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12 comments
I see why wider tyres are the bees knees. To maximize average speed, combination of road and shared pedestrian /cycle paths means hopping up small gutters often plus a lot of these roads have potholes.
Started day with 123km. Nice route. Starts flatish about 70km then into rolling 6% then increases to 15% to gentle roll down.
Flat bars make the gutters easier but aren't as narrow in traffic and take from the top speed on the country.
While trying to pick up a chick, I met a bloke; her boyfriend. Now I have +2 friends. He's amazing. Into sailing and cycling. He rode partially around Europe on 700c23 with backpack holding a tent and has gone through tyres but never punctured. His friends used wider tyres and very few punctures. Trippy aye.
In a city where people look strangely at me while I pack a sturdy bag with fruit and veg while continually telling ," no bag, ""net bagget" (same thing).
Imagine the Pacific ocean. A garbage patch the size of Europe floats around growing at a couple of billion tonne of plastic yearly.
Diesel's cleaner than petrol. It looks dirtier.
Thanks to cycling, a person can travel far reasonably well behaved with regards to our planets health.
Now to get this bike home. planning to build 1 more. It's that cost effective and still way cheaper than driving.
Loving cycling.
Screenshot_20190802-125845_Ride with GPS.jpg
Just done a google. Adelaide is 404 per square km, Copenhagen 6,800.
that's more than London.
It’s not how big the population is, but what the housing density is like. Some newer cities are designed for the car and very spread out.
The small upside in Australia that most use petrol and not diesel
1.4 million in a global context is a relatively small city but for certain parts of the world it's a large city, the largest are obvs metroplis or capital cities which are the largest cities of a country or region.
Whilst London is fairly large in population it's not hugely dense, it's still safer to cycle in London than most other global metroplis/capital cities I would think, based just on road casualty rates.
I can't see most of these mega cities changing away from the motor car and investing in replacing the car with cycles until well beyond the end of the 21st century. It's not going to happen in the UK duing my life time I reckon.
Well St Davids reportedly has a population of 1,600 people.
Well living in London as I do, I say you have to be crazy to want to commute anywhere regularly by car. London's population is about 8.1 million I think. Cycling is certainly one of the better ways to get around London and the number of cyclists on the road network has increased enormously in recent years.
I just got back from Paris, where cycling is also on the increase. As with London, driving in a car across Paris is extremely frustrating. Central Paris has a population of 2.1 million but the population of the greater Paris area is over 12 million now.
I'm Adelaide/Australia at 1.4 million
Here in Kiev/Ukraine is 2.8 million
So sunburnt dude.. Shady day syndrome.
Call me old fashioned, but I don't think 1.4 million or 2.8 million are "small cities"
I live just outside Bristol, in the UK, and I think the city tops out at about half a million.
How that's a small city!
I really liked Adelaide when we visited Australia. Also Perth. Melbourne/Sydney although very nice were just too busy and pretty much same with all major cities
What city do you live in, Boatsie? What country?