Wintertime Cycling I made myself a goal last year to be more courageous in the realm of winter cycling this year. Well it's February and I am still on the bicycle at least three days a week. I get the sense that my colleagues believe me to be a nut, but we cannot let the opinions of others influence our course beyond our duty. It's been cold. It's been warm. I haven't fallen due to winter conditions yet. Here's the goods: The Bicycles I have two that are road-ready at this time. The first, which is also my preference is a skinny-tire road bike, without tread. More specifically, it is a mid-80s Norco Triathlon on 23mm tires. [1] This style bicycle does not lend itself to fresh snow or those very cold days: less than 10F and -10C. I mention this bicycle first because it is the one I have ridden for the majority of the winter season so far. Here in British Columbia, the roads are generally clear enough to ride by the afternoon after a snow and it doesn't snow everyday. Most of the time, the roads are good enough for this road bike to get me around. And other times, lntl? What then? Well, I am glad you've asked. There is another ride that I common. If there has been fresh snow of less than 2 inches or it is incredibly cold out and I fear the black ice. This is my early 90s, hungarian-made, Schwinn Woodlands. This behemoth weighs in at 40 lbs and is a bear to ride uphill. The tread pattern is more aggressive than the road bike and allows me a greater sense of security when riding on a questionable road surface. So you have different setups for different conditions. One for "good" conditions and another for "less good" conditions. Is there anything else that changes with conditions? Well, clothing for one. Style is another. In winter-time I become hyper-paranoid about being killed by a motorvehicle. More paranoid than I usually am. How about maintenance. Do you do any? Truthfully, I usually put off maintenance until an issue becomes known. ie: missing a gear, strange shifting, flat tire, etc. There is a detail about my lifestyle that perhaps could be considered maintenance which I will share. In the wintertime, there is a lot of grime on the road from the sand and salt which is dispursed. When riding through this grime, it gets all over everything and will wear down surfaces. I store my bicycles on the walls of my living space. I purchased some brackets which hang a bicycle up by it's pedal and I like how they display in my home. Also, I do not have a garage or bike-shed. At any rate, before I hang up a bike, I do my walls the service of brushing off all of that loose grit and grime from the roads. In reality, if I had a garage I probably wouldn't do this. This action of clearing off road grime is the extent of winter-maintenance which I regularly perform. [1] gopher://republic.circumlunar.space/I/%7elntl/logs/img/norco.jpg [2] gopher://republic.circumlunar.space/I/%7elntl/logs/img/woodlands.jpg