therealbicyclebuck
TheRealBicycleBuck
therealbicyclebuck

For some reason, people either love or hate the seats in our Outback. Despite all the electric adjustability, my wife can’t find a setting that she finds comfortable for more than 10 minutes.

I have a small stable of bikes. One is a recent cyclocross frame with canti brakes and moustache bars (and disc brake tabs that have never seen a proper disc brake mounted). Another is a late ‘70s/early ‘80s steel framed Schwinn that started off with 27" wheels, but after a cold set has been fitted with a pair of 26"

“Having said that, it is extremely difficult to meaningfully filter enough air for aerobic activity...”

On the contrary, it would be very easy to prove. Consider OSHA’s intent:

Who will be liable if a worker returns and subsequently catches COVID-19? I assume it would be a case of the employee proving the employer didn’t provide a safe work environment.

Doggone it! I missed this one. Oh, well. Here are a few pics of my WRX being packed up after a camping trip.

My college dorm was one of the first on campus to feature a computer lab filled with Macintosh computers.

I like to listen to audiobooks while I’m working in the yard. The latest series to occupy my ears is Expeditionary Force by Craig Alanson. The series is a science fiction romp across the galaxy. The best part is that the author doesn’t take himself too seriously and has a lot of fun with the characters.

A simple mechanical timer is how we used to control our aquarium lights. They even have a manual switch for when you want to the lights off for movie night.

Nightmare? Not so much. But I did learn over the last couple of years that people in downtown Houston love to screw up rush hour traffic by parking illegally and blocking what should be an open lane.

This isn’t just affecting K-12 students. One of my former colleagues is still a professor at one of the smaller state universities. Several of his students don’t have computers at home and/or don’t have high-speed internet access. One student has internet through his cable provider, but he said, “it’s really more like

I’ve worked in the disaster recovery industry ever since Katrina pulled me from the hallowed halls of academia. While there is a lot of disaster prevention engineering going on, most of the risk is a result of an uncountable number of small decisions by individuals, small businesses, large corporations, and local,

Yeah, don’t be that guy. Who, you might ask? That’s the guy who’s been taking the full cups of water into the bathroom at WeWork and leaving them, ahem, behind.

We live outside Baton Rouge, so we don’t have the demand that you would in the Seattle area. We made our order through Walmart. 

I’ll add the FedEx driver and the dude who just delivered groceries to my home. 

This is deserving of more stars.

You are correct, they lead in value, not in quantity. Most of that value is tied up in expensive crops like fruits, vegetables, and nuts. If you want staples like bread, then you must look to midwestern and southern states. I have links to sources in my other response: https://earther.gizmodo.com/1842493808

California’s lead is not even in quantity, it’s by value and much of that is tied up high-cost crops like fruits, vegetables, and nuts.