Ride Boldly!

Bikes, bicycling, and road safety.

May 1, 2007
by julie
Comments Off on Spring Reminder: Check That Bike!

Spring Reminder: Check That Bike!

A lot of people seem to be pulling their bikes down from storage here in Minnesota. It’s a
good idea to check out the bicycle for safety before riding it the first time — or any time.

The League of American Bicyclists, as part of their BikeEd program, recommend the ABC Quick Check every time you ride. It’s a pretty good regimen to follow, especially if you aren’t used to checking on things before each ride:

  • A is for air. How are those tires? Are they inflated up right? Most modern bike tires have their recommended PSI on the sidewall. Proper inflation adds to safety and makes the bicycle easier to ride. Also, check for visible damage. If your tires are worn or threadbare, replacing them is a safety measure worth the price.
  • B is for brakes. Stopping is good. When you pull your brake, is it firm? Do you have at least 1″ between the lever and your bar at the innermost point? Also, check your brakepads for wear. You should have at least 1/4″ of pad.
  • C is for crank, chain, cassette. If your chain is bad, your ride will be bad. Loose chains skip and fall off the cassette. They make shifting awkward. Again: If you see these signs, fix it.
  • Quick is for quick releases. If you have quick release wheel levers, make sure they’re closed and tight. I think the reasoning here is obvious.
  • Check is for one last check. Hop on and ride around the lot, your driveway, whatever. Does the bike feel road-worthy?

One other tip: If you have a roof rack, figure out how tall your vehicle is with bikes attached. It’s useful for tunnels, parking garages, and other hazards. Never drive into your garage with the bikes attached unless you have a really funky awesome high garage designed for semis.

April 16, 2007
by julie
Comments Off on ‘Critical Manners’ Responds to ‘Critical Mass’

‘Critical Manners’ Responds to ‘Critical Mass’

A group in San Francisco have decided to demonstrate road-sharing in response to mild disgust at the behavior of local Critical Mass riders.

I’ve always felt Critical Mass sent the wrong message. While I see a point of militancy in social movements, at the same time I’ve always had concern what an encounter with a bunch of Critical ‘Massholes’ does for a motorist’s perception of a lone rider, later — even if that lone rider is riding in a legal manner. Critical Mass is almost the definitional opposite of ‘traffic calming’ — it’s angry people making other people angry.

I like the Critical Manners concept. It will be interesting to see if this particular cycling meme spreads.

April 14, 2007
by julie
1 Comment

Two Great Classes in Minneapolis

Twin Cities Bicycling Club are sponsoring two Sunday evening courses in the next two weeks to help people learn simple maintenance on their own bikes. The courses are being taught by Jamie MacDonald, who is the only local wrench I’ll let touch my own rides.

Attendance would be free, even for a nonmember. If you show for the dessert potluck, it would be polite to, say, bring a dessert and not be a brownie-snarfing freeloader.

Here’s the info, snarfed like a freeloader from the TCBC web site.

15 SUN BIKE U – BEGINNING BIKE CARE AND FEEDING. Begin dessert potluck at 6:30 PM, presentation at 7:00 PM at Sunrise Cyclery in Minneapolis (3031 2nd Ave S – 35W to Lake St exit) Learn beginning bike maintenance from Jamie McDonald, bicycle mechanic extraordinaire. Jamie will cover basic bike maintenance and troubleshooting – if you hesitate when your handlebars or seats need adjusting or aren’t sure how to clean and lube a bike, this class is for you.

22 SUN BIKE U – ADVANCED BIKE CARE. Begin dessert potluck at 6:30 PM, presentation at 7:00 PM at Sunrise Cyclery in Minneapolis (3031 2nd Ave S – 35W to Lake St exit) Learn advanced bike maintenance from Jamie McDonald, bicycle mechanic extraordinaire. Imagine you’re at Ironman standing in a pleasant 40 degree drizzle with a bike that won’t shift. Wouldn’t it be nice NOT to wait for that sag wagon? For those who know the basics and are ready to learn more.

April 13, 2007
by julie
2 Comments

Pave the Luce Line?

There’s talk of paving the Luce Line. It may even be an OK idea. But some of the reasons why… eh, not thrilling to me.

The article was in the Hutchinson Leader. There’s some debate among locals, current trail users, would-be-trail users who hate the limestone, and others about future plans for the trail. Some advocate leaving it as is, some advocate paving.

However, the article definitely reflects some notions that aren’t necessarily good reasons for paving.

Lee Salmi of Hutchinson said he could ride a mountain bike if he were 40 or 50 years younger. Bike riding is key to keeping up his cardiovascular health, but riding around town is hazardous, he said.

“I’ve been knocked down twice on the streets,” he said.

I have every sympathy for this. However, I have to wonder about how he’s riding the streets. Is he sidewalk-surfing against flow? Is he in parking lanes? Is he cycling as a vehicle?

Similarly, another cites ‘safety’ as a goal of paving:

Hutchinson Mayor Steve Cook also cited safety for cyclists as another reason to pave the trail. Cook said he and his family rode the trail to Winsted and back again. On the return trip, his son opted to ride along Highway 7 because the going was smoother. Cook was concerned that riding along the highway was far more dangerous than riding a paved trail would be.

I don’t know that section of 7. I’m fairly sure it’s a 4-foot shoulder. Might have a rumblestrip or two. However, if there is a shoulder, even a fast section should be safely ridable by most adults. I can certainly understand not taking children of a certain age on a busy, fast roadway — lots of kids need skills development, such as how to ride straight. As well, kids are short, modern vehicles are tall, and that can be a bad combo. But on-road, you don’t deal with off-leash dogs (as much, given that it’s farm country), children rolling all over the place, people who don’t ride to the right and allow for passing or oncoming traffic, horse poop on shared bridges, etc. etc.

That said, I’m not opposed to paving. Pavement is nice. Trails have a place. But their place shouldn’t be as a reaction to ‘oh no the road has cars.’ If one rides properly and defensively, roads are safer.

Since I keep on this rant, I should dig out the stats on that. However, there are meatballs and beer waiting. Ah, the joys of blogging during dinner prep!

April 13, 2007
by julie
Comments Off on Gateway Trail Detour Posted

Gateway Trail Detour Posted

The Department of Transportation has posted the Gateway Trail detour map for this year’s Highway 36 construction.

This looks like a solid detour set where motorists may be more apt to use different routing than the marked bike/ped detours. The pedestrians are taking a different detour as well, although how much that occurs is going to be interesting given how many bladers I see with runners, or runners with really slow bikers…