With gas over $4 a gallon around here and half the streets ripped up for repair, driving to some of the local dive spots has been getting to be a bigger hassle everyday.
I decided to convert one of my mountain bikes to an Xtracycle two years ago to haul stuff around and this year Ted (unirdna) bought a cargo trailer to join me- which is great because it means I don't have to haul his gear around with me.
This way we can bike to locations that cars can't drive- like the end of Picnic Point to dive the old underwater Habitat. It also means we can spend more money on important things, like spear guns, and less on gas and parking.
To keep our personal stuff safe while diving Ted has decided to use a kayak dry bag to put his stuff in while diving- he drags it behind his float. I went a different route and permanently mounted an old Pelican drybox on my bike- complete with padlocks to keep everything safe and dry.
He has room on his trailer for a standard cooler and I found a specific one that will fit into one of my panniers- which can fit an entire day's limit of panfish.
Locks to keep everything in place while we dive, and inflatable floats that pack away small while we're biking round things out.
Here's a few shots of the, fully loaded, rigs. First two photos are of my bike loaded with two, complete, sets of gear and two boxes of crappie- on ice! Next two pics are of Ted's Cyclocross bike and his new trailer- also fully loaded. Last one is my first buildup- complete with room for monofin.
Jon
I decided to convert one of my mountain bikes to an Xtracycle two years ago to haul stuff around and this year Ted (unirdna) bought a cargo trailer to join me- which is great because it means I don't have to haul his gear around with me.
This way we can bike to locations that cars can't drive- like the end of Picnic Point to dive the old underwater Habitat. It also means we can spend more money on important things, like spear guns, and less on gas and parking.
To keep our personal stuff safe while diving Ted has decided to use a kayak dry bag to put his stuff in while diving- he drags it behind his float. I went a different route and permanently mounted an old Pelican drybox on my bike- complete with padlocks to keep everything safe and dry.
He has room on his trailer for a standard cooler and I found a specific one that will fit into one of my panniers- which can fit an entire day's limit of panfish.
Locks to keep everything in place while we dive, and inflatable floats that pack away small while we're biking round things out.
Here's a few shots of the, fully loaded, rigs. First two photos are of my bike loaded with two, complete, sets of gear and two boxes of crappie- on ice! Next two pics are of Ted's Cyclocross bike and his new trailer- also fully loaded. Last one is my first buildup- complete with room for monofin.
Jon