Task 1: What’s in your bag?

 

My Bike Bag

My Bike-To-Work Pannier

 

I’m Brian, and this is my daily commuting bike pannier. I work as an advisor in a post-secondary school. Primarily I am a student financial specialist, but I also provide registrarial advising and services and prospective student advising. I live in Vancouver, where I have been for the past 18 years. I try to bike to work whenever the weather is nice. Unfortunately our offices are currently closed due to COVID-19, so we are all working from home, and I don’t have any reason to bike to the office!

 

In my daily commuting bag, I have:

  • My helmet (which I wear when biking, of course).
  • A pack of tissues for when my nose runs when it is a bit chillier out.
  • A hat that keeps my head and ears warm and fits under my helmet, again for colder weather.
  • A rag for when I need to make on-the-go repairs and get grease on my hands.
  • An emergency bike pump for on-the-go flats.
  • A mutli-tool, wrench, and allen wrench set for on-the-go repairs and adjustments.
  • A front and rear bike light for better visibility by cars.
  • A water bottle to stay hydrated.
  • A smart watch to track my route speed and calories burned.
  • Clipless shoes for my bike (to wear when biking).
  • The pannier that it all goes in.

 

Not pictured would be a change of clothes, towel, and a lunch, but as I am not currently biking to work I didn’t feel the need to get those out for the picture!

 

The items reflect the place that I live (Vancouver), a livable, beautiful, temperate, active, connected urban environment. They also reflect that I try to live a reasonably healthy lifestyle, and don’t mind attempting repairs and maintenance myself. They also reflect my age, as I am much more safety conscious than when I was younger. I only started regularly wearing a helmet when I started biking to work – I almost never wore one growing up! Bicycle lights are also something relatively new to me, but I would never bike in low light without them anymore. The items also reflect a bit of privilege – I am able to live close enough to work that cycling is not a chore, and there are safe and accessible bike routes all along the way. Some of this gear is also a bit on the pricier side (although only relatively so, compared to what some spend on cycling). 15 years ago there would have been no helmet, no lights, probably no tools, and certainly some less expensive toys.

 

In regards to text technologies, the smart watch would be the primary one. It allows me to check the time, my speed, my heart rate, my location, and many other things on it’s small digital screen. It also allows me to listen to music or podcasts on the go and displays text information about what I am listening to, as well as allows me to communicate with others through texting (both typing or through talk-to-text), or by taking phone calls. It also allows me to make contactless purchases without having to get my phone or wallet out. The watch also serves as a method of tracking my location, so that my partner can check where I am when I am cycling, in case of emergency. It also connects me to emergency services – it can detect a fall or crash, and will initiate an emergency 911 call when that happens.

 

None of the other items have noticeable text on them beyond brand names, with the exception of the tissue package.The front and rear lights can be considered a text and communication technology, they are typically set to flash patterns of light to alert cars, pedestrians, and other cyclists to my presence. The flashing patterns serve as a communication in this regard. Beyond glancing down at the smartwatch, most text that is viewed when cycling is in the form of street signs that convey direction, location, and safety information, and are printed in high-visibility colours and formats.

 

This bag reflects that I tend towards digital literacies as opposed to printed literacies. Any written information I need or want while cycling is or can be conveyed digitally through the smart watch. If an archaeologist were to look at this bag in the future, I think it would show a connected world – both in the sense that many of these items were produced in other countries, as well as in the sense that the smartwatch is designed to permit an always-on, always-there connection to the internet and other people. It would also reflect this point in time where we as a society are beginning to question the role of cars in our lives, both for personal health reasons as well as environmental reasons.

4 thoughts on “Task 1: What’s in your bag?

  1. Hi Brian,
    The first things I noticed in your bag were your shoes and your helmet; I immediately thought cyclist. I wondered if you were more safety conscious or law abiding as I thought helmets were mandatory. Your bag tells me that you are not only safety conscious but also well prepared. I left my watch out of my own bag as it was a) not as smart being only a Garmin for tracking heart rate, distance, calories, speed and activities and b) more a on my wrist than in my bag but if the strap breaks, again . . . then maybe. I do agree that the lights are a signalling or communication device and thus a form of text. One question: are you still biking? Just to get out and keep moving? I am envious of your ability to bike to work – I am not that ambitious and there just seems to be too many hills in my city.
    Thanks for sharing your bag!

    • Hi Rebecca,
      Helmets are mandatory, technically, and I do always wear one now, but I did not ever wear one when I was younger. Anecdotally you probably see about 50% of people in Vancouver wearing helmets when they bike. There is actually an interesting debate about the safety consequences of bike helmet laws. While clearly wearing a helmet is safer and is going to provide vital head protection in an accident, some research has shown that mandatory helmet laws lead to fewer people cycling, and cycling volume is strongly correlated with lower rates of cycling injuries. Generally, the more cyclists on the road, the fewer the number of serious accidents (which almost always involve cars).

      Yes, some of the items in my bag are actually not really ever in the bag, but on my person, so I took some creative liberty with the assignment!

      I haven’t been biking much since the pandemic, no. I’m hoping to get out a bit more on the bike soon, but without the need to get to work, it has certainly cut down on it.

  2. We meet again Brian!

    I think you have yourself an awesome bag here. When I was in college I also commuted to school but now I live too far to commute by bike. Although I have been doing much more mountain biking now that we have been mostly at home. Most of the bike supplies that you carry are similar to the ones I bring on my local trips.

    I appreciate your comment regarding the archaeologist’s thoughts on a ‘connected world’. All of the products and devices we use would outline the fact that we are all connected either through our material objects or through digital connection. Also, I am glad you chose to use WordPress as well. I find that WordPress is among the best options for creating interactive blog-style web spaces. Keep up the good work!

    • Thanks! I have actually been biking much less since I have been working from home, seeing as how my normal biking primarily consists of biking to work. I’ll have to make an effort to get out more as there doesn’t seem to be an end in sight to my current work-from-home situation.

      It is getting to the point where fewer and fewer things we have are not connected in some way to the internet, or to other devices. There is even connected clothing now!

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