Showing posts with label bike commuting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bike commuting. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Fifteen Thoughts While Riding to Work

1.       Why do people complain about traffic safety and drive dangerously at the same time?
2.       If you wave to other active commuters a couple of times, they become your friends.
4.       Sometimes I wonder why I read these things before I get on my bike.
5.       I’ll say it again (and probably again): Roads are only safe when the users make them that way.
6.       The prickly pears on the beaver tail cacti I pass on the way to work are ripening.
7.       Urban orchards are a cool idea.
8.       Daily watering leads to shallow roots leads to weak grass.
9.       Even without bike lanes and traffic, I bet I win on short trips.
10.   There seems to be more chatter about helmets or no helmets lately.
11.   I wear a helmet for the same reason I wear a seatbelt.
12.   Arguing about helmets seems to avoid the greater issue of safe biking facilities.
13.   I wonder what it would be like to go for a run with Robert Frost.
14.   What kind of running shoes would Wallace Stevens wear? Firecats, of course.
15.   I run far. Other people run farther. This will not change.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Thirteen Thoughts While Riding to Work

1.       Drivers expect us to act like cars, and then get mad at us when we do.
2.       The center line of the traffic light trigger loop is the most sensitive.
3.       What if I left hooked you like you right hooked me?
4.       Riding on the left side of a one-way street is a little disconcerting.
5.       It’s nice to feel a little chilly today.
6.       If you’re late for work, do you have to take it out on me?
7.       Thanks for waving.
8.       Thanks for waiting.
9.       Thanks for not running me over.
10.   I go over the speed limit downtown.
11.   Should sheriff’s deputies model good driving behavior, or turn right on red despite the signs while talking on a cell phone?
12.   I still don’t understand why people insist upon watering their lawns with our drinking water.
13.   What’s your rush when I get to the traffic light when you do?

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Twenty Seven Thoughts While Riding to Work

1.       Despite all the efforts to structure the streets more safely, safety lies in the actions of the people who use them.
2.       Some people may never get the idea.
3.       You can’t argue with stupid people, who continue to argue their point even when they know it’s wrong.
4.       The tree covered streets of my neighborhood are much cooler than the streets of the downtown area.
5.       Electromagnetic loops respond mostly to cars.
6.       Right on red should be against the law in any area with a lot of pedestrians.
7.       Stop lines are not for a car’s rear wheels.
8.       Intersections are especially scary when crossing drivers roll to a non-stop.
9.       Never underestimate the impatience of a driver turning left.
10.   Facebook mobs are scary.
11.   I shouldn’t be surprised by those who refuse to believe clear evidence.
12.   Violence is easier said than done.
13.   Too easy, in fact.
14.   Don’t let anyone ruin your peace.
15.   Wheels in city government move slowly.
16.   Wheels in people’s minds move more slowly.
17.   Dangerous road conditions facilitate laziness.
18.   Being a contributing member of a group makes us happy.
19.   Crossing the street mid-block is not a revolutionary act.
20.   Though there is safety in numbers, sometimes a crowd makes me nervous.
21.   Riding through town is a friendly act.
22.   I’m glad my coffee cup fits in a bottle rack.
23.   The hardest part about riding to work in the summer is not sweating.
24.   All road users break laws sometimes.
25.   Helmets may look dorky, but no helmet looks stupid.
26.   Slick tires roll fast.
27.   Riding my bike to work is an act of happiness.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Life from the Bike Lane

orignally published in the Spartanburg Journal, September 2010
I ride my bicycle to work most days.  I ride when it’s coldest, and hottest, but usually not when it’s raining.  My ride is short, about ten minutes and less than two miles, and I’ve come to value the time I spend doing so.
I ride for transportation only.  Occasionally I’ll go for the Friday lunchtime ride hosted by Partners for Active Living, and every so often someone will ask me to go for a ride. 
Having ridden in a variety of contexts from downtown Philadelphia to rural California mountains for the past 25 or so years has given me a broad understanding of how to ride.  For the past three-and-a-half years I’ve worked for organizations that advocate for active living policies, planning and design, so I have an added knowledge of the current trends and developments. 
The recent focus on spiraling obesity rates, in particular among children, has resulted in a new sense of urgency for active living and healthy eating advocates.  Much of that new energy has focused on changing the physical environment to accommodate pedestrians and cyclists.  Here in Spartanburg we have added bike lanes on many downtown streets, and improved sidewalks to allow for more equal access for people with disabilities and families with strollers.  I wrote a column recently about the addition of a simple sign placed in some downtown crosswalks that remind us that automobiles must yield to pedestrians crossing.  Spartanburg’s designation as a Bicycle Friendly Community by the League of American Bicyclists is another sign of our progress.   
Because I have a short ride, I’ve made just a few adjustments to my schedule.  In the summer, I keep my speed slow to avoid sweating.  It appears for me that 10 miles per hour, measured on my handy bike computer, is the threshold.  That means my summer ride is a few minutes longer than my winter ride, when ride as fast as I can to maintain some body heat. 
I’ve also made a few observations from my rides.  The same exposure that makes me a vulnerable target on a bike makes me a more involved street user.  Folks walking on the street are more in my realm than those in cars.  Some nod, some say hello in response to my greeting, some ignore me.  But when I drive I rarely have the same kind of interaction. 
When I turn right, it seems I know more people.   Think about the right-turn hand signal—left arm out, elbow bent, hand in the air.  I throw that one up, and all of a sudden drivers are waving to me.
Maybe I shouldn’t be surprised by the anger some drivers show when they pull in front of me, or start to.  Despite my front and rear lights, I am often blamed for their own inattention.  I’m heartened, though, by those who yield the right-of-way to me in situations where I don’t have it, at four-way stops, or when turning left. 
Only some of my route includes bike lanes, or the shared lane marking called “sharrows.”  But I do stay off the major roads like Church Street, Pine Street and Henry Street.  Those roads are just not made for bicycle travel, and most drivers are so concerned about their own safety that they are not looking for cyclists.  I prefer the slower speed streets, like Kennedy Street, or Main Street through the central business district.  Though drivers are not always aware I’m there, they are generally going slowly enough and with little enough traffic that they can avoid me. 
The more I ride and the more I’m noticed, the safer I feel.  Familiarity brings kinship—I’m the guy who rides, and I feel as though drivers begin to recognize me.  No one wants to hit someone they know.