NY_Dan
Well-known
I'm all for the 5 borough tour - that's once a year and you can make plans - and the bikers and everyone is safe. 🙂
I'm all for the 5 borough tour - that's once a year and you can make plans - and the bikers and everyone is safe. 🙂
Wow, I didn't realize how bad the 5 borough had gotten. I did it in the 80's but slow and leisurely. Yesterday I saw two bikers go down thanks to a jerk riding against traffic on 9th avenue - he got the worst of it, so that was justice of some sort...
Leica Store SoHo will have a ring light portrait session with John Kreidler using the new Leica Q2 this Saturday March 9th 1-4 PM.
47 MP.
Cal
Portrait session with a 28mm fixed lens camera?
I guess I'd pass... even if I was in the 'hood.😉
Ought to be a law that if you kill someone who is obviously brain dead it is not murder.Cal
That's a great working theory until someone else finds YOU brain dead 😀
"28 is the new 50"
Love this !
robert
"28 is the new 50"
Love this !
robert
Robert,
Kinda true because the most popular and numerous cameras are cell phones.
Use what you have...
Cal
Yes, since I have the Summaron 28/5.6 it is my most used (and satisfying) lens. I have the Nikon 28/2.8 CRC lens for my FM2T as well.
I'm becoming a 28 holic... 😀
robert
Jorde,
Mountain biking on Long Island's pine barrens is a lot of loose sand, deer trails, with some glacial rock outcroppings. Due to erosion roots and rocks get exposed.
The climbs are not long, but can be steep. In some sections like steep like a flight of stairs.
I was a big fan of long epic rides and doing "Centuries." In one season I think I did five of them.
One Century was called the Gold Coast where it was all these wealthy estates around upper Brookville. Then there was the Tour of the Hamptons out on the East End of Long Island.
The one hundred mile ride that is known for hills is called the "Highpoint." Motor Parkway formally was the driveway to the Vanderbuilt Estate. It is a long constant grade going uphill south to north. What makes this ride rather mean and cruel is that the tallest and steepest hills are concentrated into the last 30 miles of the century.
I remember Ralphie getting dropped. Next was me not so long after. The group of riders that dropped me and Ralphie were Cat 2 racers so there is little shame in getting killed by these guys.
So in Huntington there is "Snake Hill Road" which is so steep that it basically is a series of switchbacks. At this point I'm riding by myself, I'm tired, and pretty much slugging along, but I pass this rider in distress who is "bonking" at the very beginning of Snake Hill Road.
As I pass him I hear him scream out in pain. Forensics denote that he likely cramped up, lost momentum, and crashed because he could not release or get out of his clipless pedals.
I know it was mucho mean, but I laughed. How cruel was that? LOL. "No mercy," I say.
Out towards the end of the Long Island Expressway, Exit 70 I believe is this Hot Dog stand called "Gracies." Pretty much this is the only place around to get food on the way to the Hamptons on the South Fork and it is in the middle of nowhere.
One day I drive to Gracies, park, and jump on my road bike. The North Fork of Long Island use to be just potatoe farms, but now they have been made into wineries. The glacial past is evident in rolling hills on Sound Avenue going through village after village. The vibe is of New England and not Long Island at all.
For intervals this rolling terrain is wonderful. Charge every hill and rest on the downhills. The average speed goes up and it is somewhat easy to exceed a 20 MPH average riding by yourself in a sustained manner if you have the conditioning.
So eventually I run out of road and "How did I get to Orient Point?" I grab a large milk shake to refuel me, and I check my bike computer and see I covered exactly 50 miles, and now I have to ride another 50 miles back to get to my Jeep parked at Gracie's.
The first 50 were easier. Towards the end I was pretty much close to "bonking." Also know that I rode to far west on Sound Avenue and had to backtrack east.
Because I became lost the overall ride was about 112 miles or so and time in the saddle approached close to 7 hours.
What I love about riding: not a lot to think about, and this I find peaceful. Another thing I love, and it is about "being a man" and feeling connected to my body. I know my strengths; I know my weaknesses; I know my limits; and I know what I'm capable of. This connection to my body for me is part of being a man. Proud of it.
Cal
I bet that 28/2.8 CRC would be great on my Nikon D700.
Yes, since I have the Summaron 28/5.6 it is my most used (and satisfying) lens. I have the Nikon 28/2.8 CRC lens for my FM2T as well.
I'm becoming a 28 holic... 😀
robert
Remember Cal.
You're never too old to ride. You get old because you stop riding.