'm cool and comfy and still biking. Incremental cost: New bike every year plus repairs $2,000 Properly maintaining a good quality bike will cost far less than $2000 per year. The bike will last quite a bit longer than a year as well. And maybe an expensive ride to the emergency room for heat exhaustion. Only if you don't drink enough water. -M |
#57
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Simply have an affair with the bike
"Michael Warner" wrote in message ... On 18 Jul 2006 07:44:55 -0700, donquijote1954 wrote: Just don't leave her. Simply have an affair with the bike. Or become a bigamist. Or a bikeamist ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#58
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Divorce Your Car --and get into a relationship with a Bike!
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#59
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Divorce Your Car --and get into a relationship with a Bike!
wrote in message ups.com... Dave Head wrote: On 17 Jul 2006 15:14:50 -0700, "Arif Khokar" wrote: John S. wrote: An interesting but very incomplete analysis of the true costs of commuting by bike. Take the average commuter that lives 20 miles from work. To make an 8-4 work schedule that commuter will have to get up at 4:00 to begin riding at 5:00 to arrive at work by 8:00. Are you saying you can only average 6 to 7 mph on a bike? I'm not very fast, but I can average 15 mph on a bike. That means I can make the commute in about 80 minutes give or take. Try 20 miles each way in Virginia today. 100 degrees out there. Just takes a little getting used to. Plus a place to bathe and change your clothes when you get to work. Actually wash you clothes too. |
#60
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Divorce Your Car --and get into a relationship with a Bike!
Pat wrote:
Biking on packed snow -- especially snow over packed snow -- is very tricky because the tires aren't formulated for it. The rubber is too hard. Not any bike tires I've used. How do you know this? Bike tire rubber seems softer than car tire rubber. Also, at 100 psi, you don't have enough contact with the ground. So bikes and motorcycles go away when the snow starts. You can have as much contact as you want, you can use treaded and even studded tires. Lots of people ride bikes all winter in snowy climates -- I do. |
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