With an early Spring and $4 gasoline there are welcome new rumblings around the water cooler. A perfect storm that lines up with the efforts of Bike Walk Connecticut, the statewide bicycle advocacy organization, to grow their successful Bike to Work program. The Connecticut Bike to Work events started back in 2004 in downtown Hartford, and grew to include satellite events in the surrounding towns. This year Bike Walk CT is donning the "statewide" mantle and promoting bicycle commuting across the vast lands of Connecticut.
Being a non-profit organization with limited resources, the statewide Bike to Work campaign doesn't include bagels and coffee in every little CT town, although many non-metro Hartford cities are now holding events. For example New Haven and the Elm City Cyclists have a very well organized Bike to Work program. Other cites interested in joining can contact Sandy Fry, who has all the details you'll need to set up a satellite event. All you'll need is a food sponsor (employer, city, or yourself), a folding table, and some sweat equity.
For those that don't have a local Bike to Work Event but still want to get in on the movement, we present to you -- the power of the internet. Bike Walk CT has oddles of resources on their website for first timers. Connecticut will also be competing in the National Bike Challenge. The Challenge puts Connecticut head to head against other states, and hopefully the cyclists in our great state won't leave us with some embarrassing rankings.
The Bike Challenge website gives you the tools to track miles, set up corporate teams, and show the nation that CT is serious about bicycle commuting. I'm personally interested in the corporate challenge, and am certain that Pratt and Whitney will dominate the leaderboard. Engineers respond quickly to the pocketbook pressure of high gas prices, and our bicycle racks are already overflowing.
Let's bike to work Connecticut. It's easier than you think!
Being a non-profit organization with limited resources, the statewide Bike to Work campaign doesn't include bagels and coffee in every little CT town, although many non-metro Hartford cities are now holding events. For example New Haven and the Elm City Cyclists have a very well organized Bike to Work program. Other cites interested in joining can contact Sandy Fry, who has all the details you'll need to set up a satellite event. All you'll need is a food sponsor (employer, city, or yourself), a folding table, and some sweat equity.
For those that don't have a local Bike to Work Event but still want to get in on the movement, we present to you -- the power of the internet. Bike Walk CT has oddles of resources on their website for first timers. Connecticut will also be competing in the National Bike Challenge. The Challenge puts Connecticut head to head against other states, and hopefully the cyclists in our great state won't leave us with some embarrassing rankings.
The Bike Challenge website gives you the tools to track miles, set up corporate teams, and show the nation that CT is serious about bicycle commuting. I'm personally interested in the corporate challenge, and am certain that Pratt and Whitney will dominate the leaderboard. Engineers respond quickly to the pocketbook pressure of high gas prices, and our bicycle racks are already overflowing.
Let's bike to work Connecticut. It's easier than you think!
1 comment:
I started riding to work last year during bike to work week, it was really good timing because it was right after I'd got my new folding bike. I have a really long commute, so I didn't want to ride the whole way, but between the train and my new bike, it really was easier than I thought it would be.
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