My sometimes ride. And chauffeur. |
For many of you, the statement: ‘The Tolley family tends to spend a lot of their summer outside on bicycles’ will come as no surprise.
I’m almost sure I’ve mentioned it before.
And it's true.
Every morning, weather permitting, we saddle-up—Grampa,
Gramma and as many of the chicks and chicklets as are out of bed and/or conscious.
With 22 members of our family living within town limits, at
times it’s quite a group.
And the fact that we live in a community riddled with small
lakes and a veritable web of biking trails makes the whole thing . . . in a
word . . . easy.
Even taking into account that our town crowns the highest
hill for miles and there is, of necessity, a lot of up-ping and down-ing.
With such a trail of cyclists, it’s a blessing that we have
to cross only the occasional major street.
Our mishaps have been relatively few.
In fact, the only people who have pitched off their bikes
are Granddaughter #4 (our newest little rider) . . . and Grandma.
And guess which one holds the record?
I did it again just yesterday.
And yet I still insist on going.
Sigh.
Finally, sitting on a park bench, putting yet another band-aid on Grandma's much-abused knee, and while the kids played at
that day’s choice of park, Daughter #1 came up with an ingenious solution. One,
I should point out, that would still allow Grandma to continue on the rides,
but would be marginally safer and include two-wheeled death traps only peripherally.
Ahem . . .
Her answer? Pump Grandma full of helium, tie a string to her
ankle, and float her along behind one of the bikes.
Like a balloon.
Can’t you just see it?
Her idea sparked all kinds of responses: “Ahhhh Reel me in!
Low bridge! Low brid . . .!” and “Kids! Power li . . .zzzzaaaap!” and the ever
popular: “I told you not
to untie Grandma! Now we’ll never get her back!” That little beauty was also
followed closely by: “Good thing we wrote her address on her forehead!”
There were suggestions of “Old Air/Wind/Gas bag” and something
to do with “being full of hot air”. But by that point, I was already on my bike and halfway
out of the parking lot.
My family’s for sale if you want them.
What a great family activity and yes, I'm glad they didn't try the balloon idea!
ReplyDeleteNo, never sell the family, they keep you on your toes!
ReplyDeletehee hee hee! And here I thought they would be trying to get back on Grandma's good side after the Dr. Who stone gargoyle trick...
ReplyDeleteTREEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!
ReplyDeleteOuch. Family is like that. And we still love them. And hopefully they still love us.
ReplyDeleteGlad I have a small family. But, it's also been many years since I've been on a bicycle.
ReplyDeleteIt's so wonderful that you can get your entire family together every morning and go riding. Mine are spread all over the place. It must be fun.
ReplyDeleteSadly, my bike is in the shed, flat tyres, gathering dust. I keep telling myself to get new tyres fitted and try again, but am lacking the motivation to actually do it. Traffic around here is too much and too speedy for me anyway.
ReplyDeleteDo you carry bandaids in your pocket when you ride? Just in case?
I'd love to sit on the side of the road and watch your extended family riding past :)
You've gotta love a funny family Di - and your's seems to take after their grandmother! Lovely that you have so many family members nearby to bike with - I'm a little bit jealous...
ReplyDeleteThis wonderful post reminds me of the first summer we returned to Chicago - almost every morning we rose at 5:30 am, dragged our kids (5,7,8 at the time) out of bed, loaded bikes inside the minivan, drove to the lake, and road 10-25 miles. A few weeks ago, our son says we forever ruined biking for him.
ReplyDeleteI could totally see you flying in the air like a balloon behind him, HA-HA!!
ReplyDelete