3% is very close.

I rode Racelite-8 with MapMyRide+! Distance: 52.95mi, time: 03:25:58, pace: 3:53min/mi, speed: 15.43mi/h.
http://mapmyride.com/workout/1166315675
At the end of every ride, you have to stop the recording and switch off the gps. Today, I caught it just in time, there was only 3% left in the battery!
Anyway, the ride: relaxed and easy to keep the speed up. This time of year is great for mushrooms. Some were as large as dinner plates, amazing.

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Bike saddle for scale: and this is one of the smaller mushrooms.

Break even.

I rode Racelite-8 with MapMyRide+! Distance: 27.47mi, time: 01:47:06, pace: 3:54min/mi, speed: 15.4mi/h.
http://mapmyride.com/workout/1155933491
Cars can cost a lot of money. Mine has been pretty good for a big car. It’s now 12 years old and has done 112,000 miles. Now I face a few repairs which added to the annual cost of running it, equal the cost of buying and running a new car. The calculations include the assumption that big repair bills will come more often. A new car would cost nothing in repairs, less in fuel and tax. But then, maybe there will be no expensive repairs next year on my old car, it’s down to chance.
My calculation includes supposed fuel economy of the new car. What Car runs tests on fuel consumption and they don’t match manufacturers’ figures. The new Passat is only 5mpg better than the one I have.
Also, I actually feel some sentimental attachment to my current drive. We’ve been places.
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Golf Estate, a possible replacement.

Review: Kona Jake 2015

Kona Jake, 61cm. 2015.
One month on, and it’s time to summarise my experience so far.

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Fit: it’s big, but I need that. The choice was narrowed down to a ‘cross bike with disc brakes and mud-guard bolts. This is not the biggest Jake, the catalogues list up to 63cm, which must be huge. At 6’4″, I have always needed a large frame and reach has been a particular problem. That is why my first two bikes were custom made. Off the peg at the time, it was only possible to get 22.5inch top-tube bikes. Many famous brands made all their frames with the same top-tube, regardless of frame size. This 61cm fits me well.
Handling: it all seems natural to me. Squelchy surfaces are a new experience for me, and I don’t mind admitting to some nervousness. That’s my weakness, not the bike’s. My nerve and judgement is getting better with each ride. Once I have fallen off, I can truly say the bike is christened. However, the canal water looks very cold, so the first tumble better not be into the drink.
Weight : with the bottle and seat pouch removed, it’s 10.57 Kg. About the same as my steel 8 speed racer.
Brakes: at first, it needs a lot of pull to stop hard but once a hundred miles were done, they became excellent. The cables don’t need to be all that tight, unlike the setup by the shop. After loosing them off, the braking is sensitive and subtle with the option to weigh anchor if necessary .
So far so good, the only problem is the brake calipers. They are quite wide so my heel catches on the rear brake sometimes. Once I have paid the last installment, I will change them to another brand. Bikes with rear brakes mounted on the seat-stay won’t have this problem, but their owners will struggle to fit a rack.

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Wheels and tyres: not light, the rear complete is 2.2Kg. They do seem strong and the tyres grip well on soft muddy trails. The only real frustration is the large number of punctures. In first 120 miles ridden so far, 7 punctures. 5 were caused by thorns, the remaining two were snakebites. Soft grass and mud can conceal a deflating tyre which is probably how the tubes got pinched in those cases. #1
Gears: 10 on the back (11-30) and a double chainset (50-36). The Tiagra change reasonably well but one cog is slow to click down. That cassette is huge, 11-30 and is probably heavy (see above). #2
In future I will fit road wheels which will have higher ratios. Perhaps 11-25 would be more realistic. This way, if I fancy some muddy fun, then it’s only a quick swap away.
The down side: there are only a few changes I would make to this bike:
Handlebars- I don’t mind the wide bars, but the drops are quite shallow so that with hands there, your position is no lower than on the tops. You can’t really get your head down on a fast descent but at least you can exert leverage with the wider bar section. This shape, it seems, is the fashion these days.
The rear stays are rather plain; they look like they’re from a 1990’s bike. No curves or wishbone design. That is all behind you so you can’t see them though, so don’t worry. The bottom line is that when you’re on the bike you look at the landscape and traffic, when you’re off it- the bike is locked away in the shed. Looks aren’t that important.
Finally, the seat is too narrow for my big arse, and the stem, 1cm too short.
Overall, Remember that I have never had a mountain bike and am not comparing a range of machines like a proper review might.
I am having tremendous fun with it and probably building handling skills on loose surfaces. Without a doubt, it’s a fine 50th birthday present to myself.

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Deer in headlights.

6°C, strong W wind. Mostly dry under grey sky.
I rode Fixed with MapMyRide+! Distance: 22.98mi, time: 01:35:19, pace: 4:09min/mi, speed: 14.46mi/h.
http://mapmyride.com/workout/839762827
Very windy, almost unsafe on a bike. Given the quiet roads, I ventured out at 3pm. As seen in the screenshot, the route was a series of loops near home and included some short sharp hills.
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Driving back I was forced to take a diversion around Cannock Chase. There was only a few extra miles, and am interesting incident. On the twisty lane back to the normal route, I glimpsed something moving ahead. An animal, but it was very shadowy. Then a deer; both me and an oncoming car stopped too. Then he switched head lights off, and then I did. We let the deer gallop across the road to the south. Sweet!

Last ride this year.

I rode fixed with MapMyRide+! Distance: 18.92mi, time: 01:17:40, pace: 4:06min/mi, speed: 14.62mi/h.
http://mapmyride.com/workout/829576669
Zero the clocks tomorrow, the year’s milage is complete. Not quite matched my target of 6,000 miles. Not short by many.

imageAccording to MapMyRide: 5,844.7miles for 2014. That’s about 600 miles more than 2013.
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Here is the breakdown:
Arrow: 3193.1
Racelite: 934.3
Kona: 1449.8

UKIP chairman “were racist”.

UKIP’s local chairman, Peter Cope wrote the letter below to the local paper.

How to deal with this, let’s use numbers.
Firstly, the population of Lichfield is 32,000 (from the 2011 census). So UKIP thinks that 32,000 x 5 = 500,000.
Net migration is a far more useful figure to use, it subtracts the numbers who leave the UK. That is approximately 249,000. 19% of the number who migrate here are returning UK born citizens anyway. Should they be subtracted too, since nobody can claim that they have no right to move here.

Therefore, the numbers don’t add up Chairman of Lichfield UKIP. You too may be accused of brainwashing you construct arguments in the way you do. You are dysfunctional when handling numbers and can’t construct a grammatically correct sentence.
An accusation made in a non-ironic way.

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Swim,

7°C, drizzle, mist,
Swim: after work. The weather is too awful for a ride today. I chose a pool that is on the way home, a place I haven’t been to since I was a 13 year old school child. I swam lengths for forty minutes in the fast lane. I say “fast lane”, but I needed to wait at the ends for other swimmers to clear a space.
This was a public session, with two lanes reserved for adult lengths. Perhaps their adult sessions have quicker lanes.
Other swimmers were mostly quite fat. Even the kids, in the area without ropes, were paddling podgy seals. Walsall is a fat place.