The
other day -quite out of the blue- Vicky turned to me and suggested we
exercise at least twice a week. The reasons for this momentous decision
were unclear,
either she couldn’t fit into something she owns or she is suggesting I
am too fat. Clearly it could not possibly be the latter as I am in the
peak of physical fitness…
Anyway
I suggested that she use Daisy’s bike and we go out riding, she upped
the ante by insisting this must be done twice a week. There were -as I
tried immediately
to point out- some considerable flaws in her plan. Firstly Daisy’s bike
is of the ‘antique’ variety, which means it’s made of pig iron and
presumably (given its weight) then filled with molten lead. In addition
to this setback it had no gears (so we thought),
no brakes, two flat tires, mudguards whose only apparent job was to rub
on the flat tires and prevent them moving. Finally and rather
fantastically it was also equipped [burdened] with a set of
dynamo-powered front and rear lights (which didn’t work).
Never the less, she insisted if I put right some of the reparable problems with the bike she would ride it and not complain.
I
guess I should make clear at this point that I actually own a bicycle,
which I bought from Bob for the princely sum of £50 and that works fine –
admittedly
I can’t really touch the floor when sat on the saddle, and any attempt
to put both feet on the floor could only result in pain even when not
perched on the saddle. It was purchased because I stupidly said if only I
had a bike I would ride in and out of work,
unfortunately for me Bob overheard; I gained a bike and had to think of
a new excuse.
As
I figured this to be a mere whim -a phase that would soon wither and
die- I got to work and straightened or repaired all the problems with
Daisy’s bike, bar
its incredible weight and lack of gears, because at the time I didn’t
think it had any.
On
our first outing on a weekday afternoon we happened to pass Chris
Douglas’s house, and I was relieved to see he was outside and provided a
perfect excuse
to stop and chat for a while. He, being an enthusiastic outdoors-ist
was ecstatic to see that we were using our bicycles and immediately
insisted we should not be distracted by him and hopped on his bike to
join us. Although this development was deeply displeasing
to me, it did mean I had someone to talk to whilst waiting for Vicky at
the top of any and all hills. It would seem that largely due to the
weight and lack of gearing Daisy’s bike became a bit of a liability on
anything other than a downhill slope, and resulted
in plenty of breaks and time for me and Chris to discuss the bike in
question and discover that it had in fact got a gearbox. Gearbox you
say? Don’t I mean ‘gears’? No. I do not. It has what can only be
described as a car-type three speed gearbox, honestly
I looked it up and it could just as easily been a cross section of Doc
Browns Flux capacitor. During the considerable amount of time Chris and I
had to discuss this we both agreed that neither of us could be bothered
to fix it.
As
our first ride went very well indeed, Chris insisted we go out the next
day for a much longer ride with him, Callum and Ella. In addition Bob
also happened
to call and joined us en-route, dressed like a professional bicyclist
much to my amusement. It was on this day that I noticed that almost
everyone else’s bike had hydraulic disk brakes front and rear, unlike my
primitive pad-to-wheel type. Feeling a little
outdone I did formally complain to Bob about the cheap shit bike he had
sold me but he pretended not to hear me. This I find impossible,
because he has ears that make gliders blush.
All
this enthusiastic bike riding has left Vicky with a single conclusion –
she needed to replace her (Daisy’s) old jalopy of a bike. So, bright
and early on
a Saturday she spoiled my lie-in and demanded we visit Halfords
–enabling her to indulge herself and get a bike with working gears and
brakes. This turned out to be considerably more palaver than first
promised. On the way there a clearly blind chap in a BMW
decided that despite my indicator declaring my intentions he would pull
out directly in front of me on a roundabout, then stop in clear panic
when I jammed the horn on and deployed anchors whilst swerving around
the back of him, which I couldn’t do because
he had stopped partially pulled out. Quite how he missed the 3 tonne
Lolvo with its headlights on is beyond me but then again he didn’t look
all that bright and appeared to be going to Popley which goes some way
to explaining things.
Once
safely at Halfords Vicky wasted very little time selecting a bike with
the correct colour scheme (merely a few hours). Then came the fun of
purchasing a
bike, not something I fully appreciated as mine arrived at my own
doorstep in the back of Bob’s car and I gave him cash. Vicky had chosen
Hell-frauds because she had a £60 voucher, which the nice staff at
Hell-frauds tried to comprehend for a half hour in
the sweltering heat before Vicky lost patience and paid outright for
the bike.
Stress
over we assured them that if they could build a bike so could I and
launched a suspiciously un-bike-looking large box into the Lolvo. An
uneventful drive
home saw the box in the hall and opened… It was certainly full of
stuff, but no discernable bike as such. They clearly weren’t kidding, I
actually had to build a bike. Using the utterly inferior tools provided
in the box and instructions written so poorly
that they would have made the Chinese titter I was able to assemble
said bike with almost no violence and only four trips to A&E.
So
with Vicky’s bike (Badly) assembled and most of the blood mopped up we
were ready to set off, but there was a 4-year-old fly in the ointment…
Harrison was with Chris and had no bike; even if he did he wouldn’t be able to keep up. So we decided to make a tow along trailer for
Harrison to sit in, as a base we used a four wheel cart I
use to move extremely heavy items around in the garage and garden. We
very creatively used a long curved tube (formerly a trampoline) to
connect the trailer to Chris’s
bike over the rear wheel, with a pivot at the bike end and a steerable
front axle. We put sides on the cart and lined it with old sofa
cushions, then put an old car seat base and back in for
Harrison to sit on comfortably. He was ecstatic, and eager to get going. Here is a photo of our efforts;
You
may notice that Chris looks slightly flustered, well the net result of
our bombproof construction is weight – and a lot of it. The cart was
made to carry
500+Kgs, and consists of a sturdy steel frame sat on wide air filled
tires. With the not inconsiderable weight of the cushions and child as
well it led to a rather… sedate pace set by Chris, except on downhill
slopes where the weight pushed beyond the capacity
of Chris’s fancy hydraulic disk brakes and made the cart fishtail
dramatically.
Harrison of course, loved every second – Chris less so.
In
other news I have been walking home from work every day (except
Fridays), and I figured I would return my bike helmet to work so I could
use the free ‘site
bikes’ provided by my company to get around their property. This seemed
like an excellent idea, up until I got to work…
You
see, there are turnstiles all over the place, and not the wimpy three
bar type that people hop over when catching the tube in London – the
integrated-in-a-fence-or-wall
type which cannot be entered or exited without being completely inside
each section on your own (there is no way two people could fit in one)
more like a no-return revolving door I guess. To add complexity when
entering or exiting a card must be swiped and
a pin number entered. In my infinite wisdom I had attached my helmet to
the back of my backpack, which I neglected to remove when entering the
turnstile. What happened next was broadly as follows, me and backpack in
one section, helmet in another. This was
made slightly more embarrassing by the permanently present staff member
overseeing the doors, the meeting taking place on sofas just opposite
the turnstiles and the fact I didn’t realise until trying to walk away
from the turnstile.
(Title): Sanctimonious;
pious, smug, hypocritical, too good to be true, self-righteous, self-satisfied, goody-goody (informal) , holier-than-thou.
Example: He writes smug, sanctimonious rubbish.
(Clipped excerpt from the Collins Thesaurus)
pious, smug, hypocritical, too good to be true, self-righteous, self-satisfied, goody-goody (informal) , holier-than-thou.
Example: He writes smug, sanctimonious rubbish.
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