A zed
Member
About a year ago now I first delved into traveling and vagabonding by setting out from a homeless camp I had been bumming it at into the great unknown. I had spent the past few months there cooking with the local food not bombs and getting accustomed to life outdoors (I had been homeless before this but was in a shelter then) but eventually I knew I wanted to do more, to get out and travel, especially hearing stories from a bunch of oogle friends. I had also gotten robbed (for the stupidest reason too) so I was itching to be anywhere but there. Another FnB mate let me have their bike and I crafted a plan to bike to Iowa to meet a friend who wanted to travel with me. I set out early the next day .
The ride out of the city was quite easy, I felt I was making good pace the first hour or so. I took a quick break to rehydrate and got back on the road. However each hour had me stopping longer and longer, and I soon realized I had hardly enough water and food for today, let alone an entire journey. So my great adventure came to a hasty end only 1 day and maybe 30 miles into it. Being extremely new to traveling and finding myself out of water and food in the middle of the countryside I felt scared and turned back for the place that I at least knew. I was still exhausted from the day before and was walking the bike more then riding it at this point, especially as it was more hilly here.
I was absolutely miserable on the ride back, I felt defeated, but not only that I was scared of whether I could even make it back. Luckily however an old woman took pity on me and gave me a ride back to the city. During the ride she actually shared with me that she had been an avid cyclist in her youth, and scolded me slightly for my quite overzealous plan. A few weeks later though I would hit the road again with a friend, this time without the bike, learning to hitch, hop and squat.
So my first experience with bike touring obviously wasn't the best, but the idea of it still fascinates me. As I've still got some money from the stimulus checks I'm heavily considering getting a foldable bike to take on the road. I'm hoping it will go much better with a year of traveling under my belt.
I'd love to hear anyone else's first times, or even just any times you've overestimated what you could do. I hope my story isn't too exceptionally idiotic but oh well if it is. And any advice is appreciated!
The ride out of the city was quite easy, I felt I was making good pace the first hour or so. I took a quick break to rehydrate and got back on the road. However each hour had me stopping longer and longer, and I soon realized I had hardly enough water and food for today, let alone an entire journey. So my great adventure came to a hasty end only 1 day and maybe 30 miles into it. Being extremely new to traveling and finding myself out of water and food in the middle of the countryside I felt scared and turned back for the place that I at least knew. I was still exhausted from the day before and was walking the bike more then riding it at this point, especially as it was more hilly here.
I was absolutely miserable on the ride back, I felt defeated, but not only that I was scared of whether I could even make it back. Luckily however an old woman took pity on me and gave me a ride back to the city. During the ride she actually shared with me that she had been an avid cyclist in her youth, and scolded me slightly for my quite overzealous plan. A few weeks later though I would hit the road again with a friend, this time without the bike, learning to hitch, hop and squat.
So my first experience with bike touring obviously wasn't the best, but the idea of it still fascinates me. As I've still got some money from the stimulus checks I'm heavily considering getting a foldable bike to take on the road. I'm hoping it will go much better with a year of traveling under my belt.
I'd love to hear anyone else's first times, or even just any times you've overestimated what you could do. I hope my story isn't too exceptionally idiotic but oh well if it is. And any advice is appreciated!