For the Love of Bikes

Life is better on a bike!

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Edmond Bike Plan–Comments

As I mentioned in my blog of March 11th, Edmond OK Bicycle News, I would submit comments concerning the Edmond bicycle master plan. 

My comments:


Edmond Bike Plan Comment Sheet

We are residents of Edmond, OK and long-time cyclists. Besides being avid cyclists, we also maintain a website and blog about biking – All for the Love of Bikes.

Being cyclists and local residents, we wholeheartedly support the City of Edmond’s plan to develop and implement a bicycle master plan. We attended the recent open house and provided input concerning frequent routes we ride and routes we would like to ride if it was feasible to do so.

We have reviewed the goals and objectives that were provided and support them. We recognize that implementation of the bike plan by necessity will occur in stages. Consequently, we feel it is important to prioritize components of the plan to achieve the greatest impact and benefit.

To that end, we would like to see a media campaign aimed at educating the public on the purpose and benefits to the community of the bicycle master plan. The media campaign could include more 3-foot signage, a series of articles in the newspaper about bicycling and the bike plan, insert in utility bill, etc.

Another relatively easy and inexpensive step could be incorporating bikes and bicycling into already established Edmond events, such as the arts festival, Liberty Fest, etc. We rode our bikes to the arts festival last year and found the organizers weren’t quite sure what to do with us. Having more bike racks would also encourage biking. I ride my bike to shop and although there is some parking downtown, there isn’t in the other shopping areas.

Additionally, to have a pedestrians and bikes only day downtown once per month (Saturday or Sunday) would give people an opportunity to ride in a safe environment. When I talk to “non-cyclists” the number one reason they give for not riding is they do not feel safe. In fact, it’s almost the only reason people give.

An initial focus for the bike plan should be perhaps to select 5-10 main streets for markings/signage that would denote them as bicycle corridors that would allow for access to shopping areas, library, downtown, restaurants, etc.

A key focus of the bike plan should be to utilize biking as a safe and convenient way to get around Edmond. Although recreational riding is important, using bikes as a means of transportation will have greater impact on making Edmond bike-friendly.

We look forward to helping bring the bicycle master plan to fruition and making Edmond a truly bike-friendly community.


Texas Hill Country

We’re starting early this year with our first bike tour of 2012 taking us to the Texas hill country.

Although I’ve biked in the Austin area I’ve never done any touring there or ridden through the hill country. It should make for nice biking – and beautiful biking with the  Texas bluebonnets in bloom.

If we’re lucky this is what we’ll see!

Texas hill country blue

More to come – Yeeha!

Edit – I didn’t take the picture, and don’t know who did, I got it off Facebook. I do think I rode that hill though.

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!

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