Jeff Mapes said it best in his book Pedaling Revolution, "The bike offers a non-polluting, non-congesting, physically active form of transportation in a country, and in a world, that increasingly seems to need such options.... Our increasingly sedentary lifestyle raises the specter of an obesity epidemic that could shorten the life span of the next generation."
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Laws
Bikes follow the same laws as cars and any other vehicle on the road. This works great to defend and protect bicyclists against cars but the flipside is that we must still obey all traffic laws. Because many drivers already dislike us, they will be looking for any reason to dislike us more so all we do by tailgating (when possible), running red lights, and generally driving unsafely is shoot ourselves and our cause in the foot by giving the other side reasons to shoot us down. If we follow the letter of the law and we get injured by a car, it will most likely be there fault so although you'll likely be very hurt, you won't then have legal trouble on top of that. In some jurisdictions, bikes have special laws so before you ride on the street (which you're legally supposed to do instead of riding on the sidewalk) check your state and city's bike laws.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Merch
Depending on how many readers I get, I might start selling bumper stickers and T-shirts and the like to raise funds to help raise awareness of bikes and urban biking and such. I also have to find how the money would go to said causes or if I want to handle it myself. If you would like a bumper sticker or shirt or have other ideas on how to raise funds/awareness, comment/reply.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Pedaling Revolution
I recently acquired Pedaling Revolution by Jeff Mapes and it is a fantastic book. It's about the struggle of urban bicyclists and how cities are becoming more and more bike friendly. Mapes makes some great points and gives bike advocates a lot of arguments for making their cities more bike friendly. One of the best paragraphs is in the introduction where he says,
"The bike offers a non-polluting, non-congesting, physically active form of transportation in a country, and in a world, that increasingly seems to need such options. The heightened global competition for the world's oil supplies has ended the era of cheap fuel that made our automobile dependency possible. Our increasingly sedentary lifestyle raises the specter of an obesity epidemic that could shorten the life span of the next generation. And we're outstripping our ability to maintain and expand out network of roads and bridges."He looks at both sides of the argument and admits sometimes bicycling doesn't work. I highly highly suggest getting a copy of this.
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