Biking & Baseball: an awesome trip to Raley Field!

Home of the River Cats, Affiliate of the Oakland A’s, winners of 10 division titles, 4 pennants and 2 Triple-A World Series in 12 years of existence. They’re classy on the field and off–the product is always good and the waterfront park is very nice, surrounded by natural beauty (especially by bike!)

I took our eldest girl to her first baseball game, and it was awesome!  Granted, I’m a sucker for baseball–especially in a pure form like that played by our Triple-A Sacramento River Cats, the region’s perennially successful and consistent professional sports team (Yes, Kings, I’m talking about you…there is much you could learn from the Cats).

I won’t bore you any further with baseball minutia, but I wanted to share four awesome things I discovered about biking to the game (as opposed to driving):

  1. Free, attended, gated VALET BIKE PARKING six feet from the Front Gate Plaza! (They also have bike racks near the ticket office, by the way).  So, instead of paying $10 or so for parking and walking across parking lots in the heat, I rode right up to where I wanted to be anyway and parked my beast in the safest spot on the property.

    bikevalet

    Thanks to Pat, head valet to biking Rivercats fans…I was so pleasantly surprised to see that this was a free option, a cut-off throw away from the front gate at Raley Field.

  2. You have your choice of two pretty river-front bike trails (Sacramento side and West Sacramento side) and a short jaunt over the beautiful Tower Bridge if you prefer when you bike to Raley Field.  For out-of-towners, your local sports stadium may not be in as scenic a locale, but I’m sure you can find a route to see your team that is lovelier by cycle than by car.
  3. Whether you’re taking a 6-year-old with you or not, chances are good that–at the ballgame, circus, movie theater, or what have you–you’re going to eat in a way that’s…let’s say…not exactly what you’d call up your cardiologist to brag about.  We were fairly conservative and still had a hot dog, ice cream, and 3 cubic feet of salty popcorn.  For your own self-respect (and for your body’s sake a few hours after the final out is recorded) it’s nice to end a nice afternoon of sitting and eating junk food in the sun with a wee bit of exercise.
  4. When you’re a little sunbaked after the game, it sure is nice to get back to your vehicle when its a shaded bike instead of a 130-degree oven on four wheels that you’re trying to convince your young child is not cooking her like the hot dog she just ate.  (On this subject, it sure has been nice running errands on the bike this early-arriving summer as opposed to jumping in the car, which is already becoming unbearably hot after even short errands!)

Oh, and the River Cats won, and my daughter saw two huge home runs, a man dressed like huge feline getting drenched with a bucket of water while riding a very fast go-kart, an actual Olympian, and a man in a huge Arnold Schwarzenegger paper-maiche head win a very sloppy foot race with a similarly-suited Ronald Reagan…a day of firsts bookended by two beautiful, breezy waterfront bike rides.  We will definitely be back to root, root, root for the home team!

Bring on the Sun!

Riding in the heat doesn’t have to be brutal, even with your little co-pilots

bike with umbrella

Well, it’s officially getting warm (and then some), and that can be a big turn-off–believe me, I’ve been there–for people wanting to get more done on their bikes.  Living in the valley, we are sometimes dealt the hand of Short Cool Spring/Early Hot Summer.  I had to take the kids somewhere in the car yesterday for a brief errand, and our car felt like the 7th Circle of Dante’s Inferno (minus the Minotaur, thankfully).

Considering what to do, regarding our region’s rainy season and long roasting hot season, gave me concern before deciding to buy our Mundo.  Not being one who knows how to weld metal or do whatever it is one does to plexiglass to bend it to one’s will, I didn’t know if I could adequately cover my kids from rain and wind and protect them from brutal heat and harmful UV rays without hiring an alchemist with a penchant for two-wheeled vehicles and hope he/she would give me a serious discount.Tinker tailor roller guy

And, as much as I like to tinker, I wasn’t feeling overly competent in my abilities to make some sort of super-structure for the bike…so I looked around my basement and stumbled upon some really practical, easy and cheap solutions:

* The clip-on canopy to an old umbrella stroller worked just right for clipping onto the handlebars (with some zip ties used for added reinforcement), supplying shade for baby boy’s body when he’s in his Yepp Mini seat (his helmet shades his head, but I may add onto the canopy to extend over his head in the future for rain protection).

stroller

* A $3 umbrella from IKEA (http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/30215711/) provides total coverage to the entire back of the bike (2 Peanut Shell child’s seats in our case, plus the girls’ arms and legs)

UPPTÄCKA Umbrella IKEA Button for automatic opening.

* An old piece of 1.5″ wide PVC pipe, (about 1 1/2 feet long), and a bungee cord.  The bottom of the pipe sits in the middle hole on top of the rear deck of the bike, while the bungee secures to the Peanut Shell child’s seat.  The umbrella slides securely in (and out for easy removal) in seconds–Viola!

umbrella post

All told, it can cost considerably less than an arm and a leg to cover 3 little ones on a cargo bike in the crazy Sacramento heat (or any other place’s crazy heat).  The umbrella and pipe cost about $5, and a no-frills umbrella stroller is about $20 (I will also sometimes fold up the stroller and bungee it to one of the running boards on the bike if I need to wheel our little guy around, once we’ve reached our destination).

Happy Summer Cycling to All!

Common Sense Gun Legislation

***The following is not a post about bikes, obviously. It will not be everyone’s cup of tea, and it is a bit of a tonal departure from the rest of the blog (although I believe that the community-based and environmentally-focused elements of biking share, at least, some kinship with the ideas delineated in this document).

I will not be at all offended if people wish to not read it, and I hope that people who may disagree with my position are not offended by my placing it here. This site is where I am beginning to feel comfortable sharing with people, and I thought that if I could write my elected representatives about this, then I could share it with people to whom I am more connected, as well.***

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