Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Commuting, Day rides, Audax, Incidents, etc.
maanderx
Posts: 97
Joined: 17 Jul 2023, 12:20pm

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by maanderx »

Bmblbzzz wrote: 2 Sep 2024, 4:49pm Pogies are great on flat bars but AFAIK it's extremely difficult to make them work with drop bars. I used to have them on my motorbike, decades back, and even with zero activity they kept my hands warm all winter.
Pogie Lite are available for drop-bar bikes.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=gFdebjGrp-o

Image
AKA De Sisti
User avatar
Vantage
Posts: 3131
Joined: 24 Jan 2012, 1:44pm
Location: somewhere in Bolton
Contact:

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by Vantage »

531colin wrote: 2 Sep 2024, 4:59pm The loops on a cape are for your thumbs!
That way you can get an arm out for an arm signal.

Aha!
Bill


“Ride as much or as little, or as long or as short as you feel. But ride.” ~ Eddy Merckx
It's a rich man whos children run to him when his pockets are empty.
geocycle
Posts: 2237
Joined: 11 Jan 2007, 9:46am

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by geocycle »

I’ll try and schedule rides around rain but will usually go out if it’s relatively warm. As a rule of thumb, if I can hear the weather through the double glazing, (rain, wind, hail), I’ll think twice! I don’t mind wet legs but I really hate shoes full of water.
pq
Posts: 1362
Joined: 12 Nov 2007, 11:41pm
Location: St Antonin Noble Val, France
Contact:

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by pq »

For me mudguards are key. Within reason I don't mind riding in the rain if I'm on a bike with proper full length mudguards including mudflaps. But if I get caught out on a bike without muguards I find the gritty spray very unpleasant.
One link to your website is enough. G
User avatar
TrevA
Posts: 3692
Joined: 1 Jun 2007, 9:12pm
Location: Nottingham

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by TrevA »

For winter, if it’s icy, I have a few routes based on the county council’s gritting routes. They grit mainly the main roads but also rural bus routes, which you may be able to utilise to make a decent route, depending on where you live.
Sherwood CC and Notts CTC.
A cart horse trapped in the body of a man.
http://www.jogler2009.blogspot.com
biker38109
Posts: 183
Joined: 13 Aug 2024, 6:12am

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by biker38109 »

pq wrote: 2 Sep 2024, 9:44pm For me mudguards are key. Within reason I don't mind riding in the rain if I'm on a bike with proper full length mudguards including mudflaps. But if I get caught out on a bike without muguards I find the gritty spray very unpleasant.
Oh definitely.

The gritty slurry you feel spitting on your bum crack is awful! Also up in your face from the front wheel.

I got caught in the rain again yesterday but this time I just stood under a tree for 15-20 minutes. Quite pleasant to stand there and waiting for it to pass. Good to have waterproofs though if caught and time to get back is an issue.
User avatar
pjclinch
Posts: 5961
Joined: 29 Oct 2007, 2:32pm
Location: Dundee, Scotland
Contact:

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by pjclinch »

Nearholmer wrote: 2 Sep 2024, 2:37pm
the Cake District
Is this a typo, deliberate humour, or (as I hope) an area for which I urgently need to acquire an OS Map, and get planning a three-month tour of?
Deliberate (up to the observer whether it counts as humour!), and common usage in my circle.

There is no shortage of places to get cake in the Lake/Cake District...

Pete.
Often seen riding a bike around Dundee...
Carlton green
Posts: 4120
Joined: 22 Jun 2019, 12:27pm

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by Carlton green »

Steve wrote: 2 Sep 2024, 1:30pm I take it that the OP knows the value of mudguards in the wet - really the first line of defence.
He seems too. The additional benefit of long and wide mud flaps isn’t obvious to all and I no longer regard them as only ‘nice to have’ (so fit them where and when you can).
Edit. And the width of the mudguards is important too; spray also comes off the tyre’s side, etc., so your guards need to be wider than your tyres.

Plenty of good tips on this thread already. However I don’t think that anyone has mentioned overshoes, when I was commuting and had to cycle in all weathers they were a big help to me. These days, if I had to utility ride in the rain, I’d try wellingtons and over trousers (over them). Mits can keep the chilling wind and some rain off of wet hands. As others have said wet but (still) warm can be ok.

The material that ones clothes are made of is important. Wool has been mentioned and traditional clothes that are well made can be great - imho they’re too often overlooked and underrated. I also like some modern materials that simply shrug off the water (effectively non-absorbent) and retain a layer of wam air in them.

It’s worth noting that cyclists ride in different ways and for different purposes, with that in mind solutions that suit some will not necessarily be ideal for others.

In foul weather visibility is reduced and particularly so for motorists. I tend to wear light coloured clothes, ‘sorry mate I didn’t see you’ might be true but they aren’t words that I want to hear so I try to make it less likely that they are said.
Last edited by Carlton green on 4 Sep 2024, 2:13pm, edited 1 time in total.
Don’t fret, it’s OK to: ride a simple old bike; ride slowly, walk, rest and admire the view; ride off-road; ride in your raincoat; ride by yourself; ride in the dark; and ride one hundred yards or one hundred miles. Your bike and your choices to suit you.
ANTONISH
Posts: 3106
Joined: 26 Mar 2009, 9:49am

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by ANTONISH »

531colin wrote: 2 Sep 2024, 4:59pm The loops on a cape are for your thumbs!
That way you can get an arm out for an arm signal.
Tie them to the bars? I don’t fancy that….. have to un tie to get off the bike, I would forget!
IME even using the thumb loops as one should, extricating the thumb from the loop in a timely manner is still a problem.
When I was young I liked nothing better than going for a ride in the rain.
A cape really works well and I've never had anything better.
The problem these days is signalling and turning with the level and speed of traffic.
Hence I rarely ride in rain. I have a "waterproof" jacket which is ok for a couple of hours and a pair of cut off waterproof trousers made into shorts reaching just below knee level - I prefer these to "rainlegs" because I don't like the associated straps.

I never ride on ice, at my age you don't bounce.
User avatar
Vantage
Posts: 3131
Joined: 24 Jan 2012, 1:44pm
Location: somewhere in Bolton
Contact:

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by Vantage »

ANTONISH wrote: 3 Sep 2024, 10:11am I never ride on ice, at my age you don't bounce.
Spiked tyres sir! They do make quite the racket though.
Bill


“Ride as much or as little, or as long or as short as you feel. But ride.” ~ Eddy Merckx
It's a rich man whos children run to him when his pockets are empty.
RodT
Posts: 134
Joined: 7 Oct 2016, 8:59am
Location: Cornwall

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by RodT »

I was caught in one of last Sunday’s downpours while climbing out of Compton Dando in the Mendips. It was torrential. There was thunder and lightning, the lane became a small river and I was instantly drenched, notwithstanding the flimsy Rapha jacket I was wearing. It was utterly exhilarating. The rain was warm and refreshing and the lightning seemed to give me extra energy. Bring it on, I said to my bike. It did not reply. Probably didn’t hear me amid the racket of the storm.
Of course, it would have been a much less enjoyable experience in a cold winter rain. This was sub-tropical.
The downside was the coating of gritty mud all up my back from riding my summer bike with no mudguards.
Biospace
Posts: 2627
Joined: 24 Jun 2019, 12:23pm

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by Biospace »

RodT wrote: 3 Sep 2024, 11:32am The rain was warm and refreshing and the lightning seemed to give me extra energy. Bring it on, I said to my bike.
Ha ha! Lighting always clears the air very nicely and riding through rainstorms is often fun. I've been camping before in heavy summer rain and after a day or two, given the tent is dry and you're well organised for cooking, I've learned to embrace it.
ANTONISH
Posts: 3106
Joined: 26 Mar 2009, 9:49am

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by ANTONISH »

Vantage wrote: 3 Sep 2024, 10:49am
ANTONISH wrote: 3 Sep 2024, 10:11am I never ride on ice, at my age you don't bounce.
Spiked tyres sir! They do make quite the racket though.
I forgot to mention that another reason I don't ride on ice, is that I have to rely on motor vehicles being driven according to the conditions.
Manc33
Posts: 2339
Joined: 25 Apr 2015, 9:37pm

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by Manc33 »

I remember biking to work some mornings where I got rained on so much, my pants stuck to my legs and acted as a wetsuit, keeping me warm. Yes you need to have some spirit about you for it to not get you down when you get 100% soaked. Normal rain doesn't bother me, but I avoid it completely now because I'm on an eBike, where I have prized open the display twice in the past so it's not waterproof anymore. I need to pack a sandwich bag for it actually. :)
We'll always be together, together on electric bikes.
User avatar
Vantage
Posts: 3131
Joined: 24 Jan 2012, 1:44pm
Location: somewhere in Bolton
Contact:

Re: Can riding in the rain be not miserable? Also related safety questions for bad weather cycling

Post by Vantage »

Manc33 wrote: 4 Sep 2024, 2:02pm I remember biking to work some mornings where I got rained on so much, my pants stuck to my legs and acted as a wetsuit, keeping me warm.
How does that work? Anytime I've been soaked, the wind only makes the water colder.
Bill


“Ride as much or as little, or as long or as short as you feel. But ride.” ~ Eddy Merckx
It's a rich man whos children run to him when his pockets are empty.
Post Reply