The biggest problem with that is that you need to wear specific shoes so removes the possibility of an impulse trip. I have the same problem because I use SPD's on both of my bikes so often end up just using the car for short trips to the next village etc. If I had space a 3rd bike with toe clips would be the best solutionI've never used them, but I know you can get magnetic cleats/pedals. You'd need the correct shoes to match (2 bolt spd), but it might solve your problem.
Tried those before, they don't work well as the free pedal always ends up upside down when you pull away due to the weight of the adaptor. Que much kicking of the pedal trying to get it the right way up when you should just be accelerating.Adapter for SPD-compatible pedals that lets you wear street shoes
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BBB Feetrest SPD Pedal Adapters
The Forge Cycleworks - BBB Feetrest SPD Pedal Adapters - £8.00GBPwww.forgecycles.co.uk
That reminds me my road bike had toe stops half the height of these 'quarter clips', they worked a treat, you could centre up by feel alone. I must have been defter at pedal flipping back then, or had more patience / less traffic.aluminium up stand around the front perimeter
Two lengths of this Velcro format hold waterproof rucksack covers on my rackmounted downtube battery. Hook one side, the other side is loop. They're held onto the rack by small zipties either side:What about using velcro straps, below is one version of many