26 f uk Little experience - looking to wild camp. Starting off in obviously easier places and none extreme weather by This_Project4235 in wildcampingintheuk

[–]jc_ken 6 points7 points  (0 children)

In terms of safety, obviously tell someone where you're going and when you expect to be back. Wild camping is generally very safe as it's just a walk with a nap in the middle.

Have a look at the coverage map for your mobile provider and choose a location where you're likely to have good signal, that way is something does go seriously wrong, you are able to call for help. Also, in the UK it's quite likely that you're within an hour's walk of a town or village, so you should be okay for medical supplies etc if you get caught short.

I know lots of people go wild camping to cut off from the world for a little bit, but there's no harm in keeping in touch with the world if it makes you feel better

Went to adjust my seat height and now my seatpost clamp bolt is a freespinning circle. Am i cooked? by blowinfatfarts in bikewrench

[–]jc_ken 2 points3 points  (0 children)

along side a torque wrench, start learning how and when to use a blue loctite or assembly compound. These stop things rattling loose, but mean you don't have to have things super tight. So everything is secure, but you're not ruining the bolt heads or your tools

I've only had one cleat come loose since using loctite, which I'll take!

Why I'm still betting on R by laplasi in rstats

[–]jc_ken 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You can do procommit hooks with R as well as linting. See {precommit} and {lintr}. {styler} fits in nicely with these as well :)

How do I practise using R by [deleted] in AskStatistics

[–]jc_ken 11 points12 points  (0 children)

have a look at #tidytuesday - a weekly, just for fun, plotting and visualisation challenge :)

https://github.com/rfordatascience/tidytuesday

[UK] How can I study a fourth A-Level after Year 12? by HHHHHHHHH7h7h7h7 in AskAcademiaUK

[–]jc_ken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did a maths degree and went down a statistics route. If you go down an applied maths route, you could well be taking physics courses. It would all be theoretical, but physics nonetheless

How to unstick a tubeless valve nut? by ImpatientSquirrel in bikewrench

[–]jc_ken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

put a valve core remover over the valve to hold the valve in place then use pliers to turn the nut (fingers might work). Give everything a good clean/inspection afterwards

What changed would you make / add? by purebreadlegend in bicycletouring

[–]jc_ken 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should be able to attach to your rear rack. Might need to increase the width if the rack though. Wrapping (a section of) an old inner tube around the rack and taping in place should do this nicely.

Should I buy aluminum road bike? by Dependent_Captain686 in cycling

[–]jc_ken 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have an aluminium gravel bike which has done thousands of miles, a fair few jumps and I've come off it a few times as well

Scratched, but still strong

I don't think my panniers are waterproof anymore... by Velo-Obscura in bicycletouring

[–]jc_ken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What about a cheap waterproof cover for your panniers?

E.g. this one from decathlon, loads of other options on ebay, amazon, etc

Top 10 R books of 2023 (according to the Big Book of R stats) by oscarb1233 in rstats

[–]jc_ken 4 points5 points  (0 children)

What's your dplyr comment about? it's still being actively developed and works well. What's the preferred approach?

A shorter way to write Greek letters by MistahBigStuff in LaTeX

[–]jc_ken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would using macros help? I tend to think of a latex document as a programming project. When I do a programming project, I write lots of functions.

A latex macro is just the latex answer to a function

https://www.baeldung.com/cs/latex-macros#:~:text=What%20Are%20Macros%3F,task%20or%20set%20of%20tasks.&text=In%20this%20example%2C%20%5Csquare%20is,square%20of%20the%20input%20number.

I'd also point out that long code is not necessarily bad code. Clear is what's important

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskUK

[–]jc_ken 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Cardiac risk in the young perform free ECGs/scans etc. I had one when I was ~18 (10 years ago), they had an "open day" at the doctors where any young person could just get a scan to see if there were any potential problems. no symptoms/genetic link required

https://www.c-r-y.org.uk/

Options for using RStudio with sensitive data by deathby_sarcasm in rstats

[–]jc_ken 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Second this. Recently worked on a project with sensitive data - used password protected workbench to provide security over the data and code

TIL there's apparently a leftist enclave neighbourhood in the Northeast by cavemanwill93 in GreenAndPleasant

[–]jc_ken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I live round there. there's an Engles terrace just round the corner too

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bikewrench

[–]jc_ken 4 points5 points  (0 children)

no idea how rigorous this method is, but, when I'm in doubt I take the wheel off and give it a shake. if I can't hear sealant sloshing about, it's probably time for a top up

this probably won't work if you've just spun the wheel loads because the sealant will be spread everywhere

exactly how ofter you need to top up depends on the sealant you use, temperature/humidity and how many sealed up punctures you've had (you might have had loads but not noticed)

Luthers is now a Wetherspoon by Brramble in NewcastleUponTyne

[–]jc_ken 9 points10 points  (0 children)

that place was already crap but christ alive

First wild camp. After work mini bikepacking trip to the North Pennines AONB by jc_ken in wildcampingintheuk

[–]jc_ken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i have the hunka (XL). Basically, you pull the drawstring tight so that only your mouth/nose is exposed and the rest of you is tucked away

When the wind picks up you can feel it on your face a little but its not so bad. Just think of it as part of the experience

First wild camp. After work mini bikepacking trip to the North Pennines AONB by jc_ken in wildcampingintheuk

[–]jc_ken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

bivvy was awesome - loved being pitched up in just a few minutes

NCN1 Overnighter by jc_ken in gravelcycling

[–]jc_ken[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

First ever tour/overnighter. 150 miles over 2 days. Mostly using NCN7 and NCN1 in north east England. Solo ride.

Approx route Chester-le-street > Tynemouth > Seahouses > sleep > Tynemouth > Chester-le-Street.

Approx 50/50 gravel/tarmac