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Weekend of Food, Valentines, Bicycles and Presidents

Best Valentine’s Day present ever was having Kyle for a three day weekend because of President’s Day.

Speaking of presidents, we watched the documentary produced by Edward Norton, By the People on Friday night. The documentary film that was originally about a young senator who had the ability to inspire the youth turned into a behind the scenes play by play of the 2008 election primaries. There were great scenes of the Obama family, Axelrod, Plouffe and interviews with big media. The best part about the film was that it transported me out of this negative gridlock that is our political system back into the time of hope. I have to believe that Obama will move us beyond this crap.
Kyle took Annika grocery shopping on Saturday while I worked out and bought ingredients to make Shepherd’s Pie. I made some gluten free crust for it and it turned out really well.
On Sunday morning, Valentine’s Day, I made Gluten free banana pancakes that turned out oh-so fluffy, apple chicken sausage, bacon and a feta-tomato-onion scramble.

Pancake Recipe:

  • 2 c. Bob’s all purpose gluten free flour
  • 1 tsp. xanthum gum
  • 1 tbsp. baking powder
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 2 eggs
  • 3 tbsp. oil
  • banana
  • 1 tbsp. cinnamon
  • 3 tbsp. sugar
  • 2 tbsp. honey
  • 3/4 c. soy milk
  • 1/4 c. goat yogurt
  • 1/4 c. applesauce

Mix wet ingredients in blender. Sift dry ingredients and add to wet ingredients gradually.
Since Kyle and I aren’t hip on the Vday consumer thing, we rode our bikes with Annika in tote in the Burley trailer to Target and Crate & Barrel to spend gift cards that we had received. Kyle had his eye on some ear phones at Target and I wanted more lighting for our loft. After 5 minutes of hard core decision laboring at Crate & Barrel, we decided on this beauty.
Biking with Baby:
When I was still pregnant, I often thought about how I could bike with Annika. Because I cycled every day of the pregnancy until 2 days past my due date, I was jonesin’ to get back in the saddle after she was born, but I new it would take careful consideration. I was concerned with functionality, ease of use and safety, of course. We have owned a Burley Trailer for about 4 years now. It was originally bought for towing the dogs or camping. I was pretty dead set against using the trailer to transport Annika because my only experience with it was on dedicated bike trails, not street traffic. But, I knew there was no way she was going to be on the bike in a seat until she could wear a helmet so the trailer was my only option.
Kyle harnessed her car seat base into the trailer so getting her in and out would be a simple click away. And as far as the safety issue is concerned, she is strapped into the car seat just like she would be in a car. Both the roll bar on the car seat and the roll bar on the trailer protects her head. Technically, this rig is not legal for her because Massachusetts law states that all children must wear a helmet, but I would argue that she is much safer this way than a child wearing a helmet, sitting in a seat mounted on the bike.
Pros:

  1. protects her from the elements – wind, cold, rain, street dust
  2. efficient – not that much heavier
  3. load bearing – I can toss a bunch of stuff in the trailer with her
  4. sturdy – absorbs shocks from street potholes and bumps
  5. compatibility – switches between different bikes
  6. safe
  7. snooze machine – she passes out!

Cons:

  1. set up – takes about 5 minutes to attach the trailer (luckily we’re blessed to live in a condo that provides an outdoor bike shed)
  2. big footprint – hard to store
  3. expensive

And to top off the Valentine’s Day, I bought this appropriately branded Cabernet, Cyles Gladiator, from Darwins LTD. on our hot chocolate pit stop. I’m a sucker for labeling. Speaking of labeling, I just visited the wine’s website and it turns out that they are banned in Alabama because it’s deemed pornographic. Oh Alabama, I’m speechless. If anyone wants to buy me a present, I’d love the t-shirt, ‘banned in Alabama’ from their website.

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Car-free = Merry Christmas and Happy Birthday to me


My 32nd birthday present to myself was selling our car. Kyle and I sold our ’97 Honda CRV within 4 days of listing it on Craigslist for the asking price and now we are officially car-free! Kyle still has his motorcycle, but it’s not used for necessary travel, but leisure during the warm months. It has been a dream of mine to be car-free for 5 years and the dream came true a day before my birthday.

We have barely touched the CRV since moving to downtown Madison in 2005. Additionally, since we have moved to Boston, we have only used our car to move and for unnecessary trips. It was definitely time for that car to be sold. All of our errands and trips to work are done on bike, foot or mass transit (Kyle’s company subsidizes part of his subway card and the rest is taken out of his paycheck pre-tax). I was a little nervous this past week with the huge snowstorm we got, but I found out our lifestyle is still doable.

On the night of the huge snowstorm, Friday, we bundled up with our ski goggles and walked 40 minutes to a friend’s cocktail party and then walked home. There is no feeling like layering on the winter gear and walking through snow and wind – the weather lets you know you’re alive.

We pretty much stuck close to home on Saturday, but had to get groceries while it was still snowing, so we got bundled up again and loaded the milk crate and canvas totes on the back of my bike. With all the double parking in Southie, the ride was pretty miserable, but we effectively loaded 0 worth of groceries on my bike and Kyle’s back and got home with no worries of finding a parking space.

Monday was an adventure and I’m still sore. We received a rainy sleet mixture on Sunday so I knew the roads were unbikable, so I decided to literally run my errands in the 15 degree chill. Everything would have been fine except for two things: 1) unshoveled sidewalks that even the walkers chose the road instead of and 2) being hard to breath because of the mucus factor…I was spitting every block. So I accomplished going to yoga, running to the post office to get stamps for Xmas cards and running down to office max to get printer ink. All in all, it was a 3.5 hour work-out.

Tuesday, I did not want to run, so I used Kyle’s mountain bike that has burlier tires. I dropped off a deposit at the bank, went to the gym and rode to Newbury street to get more ink for the printer at Best Buy. All of this while spraying gross brown and salty slush up my back and on my shoes, competing with double parked a-holes, and walking my bike on the unwalkable sidewalk.

If all of this sounds exhausting, it kinda is, but guess what? I have no stress, I sleep well at night, and besides my gluten intolerance, I can eat whatever the hell I want. Plus, I get to SEE and interact with people, not get frustrated with their driving styles and honk my car horn.

An article from the AP came out on the day after my birthday entitled “Leaner nations bike, walk and use mass transit.” The secret that all of us lifestyle bicyclists and alternative commuters share is no longer a secret. We’re happier and healthier. For me, the car-free life happened without choice when I was 20. I totalled my car in college at UGA in Athens and was forced to ride my dad’s awesome Trek bike. That was the beginning of the rest of my life and although I succumbed to buying a car again (because that’s the American way of life), I am living the car-free life again.

Today’s agenda- buy Christmas tree, last minute groceries, yoga, gift for my husband, Christmas service, dinner and a movie…all on bike and foot. I hope your holiday is as blissful as mine.

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My Bicycling Scheme for visiting friends in Atlanta

Visiting my family and friends in Atlanta is great, but nothing offsets my fun index more than having to drive EVERYWHERE. When you live in Atlanta, you don’t know any better and the 45 minute drives seem like nothing. On the flip side, when you have lived the past 8 years riding your bike, walking or taking mass transit for transportation, you get extremely spoiled.

You see, unlike traveling by car, when you bike, walk or use mass transit, the time is your’s. No worries about traffic jams and even if there is one, there’s always a book to keep you content on a bus or subway. Additionally, there’s the health benefits, sense of community and opportunity to be outside….not to mention the environmental impact.

Kyle and I are renting a Prius to drive down to Atlanta from Boston, mostly because we want to bring the dogs, but even more because we get to bring our bikes and his guitars.

I cannot wait to visit the city now that I know I won’t be held hostage by our car. Especially in Newnan, GA.

Towards the end of our week there, Kyle is driving down to Mobile, Al for a wedding and I get to go see my friends, Sara, Julie and Tracy. Like any big city, they live pretty far from one another. Unlike other big cities, the mass tranportation system (MARTA) is underutilized. This is my perfect opportunity to ride my bike, use the bus and ride the subway in Atlanta.

My trip is as follows:
1) Ride my bike on Thursday from Newnan to Palmetto (13 miles)

Newnan to Palmetto MARTA Bus
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2) Ride MARTA bus #180 from Palmetto to College Park train station (35 minutes)
3) Ride MARTA subway from College Park to North Springs (30 minutes)
4) Ride Marta bus #85 or 185 from North Springs to Roswell Shopping Center (15 minutes)
5) Ride Bike from Roswell Shopping Center to Sara’s (8 miles)

02/02/2009 Route
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6) On Friday, Bike from Sara’s to Julie’s (19 miles)

Sara in Woodstock to Julie in Norcross
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7) On Saturday, Bike from Julie’s to Tracy’s (20 miles)

Julie\&#039s to Tracy\&#039s
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Woo-hoo, then Kyle picks me up from Tracy’s on Sunday to make the road trip back to Boston! Now I will be relaxed with my friends.

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