Ken Steinhoff spent more than 40 years in the ink-slinging newspaper business where he had a license to be nosy. Palm Beach Bike Tours renewed that license in his retirement years. The blog is ostensibly about cycling, photography and using GPS technology to figure out where you're going and where you've been. It's really an extension of his lifelong effort to tell the stories of "ordinary people doing ordinary things", which sometimes turns out to be pretty extraordinary. If all that sounds like something in which you might be interested, please sign up for the PBBT RSS feed to keep in touch.
Phillip is headed to Chicago this summer to visit family. Phillip has 1,300 miles or so to go… On a bicycle… Pulling three fully-loaded trailers.
When I saw him sitting in the shade at the side of the road this morning, I had to stop and chat. I’m used to pulling my son around in a bike trailer. All told, him (42 pounds), his toys and his trailer (31 pounds) weigh in at 80-85 pounds. Phillip’s convoy is every bit of 300 pounds.
Phillip doesn’t know when he’ll get to Chicago. He has done the round trip before but didn’t keep track of the days, his peak wattage or calories burned. He rides without a GPS.
I wish I had more time to chat but I was running late for work. Below are some pictures. If anyone between Palm Beach County and Chicago, Illinios happens to see Phillip, please post an update to the comments below. I’d love to know what sort of progress he is making.
—Matt
(more photos of Phillip’s Bike below)












3 responses so far ↓
1 kls // Jun 4, 2008 at 6:04 am
I’d like to know how he stops it without jackknifing.
2 matt // Jun 4, 2008 at 9:53 am
I doubt he ever gets going fast enough to run the risk of jackknifing.
By yesterday evening when I went to pick up Malcolm, Phillip had moved just seven blocks west. This morning, he was two blocks further on a side street.
Interestingly enough, all three times I have seen him, he was parked at a bus stop.
I wonder if he is really headed to Chicago or is just looking for handouts at the local bus stops. That would make some sense. He has time to give his pitch and people riding the bus feel sorry for someone on a bike.
3 kls // Jun 4, 2008 at 10:09 am
I hadn’t thought of the scam angle. Reminds me of a something I saw in Riviera Beach, FL, several years ago.
There was a guy in front of a convenience store with his beater bike turned upside down, a wheel off and he was holding a flatted tube.
When I asked if he needed any help, he gave me a story about having a flat tire and needing money to buy a tube.
I gave him a spare tube and took off.
The next week, I saw the same guy, in front of the same convenience store, with the same bike, with the same wheel off, holding a flatted tube.
Either he had the worst flat tire luck in the world, that parking lot had lots of sharp stuff in it or he was working a great scam.
I didn’t stop for him this time.
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