Life is better on a bike!

Month: March 2012 (Page 2 of 2)

Why We Still Ride

I broke my right leg on a bike just like the one below when I was 10 years old. My friend, Debbie Smith’s bike. I was pedaling she was riding on the handlebars… we flipped and I landed on my knees. Crazy kids.

This is a great post by Brent Cohrs from his Easy as Riding a Bike blog.

Is 2012 the Year You Rediscover Bicycling?

Is 2012 the Year You Rediscover Bicycling?  By Brent Cohrs

Not my photo, but this was my first two-wheeler, a Sears Spyder. Image courtesy of oldroads.com

Think back.

Way back. Back to a time when the toughest decision you needed to make during any given day was which color popsicle you would eat first. Life was as simple as hopping on your bike and pedaling from one adventure to the next.

As long as I was back in time for dinner, I could pretty much go wherever my bike would take me. Down the block to a friend’s house. Over to the neighborhood White Hen Pantry. Up to the public swimming pool. Off to playgrounds near and far.

Sometimes the adventure didn’t involve any destination in particular. My bike was simply the vehicle that put my imagination into action. Sometimes it was a motorcycle. Other times it was a fighter jet, a horse, a police car, or any other conveyance needed to complete the fantasy. I didn’t require a game console and a big screen TV to simulate an experience – I just utilized my brain and my bike.

It’s been over forty years since that first solo trip around the block, yet I remember it as if it were yesterday.

I was on my older brother’s Stingray-like bike which was clearly too big for me to ride. I hovered over the top tube, pedaling sporadically to keep from toppling over. Each time I attempted to scoot up onto the seat I would lose momentum and the bike would start to wobble. Rather than risk crashing – which I’m sure I had done dozens of times before I finally attained that right combination of forward motion and side-to-side balance – I continued to stand up on the pedals until I had circumnavigated the entire block.

The five year-old version of me hopped on that bike determined to master an elusive motor skill and returned not merely satisfied with an achievement, but addicted to a new sensation. I still grin like a five year-old each time I throw a leg over my bike.

Every bike ride is an adventure.

Whether zipping over to the library or exploring a regional rail trail, tooling around the forest preserve or riding 150 miles to raise money for MS research, each outing has the potential to relax your mind while activating your imagination. Every trip can stimulate your senses while simulating your childhood memories.

Bicycling will help you reclaim your health while you relive your youth.

There is no better time than right now to rediscover bicycling. You never forget how to ride a bike – it’s been scientifically proven, by the way. Enjoying our unseasonably warm weather and getting back in shape is as easy as riding a bike.

Follow this blog for a series of posts on how you can rediscover bicycling. From slowly riding yourself back into shape to evaluating that bike hanging in the garage, I’m here to offer advice and encouragement. I’ll provide you with insider’s tips for buying accessories and offer reviews of fun and safe places to ride.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to get ready to take my bike out on some local sales calls today. I love an early spring!

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Keep riding and be safe!

Edmond Ok Bicycle News

City-of-Edmond-Bike-Plan-logoOn March 8th Mark and I attended the City of Edmond Bicycle Master Plan open house from 6:00 – 8:00pm in downtown Edmond. The open house was held to generate discussion and input for creating the “grand plan” for bicycling in Edmond, OK. Even though it was cold and rainy there was a large showing of Edmond citizenry interested in promoting safe bicycling in our community.

From 6pm – 7pm was set aside to visit various stations where goals and objectives were explained and for participants to note on maps where they currently ride, would like to ride, and would like to see bicycle facilities (trails, marked lanes, paths, etc.) to facilitate riding. There was a feeling of camaraderie as other’s shared their favorite routes, discussed difficulties with riding in the area and engaged in a little wishful thinking about what the future might hold. Mark and I noted on several of the maps where we ride and would ride if it was safer and easier to do so. To be honest, it was strange and beyond nice to be asked as cyclists how we thought “our” streets and community could better support our needs. As cyclists, we aren’t used to that are we!

The next hour of the open house was spent listening to staff of Kimley-Horn and Toole Design who will be constructing the bicycle master plan explain the process of developing such a plan. Jan Fees with the Edmond Bicycle Committee provided history and all parties took and answered questions from the standing room only audience.

Presently they are in the information gathering stage. There is a survey being conducted to elicit pertinent information and a comment form was distributed to open house participants for input into the bicycle master plan.

Outlined Goals and Objectives for the Edmond Bicycle Master Plan are:

Bicycle Network:

  • Identify a comprehensive on-street/off-street interconnected bikeway system that can be developed in phases.
  • Achieve a transportation system that is affordable and equitable for all types of users.
  • Increase the convenience of bicycling to and within commercial and employment areas.
  • Increase the connectivity of the bicycle network to parks, schools, Arcadia Lake, downtown, Citylink Transfer Center at Festival Market Place, trails, medical facilities and neighboring cities.
  • Improve accessibility for bicyclists around barriers such as intersections, freeways, and a discontinuous street network.
  • Develop a series of short loop rides around the community for the casual rider.
  • Develop a long continuous loop around the City connecting various destinations for the more advanced rider.

Engineering:

  • Design all bicycle facilities utilizing the most current national standards and guidelines and practices.
  • Include City of Edmond bicycle facility recommendations in the Edmond Transportation Plan.
  • Incr3ease the number of arterial streets that have wide shoulders or bike lanes.

Encouragement:

  • Distribute a Bicycle Map and Commuter Guide.
  • Promote bicycling through event and social marketing.
  • Set up community celebrations and/or rides each time the community completes a new bicycling-related project. This is a great way to show off the city’s good efforts and introduces new users to the improvement.
  • Design a way-finding sign program to facilitate and encourage bicycle mobility and access to facilities, services and destination.
  • Promote active lifestyles by promoting bicycle ridership through community-wide health initiatives.

Education:

  • Expand public education campaigns to promote the “share the road” message and the rights and responsibilities of all users.
  • Education city staff involved in planning, design, maintenance, and construction about best practices for addressing bicycle needs.
  • Expand the city’s Safe Routes to School program to include bicycling and encourage all schools to get involved.
  • Initiate a Bicycle Rodeo to education school age children proper bicycle ridership.

Enforcement:

  • Increase enforcement, taking a balanced approach that improves the behaviors of both motorists and bicyclists and reduces crashes.
  • Encourage police officers to use targeted enforcement to encourage motorists and cyclists to share the road. This could be in the form of a brochure or tip card explaining each user’s rights and responsibilities.

Evaluation:

  • Develop a system for identifying and understanding the type and location of bicycle crashes so that safety issues may be addressed.
  • Work to improve data collection methods for bicycle usage.
  • Establish a system of performance measures for plan implementation.

Implementation:

  • Adopt a 5-year Capital Improvement Program (CIP) for bicycle improvements.
  • Coordinate among city departments during the planning, design and construction phases of roadway projects to ensure that no opportunity to implement the bicycle network is missed.
  • Implement a procedure to ensure that non-motorized transportation opportunities are evaluation during the planning phase for major traffic corridors.
  • Develop short- and long-term goals for implementation.

We were told the website for the Edmond bicycle plan would have the Goals and Objective noted above, the PowerPoint slides presented, the maps with routes and notations made by citizenry, the bike plan timeline and other related information. It sounded to us like that website would be the place to go to check on the status of the project. Presently, there is a link to the survey on the website, I believe the other information I mentioned will be added soon.

Edmond Bicycle Master Plan website

If you are a local rider please click the link above and complete the survey. Even more important, please send any comments/questions about the Edmond Bike Plan to Jan Fees at Janet.Fees@edmondok.com

It is my understanding that the bike plan will be presented to Edmond City officials in October 2012. Last year the City Council allocated funds to create the Bicycle Master Plan, additional funds to implement a pilot project will have to be obtained. Additionally there are plans to complete a paved trail around Lake Arcadia including access to it from Edmond.

I’m an Edmond resident/bike rider who has had good success working with city officials in the past on adopting the Oklahoma 3-foot law as a city ordinance and my experiences with the Edmond Bicycle Committee both of which I wrote about in “Improvements in OK Bike Law”.

I’m very excited about the obvious support and enthusiasm to make Edmond more bicycle friendly aka SAFE. I would venture that between 6-8pm there were around 100 people, all ages, attending the open house. Reportedly there have been over 300 people take the survey to date.

I have not sent in my comments/suggestions for this bike plan to Jan Fees yet, but when I do I will post them here.

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