Glad I took the heavy bike out today
Actually, I did it on purpose. I knew there was a chance it might rain, and I thought that if I was gonna get caught riding home in the rain, I’d rather ride the heavy, stable, upright bike with the electric handwarmers (one of which actually works) than the beast with 120 horsepower on a hairtrigger, the steep steering angle, and the brakes capable of throwing me forward over the handlebars.
Well, sure enough it rained tonight. I waited for a break in the rain, but left at exactly the wrong time. A little way up 101, the rain started to get heavy, and the raindrops got bigger and bigger in the headlight. As I started to feel the impacts hit my leather, I realized: that’s not rain. It was chilly, but not really cold, so I assume that it had to be hail, not sleet, but it was enough to make me wonder if I should do something more than slow down, like pull over and stop, or even just get off at the next exit and find a diner for a cup of some hot beverage.
It got frightening when the precipitation started to collect. The freeway was still all wet, not frozen, but the frozen pellets were falling faster than they’d melt. I started to wonder if it was really smart to continue riding on a roadway covered with wet ice marbles.
I didn’t relish the idea of sitting at the side of the freeway, and I was between exits, so I just took it as easy as I could, no sudden changes, about 40mph on a road I’d normally ride at 80. The four-wheeled traffic around me was keeping pace with me over in the slow lane, and the folks moving at real highway speeds in the fast lane were few and far enough away for me not to worry about them.
Ha! Who would have thought I’d get my first chance to ride in a hailstorm here in the Bay Area? Apparently Rte 17 was closed today due to snow. Not hard to believe; last weekend I saw snow at the “Four Corners” intersection of Skyline Boulevard and Big Basin Way. It was the sort of filthy series of snow clumps that tenaciously refuse to melt at the side of the road in the springtime, in parts of the world that have real winters. Rows of remnants of snowdrifts no larger than bowling balls.
Well, I made it home and I’m about to crawl in under the electric blanket. The bikes are all out under their covers and all is well with the world.