I picked up a staple in the rear tire on Market Street this morning, but didn't notice it until the rear wheel started wobbling all over the place.  So I got to pull over and change a flat.
When I lived (and bike-commuted) in Berkeley, I had to do this almost every week.  The road shoulders there were full of all kinds of crap.  This sucked, but it also meant I got really good at it, and always had the right equipment handy.
Well, in ten years of biking in SF, I've probably had two flats, and none recently.  I hadn't even looked at the contents of the tool bag in over a year.  I had no idea what was in there.  I opened it up, crossing my fingers mentally.
I had a hand-pump, so all I really needed was a patch kit, and some tire irons.  Chances are, since I hadn't opened the bag in a while, that the rubber cement in the patch kit was all dried out.  Worst case, I'd end up taking a bus the rest of the way.  Not a disaster, no more than a mild bummer really.  However, since it was my first day back riding in months, I wasn't too pleased at the prospect.  If I wanted to ride the bus, I would've gotten on a bus, dammit.
Not to worry.  Apparently, I was loaded for bear, flat-wise: two new tubes, a quick-flate and three CO2 tanks.  Sometimes it's nice having an obsessive-compulsive do all your bike maintenance.  Thanks, me-from-the-past.
And did I even remember how to change a flat?  Why yes, I did.  Five minutes, back on the road.  With filthy black fingertips.  Smiling.
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