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Showing posts with label bicycles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycles. Show all posts

Friday, June 2, 2017

Cycling trip, the coast

Maybe D. will write more, but this is my final post for the trip.


Cala S'Alguer
Maybe you can see the colorful fishermen's huts?

A little farther is Platja Castell.

Looking the opposite direction down the coast.

The small town of Calella de Palafrugell.

Just past the beach shown above we found this little
cove where we had a swim and scenic lunch.

On my last day riding with D. we had a lot of climbing but it made for great views.
Our destination was Tossa de Mar with the ancient citadel to the right of center.

Tossa de Mar


Tossa de Mar from the citadel

One of many, many coves we saw from the road.

What an amazing tandem team!

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Cycling trip, part two

After the third day of cycling we arrived in S'Agaró and even though I had enjoyed the scenery to get there, it was nothing compared to being on the coast!

The first set of pictures is from a walk that started near the hotel, loops in front of an exclusive neighborhood, and ends over at the next beach. In addition to the great rail trails, I think Catalonia has done a fantastic job of keeping the coast open to all.





There were fourteen signs describing different geological features. Some of the information can be found here, with the original site being here.

Stay tuned for one last post with more beautiful pictures from the coast!

Sunday, May 21, 2017

Full day

Some weekends time just melts away, but yesterday was a full day.

A.'s school has its Festa Major/Major Festival. We had no idea what that meant, but 

we figured out that A. had to go to a couple events and the awards ceremony,

where he received a medal for fair play. Afterward he tried some free samples from the sponsors. That was it for him. Parents were allowed to attend, but mostly the primary kids had parents there.

In the morning, when the older kids were doing their activities, there was a fund raising bike ride.

The people in yellow helped clear the route, which was definitely necessary given the route and the cycling ability of the participants. Here you can check out a video of a small bit of the event. The road they are on is several blocks long and usually has traffic in both directions. Good thing the city was a co-sponsor of the event!

A. and a friend traipsed around Barcelona for several hours. At a bee festival
near the Arc de Triomf they watched while the artist created this with spray paint!

We met up in the evening and were amazed by the variety of
fidget spinners that are already in the tourist stores. 

Night of the Museums had more participants than we could ever take
advantage of, but we picked a few out to try since the price was right.

It was amazing to see giants that have been in continuous use for over 100 years!

Many of these giants had stories about being hidden
away only to be discovered many decades later.

From the sign, "In bygone times, carasses were heads of Arabian donning long beards, which were installed under the organs of some churches. Around Christmas, they threw sweets out to the children in the crowd. The city has recovered this tradition by way of the Carassa de Barcelona, or Carassa de Nadal, an entertaining and parading figure that throws out candy during the Santa Llúcia Fair."

The sign for this one described the turtle body, humanized cat head,
and split personality, sometimes spitting fire and sometimes giving out sweets. 

A picture of a picture of it in action.


A picture of a picture of the hobby horses in action. 
We were very happy with our choice of museums and I encourage you check out historic pictures and more current ones. After leaving we headed off to the chocolate museum, but sometimes free means paying with time and we were not willing to wait in a line that we could not even see the front of!

We caught a bus and headed to a one-hallway museum.

The entire museum was in Catalan, but we enjoyed looking at the pictures.

Sant Cugat had a few activities, too, including a lot of concerts in surprising places (e.g., a cappella across from the bakery). A. snapped this picture, which I thought might have been part of the adult percussion event (adult as in grown ups, not adult as in X-rated), but I am not sure.
Just trying to squeeze it all in before we leave!


Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Window shopping

As you know, when I travel, I like to investigate the local bike shops that I can find.  The volume of bicycles in a city like Amsterdam is simply amazing, and hard to fathom.  So many of the bikes are left at train stations, one wonders how many are possibly abandoned there.  Most of these bikes are not special to me, but the common styles tell you a lot.  Almost every bike in Amsterdam had mustache handle bars for example.  While some of the bikes you see ridden are like those parked at the station, many of the bikes I see ridden in Europe this year are electrified bikes, and in the bike shops the range of electric bikes is quite large, not just one or two models.  Several shops here now carry dominantly electric bikes, and some only carry electrics.  I recently found a folding electric bike with a shaft drive here in a store in Sant Cugat.  I see electric mountain bikes as well as city bikes.  I have not seen nearly as many road bikes here as I would have expected in stores.  I do see people out riding road bikes, but that is not what most vendors are stocking in the stores I find randomly as I travel.

Anyway here is some items that caught my eye, and that I wanted to share with you.  The first photo is from a store that sold only electric vehicles.  The website is http://www.electric-scooters.be/en/index.html  The store was closed when I went by, but the item that caught my eye appealed to me more than any electric bicycle.  I guess I feel like if I am on a bicycle, I want it to be a bicycle, not an electric thing.  This is an electric scooter, which looked like a classic Vespa, and while the color is a bit Bianchi for me, I think if I were to ride an electric two-wheel vehicle this would be the one I would choose (ignoring the 3800€ sticker price, although this is far cheaper than the items that follow).

After that I found another bike shop (also closed on a Monday), which was clearly more likely to get my business, 

In fact on Wednesday I had a chance to go back to this shop when the proprietor was there and it was open.  My brother-in-law has my Pedersen from my sabbatical in Denmark and he told me that I should be looking for this bike for this year’s sabbatical acquisition. I found three in the store, one belonged to the owner, one was new (in blue) on the wall for only 5700€ with an Alfine 11 hub, shown here:


But when I started to talk about the Moultons with the shop owner, he was really excited and said he had to show me a different one.  This one was recently on loan from the Moulton factory to a museum in the area and when the exhibit closed Moulton asked him to pick up the bike and store it for them until they know where they want to send it next.  It was a very special bike, with a very special price, ~20,000€ (I had to ask which means I could not afford it).  But he brought it out for me to enjoy sharing it with me in the store.  Here is the photo, I am sorry that is the closest I will get to owning this bike.


Note the difference between the full space frame on this bike and the lower end Moulton I showed before, which still had a recognizable head tube and seat tube.  This bike was light and very rigid (excepting the full suspension) on all three axes.  In many ways the Moulton space frames do remind me of the trusses on the Pedersen, which also was made with large numbers of smaller diameter tubes in contrast to most bicycles.  

The shop also carried a full range of Bromptons, Brooks, and more typical high-end Amsterdam-style commuting bicycles with really nice bells and whistles, etc.  I attach one photo of something that I thought you might not have seen which I thought was cute, but had no need to own.

While I don’t have any pictures, one thing that I really enjoyed in one of the other bike shops I found on this trip was the wide variety of panniers that are available here.  In the US I am lucky to see maybe 3 or 4 styles of panniers in any shop. Here almost every bicycle has a pair of panniers on the back and they come in many different styles, from denim, to leather and solid colors, to wild patterns. Prices vary, too, from under 50€ to 300€ per pannier.

I am riding a 26” wheel GT mountain bike I purchased secondhand here as well as my folding bike and occasionally the red tandem with either A. or J.  The mountain biking is excellent here and every weekend I see many many riders out in the trails.  Many have very high end full suspension 29er bikes, but the type of riding terrain is lots of rocky staircases and chutes, and I admit that it is challenging for me.  I go out alone, find a group, and try to follow and often get left behind.  I don’t think it is out of my range, but it is out of my comfort zone in some cases.

Thursday, November 3, 2016

Mallorca, day two

For better or for worse we were on vacation when the daylight savings time ended in Europe, which meant we got an extra hour, but it also meant it would be darker earlier in the day.
We were on time for the first part of our adventure, a train ride to Sóller 
following the same route through Serra de Tamuntana since 1912.
From Sóller we caught a tram, just like the first electrical tram on the island.
Port de Sóller was like a postcard!
From here we split up.  D. and A. rented bicycles and explored the mountains 


and I swam a bit before exploring on foot.



We all had amazing views!

It was good to reunite, but hard to leave town for the tram and train ride back to Palma.