Boats and
bikes, despite all the expensive fold-up, rust proof, light-weight wheeled contraptions
to the contrary, just don’t go together very well. Or maybe they do—but we’ve
never been that successful at making the combo work…
We had
bikes on our first boat. The two of us were cycle commuters and couldn’t
imagine traveling without bikes. So we road tested all sorts of options and
after finding that the folding bikes we could afford were too wimpy for hilly
rides on rough roads, we settled on light-weight hybrids with quick release
front and back wheels. I sewed storage bags for them and they found a home in a
back locker—where they stayed.
Oh, they
came out a few times—but the effort to load them into the dinghy, row them into
shore, assemble them, set off on some road that was a death trap to cyclists
and then afterward try to find a safe place to lock them up, or repeat the trip
back to the boat meant that as our travels went on--we used our bikes less and
less. We finally sold them off in the Western Caribbean.
This time,
even though we have a bigger boat (easier storage) and a bigger dinghy (easier
transport) we still know from lugging scooters and a unicycle to shore that,
for us, the effort to cruise with a bike would outweigh the benefit of having a
bike. And honestly, there are not that many places where bikes work that well—most
places you can easily get what you need by walking and a lot of islands are
just too hilly for bikes to be useful.
This said,
we still like bikes, and still think that they are an excellent idea for
cruisers who spend more than a few weeks in a given port. I just don’t think
they belong *on* boats.
Some of my
favourite marina setups have had bikes for cruisers to use. Sometimes the bikes
are fancy but most of the time (at least in the kind of places we stay) they
are beaters that were abandoned by previous cruisers. We’ve also rented bikes,
been lent bikes and know other cruisers who have inherited bikes.
bike parking at Gardens Point |
Our new
bikes are what Maia calls ‘ugh’ bikes: Which means they are a) ugly and b) ugh
is the sound you make when your mum shows you your new bike. They are also very
inexpensive bikes—my lock is worth more than my bike—which makes them perfect
cruiser bikes. So we’ll use our new ugh bikes while we’re here—and at some
point when we carry on we’ll pass them along to the next cruiser who arrives in
port.
2 comments:
Great to know! Thanks for sharing your experience.
Dani
you're welcome!
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