Sorry that it has been so long since the last update. Things have not been going well.. I have had a cough for ages. The first time that I can find it mentioned in one of my emails to a friend was back in September. Nevertheless, once the Moulton arrived I was busy riding it back and forth to work. My colleagues around me were coughing too, and they had all been diagnosed as having a viral chest infection, and I assumed that mine was the same.
Around the beginning of December I was getting fed up with the cough and went to see a GP at a walk-in clinic, was prescribed antibiotics and steroids, and told to take a week off and rest. I felt no different after the week off so just soldiered on until xmas, when I decided that I was probably putting a strain on my chest and would stay off the bike until the cough got better. By the end of February there was no improvement, so I went to the doctor and he suggested that my reflux has got worse and stomach acid is being driven up into my lungs, which seemed obvious once he said it, so I am now on some new meds. The first lot just made me sick, so the second lot I am hopeful will cure me. If not I will have to have a test for helicobacter pylori.
Things have changed at work and I needed to access the cellular network rather than the work wifi. My iPad mini was just wifi so I gave that to my son, who was about to buy a used one from CEX, and replaced mine with another iPad mini, but this time the cellular/wifi one. Vodafone managed to balls up the online order, but with a bit of chasing on the good old telephone it had them running the credit check, which they had failed to do. “The SIM will be in the first class post today sir, so you will have it tomorrow”, they said. There’s no point telling them that it wont arrive tomorrow. Three days later I now have it. I popped the nano SIM out of the card and it comes as no surprise that there is no signal here at home. We just haven’t got any coverage, but I know that it will work at the place of employ as my colleague is using one not 12 feet from my desk, and work is where it is most important. I spoke to my son about the lack of signal, and he said, yes people get so used to having such a good signal wherever they are in the UK, even in the Peak District and the Lake District in the middle of nowhere, but Shetland really is in the back of beyond and unless you go there you just can’t understand how it is. Indeed!
Anyway, getting away from the personal tech, my other half has just had an electric bike delivered and was keen to go out on it. As we were at her place at the time, Scalloway, once the capital of Shetland, seemed like a good place to go where we could get a coffee. I should add this was before the latest trip to the GP. I wasn’t sure that I would be able to do the 11 mile round trip, and we agreed that if my lungs gave up on me I would turn back and she would carry on. Amazingly I made it in one piece feeling really well, and I just couldn’t understand why I was coughing so badly one moment then zooming off on the bike the next. We sat down in a cafe and had a cake and a coffee and then headed back. I had changed the battery over so that I wouldn’t have to stop on the way back, and we headed off back to Lerwick by a slightly different route with more hills.
A third of the way into the trip a car came by, the driver tooting the horn and waving, a friend of ours. She pulled into the lay by and we had a chat, but I set off after a while and let the women have a yarn. I got back to the other half’s place, and except for a fit of coughing I felt fine. I wish I hadn’t left it so long until trying to ride the bike again.
She arrived home later and was obviously pleased with the bike except for a rubbing sound that we weren’t able to track down, but seemed to be plastic on plastic around the crank area. Being small she fins the bike difficult to lift up the steep flight of steps to the block of houses, taking the battery off reduces the weight, but I was surprised how little it weighed. The Bosch batteries on mine are much more densely weighted. With the battery on her bike, to me the weight seems to be much the same as my heavily built Thorn.
I engaged a talented young man with engineering skills and the tools for the job and he has knocked me up a lovely stainless steel front rack to fit the panniers to. Unfortunately the measurements I gave him didn’t take into account key access to the lock that can lock both the ePod and the battery to the bike, so I plan to lop the top of the key off.
I have since ridden the bike the 18 miles home with loaded tail pack and front panniers, albeit not heavy, and the bike still rides like a dream.
Pottering about on a Moulton with its small wheels, whilst the other half rides about on her large wheeled bike reminded me of when we rode from Aberdeen, back to Shetland via Cullen on the Moray Coast, Inverness, Tain, Wick, JoG, along the coast, then across to St Margarets Hope on Orkney and Kirkwall, before getting the ferry to Shetland.
As you will know if you read the thread from the beginning, it took a long time to make a decision which bike to buy, and a lot of the decision was based around the battery. In a way I am envious when I see her large wheeled Bergamont from the Electric Transport Shop in Cambridge. It is very stylish, except for the Dutch sit up an beg look about it. I have no wish to be bent over drops, but I like to lean forward a lot towards the handlebars, and that is probably born out of riding in the winds up here.
Being used to riding a rigid bike the Moulton always seems like a little bit of luxury when I get on it. I know that the suspension doesn’t move much, but that small amount of movement, especially at the back does make a difference, and I think it is that, and the combination of a saddle that suits me, means that my butt survives painless for longer.
The Moulton doesn’t really have a huge carrying capacity compared to the large wheeled bikes, which naturally have more space to hang stuff from, and further before it scrapes on the ground, though I have seen some very heavily laden Moultons on touring expeditions. That does have an advantage though as it prevents people like me, who like to be ready for anything, from taking the kitchen sink with me. Generally though I don’t need to take a lot back and forth between home and work, and if it does get heavy and/or bulky the trailer will step into the breach..
So if it got stolen tomorrow what would I replace it with? I really can’t say with absolute certainty. I would prefer a large wheeled bike, but the Moulton has its advantages, as well as looking very cool. I still like the battery system. I know that Bosch batteries will be available for years to come. The ePod system has worked well, and the only problem that I have had was when I hadn’t clipped the battery on properly, but a warning light indicated a problem, and as there isn’t many places the system can go wrong, I went straight to the battery fitment. I have ridden through torrential rain without problems, and we all know that ebikes take a good few years off your legs so I ride in winds and conditions that I wouldn’t have considered before. It was initially horribly expensive, but lungs permitting I will do many more miles on this bike, and go to places that I may not have gone to before. Yes, it’s been good value. If you like Moultons, then this could be the perfect way of getting about, and hub gears have surely got to be a logical choice for all but those who don’t ride in adverse conditions.