Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Autumn

It's finally autumn and definitely feeling like it.


Just about every day we are off to one activity or another (almost all of them at supper time this year...).


So many leaves.

For so many years we had wormy things that decimated the leaves of trees - the leaves falling the last couple years have been overwhelming!


On the way home from violin we spotted a snake crossing the path in Victoria park.


I thin this is the third such snake we've seen this year. Usually they disappear into tall grass and are gone.


But the grass in Victoria park is cut very short and the kids were able to follow it for some distance.


Teh poor thing was probably terrified at first - but after a bit must have figured out that we weren't going to eat it and it sat still for some time allowing the kids to have a really good look.


The things we see when we ride our bicycles...

Saturday, September 17, 2011

September Kidical Mass

Though technically there's a week left of summer, it's really starting to feel like autumn... We couldn't have asked for a better day for our September kidical mass ride, though!

Tried a different starting location this time - the University of Saskatchewan campus.









Friday, September 2, 2011

Family Bike Tour 2011


We’ve been talking about taking the kids on a short tour for a couple years now – mostly to engrain a sense of adventure and what can be done on a bicycle. They already know well enough what can be accomplished within the city limits, but we wanted to expand that horizon.

Finally Amanda just set a date, booked some cabins at Pike Lake Provincial Park, and that was that – we would go rain or shine!

Here are some pics of our brief tour….

(Remember: click on the pictures for a bigger version)


Loading up in the back yard.


On our way.

Many options were considered for how we would haul children and sundry items on said tour. Amandas favourite idea had us on the tandem, towing Finegan on the trailerbike, and Keira in the chariot trailer… I didn’t like the idea of personally having to haul the entire family AND all our stuff… Eventually we settled on me hauling most of our stuff and the girl, and Amanda hauling a few things plus the boy (who, in theory could help out a bit).


Keira.
Age: 5
Bike Tourist and Lady of Luxury


Keira was frequently telling me I should slow down and wait for Mom and Finn. I had thought of getting a rearview mirror – not just for seeing what vehicles might be coming up from behind, but also to keep tabs on how far back Amanda was… next time I’m getting one for sure!


Rolling down Valley Road.


Me and Squirrelly Girl


The ride is about 40Km from our door to the park. We did it in about 3 hours of riding (but there were a few breaks along the way…)


I swear I’ve never met anyone who had to pee more frequently….


We also stopped at a Deer Farm operated by someone Amanda knows. The kids got to feed some orphaned baby deer.


The also had a crazy looking (but very friendly) half-blind geriatric dog….


And a LOT of kittens.


Finally we made it to out cabin.


After supper we spent the rest of the evening reading Castle Waiting.

The cabin, it turned out was a good call. We kind of wanted to ease the kids into bike touring and camping and stuff. The first night there was a thunderstorm and it oured rain and hailed!

The next day we just spent hanging around the park.


Took a walk around the “nature trail”


There was a fair bit of Poison Ivy along the trail, which we thought we should point out to the kids - lest they go rolling around in the stuff.


Unfortunately, the thought of something "poisonous" that affected you if you simply touched it, terrified the girl....


...who spent most of the walk crying…


The boy was a little less concerned.


Later we made it to the beach and everything was much better. Lacking actual pails and shovels we furnished the kids with empty juice tetrapacks, and castles were built.


It was windy and a bit nippy… Amanda and I were sitting on benches in the relative shelter of trees at the edge of the beach wearing sweaters and windbreakers?! How the kids did not freeze I just don't know...

I have to say my childhood memories of camping and days at the lake in August are filled with horseflies, deerflies and wasps… On this trip I didn’t see a single one….? I definitely took note of this while we were there and thought it rather nice. Afterwards, however, this caused me some concern – wondering if that’s because they’ve been spraying mass amounts of chemicals to eradicate them…?! Hmmmm….


Second night, more rain and reading.


Day three we got up, cleaned up, packed up…


…and rolled on home.

We had a bit of a tail wind and completed the return journey in a bout two hours and twenty minutes (plus an hour and a half break at the Berry Barn where Amanda and the kids gorged themselves on waffles). (Also the only thing in Amanda’s panniers was empty juice containers…).

Overall I’d call it a success. No one was traumatized. I was a bit exhausted – I didn’t sleep so well on the fold out futon bed… But we’ll definitely try again next summer – maybe go for a couple more trips… stay a little longer…. Try tenting!?

Shawn and April


(catching up on a little blogging...)

A couple weeks ago we played host to a couple bicycle travelers from Portland; Shawn and April - who are making a rather circuitous route across North America. I knew Shawn from waaaaay back in the comix/zine trading days in the 1990s. It was super fun to put a face and voice to the creator of all those Ten Foot Rule comix.


You can follow their respective bike tour journals at Urban Adventure League and April Likes Bikes!.

The day after they left we were off on our own little family bike tour - nothing so grand as Shawn and April's shenanigans, but it's a start! More on that in a moment...

Saturday, August 27, 2011

August Kidical Mass

Summer. Did yours make that disturbing WHOOOOSHing noise as it flew past...? Mine has...

Here we are at the August (Saskatoon) Kidical Mass ride - next week school kids are back to school, and we're back to... well... whatever it is that we do...

Here's some pics from the ride.

(Click on the pics to see a bigger version!)


Aaron marshals the riders


Alot of kids gearing to go! Isn't it awesome!


City councillor Charlie Clark and "the other Yuba rider" - Laura (and young Ella!)




Mike and Stella (who is, I think 3 years old and riding a pedal bike for the first time at a Kidical Mass - way to go Stella!!)






Bryn (and Oliver) and his (their) homemade longhaul cargo bike! Woot!








After the ride we picked up some groceries then headed downtown to the library to drop off some (overdue) books. The we hit Unreal City to see what books had been added to the $5 graphic novel sale!?

Amanda missed this ride as she was on an airplane back from Montreal - hopefully she'll have a post up on her blog about her pedalling adventures there, shortly!

I should have a post or two up this weekend (or next..) about some of our pedalling adventures this summer (I gotta do these right after the event or I just never get to it...) a family bike trip to Pike Lake... some bike tourist visitors... maybe some pics from the other kidical mass rides... stay tuned!

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Finnegan's New Ride


Woot! Woot!

We were out for a playdate in the park this morning and afterwards head over to Broadway to pickup some groceries... but before we did we nipped into the bike doc to see if there was any word on Finnegan's new ride...


As it turned out - when we walked in we were informed they had just phoned and left a message to say it was in and assembled.

With a few minor tweaks we were ready to roll!


handbreaks were a bit new - took some getting used to...


It took some time to find something that would work for us - there's not a lot of great bikes out there for kids. It's encouraging that there's a number of companies now making runner bikes - for kids to learn balance just gliding a long. But when they get to big for that... there isn't really much for them to graduate to. Almost all 12" and 16"wheel bikes (or at least ALL the ones I came across) are designed to be used with training wheels. Because of this the bottom brackets are crazy high (kids don't need to put their feet down because the training wheels are holding them upright, right?) so if you crank a seat down low enough for the rider to actually tough the ground with their feet - they get no leg extension at all when pumping hte pedals and look rather like they're trying to pick their noses with their kneecaps!?


Once you get to 20" wheels it seems the choices are - for the most part - BMX or Miniature Mountain bikes... all build like brick sh!thouses to take the severe kid of punishment that kids deal out hucking them off whatever they can find.... But what if you don't want to huck a bike around at the skate park or shred up the local trails...? What if you actually want to GO places... and go places... well... farther than the average person might imagine kids could...


When I was Finnegan's age "Ten Speeds" were all the rage and when I was 8 my folks bought me a "five speed" - a scaled down road bike with skinny (relativly) smooth tires... Where are those now!?


Anyway... I could rant all day... What we found was a 20" Townie. It's pretty sweet. Full leg extension AND can touch the ground. Gears for going up those hills (and bridges!) and it isn't a total tank!!

Finnegan liked the look of the green frame and the fact that you could more easily step trhough it than the all black "boys" version.

We probably will swap out the tires and seat on this one... and will some how need to rig up some method of carrying stuff (custom rack, perhaps...?)


Home safe and sound...