8 years ago I bought a heavy duty Sailrite sewing machine for boat covers, sails and sun shades. One of the first things I used it for in 2018 was to fix the sunshade of our house with this Big Blue Beast . I fixed a lot of big heavy boat covers that were difficult to move around.
A lot of fixing work is patching things up. Such as here: Toto’s red boat cover. This requires sewing in circles, which is difficult to do by dragging the cover around. I put the Blue Beast on a set of wheels to make it easier.
Yesterday I had the great pleasure of meeting Alex, a professional cobbler who is now retired and selling the equipment in his atelier.
Old and sturdy
It’s an industrial machine, used for many decades to sew bespoke shoes. I would love to use it but it’s too big for my abilities and needs.
from Deuter is always attached to my bike. I never ride anywhere without:
a spare tire, levers, pump, patch, glue, multi-tool and gloves.
Maybe I need a second patch? And the tools to fix a broken chain? I really don’t want to have to walk my broken bike. This stuff lives in
the bottom of the frame bag.
I also put my phone in here, and worry about it getting scratched. I also worry about the whole bag being stolen, even more so since my phone recently got professionally nicked. I have
a small lock so no one will be able to just walk away with the bike.
I’d like to reduce the ability of someone to steal my tech first aid, in part or the whole bag. Plus keep some serious cash, id and next-of-kin/biking buddy telephone numbers in a safe spot in this nonremovable bag, in case my phone gets stolen again, or I crash myself unconscious.
I’d like to add a bike-specific body first aid kit for non life-threatening scrapes and pains, and my
60 gram dyneema rain coat
… in case I am surprised by a sudden local thunderstorm, need to stay warm while waiting somewhere or want to take a nap on a wet lawn. It also reduces decision fatigue “should I bring a raincoat?” And makes getting out of the house faster.
Body baggie
Just putting
the surgical gloves over my lightweight cycling gloves
warmed my hands up right away, which I noticed when I took them off. Do I need an emergency energy gel? At what point does first aid become just normal bike trip prep?
Tissues?
I’d like my housekey not to get lost in the bottom of the bag, and neither my phone. I don’t want the bag to bulge out and scrape my legs, and I want to get rid of the velcro … so lethal to knitted materials!
The whole thing weighs 700 grams already! So the carbon-based-body first aid better not weigh much. My minimalist bike buddies will be turning over on their saddles, seeing how much “just in case” weight I’m bringing. Otoh my body weight is quite a bit lower than theirs, so I figure it’s ok to compensate for being colder more easily due to a lower bmi, and having less stamina for walking broken bikes.
So what’s the plan?
Replace the top loops with lots of zip ties
Sew in a horizontal divider
Create a first aid kit with a longish shape containing
Bandaids
Antiseptic cream (Nestosyl)
Paracetemol, ibuprofen and aspirin against a, inflammation and headaches
Other stuff tbd
I’ll publish this now and update it later.
Update: thief-proof baggy
These reusable zip ties
could also be used in an emergency situation, to replace a failed attachment loop, or to tie someone up, using proper police technique. I’d need to leave them long or they’d scrape my legs. Hmmm, maybe just keep these in the tech first aid kit and use nonreusable zip ties to attach the bag to the bike. The multiple use approach can get a bit over the top.
I love looking at brand new first aid kits and thinking about the things that could happen and how to fix them. But in real life I usually end up repacking it in a hurry just before going on a trip. The last time we went I forgot to restock the things my husband really needs, such as antihistamines. It’s not springtime so it just didn’t occur to me.
We have a well-stocked first aid kit, two, actually, a big l one and a small one. The big one was last refilled before our most recent international adventure a couple of years ago. We’ve been having local adventures since then and have haphazardly pulled together some emergency bandaids (I don’t like getting blood on things), compeed (I dread blisters) and a couple of aspirins in a smaller container.
Occasionally I’ll add something: oooh, I might fall off my bike or trip on a loose stone so I better bring something bigger than a bandaid …
What about canoeing, kayaking, lake swimming, trail running, city visiting … cooking, suntanning, bicycle tire changing, walking through grassy fields … Do they need specific things?
What about technical first aid? A punctured sleeping mat or tire? How do you ensure that the glue you brought is still viable?
Instead of just grabbing a baggy with random stuff in it I thought it would be worthwhile to think about it systematically.
of nano-weight baggies made of Dyneema that make travel so much easier!
Soap-on-a-rope
in a super light-weight Dyneema baggy. Put a hole through the small bar of soap you got at the last hotel, thread it with the string tying the label to your last clothing acquisition, drip dry it after use and pop it into a 5*7cm nanobaggy, weighing less than a gram. This ensures you have a longterm supply of soap (and shampoo) in your toiletry bag – fewer worries about running out, no need to use and throw away the next hotel soap bar, it won’t get crushed and leak like liquid soap, and it is thin and easy to pack.
Clean lines
Don’t you just hate it when your ear cleaners get all fuzzy in your toiletry kit? I hate the feel of fuzzy tips in my ears, and shudder thinking about all the bottom-of-the-bag lint they’re tranferring to my inner ear. By protecting them with a 2.5*8 cm nannobaggy they stay clean and tidy.
Square nanobaggy
Do you want to keep your minimal travel wallet dry when you stuff it in your waist belt bag and go for a run? Or you want to keep keys and wallet together and dry in your backpack? A 10*10 cm nanobaggy can do this for you! Other sizes are also available.
Two days after I finished my corporate job, and with it no longer enjoy a corporate salary, the stockmarket crashed, and the guy who caused it still has a few years to go on with his destruction. So before I start buying yet more cool and interesting raw materials, I’ll start by actually using up the “Oh I need to have that material to make the perfect blue sweater” kind of things that have accumulated in my cupboards over the decades. And before starting new projects, maybe finish a few, especially those that take up a lot of space.
So here goes: a Dutch-sized extra-large duvet brought back from Holland. Making it match the covers we already have and using the extra pockets of down to refill a tired duvet.
But wait, is this really the best thing to do? If this duvet is meant to go with my son when he moves into an apartment in September … wouldn’t he want the longer, wider one?
However, the ikea duvetcover is 20 cm too short … 2m and the duvet is 2.2m. Yep, the dutch ikea sells 200*200cm covers. And 60*70cm pillow cases. What to do?
I could use one pillowcase to lengthen the duvet, and turn the other pillowcase into two smaller ones … Is this the best use of my time?
It’s like a puzzle …
The sighting of a snake brought me into the garden, where I realized what a wonderful spring day it is.
Now that I’ve finished my decades-long corporate career, I’d like to focus on doing cool and interesting stuff. I love to sew, saw, sand and shellac and create useful things that you can’t buy. Such as a tiny baggy made out of dyneema material that holds 5 ear cleaners. I’ve travelled a lot and intend to keep on travelling in a light-weight way, but I don’t like digging the ear cleaners out of the bottom of my toiletry bag, and the perfect tiny plastic bag with 3 ear cleaners in the hospitality kit disintegrated at some point. So I taped one together with a tiny bit of super thin dyneema material.
Just perfect!
You can’t buy such a thing anywhere and it makes me happy every time I use it.
Looking forward to creating more such cool and interesting things, fueled by real and imagined conversations with my real and imagined readers.