SATURDAY, JUNE 7TH
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Bonus karma if you show up on your bike, walk, or take the bus. Let's fill the fence with locked bikes. If you're driving, there is plenty of off street parking in the church lot on Hungerford.
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| Dinner bell rings at 7PM |
riding bicycles in hartford
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| Dinner bell rings at 7PM |
The question I'm pondering is, "Does car-centric infrastructure drive suburban development patterns and car-centric behavior, or is it the nature of people that drives the shape and design of the infrastructure?" I'm torn on this one. I see highway and road design influencing behavior, but also see friends and co-workers making life choices that force car centric living (and the associated infrastructure to support it). At the end of the day, I'm not sure it's cut and dry.
This past week I was in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania for a business trip. Prior to the trip I didn't know anything about the city and had even forgotten that it was the state capitol. I like to get a feel for the cities I'm visiting with a feet on the streets interview of sorts. Walking around after a day of hokey meetings is also a great way to clear one's head and get the blood flowing.
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| In case you didn't get the hint from the horrible design. Walkers unwelcome here. |
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| Just when all hope was lost, I found this snowy trail network. |
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| The beautiful pool at the Harrisburg YMCA. |
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| A multi-use bridge, car free, across the river. |
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| Majestic capital building in Harrisburg. |
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| Some naked folks freezing their bits off. Clearly in pain. |
Here's a question to get you thinking. How did you learn to cross railroad tracks at a ninety degree angle? Did you learn about the safer method in gym class at school, during your driver education course, or via a public safety announcement? Probably not. If you're like me, you learned the hard way - by having your bicycle abruptly disappear and finding yourself pitched head first into the traffic lane. I won't forget that lesson, but I would rather have learned it minus the crash. This is but one example of many dangerous situations that arise for cyclists that haven't taken a course in cycling safety. Based on the crash data, just knowing what those dangerous situations are and having a basic safe cycling skill set can address a large majority of the risk in using a bicycle - for both transportation and recreation.
There is a dearth (scarcity) of education for cyclists that are looking for information and skills on how to ride safely and competently. From grade school through teenage years and into adulthood, there really isn't embedded education that familiarizes cyclists with the tools needed to ride safely. Imagine if a fraction of the time and effort spent teaching teens how to drive was dedicated to education on safe cycling, pedestrian safety, and transit. The focus on one preferred means of transportation, the car, biases those teens toward driving as the socially acceptable option. It also leaves those that choose to do something other than drive a car pretty clueless. As captured in the introduction, I initially took the clueless route to earning my stripes as an occasionally bruised, but now much safer, bicycle commuter.
It's clearly not efficient, or safe, to learn how to ride by screwing up a lot and gathering advice in bits and pieces from other more experienced riders. After a lifetime of going about this the hard way, I took Traffic Skills 101 (TS101) and followed that up with the League Cycling Instructor (LCI) training. Now I can do my part to spread some very powerful information by teaching Traffic Skills 101 to other riders. The next course in Hartford is planned for Sunday, March 30th. You can register online through Bike Walk Connecticut. If you want to spread the word about the TS101 course, you should invite others to this Facebook Event.
Traffic Skills 101 is a comprehensive, full-day program for adults and mature teens who want to improve their street riding skills and increase their cycling knowledge. The course includes classroom time, parking lot drills, and a road ride. Many different types of cyclists will benefit from taking TS101. It is ideal for cyclists who want to build upon the basics, those returning to cycling from a long hiatus, people who want to be more independent on their bike, and those looking for more confidence cycling in traffic. The class also satisfies the requirements to pursue a League Cycling Instructor certification through the League of American Bicyclists.
Part of the reason for holding this early Spring course is to support the League Cycling Instructor course planned for April 17th through April 20th in Simsbury. The LCI course is a specialized bicycle boot camp to train the trainers, and it is intense. Those that pass the weekend course go on to teach courses like TS101 and other critical courses, including school based programs that have started in several CT communities, such as South Windsor and Simsbury. Educating children and teens about bicycle safety is part of the solution to allow a safe transition toward a less car dependent future.
I'm also excited to be organizing a June 7th event in Hartford, Dinner and Bikes. There will be a vegan buffet dinner, bicycle short films, and a book talk by Elly Blue on Bikenomics, How Bicycling Can Save the Economy. More info to follow in a later post, but make sure you leave that Saturday night open. Put it on your calendars now, as I know June can be a busy month.
Note to Loyal BBB Readers - I would love if all 9 of you would share in the comments something you "Learned the Hard Way". It doesn't even have to be about cycling. I've got so many that I could write a book.
Heya bike folks. I know you are jonesing for your bike that was put away months ago or is perhaps suffering with you through the winter on your stationary trainer. Since Hartford loves you and we know that S.A.D. for cyclists is particularly harsh, there is a cycling movie at the Wadsworth on Tuesday, February 4th.
Here's the blurb. Hope to see a bunch of folks out there. Discount for Bike Walk Connecticut members.
What are your plans and goals for 2014 ye loyal readers of the Beat Bike Blog. Simple stuff or grand schemes? Were you happy with your 2013? How will 2014 be the same or differ.
Personally I've been doing an inordinate amount of navel gazing as 2013 draws to a close. 2013 brought some very interesting "firsts", but at the same time felt a bit lacking. The time I spent engaged and animated, fulfilled really, seemed too short when compared to the grind. I have some thoughts on how to rebalance. We'll see if 2014 is the year for a new direction. If so, you'll probably see it here.
The themes of my introspection circle around global impact, community involvement, and preparedness for an uncertain future of global weirdness. It seems that within my lifetime we may see some serious upheaval and challenges to our current state of civilization.
The timeframe probably isn't 1-5 years, but as with car free living, I expect that building more resilience into my life - and that of my community - has near term benefits. There really isn't a reason to delay transitioning to a more fulfilling, happier, and less fossil fuel dependent future state. Clinging to the status quo may have some financial benefit as the US rides what may be the final cresting wave of frack'd oil and gas. Staying on that wave, as greater society seems intent on doing, seems irresponsible at best. At worst it appears catastrophic, globally and economically.
Instead of getting discouraged and carrying a dour outlook into 2014, I resolve to make what incremental changes I can. Teach more Traffic Skills courses. Expand my garden plot. Can more preserves and vegetables. Engage in community focused bicycle and pedestrian education and advocacy. Maybe even make some more radical life changes.
Any resolutions of your own?


It's that time of year again when folks at work look at the bicycle commuter with a head tilt and ask, "You didn't ride in today, did you?" I'm toying with escalating ridiculousness in my response. "No. Actually I decided to ice skate." Or, "Riding a bicycle in the winter is the stupidest thing I've ever heard of. Do you think I'm an idiot? I stole my neighbor's car today." I'd be interested to hear responses from other year round commuters when this perennial question returns each winter.
As an experienced user of the bicycle, my own two feet, transit, and even the occasional car, I should be patient in my treatment of those that ask seasonal and weather related questions that can seem repetitive. The asker of the question doesn't realize they aren't asking a novel question and therefore don't expect or deserve my impatience. In truth the question is welcome. If I can find a way to twist the answer in a way that catches the person's attention or makes them think, perhaps they too will look critically at their rampant single occupancy vehicle trips. As a friend of mine likes to remind me, clever assholes don't change many minds.
On the topic of changing trends, I've seen several more winter bicycle commuters at Pratt & Whitney. Studded tires even. Tomorrow will be a good test of these hardy souls with the low teens and 2-4" of snow predicted. I received several email from co-workers disappointed that the bicycle racks near their building had been removed. Curious, I've dropped a note to our Facilities department who may not have realized that bicycles work in cold weather too.
The CT DOT seems to forget each year that the bicycle and pedestrian crossings adjacent to the Connecticut River highway bridges also need to be cleared of snow and ice. Eight lanes of highway can be bone dry the day after a storm, but the eight feet of multi-use path can be left for weeks unless pestering ensues. The level of clearing doesn't match that of the highway lanes. For example the Charter Oak Bridge was plowed, but a 1" deep layer of dense and icy remainder was left along the entire length of the crossing. No salt or grit in sight. There is a tight downhill turn on this crossing, and even with studs the ice can be tricky to navigate.
That brings me to my final topic. Crashing. I crash. On Saturday I spent several hours riding with Salem on my Kona with studded 700x35 Nokians. They are a bit slow and noisy, and klunky for handling on dry pavement, but they significantly reduce my crashing in the winter. We hit the perfect level of snow on the ground, smoothing out the trails and quieting my tires.
Later in the afternoon I thought it would be fun to take my fixed gear Schwinn out for an in town trip. It was fun, and I got to practice locking up the back tire. Feeling pretty good about my traction and having leaned turns all morning I headed into an intersection. The slick tires didn't do any good at all in a hard right turn on a 1/2" of packed street snow. Sliding sideways on my hip, I sprung up and did a little "I'm okay. Enjoy the show!" dance for the concerned onlookers. A friendly fellow picked up my fractured rear reflector and made sure I wasn't injured. Fortunately I've entirely given up on pride, so no other damage was sustained. When crashing on snow you typically slide, a good way to bleed off the forward momentum.
Crashing is okay, and it can be fun. If I didn't do it often, it would probably hurt more when it happened on rare occasion. Falling down is part of the human condition. It's how you get up that matters.
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| More hardy P&W bicycle commuters confusing their co-workers this year. |
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| Salem leads the way |
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| Hopefully South Windsor's Bissell Bridge will be cleared more regularly this winter |
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| This is what happens when you forget you're not on snow tires. |
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| You either engage or enrage. Pick one. |
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| Don't piss away what you just started. Build on it. Own it. Make it awesome. |