Life is better on a bike!

Month: November 2012 (Page 1 of 2)

November Rides

The weather has been unseasonably warm which means bike riding weather! Global warming makes our summers hellish, but fall and winter – not so bad.

Since I’ve been doing a photo project diary for 2012 – a picture a day starting January 1 – I usually have my small point and shoot camera with me so I can shoot while riding.

A few shots from November rides:


 

Day 302

 

 

Day 320

 

 

Day 322

 

 

Day 330

 

 

Day 330 (2)

 

 

Day 318

 

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20121115_151739

 

 

20121116_130107

 

 

Day 321

 

 

P1050285

 

 

P1050429

 

 

P1050303

 

 

P1050434

 

 

P1050448

Mirror, Mirror

P1050256aI would guess that most of you wouldn’t consider riding without a helmet strapped to your head. You probably see it as a necessary piece of equipment to keep you safe when you’re out riding.

I happen to agree with you.

I wonder though if most of you helmet-loving-riders will agree with this:

A mirror, whether attached to your helmet, glasses or bike is just as important to your safety as your helmet.

It has been proven to me on many occasions, but two near misses really drove it home. Two occasions where drivers weren’t paying attention, and knowing that I was able to take action to get out of their way. I knew it because of my mirror.

When it comes to us and cars, we only need to remember one rule: cars always win. Consequently I do everything I can when I’m on my bike riding alongside those metal behemoths to best insure my safety. For me that now includes using a mirror.

The mirror I use is the Hubbub helmet mirror. I love that the mirror mounts to my helmet and not my sunglasses and that the viewing area is large. Previously I used the Bike Peddler Take A Look Mirror which attached to my sunglasses. It worked well, but I didn’t like having it mounted to my sunglasses. Both are great mirrors and there are also many other mirrors to choose from. Both my husband and I tried a couple of different mirrors that adhere to the helmet via sticky stuff (technical term) but they never stayed on.

For many years I never used a mirror, but I wouldn’t dream of riding any significant distance without one now. I wasn’t aware there were mirrors appropriate for road bikes when I started riding again back in the early 90’s, only the very large mirrors that mounted to the handlebar. I was way too cool for that, and besides back then we were told cyclists rarely were hit from behind.

That was probably not true then, and it certainly isn’t true now:

According to the League of American Bicyclists more than one in four of crashes involve cyclists getting hit from behind.

A mirror definitely can help protect you. I use my mirror when I’m biking the way I use my mirrors when I’m driving. It has become second nature to look in my mirror for traffic – just like driving. I frequently check my mirror while riding and on those occasions I think a car has not seen me (they haven’t moved over to pass), while it is safe to do so I take even more of the lane to first get their attention and second, to force them to pass safely. 

Through the use of my mirror I’m also able to go with the flow of traffic better. If I can see there is a car coming up behind me I’ll slow slightly so they can go past. It is not just their preference to not be behind me, it’s mine too!

The bottom line is that cycling is more enjoyable and relaxing with a mirror and in my opinion at least – safer. If you’re not convinced, get a mirror and use it for a month or two then take it off and see how less aware you are of your surroundings and how less safe you feel. That’s what happened for me, I first used a mirror on a bike tour where the company provided them. After a week of using it I came to rely on and appreciate it – and bought a mirror when I got home.

If you don’t ride with a mirror, try one. What have you got to lose?

Good and Bad Times on the Bike

I wish I could talk to every single one of them. I wish I could put them on a bike riding on the same road with drivers behaving toward them as they did toward us. I wish they could really get how easily it could have ended tragically for us because of their impatience and frustration that we were on the road!

Yesterday was an interesting day as a cyclist in Edmond, OK.

We took a bike ride in the perfect fall weather in the afternoon. We rode out east on Sorghum Mill and Coffee Creek roads for about 2 hours. We rode from home although more often we park at a school and ride from there to avoid bad experiences we have had in the past riding on Coltrane between Coffee Creek and Covell.

It was a perfect weather day as I’ve said and we enjoyed our ride immensely. Up until the last 3 miles when we turned onto Coltrane heading south. Suffice it to say that the drivers were aggressive, irresponsible and dangerous towards us and other drivers. They sped past us with oncoming traffic present and one car passed us with less than a foot of clearance. If it had been a truck or van with protruding side mirrors we would have surely been hit.

408915_10151284233763268_2026895766_nIt was the worst experience I have had on the road in the last 5 or so years. We had probably 10 cars blow by us with oncoming traffic (two lane road) on a hill no less! We were riding single file far to the right but not on the “white line of death”. I was riding just to the right of where a car’s right wheel would be so we were riding in a way that should have told the drivers behind us not to attempt to pass until they could change lanes to do so. And would have told them that (as it almost always does) if they had not been asshat drivers!

I saw one of the oncoming cars get far to the right of their lane to avoid getting hit by the car passing us. They may have had to leave the roadway, I couldn’t tell. The worst offender mentioned above was reported to the police when we got home. We caught up to him, and 75% of the other asshat drivers that had narrowly blown by us, at the stop sign at Covell and Coltrane because although they chose to put us at risk they still had to wait at the same stop sign as us. So much for rushing.

Their behavior was completely inexcusable. They could have hit us and would have I believe in one case when thanks to my mirror I could see what they were doing and I was able to move to the right edge of the roadway to avoid them.

Thanks to my mirror I was also able to pick the right time to take the full lane without losing sight of what was happening in front of me. Mark pulled up alongside me and we rode that way until it was safe for cars to pass us and then returned to our previous single file positions.

I have not felt that threatened on the road in forever and I can’t ever remember having so many drivers behave so recklessly at one time. They had either all been at the same bar drinking or coffee shop getting hyped up on coffee.

I wish I could talk to every single one of them. I wish I could put them on a bike riding on the same road with drivers behaving toward them as they did toward us. I wish they could really get how easily it could have ended tragically for us because of their impatience and frustration that we were on the road!

Mark did make a complaint about the worst of the horrible drivers to the police including their tag number. The policeman told Mark they had been instructed by the city attorney not to issue citations unless they had observed the offense. Mark then asked if the police would at least contact the driver and inform them of our complaint and they were required by law to give a person riding a bike at least 3 feet of clearance when passing. The police officer was cordial and said that he would attempt to contact the driver of the vehicle. Mark requested to be notified of the outcome of that contact.

We quickly inhaled a recovery shake and showered  because we had an important city council meeting to get to. There was a large representation of area bicycle riders on hand as the Edmond City Council voted unanimously to accept (adopt) the Bicycle Master Plan!

City-of-Edmond-Bike-Plan-logoThe plan is comprehensive including both short and long term goals which will be prioritized for implementation. I encourage you to visit the website for the Edmond Bicycle Master Plan, view the bicycle plan network map and read the Edmond Bicycle Master Plan.

We now have a framework and some community will to improve bicycling here in Edmond to hopefully reduce the likelihood that any cyclist experiences what we did yesterday afternoon.

Cycling Nirvana

Recently I’ve felt hopeful about the upsurge of bicycling nationally and locally with several improvements to the cycling infrastructure made in the Oklahoma City area where I live. We have new signage and bike lanes, and my community has recently passed an ordinance for affirmative defense and is currently working toward developing a multiuse paved trail around a local lake as well as getting a bicycle master plan in place to direct bicycling improvements.

My positive feelings were put into perspective today when I read the article below from the International Herald Tribune. All the changes I mentioned above are true and positive but read below what the likes of Amsterdam aka “Bicycling Nirvana” is doing.

Try not to get depressed. ~Susan


Making the Bike as Logical a Choice for Commuters as the Car, Bus, Train or Metro

By CHRISTOPHER F. SCHUETZE

 

Bikers with kids cycling in downtown Amsterdam.

(Herman Wouters for The New York Times) Bikers with kids cycling in downtown Amsterdam.

What do you give the bike city that has it all? Better bicycle highways and parking lots, obviously.

In fact, the capital of European biking — in a bike-obsessed Europe — is investing nearly €120 million, or about $150 million, in cycling infrastructure over the next eight years, with almost half of that sum be spent in just the next four years.

“Amsterdam wants to remain a clean and accessible city and the city administration had to ensure the conditions are set for people to be able to choose their bike as a means of transportation,” Tahira Limon of the City of Amsterdam in a telephone interview.

Amsterdam is not the first European city to make headlines for improved bike infrastructure this year. Even during Europe-wide belt tightening, some cities are spending heavily on two-wheeled transportation infrastructure. My colleague Sally McGrane reported on a new bicycle superhighway in Copenhagen, which officially opened in spring.

A man parking his bicycle in a crowded lot near Central Station in Amsterdam on Oct. 31.

(Peter Dejong/The Associated Press)  A man parks his bicycle in a crowded lot near Central Station in Amsterdam on Oct. 31.

“Cycling is not a goal in itself but a way to create a more livable and green city with healthier citizens and should be perceived as a ‘normal’ means of transportation in line with the car, bus, train and Metro,” wrote Anja Larson of the City of Copenhagen in an email.

“Cycling is the most cost-effective way to move people,” said Julian Ferguson of the European Cyclists’ Federation, or the E.C.F., about public and private transport systems.

It is also becoming increasingly popular. Cities as diverse as London, Paris, Barcelona, Lyon and New York have doubled their bike share trips in the last decade, according to E.C.F.

The city of Amsterdam already has more bikes than people. According to city data, 780,559 citizens live in a city of 881,000 bicycles.

Currently 58 percent of all Amsterdam’s citizens use their bikes on a daily basis, with 43 percent using their bikes for their daily commute.

One downside to the massive popularity of bikes is an increase in accidents as more bikers share the same bike lines. Amongst people seriously wounded in traffic accidents, 56 percent in Amsterdam are cyclists, up from 48 percent in 2000.

The boost in bike ridership has also led to enormous bike parking problems, as anyone who has tried to lock up his or her bike close to a Dutch train station can attest.

The massive funding boost will be spent on upgrading bike routes and enhancing bicycle storage, the city said when announcing its plans last month.

Amsterdam will fund some 38,000 additional bike parking places at many of the city’s railroad and public transportation hubs, as well as other popular sites such as the Museum. Most impressive, perhaps, is the plan to build a new indoor storage place that by 2020 can fit up to 17,500 bikes close to the central train station.

In addition to the extra spaces, the city will create more bike parking laws and enforce existing ones, ensuring Amsterdammers do not leave their bikes for longer than 14 days in at high-demand locations.

Also Amsterdam bike paths will be widened and enhanced. (Read on here.)

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