Life is better on a bike!

Month: March 2010

Share the Road

Even, if you do everything right – follow all the laws of the road and ride perfectly – you still run the risk of being seriously injured or killed riding a bike. 

Riding a bike is exhilarating.
Riding a bike is challenging.
Riding a bike can also be dangerous.

Don’t get me wrong, there are things you can do as a cyclist that help to ensure your safety. Riding with traffic, riding in accordance with laws and most importantly, always riding defensively.

Regardless of how careful you are when taking to the street on a bike, you still are at risk.  Tony Kornheiser on his March 11 ESPN radio show recently said the solution to getting cyclists off the road was to run them down! Other people probably share this sentiment but are just more quiet about it.

This isn’t a surprise to cyclists. If you ride a bike and you’ve ridden for very long, you’ve encountered angry and frustrated drivers. Drivers that pass you too closely, drivers that threaten you, drivers that verbally harass you and potentially drivers that actually target you.

Google “cyclist injured” or “cyclist killed” in Google News to see just how dangerous. Every time I have (which isn’t often because it scares the hell out of me and makes me afraid to ride) there have been a minimum of 3 or 4 pages of links.

These accidents rarely list the cyclist at fault. More often then not it is an inattentive driver, a distracted driver or a driver fed up with having to share the road with bikes. To make matters worse, the drivers are rarely fined, ticketed or held accountable in any way.

Currently more than half the states require motorists to give cyclists at least 3 feet of space when passing. Many also allow cyclists to take the lane when needed to ensure their safety.

If you are thinking cyclists should ride on the sidewalk (Tony Kornheiser) – think again. Not only is it impractical, in most states it is also illegal.

Give us a break and share the road!

For more info:

Share the Road: Give Cyclists Three Feet of Space | Everyday Citizen

Anne Mustoe: Explorer by Bike

The Internet is full of stories about people who do things that are said to be extraordinary. 

Whether through Facebook, Twitter,  email or Google, we all come across stories such as these.   Some we read – and most of those we forget.

I learned about a woman tonight that I had never heard of, Anne Mustoe.

Her story is both extraordinary and inspirational. At the age of 54, somewhat overweight and not exactly fit, she decided to bicycle around the world. Keep in mind she hadn’t ridden a bike in 30 years!  She was motivated to do this incredible feat – incredible for anyone at any age -  after seeing a man riding a bike while she was on vacation in India in 1983.

It took her 4 years from seeing the cyclist in India, to quit her job and take off on her bike, a Condor, given to her by her students as a going away gift. This Condor, must have been one hell of a bike because she was still riding it 22 years and about 100,000 miles later!

In 1987 on her first bike trip around the world, she took off from London, riding from west to east. She completed her trip around the world, 12,000 miles, in 15 months. As if that wasn’t enough she also rode these miles via historical routes:

"Roman roads across Europe; Alexander the Great’s route from Greece to the Indus Valley; Pakistan and India with the Moghuls and the Raj; and so on. Across the United States she followed the great pioneer trails."

And, keep in mind she did this by herself, at age 54 – with no prior training in terms of cycling.  Extraordinary.

Mustoe completed a second bike tour around the world, but to make it more interesting she did it in reverse direction. There were other trips too, Egypt, across the Alps, from the Baltic to Mediterranean, Buenos Aires and others.

Mustoe left by bike in May of 2009 at age 76 on what was to be her third trip around the world by bicycle. Sadly she fell ill and died in Syria, November 10, 2009.

I was able to find 7 books written by her about her bike journeys: A Bike Ride; Lone Traveller: One Woman, Two Wheels and the World; Two Wheels in the Dust; Cleopatra’s Needle; Escaping the Winter; Amber, Furs and Cockleshells Bike Rides with Pilgrims and Merchants; Che Guevara and the Mountain of Silver .

Yes, I’m a cyclist, but it is not her cycling that I find most inspiring. The way she lived her life inspires me. Hell, it amazes me! Can you imagine doing what she did? I can’t. What courage she had!

I will forever be inspired by her courage and sense of adventure.

Mustoe’s life story reminds me there are heroes among us. It’s a great loss that we rarely know of them. As a society we generally focus our attention on the bad actors and celebrities, and the hero’s live under our radar. That’s a shame, because our world is badly in need of true heroes.

Rest in peace Anne Mustoe.