sirico

joined 2 years ago
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Why have they separated trans did they think the T was for Tucan?

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

No it's not it's called "I have a boyfriend"

[–] [email protected] 58 points 2 months ago (4 children)

It's called decomposition

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

Instantly ruined people who used to carry things while being dragged by horses

[–] [email protected] 177 points 2 months ago

Unlike Russia, Ukrainian military targets aren't schools and shopping centres.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 months ago

Wait, that's not the hieroglyph for room!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Just rework gumshoe

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 months ago

Shut up ars you grass

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Just use the salmon method

[–] [email protected] 14 points 2 months ago (6 children)

Where have I seen this kind of parade before?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

I think Darth jarjar should sound like Ian McKellen

 

I was just watching the Neopoleon trailer and releasied I have hit my limit with these stripped back orchestra hit covers of modern songs that seem to want the audience to do the Leo.gif about halfway through

 

When Alice Clews-Smith and her partner, Kitty, moved to London, they didn’t see many options for pursuing their shared passion for cycling.

“I think it’s fair to say that the industry and the cycling scene were very male dominated,” she said. “There was a lack of space for women, trans-femme, non-binary people. We wanted a space where these people could feel welcomed and included. And because not everything is about going fast in Lycra.”

So was born the Steezy Collective, which brings together cyclists across the UK. Not that going fast is off the table. The collective noticed that there were no women in the Fastest Known Times list for the Lakeland 200 route – 200km of mountain bike trails through the Lake District – so they set about correcting that, and now the list includes nine women riders, with their efforts captured on film. The existence of the Steezy Collective and others such as Sisters in the Wild, the Lakes Gravel Gang, the New Forest Off Road Club and 6am Cycling is part of a new wave of enthusiasts fuelled by the lockdown bicycle boom. Riders are now much more diverse than the cliched and not entirely accurate stereotype of middle-aged men in Lycra.

With miles of cycle paths opening up in cities across the UK, people reacted during the pandemic lockdowns by buying bikes in record numbers, with latecomers facing months-long waits. By March 2021, cycle traffic in England was 64% higher than in December 2013.

Now that has all changed. Last week, Wiggle Chain Reaction Cycles, one of the UK’s largest online cycle retailers, went into administration while Islabikes, which transformed the design of children’s bikes to make them lighter and easier to handle, said that it would stop manufacturing. The announcements came after three major UK distributors went bust, along with German company Signa Sports United, and the Italian firm Bianchi announced redundancies, Cycling Weekly reported.

The whole industry generates about £7.5bn of added value to the UK economy and employs about 64,000 people

Phillip Darnton, Bicycle Association So what went wrong?

“We could see it before anyone else,” said Martin Shepherd at Reynolds Technology in Birmingham, which for the past 125 years has made steel tubes used to create bicycle frames.

“During the pandemic, you couldn’t ship bikes fast enough,” he said. “Everybody’s lead time for orders [mostly to Taiwanese factories] started to go up nine months in advance, 12 months in advance.

“Now we’ve come out of the other side of it, there’s just vast amounts of inventory because all those people who were having to order 500 bikes 18 months in advance were suddenly swamped with stock.”

Customers, on the other hand, had been hit hard in their bank accounts. Sales have dipped, leaving companies with stock that’s proving hard to shift – something analyst Velco described as an economic “whiplash effect”, where small changes are magnified down the supply chain. Some bikes can now be bought at steep discounts since 2024 models will be arriving in a matter of weeks.

Shepherd said high interest rates, as well as post-Brexit trade barriers, were also playing their part. UK firms have specialised in mid- and high-end bikes, and sales to Europe had been substantial, but they have been hit by customs delays and extra charges. Now is an excellent time to buy a bike, but those bargains come with a price tag for the sector. If the market is flooded with more cheap stock, it could drive more firms out of business.

UK bikes shops have record stocks just at the point when potential customers are facing a cost of living crunch. Photograph: David Pearson/Alamy UK bikes shops have record stocks just at the point when potential customers are facing a cost of living crunch. Photograph: David Pearson/Alamy © Provided by The Guardian “In the long term, it could result in less choice for consumers because the more high street shops that shut, the less people there are to fix a bicycle or advise them,” said Jonathan Harrison, director of the Association of Cycle Traders, which represents retailers and repairers.

There have already been “quite a lot” of closures, he said, and there are now about 2,700 bike shops in the UK and another 1,100 workshops, hire centres and bike cafes.

“The likes of Wiggle closing will have impacts on other businesses, too, because a lot of distributors have been over-reliant on them as a sales channel,” Harrison said. “So we will see further repercussions happen, particularly in the supply chain. But I think the market will bounce back. We still think there is room for growth in the number of people cycling.”

There is another headwind for cyclists blowing from Westminster. Inspired by a narrow victory in the Uxbridge byelection in July, Rishi Sunak declared the end of an alleged “war on drivers”.

Whether that amounts, as some fear, to a declaration of a new war on pedestrians and cyclists remains to be seen – the prime minister’s plan for drivers includes a clampdown on 20mph speed limits, bus lanes and low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), having slashed funds for cycle lanes and pavements in March.

There used to be cross-party consensus on active travel, but there’s been a substantial change over the last 18 months against anything perceived to be green

Duncan Dollimore, Cycling UK Last Friday, the Commons’ public accounts committee said there had been “disappointingly slow” progress on increasing active travel. The Department for Transport has been ordered to conduct an LTN review and has canvassed views from local authorities, which campaigners say could lead to reopening rat runs closed years ago by tarmacking over cul-de-sacs and ripping out bollards and other so-called modal filters.

“During Covid we saw a massive increase in levels of cycling,” said Duncan Dollimore, head of campaigns at Cycling UK. “Since then, the numbers have dropped substantially and we’ve lost all the benefits. And part of the reason is government policy.

“There used to be a cross-party consensus on active travel, but there’s been a very substantial change in tone over the last 18 months. The whole narrative from the government has been very much against anything that’s perceived to be green, and it’s quite toxic.”

He said that a media campaign with “a certain degree of vilification of people cycling has an effect on people and then puts people off. The narrative against cycling isn’t helping these local industries.”

Phillip Darnton, the chair of the Bicycle Association, which represents larger manufacturers and retailers, said they have been trying to persuade ministers that the cycling industry presents an opportunity to boost economic growth.

“The whole industry is surprisingly valuable,” he said. “It’s probably generating about £7.5bn of added value to the UK economy and, if you include livelihoods, employs about 64,000 people.”

Islabikes, which transformed children’s bikes to make them lighter and easier to handle, recently said it would cease manufacturing. Photograph: James Sturcke/Alamy Islabikes, which transformed children’s bikes to make them lighter and easier to handle, recently said it would cease manufacturing. Photograph: James Sturcke/Alamy © Provided by The Guardian While it is often tempting to look enviously at the Netherlands and Denmark, which have been investing in cycling and cycle lanes since the 1973 oil crisis, Darnton pointed to Germany as inspiration. “In Germany last year they sold about 2.2m electric bikes and were disappointed they couldn’t satisfy the last 100,000 orders,” he said. “In the UK, we struggled to sell 150,000.”

France has had huge growth in ebike sales, he added, because the government had offered some modest subsidies. “The French say it’s not about how many euros or pounds but the very fact that the government says: ‘This is the strategy – we want to urge you not to use a car for short urban trips’ and makes it attractive for businesses to make deliveries in the last mile by cargo bike.”

Cargo bikes – larger, usually electric, bikes with a separate carrier – are one remaining bright spot, with people adopting them in growing numbers.

The trend is particularly noticeable in Cambridge, where it was instrumental in shielding Outspoken Cycles, which sells and services bikes in the city, from the worst of the lockdown effects, according to the shop’s general manager, Robert Hampton.

“We haven’t had the overstock issue for cargo bikes,” he said. “We’re now back to a lead time of about four weeks. It’s been steady growth: 20% more this year than last year, and 20% more last year than the year before. It’s much more of a steady increase of people looking more to move out of using a car for everyday journeys.”

Meanwhile, there are still plenty of riders who take the sport seriously, whether that’s taking one of the dozens of routes through the flat Cambridge Fens or the hills of the Yorkshire Dales. While appetites for a £300 commuter bike have waned, people who want to add another £10,000 bike to their collection are still doing so, according to Shepherd.

At 6am Cycling, there is room for both types of rider. The club was started by Tom Glendining and Lesley Sharpe in 2015 and really took off when they began their Fri-Day rides – a dawn trip through Epping Forest followed by a fry-up.

“It just started through a group of us going out really early on a Friday morning,” Glendining said. “And more people started joining.

“Everything’s shifted. Loads of girls getting into it now, which is fantastic. There’s Brothers on Bikes trying to get Muslim dudes out on bikes – they’ve started joining the fry-up rides as well. It’s not all about going fast – although we’ve got them too. There’s guys who ride with 6am who are incredibly strong riders and have done national time trials and all that. They’re all really lovely people. The main thing is you’ve got to be nice.”

 
 

When you envision a cycle commute, your mind will conjure images of bustling cycle lanes through bright city centres. The roads are dry, the air is warm, and the puddles are sparse. It’s easy to see why so many people might make this a regular part of their routine throughout the summer.

But once September rolls around, everything changes. The rain arrives, in what seems like an incessant nature. The small potholes that you would occasionally skirt round now fill with water and seem to grow every day. The dark mornings mean you don’t always see them, despite knowing this route like the back of your hand. Is that a new pot hole?!

Your once thriving commute seems less appealing as time goes on. Is that it for the year? But wait! Don’t give up yet! Without getting too spiritual, there are so many ways you can embrace the change and maintain your love for the cycle commute throughout autumn.

Embrace the CX season Being a roadie commuter is easy in the summer. But once the leaves begin to fall, the combination with rain and mud creates a near-treacherous route on slick tyres. You’re right to be a little cautious, so instead of banishing your bike to the garage for the next 6 months, embrace your new persona as a cyclo-cross rider and switch things up.

Sanne Cant Embrace the cyclo-cross season. © Profimedia Switch your tyres As part of embracing your inner-cyclocross racer, you’ll want to switch up your tyres. If you’re converting a road frameset, then you’ll want to consider tyres that are as narrow as possible – say 30 mm, but that are knobbly for the autumnal change in road surface. Though if you’ve got slacker geometry, like that of a touring frameset, then you’ll have a little more clearance for a slightly wider tyre. Whatever you switch your tyres for, you’ll likely feel much more stable when you’re slicing through piles of muddy leaves on your way to a 9 am meeting.

Lower the pressure If you’ve only ever ridden a road bike on your commute to work, then you’re likely used to pumping your tyres up to the max. But if you want the added benefit of those knobbly tyres, then you’ll want to drop the pressure.

Autumn brings damp road surfaces, and other potential hazards, with possibly even the first frost of the year, so having softer tyres enables those bumpy bits of your tyre to grip to every small on the ground, reducing your risk of injury and speeding you up on those rushed mornings.

Change your route With your fresh new tyres, and an acceptance that you might get a bit damp and muddy on your commute, it might be time to change up your route.

Riding roads in the sunshine is a blissful sport in its own right, but come the wetter months, and the spray that comes from passing traffic can make those dark mornings miserable. Have you discovered any off-road sections between your home and work? Try breaking out of your routine and incorporate the odd bridleway into your commute, you’ll get away from traffic and add a bit of added nature to your day. You’ll be surprised at how many there are even in urban areas too.

Be sure to check your routes out in advance of an early start, so you’re not panicking on your way to work when you accidentally end up on a path not exactly suited to bikes.

Mudguards Whilst you can blame passing cars for road spray all you like, it’s possible that the majority of the wet is coming from your own tyres, if not from the sky of course. Getting wet on your way to work is less than ideal, especially if it’s preventable. If that’s the case, then it’s mudguard season!

The world of mudguards can be an overwhelming one, so we’ve a couple of suggestions for a range of requirements, or you can read our more comprehensive guide here.

First consider how wet it actually is, if you’re encountering the odd muddy puddle then an ass-saver could be a quick, easy win. They’re super light, and you can keep them in your commuting bag in times of need. However, they do have their limitations and offer no protection to your legs or bike components.

If you’re in a damper climate, then a slightly larger clip-on mudguard could be a better option, but still suitable for a quick and easy installation. This pair of front and back mudguards from Planet X are an affordable option for all-round coverage. Full coverage mudguards are available for those long, damp months when you’ll be commuting daily and want to avoid getting any wetter than you need to.

Peeling off your tights every day when you’ve arrived at the officer but it’s not actually rained can be quite demoralising. German brand SKS offer a great variety of mudguards suited to every bike and tyre. It’s worth bearing in mind that if you’ve swapped out your tyres for bigger CX tyres, then make sure you’ve got enough clearance for full mudguards, and SKS have the range of sizes to get the perfect fit.

Be bold, start cold (but don’t forget your waterproofs) Autumn is that tricky time between hot and cold, where the weather doesn’t quite know what it’s doing, and you’ve not acclimatised either way. So when the temperature dips below 10 C (50 F), you’re likely to reach for your thermals a little bit sooner than is necessary.

Instead, you should hold off on the thermals and hold on to your summer layers a little longer. It’s possible your commute will be wet, so you could layer up with just your waterproofs, or a splash-resistant windproof and leggings. You may feel a little cold once you first step out of the door, but with waterproofs, you soon create a little micro-climate once you start pedalling hard. Warm up, and then be sure to ventilate so you don’t sweat too much and begin to cool down. This way, you can save all your warmest layers for the genuinely cold months, and feel comfortable in the knowledge that you’ve acclimatised slowly.

There are plenty of tips we could offer to improve your daily commute, but over time you will work out what works best for you. You might even just opt to cycle less, commuting by bike 3 days a week and driving the rest. But know that you should absolutely still feel smug on those days you do cycle in, and if you truly embrace your inner-CX, then you’ll have even had an adventure before the day has begun!

 
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