The Quandry of Rain
I hate waking up to rain. Not so much because I have anything against the rain, per se, but because it changes up my transportation choices. Today is a class day for me, which means heading the 3.3 miles or so to USC. I don't particularly care about getting wet during the 15 minutes I'm on the bike -- heck, I get sweaty on good days -- but there's no way I'm letting my bike sit uncovered on campus for several hours in even scattered showers.
And that led me to the question: what would a professor do if I brought my bike into class? At least for this first class the room in question is plenty big. I could stash it on a wall without getting in anyone's way.
I think that's what I'm going to do. I'm not going to bring a lock, so either the bike stays or I go.
Update (4pm): I did indeed ride and take the bike into class. No real problems, but I learned some things I'll share after the jump...
It started to rain a bit more as I headed out. That wasn't cool.
- I would say that of the wet I got, 30% was from above and 70% was up from the road and my tires. That's no good. The front wheel especially soaked the bottom of my pant legs and my shoes.
- Wet shoes are no fun.
- It's fun riding with nothing on the bike -- no bag or rack.
- A rear rack can serve as an effective fender, but only if you leave it on the bike.
I took a little hand towel with me and wiped the bike off when I got to the building. The bike came out of this well. I, on the other hand, got very wet.
Comments
My roommate has the spot that comes with the apartment. So really we just keep from having to pay to park a second car somewhere else. -e;
# on Nov.10.2005 AT 11:00 AM
so if you get around just on bike, what do you do with your parking spot? You rent it out?
# on Nov.09.2005 AT 11:31 PM