Found this week on WIRED:
Monthly Archives: July 2016
Myth debunked: knights in armour couldn’t move
We’ve all heard that the full armour of knights was not practical. Probably more used for status, as they were too heavy and that they could hardly move. Right?
Then watch this, found this video in an Article on Engadget (German) or on this site (english)… debunked:
Training in the Allgäu
From Friday 24.6. until Sunday 3.7. I took a long week vacation in Nesselwang, Allgäu, or to be more specific, a short training camp. The weather was OK, especially compared to the weeks of rain we had recently. Out of 10 days it rained on 2 and I could do 8 nice tours on my road bike.
Apart from my usual smaller tours, I was able to try out a few new routes. One was on totally deserted side-roads (mostly closed for traffic, but well paved) from Forggensee to a very nice church, the “Wies-Kirche”, to Oberammergau … a really nice route with no cars, only farms and cows. After a few years, I again took up the challenge over the Riedbergpass and returning via a parallel valley where a nice paved track (closed for car traffic) exists that I didn’t know yet. This one was the top-tour of the week.
The first few days I was alone, Peter joined Wednesday, after he had participated in the Alb-Extrem on Sunday. So we did the second half of the week together. On Monday I returned home and Peter did another long tour, over the Hahntennjoch and Arlberg.
In total I did 8 Tours with 1.032 km and 10.990m of altitude. I’m quite happy with that 🙂
The most interesting routes I have put up on GPSies in the Allgäu Folder. Always very nice is the Namlos-Tour, and of course the new Tour Wieskirch-Oberammergau and the route over the Riedbergpass (to Balderschwang and back via Oberstdorf) with its steep climbs of ~16-18% and ~600m altitude on ~6km.
(The altitude of the tracks on GPSies is usually about 20% too high, in comparison to my barometric speedometer).