#bikepacking

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

Cycling trip - day 2

Well, what an arrival. Due to the weather I spent the whole uneventful 30 hour boat journey wrecking my brain on how to get to Hamburg. I could have taken it safe and taken a local train, then sleep at a hostel for some hours. Since I would have 7 hours until my train, the idea of spending that time riding was just a bit too much. I knew the weather would turn nasty around midnight, meaning potentially half of my ride I would get wet.

Some 5 hours before arrival to Travemünde the captain announced we would be arriving one hour early. It's a sign, surely! I would have an extra hour of dry ride time before rain. Rain which could be short showers, drizzle or heavy rain - but hey how heavy can rain be? I've done rain before. It's summer, it's warm summer rain. I've done freezing snow storms, surely a little rain wont hurt. To be on the safe side, I plotted a route going through the 3 train stops between Lübeck and Hamburg. Then, if rain comes down, I can always jump on a local train, was the masterplan. This did add 10km, but it looked like a nice ride.

The ride was nice. Pretty suburbs, farms, fields and quiet roads to zoom through. But boy was I wrong about the rain. When it started, it came down like it was on a deadline by an angry rain god to fill this region with as much water as possible. How long can rain like this last? Surely this is just a shower, then it will just "rain a little". So I peddled on, not planning on stopping at the last station. Wasn't even sure if trains went anymore. Apparently this rain wanted to very much disagree on the commonly accepted "heavy rain lasts for a short while" fact. Apparently the amount of water that can be stored in German clouds is more than my common sense wants to believe possible.

Unfortunately as well, just afte the heavy rain started, Garmin routed me onto a trail, and I was stupid to just jump on it. I thought it would be a short hop through something but it ended up being this massive park. Probably very beautiful if you weren't in it in pitch black darkness, with only your headlamp to make the now "oh I'll turn into mud" path visible. There is a thing I learnt about headlamps as well. I wanted a single lamp with me to be used for setting up a tent but also cycling in the dark. Works well strapped onto the helmet. Powerful enough to see and to be seen. But you know what happens in heavy rain? The rain drops in the light turn into bright sparkles. And this happens in front of your eyesight, which doesn't help visibility with already totally wet glasses. So slow it was.

And some point while struggling through the muddy trails I realized this will never end and politely went to curse myself to the deepest pit of hell as I realized my Garmin navigation was on "gravel" mode. I switched it to "road" mode and managed to get out of the hellscape that is a park somewhere south of Bad Oldesloe, towards Ahrensburg. Of course after that the rain cloud took a lunch break. Some 20km from Hamburg it dutifully returned to service and pounded away until I arrived at the trains station, when it decided it had dropped enough rain on poor Jason and Sanna, who dared to have the audicity to ride through this region.

I was a bit scared if the Garmin would hold up, but for now at least it seems fine. Beautiful device, can't imagine how I could have navigated through hours of downpour without it. Though they could add a quick action button called "it's raining heavily, please stop trying to route me into muddy paths, especially now that I'm on road mode", since apparently Hamburg has many nice gravel cycling paths which are probably great, but the few I tried last night were also completely horrible muddy death traps.

At the train station I realized saver train tickets are apparently not available just before the train journey starts. I only had a bicycle reservation and since the train was low demand, I thought I would buy it just before. This mistake cost me some 50€. Oh well, lessons learned. Quick snack after I camped at the platform to wait for my train in completely wet shorts and completely wet shoes and socks, otherwise feeling warm and happy with the rain gear doing its thing. Not sure what happened with the shoes. I had the rain covers I bought on them but apparently they either didn't work, there was too much rain or I didn't wrap them properly.

Although everything is muddy and I'll probably need to find a bike wash at some point soon, I did enjoy the ride, which apart from the rain was less effort than I had expected. Less hills than Helsinki probably explains a bit. Sanna rolls very nicely even in a heavy load <3 I can say I did it my way and didn't do the safe smart way, like one of the other cyclists who had been on the same ship, who apparently was going on the same train, who I had a nice chat with before trying to get some sleep. They had done the smart thing of going by train and sleeping in a hostel. They were not muddy.

Didn't get much sleep, which I kind of knew. Train is zooming towards Mannheim, from where I will jump on a local train to Heidelberg and ride another EC train to Ulm. From there a local train to Lindau, and I'll be at my destination for today. Hopefully it's not raining, I'd love to properly dry my shoes in some glorious sun before crossing the Austrian border. Wont probably ride that far today.

Distance cycled: 94.94km (today), 109.8km (total)

#Travel #Bikepacking #JasonTravels #Cycling #HaveIAngeredTheRainGods?

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

Cycling trip - day 1

On the boat towards Travemünde \o/ It's been a few hectic days getting everything ready, but finally on the way. Now it's 30 hours of looking at the sea, and possibly hacking on things a bit to pass the time.

Having spent an hour queuing into the boat in hot sunshine with no shelter, kind of looking forward to the what looks like a bit cooler temperatures in Germany - at least for now :P Once I arrive, my plan is to do a night ride from Lübeck to Hamburg, and catch the early morning train towards the south. Weather forecast says I'll be getting wet.

Also, I managed to get rid of the clicking noise on my bike, yay! It seems on the Marin DSX 1, the saddle post is too long for the frame. If you lower it to the lowest it will go (which I did when I installed my saddle, which has a slightly higher profile than the original one), the seatpost will actually hit the bottom of the tube 🤯. I really hope I've not damaged the frame by riding it like this for months. After raising the saddle by 1cm, the worst of the clicking noise disappeared instantly. There is still a little bit of noise when putting a lot of pressure on the pedals, so something to check up on later, but mostly it's now quiet to ride.

Distance cycled: 14.86km

#bikepacking #jasontravels #marin

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

Did a new test run last Sunday with my partner, this time with pretty much a full load of gear I'm planning to take with me on my bikepacking trip in approx one week. Even had medicine, toothbrush and all pretty much everything - had it not been for work I could have just wondered off and started the trip now :P

One week! This was probably the last test run I'll have time for. Based on the previous tests, I found an additional second hand bag for the rear rack - smaller than the main one but enough to share weight on both sides of the bike and provide enough extra space. Happy now I can leave my backpack at home. I'm still thinking whether I need a small frame bag, for tools and snacks. May just see how it goes, can always visit a bike shop on the way.

This time I wanted to practice setting up the tent in rain conditions, ie without getting the inside part of the tent wet. We didn't plan for rain, but a little bit appeared anyway. Following a video tutorial, I'm going to give myself a grade of 4/10 on graceful setup of the tent with the rainfly on. I think the next time will be smoother, so good valuable practice.

Right now I'm worried about a few things:

  • Sanna (my bike) has been making some clicking noises while pedaling for a while. Service people found no cause, not the pedals, not anything loose. Going to take her into one more service on Wednesday to get the bottom bracket changed - the last thing that may be faulty, according to service people. The clicking noises have gotten worse in recent weeks and I'm going to be gutted if I have to make the trip with constant noises while pedaling. Should have dealt with this sooner maybe?
  • I didn't weigh my two bags on my rear rack but I'm worried it's near or over the 20kg weight limit of the Ortlieb Quick Rack, which isn't meant for massive loads 😬.. If the attachments on that thing break during the trip it's going to require some serious MacGyver shit to keep going. Need to do some weighing and try to get some weight into the front bags if needed.

Apart from actual gear, I'm also worried about my route somewhat. Kind of last minute I switched the direction to be from Switzerland to the Netherlands, rather than the opposite. This way it will be gradual descent rather than a gradual climb towards the south. While doing this I added a few countries, because why not! Now my plan is to start from the border of Germany and Austria, ride to Lichtenstein and then through northern Switzerland through Zürich and on-wards to Basel. From there it would be northbound towards the Netherlands (via Belgium and Luxembourg).

Since my boat arrives and leaves from Travemünde, obviously I'm not going to ride to the southern border of Germany or back from the Netherlands, with only three weeks. I was planning on using trains. But guess who didn't bother to actually look at reserving bike places on trains in time? Somehow slipped my mind, focusing so much on gear and stuff. It was fun to find out that train places on long distance trains in Germany are booked sometimes months in advance. My choices ended up being: 1) use local trains which don't need bike reservations and zig zag towards the south or 2) use a train of some ungodly hour which still had free spaces.

I chose the latter, which means when my boat arrives to Travemünde at 9pm, I'll be riding to Hamburg during the night to catch the 4am long distance train towards the south, and hopefully getting even a few hours of sleep. After a few more changes closer to the destination, I should be at the border of Austria around 3pm, hopefully not entirely sleep deprived. The next days will then be the most challenging parts of the route I've planned, with the worst climbs being around 200m upwards (based on Komoot). I have absolutely no idea if what I'm planning makes sense, but I know it will be challenging :) Slow and steady I guess for these days. Hopefully the views will be nice.

Nearing the end of the route the challenge will be getting back to the boat in time. Will probably need to leave a few days for that, if no good train options seem available, then it will have to be zig zagging on regional trains. I have no idea how far I'll make it along the route, so reserving spaces on any train may be challenging. May just reserve a few possibilities, one from the Netherlands (best case) and one somewhere lower south (the "didn't quite make the route" -case).

I'll be attempting to write something every day, feel free to follow my fedi account posts at https://jasonrobinson.me/streams/tag/jasontravels/ or my Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/jaywink, for updates :)

Ps. The bull is one gorgeous animal from the Haltiala farm in Helsinki <3 Such a majestic creature.

#cycling #bikepacking #jasontravels #travel

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

Second gear test for upcoming #bikepacking ride, yesterday to Vuosaari. This time also setting up the tent for the first time!

The last test and recent rides have been useful in the sense that I realized I simply can't have a backpack on my back for three weeks while trying to do long daily rides. I already occasionally suffer from shoulders being tense due to weight on the backpack while riding, so probably not a good idea for longs rides over many weeks.

So, new plan, don't buy a frame pack and instead buy a rear rack and a pannier which converts into a backpack, thus allowing leaving the backpack at home. Due to time being limited, options were limited to local shops, which basically meant a combo of Ortlieb's Quick Rack + Vario PS QL2.1 26L. The Quick Rack is simply amazing, literally can be attached and detached in seconds. The Vario PS is very functional. It does the job of being both a pannier and also a backpack. This is a difficult thing to achieve and given that Ortlieb have done a good job. However, it's somewhat ugly and uncomfortable actually wearing as a backpack. But hey, we're going riding, not walking, right?

This ride told me I do need another pannier, if I'm going to skip the frame pack and backpack, otherwise the single pannier is just going to have too much weight in it. Basic model panniers are available second hand quite well luckily so hopefully wont need to buy that one new.

Setting up the tent was really easy! At least without rain pouring down 😅 I do love the functionality of the MSR Hubba Hubba NX 2. Also got to test my Klymit inflatable sleeping pad and the super awesome FLEXTAILGEAR mini-pump, which also functions as a light for the tent. Really nice find.

Didn't stay the night, just set up camp and then packed up again. Maybe one or two more tests and hopefully then ready to go :)

#cycling

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

Did a first gear test ride today, a whole 55km! Almost everything, at least the larger items, didn't pack things like toiletry, chargers, cables etc random small stuff. Went really well. Had to adjust the seat pack a few times to avoid it hitting the tire on bumps. Not sure if it's the model or the shape of my bike but there isn't a lot of space between the tire and the bag, so not much possibility in strapping heavier stuff on top. The sleeping bag strapped on top seemed fine as an addition though.

Fork bags were filled with tent (without poles), sleeping mat and pillow. At the front a handlebar bag for my camera and also strapped in front of that an action cam, which I had trouble mounting on the handlebar in a way that the camera bag wouldn't be included in the videos. Didn't seem to jump around too bad but will need to check out the videos.

Backpack had too much stuff, though once I get a frame pack most of that is planned to go there, like the tent poles and the bike lock. Hopefully I can get everything out of the backpack except the laptop and medicine + other "important to keep on you" -things.

I am unsure where the waterbottles will go to once I get the frame pack. Probably one on top of the top bar as I have a strap on mount. The other possibly strapped on to the sleeping bag in the back or a fork bag in the front, will need to see. If all else fails, there is the backpack.

I forgot to weight things, will need to do that for the next test ride. Sanna rolled perfectly, didn't even notice the extra weight that much. Probably the long uphill sections will be the places it will become apparent.

#bikepacking #cycling #gettingexcited

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

Three weeks and six days until my first ever proper #bikepacking trip starts! Feeling nervous 😰 Haven't had any tests with equipment yet and actually #cycling in the last few weeks has been a bit of a pain due to the dust, but I think my lungs are now starting to recover, yay. Just in time for #Kilometrikisa starting. Btw, we have an #Elokapina team this year too, wink wink any rebel riders out there who've missed the memo!

I've got most of the gear over the recent months. Just a frame pack (Ortlieb 6L, looking at you, assuming it fits my frame..) to fetch from somewhere, as I haven't spotted one second hand. Tent, sleeping pad and sleeping bag I managed to buy second hand, some other things like a Garmin and the fork bags not.

One of the biggest investments was actually on the bike itself. I had been considering whether to jump to #tubeless before the trip, and then decided to do so when taking the bike into spring service! Unfortunately due to my bike not having tubeless ready rims it ended up being a bit expensive (hello Fulcrum Racing 6 DB rims), but also wow the difference is like night and day. I read about "smoother rolling", but still my reasons to get tubeless were more about not needing to worry so much with punctures. Now I realize I was wrong, the improvement in how the bike rolls - no wait, flyes, was why I needed tubeless. What I am now worried about is the maintenance burden ironically, like how to deal with a leaking tire on the road. Apparently it's good to carry a spare tube anyway to slot in in an emergency? Tips welcome from bikepackers who have done long tubeless trips!

One of the other great things I added to the bike, with a much less amount of money, was the #SQLab Innerbarends (411 model 2.0). Given I have a straight bar, I wanted some bar ends to give different positions. Quite accidentally I ended up looking at the innerbarends from SQLab and the reviews seemed really positive, so I ordered some. And they are simply fantastic! Since installing them I think I've spent much more time with my hands on them than on the normal grips. Slightly lower riding position and a more central grip, obviously some of the benefits that I would imagine drop bars would give - but this way I keep my straight bars for better handling (and more space for gadgets :P).

Next: installing the fork bags and testing out different options on how to mount the tent and sleeping bag onto the bike. Then as many test rides as possible and setting up the tent in random parks to get used to that. Calendar looks like I wont be able to do any long overnight rides before the trip like I planned, but oh well.

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

People who know me for a longer time may have heard me say "my dream is to do a bikepacking trip in central Europe" at once or more during the years. Well actually I always said "bike + train trip", ie taking the bike around Europe on trains and then riding around locally, instead of riding around Europe.

I started seriously thinking about this when I read Osmo Soininvaara's excellent "Fillarilla Nizzaan" book, where Osmo rides from Helsinki to Nizza in 30 days. Sometime around last summer when I realized I can do longer day rides, I set my first goal to get a bike (in addition to my mountain bike) that is nicer to ride for longer distances. I've since learned lots of people do bikepacking on mountain bikes, but hey I got a new bike, so yay. I bought my first gravel, a straight bar Marin DSX 1 ("Sanna"), lighter and better gearing for longer distances than my mountain bike ("Monty"). Next was to start thinking about buying some equipment, so I bought myself a 16L saddle bag and did a small two day trip around Tampere to get some feeling into riding with more weight. At this point the idea of actually skipping the trains part started to formulate and I started to plan for 3 weeks of riding in the spring.

Three weeks seemed like a good amount of time. Not too long that the kids and loved ones wont hopefully forget about me and enough time to warrant all the planning. Potentially possibly to arrange without going bankrupt. My initial plan was to do it the "credit card holiday" way, ie stick to hotels and hostels. While going through various plans during the end of 2023 and start of 2024, my savings account was giving me clear signals this will not happen. By this time I had joined all the possible bikepacking groups, read some books, incl "Fillarilla Nizzaan" a second time, Matti Rämö's "Polkupyörällä Ukrainan halki Istanbuliin" (recommend!) and a really poorly written "book" that I'll not mention as I don't like talking badly about people, let's say it deteriorated my Finnish language skills for a while. I also watched a ton of videos on the subject, both regarding gear and trip diaries.

It then hit me - if these people can do the camping thing, surely I can too? I've probably spent like 5 days of my life in a tent, so that's a good start, right? Buying all the camping gear is surely going to come up cheaper than hotels/hostels, even when staying at camping sites. In theory at least. I made the decision to start looking at gear and it soon became apparent there will be a large cost going into that, but hopefully it will still come out cheaper and I'll also be able to keep the gear!

Lots of gear reviews later I had some kind of idea what stuff I needed and wanted to buy. I spent some time trying to find the most expensive stuff second hand. Managed to land an MSR Hubba Hubba NX2 tent (1.5kg) second hand. Some of the other stuff I've needed to buy new, and I'm still looking for a light sleeping bag and sleeping mat. All in all quite a lot of stuff to lug around due to moving from hotels to camping, but then it does come up with some extra freedoms. And I'm still planning on a few nights at a hotel for a proper rest and fresh up.

Other gear I've decided to get is a bike computer. Initially I thought I would just navigate with my phone as I have done so far, and I'll probably do that when finding local places in a city for example. But for a full day of riding, I'd have to charge my phone multiple times during the day which feels a tad bit inconvenient. And to be honest, unsafe, needing to navigate longer distances during the day. So after spending some time looking at reviews, I got myself a Tamagotchi, I mean Garmin Edge Explore 2. It makes lots of beeping sounds, but most important handles tracking my rides and navigates me. I don't really care about all the sports metrics, thus the Explore seemed like a good model geared more for navigation. I did consider a Wahoo Elemnt (no, that's not a typo), but they don't have touchscreens. I also acquired two 5.8L fork-packs and in addition to those I'm planning on having my handlebar DSLR camera bag and my beloved Osprey Radial backpack with me. If this isn't enough, I'm considering a frame bag as that space will otherwise be used by only water bottles, which I can strap somewhere else.

So, if you've made it this far, you may be wondering where I'm actually heading? This was a nerve wrecking process of a few months of going through various options. The cheapest would be to drive through the Baltics into Germany, and then take the ferry from Travemünde back home. I wanted to explore the possibility of taking a train through Sweden and Denmark, but apparently Swedish rail wont take your bike on board without it being in a carry bag (shame on you!). A strong option constantly on my mind was the boat between Helsinki and Travemünde, and eventually it won. For the timeframe I chose a hopefully warm but not too hot end of May -> mid June.

From Travemünde my current plan (which changes every week) is to head towards Amsterdam (probably by using regional trains for a part of the way), Rotterdam, then down into Belgium, following the EuroVelo 19 "Meuse" route for a bit, peeking into to Luxembourg (haven't been) and then south through France to Basel in Switzerland, and if time up to Strasbourg, and eventually a train back into Travemünde for the ferry back home. It's a lot for 3 weeks, 1700km, but I'm hoping to either replace a part of it with trains or shorten the trip as it evolves. I'm aiming to keep the route more as a guideline, possibly when there I'll do something completely different or hang out for days at city. When traveling, there is nothing more I hate than strict timelines.

My main concerns for the trip are getting gear stolen while stopping for food and beer. How do people deal with bike bags and leaving the bike outside while stopping for a bit? My idea is some lightweight cable locks to at least make it harder to take the bags, but also obviously having everything valuable or critical in my backpack (like money, meds, etc). I'm also somewhat concerned of the length of the trip and the loneliness it will bring. However, it doesn't feel worth it going from Finland for any time less, the boat journey being the single biggest cost of the whole trip.

Another thing I'm concerned about is weight. While I'm trying to find some relatively good quality light weight camping gear I can afford, I'm not leaving home without my laptop and DSLR. Obviously this also means many power packs. But the way I see it, the trip is about creating experiences, and I can't formulate my experiences into blog posts without a laptop or take photos without a proper camera. I suppose some test runs with a fully packed Sanna some weeks before the trip will end up the deciding factors into what gear I'll end up going with.

Any thoughts and suggestions welcome! Holiday and boat rides are already booked so the trip is at least happening, unless something physically stops me. Kinda of excited about this whole thing, and hoping if it goes well it will become a new regular yearly hobby :)

Pics: Approx route as of now and Sanna at Tampere last October.

#jasontravels #bikepacking #cycling #lifegoals

jaywink@jasonrobinson.me

2023 was most a really nice year, personally. Obviously being extremely privileged, living in a country which isn't at war, isn't really suffering from #climatechange (yet) and isn't a total police state (yet, we're going that way). I made new social connections, kept old ones alive and dug deeper into the wonderful world of #polyamory (😘's to my darlings). I had many wonderful moments with my kids, who all stayed healthy and are growing up to be fantastic, if not sometimes annoying, little human beings. I traveled, visiting Brussels for FOSDEM + friends and then Prague, all by train, and then a family trip to the UK by plane. I went to awesome #gigs, the highlights being Jinjer, Gojira (twice!), Trivium, Ignea, Huora, Vimma, Infected Rain, 22-Pistepirkko, Soilwork and many others. I almost broke my leg in a moshpit 🤘. I went on more dates than I can remember. I attended many marches, against the populist right wing government Finns decided to vote in, but also to demand more climate action. I also attended various XR actions, though not as many as I would have liked. I survived three rounds of layoffs.

But most of all, the year was about #cycling. I managed to log 182 activities into Strava for a total of 3227km, which is more than 2022 and 2021 combined (1503km and 1280km, respectively). I made my first 100km+ day ride by visiting Porvoo and tested out some bikepacking gear during rides in Tallinn and Tampere. I also started planning my first proper multi-week #bikepacking trip in central Europe for May 2024.

Still, seeing the year as positive does require forgetting a lot of things that are not personal. Like the utter failure of #humanity to converge on climate action. Personally, I've already lost hope. We're just going to ride over that cliff. How big the drop is just depends on what we do to mitigate it. Currently we're not doing much, and the direction isn't necessarily going to improve. With right wing governments on the rise, climate action just isn't going to be a priority. And at least in the democratic countries, you can't go blaming "the government for not doing anything" when it's the voters who are gullible fools, voting populist right wing parties for very very selfish reasons. We, the citizens of these countries, are responsible for change not happening. Maybe this crisis is just too big for our species to handle.

2023 was also the most violent year in a long time, with more #conflicts globally than we have had since a long time. While the world should be converging on the big issues, we're doing what humanity knows best - building borders based on imaginary nationalist ideas and smashing each other to pieces.

Can we, as a species, improve in 2024? That remains to be seen.

guillaume_f@diaspora.psyco.fr

Réparation de sacs avec fermetures zip cassées


En ce moment j'ai deux soucis de fermetures zip cassées :
- fermeture d'une poche latérale sur une sacoche de vélo
- grande fermeture principale d'un sac à dos


Je suis allé dans deux commerces :
- cordonnerie : me dit que sacoche vélo irréparable et sac à dos 80 € (valeur à neuf du sac 35 €... il a 8 ans)
- couturière Rapid'Couture : me dit que sacoche vélo irréparable (il faudrait défaire toutes les coutures pour la mettre à plat), et sac à dos elle ne veut pas s'embêter avec ça (elle est déjà bien occupée par les réparations de vêtements... réparer un sac à dos ça a l'air assez compliqué à faire)


ça m'embête de les jeter. (et d'en racheter des neufs ! )
Je me dis que je vais peut-être tenter à la main avec du fil et une aiguille.


Auriez-vous des suggestions, des tuyaux à ces sujet ?


#DIY #Couture #Cordonnerie #Reparation #SacocheVelo #Zip #FermetureZip #SacADos #Recyclage #Decroissance #Sobriete
#FaireSoiMeme #Resilience #Anticapitalisme #CommentFaire #SystemeD #Artisanat #Commerce #MachineACoudre #Bagagerie #Randonnee #BikePacking #DoItYourself #CafeRepair #RepairCafe #Hacking #Autonomie