Snow Biking Rules!

When I real­ized there was a bunch of snow on the ground (and got off my lazy ass) I made a quick run into Cambridge and retrieved my bike. Upon return­ing home I ate din­ner and then fit­ted my bike with the fancy new win­ter tires (Nokian Extreme 294) that I bought myself a few days ago. Incidentally, the studs are alu­minum with sil­i­con car­bide tips and the rest of the tire is nice and high qual­ity too. I have, of course, been want­ing to go snow bik­ing for months and months and months, so I had to go imme­di­ately (~7p).

Initially, I found the tires to be incred­i­bly impres­sive, man­ag­ing to hold on to a recently plowed road quite well (we’re talk­ing half an inch of packed snow with another inch of pow­der on top); I tried skid­ding out just for fun and man­aged to fish­tail about a foot or two before I regained trac­tion. From there I decided to bike into town via the old railbed path near my house. Approaching the entrance to the path­way I saw a large pile of plowed up snow and said to myself, “let’s launch over it!” Sadly, this three foot tall snow pile was mostly soft pow­der, so instead of jump­ing off the top of it, my front tire plowed right into it and stopped dead. Now, any­one who has ever slammed on the front brake of their bike at high speeds will know what hap­pened next: I went fly­ing over my han­dle bars. Luckily there were a few inches of snow on the ground beyond the snow pile and I got a nice soft land­ing, mak­ing the whole expe­ri­ence awe­some instead of painful. Oh man, it was totally sweet. So then I got up and set off for town.

Turns out the trac­tion of stud­ded tires isn’t quite so good in four inches of pow­der; the pow­der pro­vides a bar­rier between the tires and any­thing solid and doesn’t have any cohe­sion of its own. Also, four inches of pow­der pro­vides a ton of fric­tion and impe­dence to motion. The end result was a very slow and involved trek to town that prob­a­bly took about forty or fifty min­utes (to the usual twen­ty­ish). I am quite cer­tain that the trac­tion was bet­ter than my onroad tires and expect that it was bet­ter than my stan­dard offroad tires in the pow­der (because of the tread­ing style, not the studs) but it still wasn’t all that great and I was slid­ing a lit­tle on turns and spin­ning my tires a lit­tle on each ped­dle. Eventually, I made my way to Concord center.

At that point, I aimed myself at Emerson field and set about try­ing to do some fish­tail­ing on a giant field of snow. Here, how­ever, my tires out­per­formed expec­ta­tions and held tight to the grass under­neath the pow­der, thus defeat­ing my fishtail-with-soft-ground-underneath-to-catch-my-fall plan. So defeated, I made some snow angels. Then I biked over the high school, hauled myself up the hill and biked down it, not much more inter­est­ing than with­out snow. I was get­ting kind of exhausted so I lay around for a bit. Then I got myself a hot choco­late and a honey bun at Cumberland Farms (because it was the only place open) and headed back home. I stopped a cou­ple times on the way home to lay down in the snow and even­tu­ally got home (~10p).

Snow bik­ing is so much fun. Hopefully there will be big­ger plowed piles of snow and hope­fully the snow will start to thicken to some­thing that my tires can bet­ter adhere to than this pow­der. Also, I need to find peo­ple and go sledding.

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