The way I cycle has changed. I used to cycle to work each day, doing 17 miles a day and so being able to easily reach 100 miles a week just by adding a short recreational ride to my commute. I also cycled mainly on canal towpaths, because the canals are actually my quickest route to work as they allow me to avoid the very congested route through Birmingham city centre.
I remember my last commute; my bike loaded up with as much as I could carry, but still only containing about half of the personal possessions in my office (plus my work laptop which had to travel everywhere with me at that point in time). The weather was quite pleasant for March, and although my bike was slightly unbalanced due to only having one pannier with me it was an enjoyable, albeit unremarkable, journey.
That was mid-March, and I’ve not cycled that route since.
I started off mainly using my bike for trips to the supermarket and the pharmacy. I was adhering strictly to the “exercise no more than once a day” and because I had taken the dog out in the morning I thought I couldn’t cycle. After a couple of weeks I realised that no-one else was interpreting the rules that way, checked I wouldn’t be breaking the law, and then decided that for the sake of my mental and physical health I needed to cycle again.
The towpaths were packed with people the first time I went down there, and most of them were breaking the social distancing rules. My favourite places to cycle are the places where people don’t go; where you can forget for a couple of hours that the city is all around, and these were exactly the places people were going for their clandestine gatherings (and the occasional drug deal). So I stated cycling on the roads. This isn’t a totally new thing, but I hate cycling in heavy traffic, so I had tended to avoid them. But it was ok because the traffic was largely gone, and as the roads emptied I found my confidence growing. I found roads I had never cycled on before, and also tried a few routes I had previously dismissed because of the traffic.
The traffic is a bit heavier now, but I’m also more confident. I am seeing lots more people on bikes, and I hope that when we return to whatever the new normal looks like these people might want to stay off the trains and carry on cycling (if they can, I know not everyone can).
I’m not cycling 100 miles a week now, but I do try and get out a few times a week for 30-60 minutes. I find it very valuable to get my exercise just as the working day finishes, and it draws a firm line between work and home in the same way that my commute did in the world before coronavirus. I may never go back to being in the office 5 days a week, but when I do end up going back then I have no real interest in getting there any other way. And some of it might even involve cycling on the roads.