jamesp
Cave Dweller
Member since October 2012
Posts: 36,612
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Post by jamesp on Nov 21, 2014 19:47:13 GMT -5
That would be a mess but I actually want to try and ride it My tires are studded so i have as much if not more traction than riding on pavement / gravel Oh yea, studded bicycle tires. Is that common in your area ? I assume so for a mountain bike.
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Post by glennz01 on Nov 21, 2014 20:42:03 GMT -5
That would be a mess but I actually want to try and ride it My tires are studded so i have as much if not more traction than riding on pavement / gravel Oh yea, studded bicycle tires. Is that common in your area ? I assume so for a mountain bike. Yeah, they also have fat tire bikes for the really hard core people
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jamesp
Cave Dweller
Member since October 2012
Posts: 36,612
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Post by jamesp on Nov 21, 2014 21:11:27 GMT -5
Oh yea, studded bicycle tires. Is that common in your area ? I assume so for a mountain bike. Yeah, they also have fat tire bikes for the really hard core people A 17 mile loop in 45 minutes is hardcore.
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Post by glennz01 on Nov 21, 2014 21:46:17 GMT -5
Yeah, they also have fat tire bikes for the really hard core people A 17 mile loop in 45 minutes is hardcore. It is easy to maintain 20 mph on flat ice areas with such a light bike.. been a few years since i was last able to bike through that part (being how its swamp as you see at the end of my vid)
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jamesp
Cave Dweller
Member since October 2012
Posts: 36,612
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Post by jamesp on Nov 21, 2014 22:49:18 GMT -5
A 17 mile loop in 45 minutes is hardcore. It is easy to maintain 20 mph on flat ice areas with such a light bike.. been a few years since i was last able to bike through that part (being how its swamp as you see at the end of my vid) Best with 40 MPH wind on back
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Post by glennz01 on Nov 22, 2014 0:14:39 GMT -5
It is easy to maintain 20 mph on flat ice areas with such a light bike.. been a few years since i was last able to bike through that part (being how its swamp as you see at the end of my vid) Best with 40 MPH wind on back That does help but I don't do long bike rides in those conditions unless its really warm wind On the loop back is kinda down hill... not enough to notice to the eye but enough to notice with speed
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Post by Rockoonz on Nov 22, 2014 3:57:34 GMT -5
here you go jamesp you need one of these. So back to original topic, does anyone make the LA hots with beef? I pretty much quit eating pork and I sure do love jambalaya.
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jamesp
Cave Dweller
Member since October 2012
Posts: 36,612
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Post by jamesp on Nov 22, 2014 4:15:39 GMT -5
here you go jamesp you need one of these. So back to original topic, does anyone make the LA hots with beef? I pretty much quit eating pork and I sure do love jambalaya. I think we need to let @shotgunner pull the trigger on that one. Wife makes a jambalaya w/chicken. And chicken gumbo or seafood gumbo is a great dish. We cooked the sausage down in a fry pan to get rid of the grease. and you can substitute with turkey sausage. Add peppers= andouille effect Actually, if you do not cook the heck out of the sausage in a frying pan you will get 1/4 inch of oily grease floating on your gumbo. Probably the best improvement we made on the gumbo. Slice it first, then put in skillet for best grease removal.
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