Monthly Archives: December 2011

Century for New Year’s Resolution

So I’ve heard some people say they want to ride a century as their New Years Resolution. To ride a century you need two things – a good breakfast and a bicycle. Here are a few routes you can follow to cross the achievement off your list.  They can be picked up anywhere and make great weekend rides. I have to thank the members of the HRRT for letting me publish their routes.

2012 Hill Challenge By Jason Stilson

100 Miles of Hill By Andy Reeds (more like 110 jeez)

SAC Hell Ride By Andy Reed

Hell Century By Douglas Southwick

HRRT Century Route 2011 By Jonathan Stillman

Come Climb With Me! By Jonathan Stillman (120 miles, Yes!)

Charlton/Saratoga Battlefield Metric By Jonathan Stillman

Tour of the Battenkil By Jonathan Stillman

Sweat n Summer Century 2010 By Jonathan Stillman

Metric from Charlton Town Hall By Jonathan Stillman

Got Climb?

Happy New Years!

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Filed under Local Bike Rides

Oh Sweet Innovation – BKME

Ah BKME, sweet innovative activism!

Bike Lanes from Casey Neistat on Vimeo.

Bicycles are a great means of transportation – they run on fat and save you cash, opposed from their counter parts which run on cash and make you fat! They are welcome in  cities all across the world. City planners in Portland, Amsterdam, Seattle, New York City and even here in Albany have incorporated encoraging bicycle lanes into their designs. This is great, until motor vehicles start to use bicycle lanes as their parking spots! Luckly we are we have smart people on our side.

Here’s one innovation we could use for evidence to encourage bicycle boulevards.  It’s called BKME. If we were to document all the hazards along the bike lanes in Albany, which there are many, this may go a long way to convince planners that bicycle boulevards would be a safe design. Another note – some of our main streets don’t have bike lanes… what happened to safety first?

From BKME.org

Image from The Bird Wheel

About la velolución

BKME.ORG is a platform that channels the power of cyclists to reclaim bikelanes from vehicles.

We use #BKME on Twitter to collectively defend our bikelanes in realtime, everywhere.

Join the Velolucion.

Who We Are

We are cyclists in NYC.These bikelanes belong exclusively to us.We are determined to defend them to stay alive.

This is why we made bkme.org, as a way to authorize urban access for us all.Think of it as an Open Data platform for collectively recording each violation against our bikelanes, socially in real time.

We are all connected and we must participate in this revolution together.Starting now we always bike together.Join us and defend your bikelane.

This is just the beginning.Viva la Velolución.

Interested?

Keep in mind we are in super alpha but we are working hard to make BKME even better.

Here is how to join in:

Whether on bike or on foot, Use your mobile device and take a photo of the offending vehicle, take down the license plate andtweet it all to #bkme with your GPS location enabled (here’s how toget a Twitter account and activate geolocation on your device).

We are working on some really cool ideas for the future.To stay current, follow us at @bkme_ny.

Have a comment or suggestions, want to go for a ride? Awesome! We would love to hear from you! Send us an email at us@bkme.org

Yours,The BKME Community

I also want to note that I went through NYS transportation laws. I was unable to find any law prohibiting parking in bicycle lanes by motor vehicles. Here are the laws.

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Filed under Activism, Bicycle Boulevards

How Many Cyclists Exist?

I don’t know how to go about researching this idea. How does one figure out how many cyclists are riding around?

This source says most everyone are cyclists. I find that doesn’t sink in too well.

Any thoughts?

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Animation, on a Bike?

Spring is here! Time for a gentle day cruise through the rolling streets. Through the ear bud play my favorite chill outs, Nightmares on Wax, Jazzanova, or Plej. Yea that’s the stuff . . . Wait a minute it’s winter in New York.  Guess I lost myself in the video. Check this out.

Katy Beveridge has designed and produced some cool bike art. She’s inserted paper on spokes in just the right places to come up with cool art for bikes. Not to mention the cinematography is killer too.  This video of bike art does a good job to create a feeling of spring while showing off some bicycle animation. See the video below on Youtube.

The Bicycle Animation

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US Proposes Law to Force Cyclists Off the Road

The Senate’s transportation authorization has drafted the S. 1813 Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act that if passed, would force cyclists to paths and trails parallel to all roads in national parks and other federal lands. Yes – new law that forces cyclists off the road.

Are you kidding me?!

The Section § 203 (d) (p. 226) says,

“(d) BICYCLE SAFETY.—The Secretary of the appropriate Federal land management agency shall prohibit the use of bicycles on each federally owned road that has a speed limit of 30 miles per hour or greater and an adjacent paved path for use by bicycles within 100 yards of the road.”

Andy Clarke, the President of the League of American Bicyclists (LAB) says,

“The problem with the provision is that the restriction applies regardless of the quality, safety, and utility of the path provided; it disregards cyclists need the roadway to reach shops, services etc.; and ignores our fundamental right to the road.”

Answering why this proposed provision, Clarke says,

“One such idea is that it’s just not safe for cyclists to sharing the road with cars going more than 30 mph and thus, for our own safety, we should have to use the provided path. This paternalistic (at best) approach is guilty of not only blaming the victim but simply doesn’t make sense unless every higher-speed roadway has a path alongside it.

The second principle at play is the idea that “we provided this path for you, you’d darned well better use it”. To which our response should be…if the path is any good, you shouldn’t have to force anyone to use it; they will use it voluntarily because it works. Our communities are replete with examples of poorly designed, built and maintained paths that are little more than glorified sidewalks. “

One blogger brings up a meaningful point. Michael Frank of Adventure Journal says, “just code for a screaming headline, ‘Mountain Biker Takes out Iowa Mom on Grand Teton Walking Path'”.

This provision would affect 22 national parks in New York State according to the National Park Service. This includes sites from New York City, into the Appalachian Mountains and  many others. Who’s to say this law won’t spill over into state parks? How will we get to food and service shops on the roads? What about road cyclists?

Are we going to let law makers force us cyclists off all US national park roads?

To remove the provision that would force cyclists off national park roads there is a petition, the League of American Bicyclists have started with over 12,500 signatures thus far. Sign the petition. The petition tells, “the Senate that the mandatory side path law is a bad idea.” If this law passes, we are supplying a deterrent against bicycling.

Join the effort to keep us on the road by signing the petition.

KEEP US ON THE ROAD!

SIGN THE LEAGUE OF AMERICAN CYCLIST’S PETITION TO REMOVE SECTION § 203 (d)

OR

WRITE YOUR SENATOR A LETTER 

The League of American Bicyclists represents 57 million cyclists with 300,000 members, 25,000 individuals and 700 organizations. LAB works for better bicycling.


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Filed under Activism, Law