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#1
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I posted some photos to abpw.
I spent all day in a hotel conference room today... The hotel was completely gutted and redone over the past year or so and only recently reopened under a different brand. I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. What was also amusing is the location of the peep hole on the door... note that the push bar is at the usual 36" from the floor. To see through the peep hole youd have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? |
#2
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On 1/22/2016 10:30 PM, John Grossbohlin wrote:
I posted some photos to abpw. I spent all day in a hotel conference room today... The hotel was completely gutted and redone over the past year or so and only recently reopened under a different brand. I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. What was also amusing is the location of the peep hole on the door... note that the push bar is at the usual 36" from the floor. To see through the peep hole youd have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? Where was this, what location? Everything is location , location, location. -- Jeff |
#3
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On Fri, 22 Jan 2016 22:30:45 -0500
"John Grossbohlin" wrote: hole youd have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? the signer obviously thought the price was right a master tile setter i know gave up every job he used to get was underbid by non-english speakers he went back to visit the jobs once completed and was not surprised to see no craftsmanship and ridiculous tile layouts this also was in hotel environments so it was easy to visit the finished jobs state of the union indeed |
#4
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"John Grossbohlin" wrote in
: I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. I've seen that...close inspection showed each one to be offset from the one before by half the width of the box. Apparently the guy who installed them couldn't be bothered to put any S-bends in the conduit, so he just offset the boxes to line up with straight runs of conduit. John |
#5
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"woodchucker" wrote in message
... On 1/22/2016 10:30 PM, John Grossbohlin wrote: I posted some photos to abpw. I spent all day in a hotel conference room today... The hotel was completely gutted and redone over the past year or so and only recently reopened under a different brand. I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. What was also amusing is the location of the peep hole on the door... note that the push bar is at the usual 36" from the floor. To see through the peep hole youd have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? Where was this, what location? Everything is location , location, location. The Capital District in upstate NY... |
#6
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On 1/23/2016 11:37 AM, John McCoy wrote:
I've seen that...close inspection showed each one to be offset from the one before by half the width of the box. Apparently the guy who installed them couldn't be bothered to put any S-bends in the conduit, so he just offset the boxes to line up with straight runs of conduit. Bingo ... What you get when you take the lowest bid. -- eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net https://www.google.com/+eWoodShop https://plus.google.com/+KarlCaillouet/posts http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/ KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious) |
#7
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On Fri, 22 Jan 2016 22:30:45 -0500, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: I posted some photos to abpw. I spent all day in a hotel conference room today... The hotel was completely gutted and redone over the past year or so and only recently reopened under a different brand. I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. What was also amusing is the location of the peep hole on the door... note that the push bar is at the usual 36" from the floor. To see through the peep hole you’d have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? If the push bar was 36" then the peep hole looks like about 6 ft from the photo I saw. The room may have been two rooms, turned into one small conference room, judging by the outlets and blank covers. Not sure what part of the country you are in but I can tell you from personal experience that most of it was just modified, with limited remod. Typically they use their maintenance staff, and perhaps some additional ones, looking for new hires. 90% of the redo's are just foo foo stuff, wall paper, paint, beds, furniture and TV's. Re decorating in large conference rooms, and only what mechanical stuff is actually broken down and determined to be needed. Nowadays a lot of maintenance staffing in the west are illegal's, and just a few tradesmen. I laugh when I see signs of a million or 6 million dollar remods, knowing the kitchen was no better than was before, the HVAC is in miserable shape because the Hotel lessee's won't pay for it, since they only manage the facilities, and the money owners put it off for as long as they can. Yet requiring a co-op arrangement for repairs or replacement depending on how large the facilities. Except for brand new facilities or the better Hotels in Vegas where they have to have A/C, I think of them like cheap painted whores. The only good thing about a remod is that some wings actually have new mattresses and are relatively "bug" free. |
#8
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John McCoy wrote:
"John Grossbohlin" wrote in : I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. I've seen that...close inspection showed each one to be offset from the one before by half the width of the box. Apparently the guy who installed them couldn't be bothered to put any S-bends in the conduit, so he just offset the boxes to line up with straight runs of conduit. John Should only require a simple off-set bend to accommodate the distance from the wall to the knock-out. Should not involve any difference in height at all. -- -Mike- |
#9
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OFWW wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jan 2016 22:30:45 -0500, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: I posted some photos to abpw. I spent all day in a hotel conference room today... The hotel was completely gutted and redone over the past year or so and only recently reopened under a different brand. I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. What was also amusing is the location of the peep hole on the door... note that the push bar is at the usual 36" from the floor. To see through the peep hole you’d have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? If the push bar was 36" then the peep hole looks like about 6 ft from the photo I saw. The room may have been two rooms, turned into one small conference room, judging by the outlets and blank covers. Not sure what part of the country you are in but I can tell you from personal experience that most of it was just modified, with limited remod. Typically they use their maintenance staff, and perhaps some additional ones, looking for new hires. 90% of the redo's are just foo foo stuff, wall paper, paint, beds, furniture and TV's. Re decorating in large conference rooms, and only what mechanical stuff is actually broken down and determined to be needed. Nowadays a lot of maintenance staffing in the west are illegal's, and just a few tradesmen. I laugh when I see signs of a million or 6 million dollar remods, knowing the kitchen was no better than was before, the HVAC is in miserable shape because the Hotel lessee's won't pay for it, since they only manage the facilities, and the money owners put it off for as long as they can. Yet requiring a co-op arrangement for repairs or replacement depending on how large the facilities. Except for brand new facilities or the better Hotels in Vegas where they have to have A/C, I think of them like cheap painted whores. The only good thing about a remod is that some wings actually have new mattresses and are relatively "bug" free. I'm not sure where a lot of you guys are from, or what your local codes are, but i've seen a lot of remodel stuff in the North East and it is not at all what I hear in this group. Maybe more people are just talking out their butt than really having seen things, or maybe things are just done differently in Texas... -- -Mike- |
#10
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"OFWW" wrote in message ...
If the push bar was 36" then the peep hole looks like about 6 ft from the photo I saw. That is about right... perhaps a bit higher. The room may have been two rooms, turned into one small conference room, judging by the outlets and blank covers. It is a very large room with 3 dividers... we had 1/2 of the room. Not sure what part of the country you are in but I can tell you from personal experience that most of it was just modified, with limited remod. Typically they use their maintenance staff, and perhaps some additional ones, looking for new hires. 90% of the redo's are just foo foo stuff, wall paper, paint, beds, furniture and TV's. Re decorating in large conference rooms, and only what mechanical stuff is actually broken down and determined to be needed. Nowadays a lot of maintenance staffing in the west are illegal's, and just a few tradesmen. The Capital District in upstate NY. This was a gut job... they completely shut it down and tore everything out except the structure itself... new windows, doors, bathrooms, exterior, interior, mechanicals. I can see the place from my office, including the roof as I'm 3 stories higher up than the roof of the place, and could see the demo and reconstruction progress. I am familiar with other facilities that were cosmetic as you describe... and am very familiar with one close to my home that was rebranded just last year that wasn't quite a gut job. This as they had renovated the place maybe 10 years ago and had replaced windows, doors, etc. then. |
#11
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On Sat, 23 Jan 2016 23:02:19 -0500, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message ... If the push bar was 36" then the peep hole looks like about 6 ft from the photo I saw. That is about right... perhaps a bit higher. The room may have been two rooms, turned into one small conference room, judging by the outlets and blank covers. It is a very large room with 3 dividers... we had 1/2 of the room. Not sure what part of the country you are in but I can tell you from personal experience that most of it was just modified, with limited remod. Typically they use their maintenance staff, and perhaps some additional ones, looking for new hires. 90% of the redo's are just foo foo stuff, wall paper, paint, beds, furniture and TV's. Re decorating in large conference rooms, and only what mechanical stuff is actually broken down and determined to be needed. Nowadays a lot of maintenance staffing in the west are illegal's, and just a few tradesmen. The Capital District in upstate NY. This was a gut job... they completely shut it down and tore everything out except the structure itself... new windows, doors, bathrooms, exterior, interior, mechanicals. I can see the place from my office, including the roof as I'm 3 stories higher up than the roof of the place, and could see the demo and reconstruction progress. I am familiar with other facilities that were cosmetic as you describe... and am very familiar with one close to my home that was rebranded just last year that wasn't quite a gut job. This as they had renovated the place maybe 10 years ago and had replaced windows, doors, etc. then. Then like you I wonder who signed off on the job. Everything in your pic's spoke of a renovation to me. Liked like typical retro work. |
#12
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On Sat, 23 Jan 2016 21:45:48 -0500, Mike Marlow
wrote: OFWW wrote: On Fri, 22 Jan 2016 22:30:45 -0500, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: I posted some photos to abpw. I spent all day in a hotel conference room today... The hotel was completely gutted and redone over the past year or so and only recently reopened under a different brand. I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. What was also amusing is the location of the peep hole on the door... note that the push bar is at the usual 36" from the floor. To see through the peep hole you’d have to be at least 7 feet tall! How could anybody sign off on such lousy work??? If the push bar was 36" then the peep hole looks like about 6 ft from the photo I saw. The room may have been two rooms, turned into one small conference room, judging by the outlets and blank covers. Not sure what part of the country you are in but I can tell you from personal experience that most of it was just modified, with limited remod. Typically they use their maintenance staff, and perhaps some additional ones, looking for new hires. 90% of the redo's are just foo foo stuff, wall paper, paint, beds, furniture and TV's. Re decorating in large conference rooms, and only what mechanical stuff is actually broken down and determined to be needed. Nowadays a lot of maintenance staffing in the west are illegal's, and just a few tradesmen. I laugh when I see signs of a million or 6 million dollar remods, knowing the kitchen was no better than was before, the HVAC is in miserable shape because the Hotel lessee's won't pay for it, since they only manage the facilities, and the money owners put it off for as long as they can. Yet requiring a co-op arrangement for repairs or replacement depending on how large the facilities. Except for brand new facilities or the better Hotels in Vegas where they have to have A/C, I think of them like cheap painted whores. The only good thing about a remod is that some wings actually have new mattresses and are relatively "bug" free. I'm not sure where a lot of you guys are from, or what your local codes are, but i've seen a lot of remodel stuff in the North East and it is not at all what I hear in this group. Maybe more people are just talking out their butt than really having seen things, or maybe things are just done differently in Texas... I'm in Calif. I did commercial industrial HVAC, we had a lot of Hotels and a few motels under contract for years From SB to SD and to all the inland area's. I was writing about the bulk of the jobs on renovations I have personally seen. Anything new that was computer controlled was done by outside contractors, but I have seen in house employee's even doing copper re piping up to 4" dia. Thus circumventing the need for inspectors. I really doubt it is much different in Texas, as the major hotels and motel chains are all controlled by their corporate offices, all who would squeeze a buffalo nickel until it took a dump. |
#13
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OFWW wrote:
I'm in Calif. I did commercial industrial HVAC, we had a lot of Hotels and a few motels under contract for years From SB to SD and to all the inland area's. I was writing about the bulk of the jobs on renovations I have personally seen. Anything new that was computer controlled was done by outside contractors, but I have seen in house employee's even doing copper re piping up to 4" dia. Thus circumventing the need for inspectors. I really doubt it is much different in Texas, as the major hotels and motel chains are all controlled by their corporate offices, all who would squeeze a buffalo nickel until it took a dump. Failed. I was trying to be humorous with the Texas statement. Guess it did not come through. I do agree to some extent with your thoughts on house employees and the quality of workmanship, but I don't generally see them doing renovations - repairs, but not renovations. Those are usually contracted out. -- -Mike- |
#14
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Mike Marlow wrote in
: John McCoy wrote: "John Grossbohlin" wrote in : I got to looking at the alignment of the various outlets, jacks and switches on one section of wall. I don't think any two of them were installed at the same distance from the floor or ceiling or a level line. I've seen that...close inspection showed each one to be offset from the one before by half the width of the box. Apparently the guy who installed them couldn't be bothered to put any S-bends in the conduit, so he just offset the boxes to line up with straight runs of conduit. John Should only require a simple off-set bend to accommodate the distance from the wall to the knock-out. Should not involve any difference in height at all. Different scenario - imagine you have 3 parallel runs of conduit. Normally you'd put 3 boxes at equal heights, and s-bend each conduit to align with it's box. This guy, instead, spaced the conduits by 1/2 the box width and staggered the heights of the boxes to match. John |
#15
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John McCoy wrote:
Different scenario - imagine you have 3 parallel runs of conduit. Normally you'd put 3 boxes at equal heights, and s-bend each conduit to align with it's box. This guy, instead, spaced the conduits by 1/2 the box width and staggered the heights of the boxes to match. John Boy - that does not make any sense at all. That's "different" thinking... I'm guessing he did that so that he could hit the side of the box instead of the top or bottom? -- -Mike- |
#16
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On Sun, 24 Jan 2016 06:43:15 -0500, Mike Marlow
wrote: OFWW wrote: I'm in Calif. I did commercial industrial HVAC, we had a lot of Hotels and a few motels under contract for years From SB to SD and to all the inland area's. I was writing about the bulk of the jobs on renovations I have personally seen. Anything new that was computer controlled was done by outside contractors, but I have seen in house employee's even doing copper re piping up to 4" dia. Thus circumventing the need for inspectors. I really doubt it is much different in Texas, as the major hotels and motel chains are all controlled by their corporate offices, all who would squeeze a buffalo nickel until it took a dump. Failed. I was trying to be humorous with the Texas statement. Guess it did not come through. From what little time I've spent in Texas, I've taken them as serious folk for the most part. So I wasn't sure. I do agree to some extent with your thoughts on house employees and the quality of workmanship, but I don't generally see them doing renovations - repairs, but not renovations. Those are usually contracted out. Around here, not at the motels, but at the hotels where they have a crew of 5-6 guys days, and 3-4 evenings I've seen way too many working way over their heads. Non-union, usually limited skill sets, but that's not to say they aren't serious or trying to degrading them. They all want to eat and feed their families so they will do as asked. I've seen way too much, and have way too many stories, even from the most unlikeliest places like the finest in Beverly Hills, and Palm springs. Anyhow, now I've finally got the time to do some wood working and hoping to make some fine furniture pieces as I learn. Something I have wanted to do from High School days. So I should just probably stick to that. (and SketchPro) ![]() |
#17
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"OFWW" wrote in message ...
On Sun, 24 Jan 2016 06:43:15 -0500, Mike Marlow wrote: I do agree to some extent with your thoughts on house employees and the quality of workmanship, but I don't generally see them doing renovations - repairs, but not renovations. Those are usually contracted out. Around here, not at the motels, but at the hotels where they have a crew of 5-6 guys days, and 3-4 evenings I've seen way too many working way over their heads. Non-union, usually limited skill sets, but that's not to say they aren't serious or trying to degrading them. They all want to eat and feed their families so they will do as asked. I've seen way too much, and have way too many stories, even from the most unlikeliest places like the finest in Beverly Hills, and Palm springs. It doesn't seem to matter where I travel but I find a lot of poor conditions in motels, hotels, hostels and campgrounds. When I'm on months long bicycle trips I'm in a new place pretty much every night. The last trip, from FL to NY, I repaired things in rooms just to satisfy my needs... or asked for a different room/site. I stopped using one chain motel as I encountered terrible conditions in too many of them, e.g., sticky carpets, filthy carpets, water controlled by the wrong faucet, loud/broken A/C, burn holes in sheets/pillow cases/comforters in non-smoking rooms, useless or no Wi-Fi, out of control guests, disengaged staff. Independents are a crap shoot. Some were well maintained places with great staff. Others were absolute dumps in locations where there were no options (for someone traveling by bicycle!). The biggest name in campgrounds doesn't guarantee anything either... though a few were exceptional. Hostels are all over the map when it comes to condition and cleanliness. I've had great experiences camping in the back yards of Warm Showers hosts and have hit the jackpot a few times. An encounter on the road in Savannah, GA resulted in the free use of a new guest house and vehicle to visit a fort! Business travel accommodations have tended to be a bit better on average but by no means perfect in every case. One pet peeve is faucets in sinks and showers where the hot and cold water are reversed. Some are labeled as such but most are not. It's perhaps worse than not having sufficient (or any) hot water as it can be dangerous. Another pet peeve is clogged drains and they hand you a plunger or tell you not to throw paper in the toilet! |
#18
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 10:23:05 -0500, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message ... On Sun, 24 Jan 2016 06:43:15 -0500, Mike Marlow wrote: I do agree to some extent with your thoughts on house employees and the quality of workmanship, but I don't generally see them doing renovations - repairs, but not renovations. Those are usually contracted out. Around here, not at the motels, but at the hotels where they have a crew of 5-6 guys days, and 3-4 evenings I've seen way too many working way over their heads. Non-union, usually limited skill sets, but that's not to say they aren't serious or trying to degrading them. They all want to eat and feed their families so they will do as asked. I've seen way too much, and have way too many stories, even from the most unlikeliest places like the finest in Beverly Hills, and Palm springs. It doesn't seem to matter where I travel but I find a lot of poor conditions in motels, hotels, hostels and campgrounds. When I'm on months long bicycle trips I'm in a new place pretty much every night. The last trip, from FL to NY, I repaired things in rooms just to satisfy my needs... or asked for a different room/site. I stopped using one chain motel as I encountered terrible conditions in too many of them, e.g., sticky carpets, filthy carpets, water controlled by the wrong faucet, loud/broken A/C, burn holes in sheets/pillow cases/comforters in non-smoking rooms, useless or no Wi-Fi, out of control guests, disengaged staff. Independents are a crap shoot. Some were well maintained places with great staff. Others were absolute dumps in locations where there were no options (for someone traveling by bicycle!). The biggest name in campgrounds doesn't guarantee anything either... though a few were exceptional. Hostels are all over the map when it comes to condition and cleanliness. I've had great experiences camping in the back yards of Warm Showers hosts and have hit the jackpot a few times. An encounter on the road in Savannah, GA resulted in the free use of a new guest house and vehicle to visit a fort! Business travel accommodations have tended to be a bit better on average but by no means perfect in every case. One pet peeve is faucets in sinks and showers where the hot and cold water are reversed. Some are labeled as such but most are not. It's perhaps worse than not having sufficient (or any) hot water as it can be dangerous. Another pet peeve is clogged drains and they hand you a plunger or tell you not to throw paper in the toilet! I am a bit jealous of you. It was a dream of mine to ride across the US, but it never happened. "An encounter", meaning someone didn't see you on the road? I used to ride a lot with a lot of near misses. I still ride if it isn't too cold, now that I am retired. I'd bet you have a lot of tales to tell and photo's as well. |
#19
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"OFWW" wrote in message ...
On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 10:23:05 -0500, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message . .. It doesn't seem to matter where I travel but I find a lot of poor conditions in motels, hotels, hostels and campgrounds. When I'm on months long bicycle trips I'm in a new place pretty much every night. The last trip, from FL to NY, I repaired things in rooms just to satisfy my needs... or asked for a different room/site. I stopped using one chain motel as I encountered terrible conditions in too many of them, e.g., sticky carpets, filthy carpets, water controlled by the wrong faucet, loud/broken A/C, burn holes in sheets/pillow cases/comforters in non-smoking rooms, useless or no Wi-Fi, out of control guests, disengaged staff. Independents are a crap shoot. Some were well maintained places with great staff. Others were absolute dumps in locations where there were no options (for someone traveling by bicycle!). The biggest name in campgrounds doesn't guarantee anything either... though a few were exceptional. Hostels are all over the map when it comes to condition and cleanliness. I've had great experiences camping in the back yards of Warm Showers hosts and have hit the jackpot a few times. An encounter on the road in Savannah, GA resulted in the free use of a new guest house and vehicle to visit a fort! Business travel accommodations have tended to be a bit better on average but by no means perfect in every case. One pet peeve is faucets in sinks and showers where the hot and cold water are reversed. Some are labeled as such but most are not. It's perhaps worse than not having sufficient (or any) hot water as it can be dangerous. Another pet peeve is clogged drains and they hand you a plunger or tell you not to throw paper in the toilet! I am a bit jealous of you. It was a dream of mine to ride across the US, but it never happened. "An encounter", meaning someone didn't see you on the road? I used to ride a lot with a lot of near misses. I still ride if it isn't too cold, now that I am retired. I'd bet you have a lot of tales to tell and photo's as well. This encounter was a good one... a chance meeting of someone interested in what my son and I were doing. I've had the other kind of encounters... the biggest offenders have been large motorhomes. Seems those folks don't know where their fenders are and don't understand the "vacuum" they create at 55-75 MPH. In and around Yellowstone, Grand Tetons and the Tamiami Trail (Rte 41) in FL were the worst places for those encounters but they've happened elsewhere. In regards to your dream... make it happen! The first trip is the hardest but assuming you learn while on the road it gets easier and future trips are less stressful in the planning. |
#20
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 16:45:30 -0500, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message ... On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 10:23:05 -0500, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message ... It doesn't seem to matter where I travel but I find a lot of poor conditions in motels, hotels, hostels and campgrounds. When I'm on months long bicycle trips I'm in a new place pretty much every night. The last trip, from FL to NY, I repaired things in rooms just to satisfy my needs... or asked for a different room/site. I stopped using one chain motel as I encountered terrible conditions in too many of them, e.g., sticky carpets, filthy carpets, water controlled by the wrong faucet, loud/broken A/C, burn holes in sheets/pillow cases/comforters in non-smoking rooms, useless or no Wi-Fi, out of control guests, disengaged staff. Independents are a crap shoot. Some were well maintained places with great staff. Others were absolute dumps in locations where there were no options (for someone traveling by bicycle!). The biggest name in campgrounds doesn't guarantee anything either... though a few were exceptional. Hostels are all over the map when it comes to condition and cleanliness. I've had great experiences camping in the back yards of Warm Showers hosts and have hit the jackpot a few times. An encounter on the road in Savannah, GA resulted in the free use of a new guest house and vehicle to visit a fort! Business travel accommodations have tended to be a bit better on average but by no means perfect in every case. One pet peeve is faucets in sinks and showers where the hot and cold water are reversed. Some are labeled as such but most are not. It's perhaps worse than not having sufficient (or any) hot water as it can be dangerous. Another pet peeve is clogged drains and they hand you a plunger or tell you not to throw paper in the toilet! I am a bit jealous of you. It was a dream of mine to ride across the US, but it never happened. "An encounter", meaning someone didn't see you on the road? I used to ride a lot with a lot of near misses. I still ride if it isn't too cold, now that I am retired. I'd bet you have a lot of tales to tell and photo's as well. This encounter was a good one... a chance meeting of someone interested in what my son and I were doing. I've had the other kind of encounters... the biggest offenders have been large motorhomes. Seems those folks don't know where their fenders are and don't understand the "vacuum" they create at 55-75 MPH. In and around Yellowstone, Grand Tetons and the Tamiami Trail (Rte 41) in FL were the worst places for those encounters but they've happened elsewhere. In regards to your dream... make it happen! The first trip is the hardest but assuming you learn while on the road it gets easier and future trips are less stressful in the planning. With the wear and tear on my body I doubt I'd make it across in less than 10 years. So I'll be sticking with my MH, especially for the wife. While we camp off road for the most part we are done with tenting and such. (although I'd still like to load up the Jeep and go on my own for a few days) |
#21
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"OFWW" wrote in message ...
On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 16:45:30 -0500, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: In regards to your dream... make it happen! The first trip is the hardest but assuming you learn while on the road it gets easier and future trips are less stressful in the planning. With the wear and tear on my body I doubt I'd make it across in less than 10 years. So I'll be sticking with my MH, especially for the wife. While we camp off road for the most part we are done with tenting and such. (although I'd still like to load up the Jeep and go on my own for a few days) Many of the people out there touring are 50+... I've met many in their 60s and 70s. See the journals here for inspiration! https://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/...octype=journal |
#22
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 22:48:47 -0500, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message ... On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 16:45:30 -0500, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: In regards to your dream... make it happen! The first trip is the hardest but assuming you learn while on the road it gets easier and future trips are less stressful in the planning. With the wear and tear on my body I doubt I'd make it across in less than 10 years. So I'll be sticking with my MH, especially for the wife. While we camp off road for the most part we are done with tenting and such. (although I'd still like to load up the Jeep and go on my own for a few days) Many of the people out there touring are 50+... I've met many in their 60s and 70s. See the journals here for inspiration! https://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/...octype=journal Well there went a couple hours, reading and viewing bike trips. If I did any at my age they'd be day trips, like bike trails, you know, leisurely stuff for my wife and I. I really like wood working and playing with scraps for joints and things. That, plus getting my garage work area cleared up. Thanks for the link, I saved it, and evidently it has stuff from around the world. Should be real interesting. |
#23
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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"OFWW" wrote in message ...
Many of the people out there touring are 50+... I've met many in their 60s and 70s. See the journals here for inspiration! https://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/...octype=journal Well there went a couple hours, reading and viewing bike trips. If I did any at my age they'd be day trips, like bike trails, you know, leisurely stuff for my wife and I. I really like wood working and playing with scraps for joints and things. That, plus getting my garage work area cleared up. I don't know where you are, but the Erie Canalway Trail and Katy Trail are both fairly long and relatively flat. The Canalway trail follows the Erie Canal tow path much of the way and the other is a rail trail... From experience I know the Canalway trail can be ridden end to end as a credit card trip, i.e., stay in B&Bs, motels, etc. and taken at a leisurely pace. Parks and Trails NY also runs an annual fully supported tour of the trail as well as offering a guide book. http://www.ptny.org/cycle-the-erie-canal The Katy Trail seems to offer the same opportunities http://www.bikekatytrail.com/ In the future I anticipate the trail network in NY to be pretty well built out such that you'll be able to get from NYC to the Ulster County/Delaware County line on rail trails and other multi-use trails. The East Coast Greenway is filling in with a lot of off-road sections and we can anticipate this to continue into the future. http://www.greenway.org/ Any of the long trails can be ridden in segments over time so you may have viable options from which to choose. Thanks for the link, I saved it, and evidently it has stuff from around the world. Should be real interesting. Some of the trips and people are so interesting that you'll find yourself going back every day for updates... and burning lots of time! ;~) |
#24
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On Tue, 26 Jan 2016 08:39:52 -0500, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: "OFWW" wrote in message ... Many of the people out there touring are 50+... I've met many in their 60s and 70s. See the journals here for inspiration! https://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/...octype=journal Well there went a couple hours, reading and viewing bike trips. If I did any at my age they'd be day trips, like bike trails, you know, leisurely stuff for my wife and I. I really like wood working and playing with scraps for joints and things. That, plus getting my garage work area cleared up. I don't know where you are, but the Erie Canalway Trail and Katy Trail are both fairly long and relatively flat. The Canalway trail follows the Erie Canal tow path much of the way and the other is a rail trail... From experience I know the Canalway trail can be ridden end to end as a credit card trip, i.e., stay in B&Bs, motels, etc. and taken at a leisurely pace. Parks and Trails NY also runs an annual fully supported tour of the trail as well as offering a guide book. http://www.ptny.org/cycle-the-erie-canal The Katy Trail seems to offer the same opportunities http://www.bikekatytrail.com/ In the future I anticipate the trail network in NY to be pretty well built out such that you'll be able to get from NYC to the Ulster County/Delaware County line on rail trails and other multi-use trails. The East Coast Greenway is filling in with a lot of off-road sections and we can anticipate this to continue into the future. http://www.greenway.org/ Any of the long trails can be ridden in segments over time so you may have viable options from which to choose. Thanks for the link, I saved it, and evidently it has stuff from around the world. Should be real interesting. Some of the trips and people are so interesting that you'll find yourself going back every day for updates... and burning lots of time! ;~) No doubt I will be. I'll also check out the links you posted. I live in Ventura County about a mile and a half from the ocean from two directions, close to three, and while we have off road trails, we only have a few of the nicer sort. Sometimes I go hunting for bike rides on the net, especially of the helmet camera variety. You can see a lot this way. I need to lose weight, after retiring I put on far more than I should, then maybe some of the rides might be a possibility. (I love to cook) |
#25
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"OFWW" wrote in message ...
doubt I will be. I'll also check out the links you posted. I live in Ventura County about a mile and a half from the ocean from two directions, close to three, and while we have off road trails, we only have a few of the nicer sort. Sometimes I go hunting for bike rides on the net, especially of the helmet camera variety. You can see a lot this way. I need to lose weight, after retiring I put on far more than I should, then maybe some of the rides might be a possibility. (I love to cook) You wouldnt be the first to loose weight while on a bicycle trip! Me... for my first major trip I went from 18 months of long hours behind a desk, with no cycling in that period, to the road. I lost 30 lbs the first month... and I was eating like crazy! This guy is an inspiration... 563 lbs when he started! https://www.facebook.com/fatguyacrossamerica |
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