Frugality

Bike Commuting: Is it for me?

I am currently in the serious consideration phase of becoming a bike commuter. The weather is starting to get really nice here in San Diego and I would love to spend a few hours each day enjoying the open skies and brown (but temporarily green) countryside. Here is a quick little list of some of the pros and cons of that I have thought of that are currently influencing my thought process.

The Pros

  • Good exercise – the extent of my current exercise regimen is 3 miles of walking per work day coupled with some light calisthenics thrown in to keep me alert as I sit at my desk. If I switched to biking my total mileage traveled under my own power would increase 633% per week and I would be spending 1400% more time exercising. That’s a lot of nuts.
  • Same approximate commute time – right now taking the bus gets me from door to door in about an hour and 10 minutes each way. In order to duplicate that with a bike commute I would only have to average 10 mph, which seems doable to me even though I haven’t commuted on a bike ever. Who knows, I may get faster once I start doing it regularly and beat the bus to work.
  • I wouldn’t have to buy a bus pass – $64 saved each month. Well probably not saved, just shifted towards bike maintenance – but by maintaining my own bike each month I will gain some skills that I could one day sell to others. That way that $64 will go to making me more useful to myself and to others instead of going to “the man” who runs the San Diego public transit system.
  • I wouldn’t have to worry about a car – I really don’t worry about a car for me right now anyway since we only have one car that my wife uses, but I could continue in this state of abnormality for longer still. No insurance premiums, no maintenance costs, no gasoline, no car washing – talk about money saving. I haven’t crunched all those numbers yet, but I probably will soon as I weigh out this idea in more detail.

The Cons

  • I don’t already own a bike – that means I have to go out and buy a new product that I have no experience in. Buying stuff is not something I am good at. In fact, I suck at shopping – especially when it is something that is needed. So not only will I have to research something new, I will have to go to a store and ask questions and try things out and weigh different options, all the while hoping I am not going to waste hundreds of dollars on something that doesn’t really meet my needs. Why does shopping have to have risks?
  • I have never cycled such a long distance before – 11 miles one way turns into 22 miles round trip. I would be logging 110 miles a week. That is a lot of miles. To mitigate the immediate impact on my body I would probably just bike one way until my legs can get adjusted to the strain, but that is still a lot of miles. Most people I have seen on this internet thingy say they ride about 12-15 miles for their whole commute. I would be doing twice as much. Is that doable?
  • I would have to use a very busy road that over one stretch has high speed traffic – here my inexperience coupled with an idiot driver could result in serious injury or death. Accidents are relatively rare, but they still do happen.
  • I would have to shower and change once I got to work (or stay stinky all day because I sweat like pig) – really, I sweat like a pig. When I was still wresting in college I would drink about 5 pounds of water during a practice and still loose 3 pounds of water weight by the end. That means I would seep about 1 gallon of liquid from my skin over the course of a 3 hour practice. Of course that was seriously rigorous physical activity, but I think it might be carried over to a bike commute.
  • I would need to carry my lunch and clothes on my back or bike – this could be awkward, dangerous, or both. I’d much rather have a nice warm breakfast and fresh change of clothes magically appear at work than have to lug it around. Genies are expensive so I don’t expect on hiring one anytime soon.
  • I’d have to bike even if I didn’t “feel” like it

I’m not sure which side will win, but I am hoping that the pros do. Bike commuting just sounds like it could be more fun than riding the bus and I like the idea of having a rock hard, functional body. I may even get my butt back! Hurrah for abnormally large butts!

This definitely needs a thorough financial analysis as well, but I just wanted to get some of my other considerations down since not everything is about money. I plan on going to a bike shop soon to see what type of bike I’d be looking for and just how much it might cost. I am not looking forward to it, but it must be done.

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