• floo@retrolemmy.com
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    27 天前

    I’m all for biking if that’s your thing, but I’d rather take a subway, than to arrive at work all winded and sweaty, smelling like a locker room. Or, completely soaked because it was raining that day.

    • timik_pipik@lemy.lol
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      26 天前

      Subway is 100% fine, also needed for accessibility for people who can’t drive a bicycle. It’s the cars which suck.

    • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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      26 天前

      Biking to work doesn’t make sense in every scenario, nor does it have to.

      I guess it’s worth mentioning that the winded and sweaty-thing is really an infrastructural problem - if your workplace offers showers, you can alleviate this problem. I used to do that back when I lived 14 km from work.

      I bike almost every day to work these days living around 5 km from work, but back when I lived 14 km from work I would stop biking to work during winter as the ride was a bit too painful and risky during that time, and I opted for bus+metro instead back then.

      Currently I will sometimes choose another mode of transport (mostly train) or work from home if it’s raining very heavily or I’m planning to be drinking a not-insignificant amount of alcohol (rare these days).

    • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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      27 天前

      If you arrive at work winded and sweaty from riding a bike, it means that your fitness level is low, and that you need to get in shape.

      • crunchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        26 天前

        I doubt there’s any level of fitness that will keep you from being sweaty at 108°F with 80% humidity.

        • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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          26 天前

          Super anecdotally, I’ve been biking to work through the desert for years. 100F and up. You eventually get used to it. Bring a shit ton of water.

          • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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            26 天前

            OK, yes drink lots of water, but… that does nothing for not wanting to arrive at work (or anywhere else) sweaty.

            • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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              26 天前

              Even that decreases; I don’t break a sweat anymore. But it helps that I have work shirts and can bike slow.

              • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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                26 天前

                “Decreases” is not good enough for any job where you have to be around and interact with other people (e.g. retail, food service, healthcare, education, any kind of office work, etc…).

      • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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        26 天前

        I sweat extremely easy and a lot. I just today completed an Olympic length triathlon, so I’d say I’m in shape. It could be cool spring day outside, and I will sweat through a shirt if I were to ride for 20 min even at a leisurely pace on flat ground. Throw some hills in there and the shirt will be mostly wet with sweat.

      • floo@retrolemmy.com
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        26 天前

        Yeah, criticizing and judging me is not a great way to get me on your side.

        And I’d also like to know, at what fitness level, a person can bike 7 miles to work in 105° weather with 80% humidity without getting sweaty and winded.

        I have a life to live, which does not include spending huge massive time at a gym meeting your standards.

        • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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          26 天前

          Hopefully this weather is not a year-long affair for you, because that sounds painful to live through. Dare I even say that humans were not meant to live in such a climate year-round