Thursday, May 31, 2007

3.419 Reasons to Ride a Bicycle


One of the main objectives of this site is to persuade folks to commute with their bicycles more often. I have posted a video by Nathan Spence of the University of Pennsylvania and an unrelated story from Charlottesville's The HooK Magazine that I hope are both effective in their cyclevangelist message.

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Why a bicycle is the best means of transportation in the city. A narrated video by Nathan Spence.
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I Want to Ride My Bicycle


Published May 31, 2007 in issue 0622 of the HooK. Link here.



By RANDY SALZMAN salz@rocketmail.com

In the six minutes just before 9am, 40 cars whiz past the corner of Key West Drive and Stony Point Road, northeast of Pantops.

Thirty six of them are inhabited by one person: the driver.

UVA physiologist John Hackett, however, smiles behind his sunglasses, swings his leg over his 18-speed Readline bicycle, and yells above the roar of the motorized blurs.

"I have a simple philosophy," the 65-year-old shouts as he starts the uphill. "I'm just planning for the next 20 years, like I do every year, by staying healthy today."

Hackett and UVA biologist Robert Kretsinger– who bikes the same general route before dawn– are likely the only two regular cyclists who brave 6,000-pound vehicles and six-ounce cell phones to maintain their health, spare the city some congestion, and save the nation's oil supply and the planet's atmosphere by commuting by bike over the twists and turns of two-lane-- and no bike lane-- Stony Point Road.

The vast majority of Charlottesville's other county-to-city commuters-- 78 percent, according to the 2000 census-- come alone in a car, spewing exhaust, carbon dioxide, and American foreign policy issues in their wake.

"As long as we sustain oil's influence with our habits, we're going to have problems," says Department of Defense contractor Daniel Ellsworth. "Oil is the root of so many of our national security issues."

Ellsworth plans his 11-mile, one-way bike commute down US 29 from Ruckersville, because-– having served in Iraq-– the 32-year-old knows first-hand the effect of America's daily reliance on 12 million barrels of imported oil.

"Working in national security, I can see that our current infrastructure and our way of doing things are appalling," Ellsworth says. "We're financing our own destruction, basically. We're just living for today and not thinking about tomorrow."

The numbers are indeed frightening. According to Uncle Sam, over half of America's daily burn of 19 million barrels of oil is in the form of gasoline or diesel while 87 percent of America's 411 billion annual trips are in private vehicles.

About 60 billion of those trips are commutes, usually during the so-called rush hours which, thanks to congestion, cause greater waste of fuel. In the words of the Texas Transportation Institute, in 2003, congestion caused "3.7 billion hours of travel delay, and 2.3 billion gallons of wasted fuel for a total cost of more than $63 billion."

Today, the transportation sector, which produces less than 11 percent of gross domestic product, emits America's largest single amount of C02 into the atmosphere, five percent higher than industrial and 15 percent higher than commercial emissions. Therefore, unless the United States wants to gut the economy, the American battleground for global warming and fears of dwindling oil reserves must be transportation.

But, with few exceptions such as our local bicyclists, most Americans-- Republican or Democrat, Libertarian or Socialist, liberal or conservative, Christian or Muslim-- drive whenever possible. Only two percent of Charlottesvillians commute on a bike, and the number of Albemarle bicycle commuters is so low that statistically they fail to register at all.

U.S. gasoline consumption, meanwhile, grew 2.8 percent in March. In 2005, we spent $256 billion overseas to import oil.

***

Although Ellsworth is a relative newcomer to bicycle commuting, Hackett and Kretsinger began pedaling to work decades ago, long before anyone connected America's emissions of 1,959 million metric tons of CO2 to our 2.9 trillion annual miles in a car.

They bicycle daily for health reasons and for the love of nature.

"It's the issue of causation and correlation," says Kretsinger, who just started his seventh decade but looks a generation younger. "Do you bike because you're in pretty good shape, or are you in pretty good shape because you bike? I don't know, but I'm sure that biking every day doesn't hurt."

Like Hackett, Kretsinger bought property in the Key West subdivision 30 plus years ago primarily for the healthy seven-mile, 30-minute bicycle ride to UVA.

Still, to counter the effect of his "too-great-a-cook" wife, Hackett often cuts away from Stony Point Road at Darden Towe Park to wander along the Rivanna River Greenway toward downtown, or to loop south on his "Great House Tour" near Monticello and Ashlawn to stretch those seven miles to as much as two hours.

"This place is a beautiful place to ride a bike," he says. "I would argue that the Blue Ridge Mountains are certainly the most beautiful place in Albemarle County, probably in Virginia, maybe in the US. And, for that matter, I might argue the whole bloody world."

For similar reasons, Mary Rowe, who moved to the area this year, is frustrated that there are no protected bike lanes or trails along her commute from Rio Road to downtown.

"Biking should be a wonderful way to see the city," says Rowe. "There are lots of back lanes and trails you don't see from a car."

This 48-year-old now works downtown at the of the non-profit human habit-protecting Blue Moon Fund, but she formerly ran a consulting business from her bicycle in Canada. "I could drift past wonderful residential communities or old manufacturing plants and understand how they smell and how they look and how they functioned."

Here, however, Rowe finds area automobile traffic too daunting to discover the city's built environment. With so few bike lanes and almost no trails, the rush of SUVs on local roads pushed her to make her commute in a car, edging up our area's congestion count.

"There are probably only half a dozen access routes into the inner city, but they have almost no sidewalks, and no buffers between cars and other travelers," says Rowe. "There's all this natural beauty, and I just can't get out there and do it."

Last June, the city hired Chris Gensic as the Park & Trail Planner, a new position created to push the City's ambitious Bicycle & Pedestrian Master Plan. Charlottesville recently set aside $100,000 toward a multi-use greenway around town. But the efficacy of one bike/pedestrian coordinator with a $1.3 million total budget for greenways, bike lanes, and sidewalks in a city of 40,745 driving citizens and a $6.4 million road maintenance budget may be limited.

Even Dan Mahon, who has been Albemarle County's greenway coordinator for years, throws up his hands when a single land owner withholds permission for a greenway to cross her land. It's not worth his fight when so few voters imagine any type of daily transportation other than their personal cars, and dedicated cyclists like Ellsworth or Kretsinger already chance the traffic without fanfare.

None of the bicyclists interviewed for this article, for example, are members of The Alliance for Community Choice in Transportation, the Charlottesville Area Bicyclists Association, BikeWalk Virginia, or other groups trying to "think globally and act locally" about how automobile transportation affects national and international issues.

Without, therefore, the political muscle of say, the AAA, could muscle-powered transportation be getting short shrift in the political world? Government money for roads and bridges carries a lot of zeroes.

Economic estimates of city, county, state, and federal dollars subsidizing drivers range to $295 billion annually– excluding the costs of foreign policy excursions to countries with oil like Iraq, or the cost of carrier fleets in the Persian Gulf.

Few cyclists, meanwhile, seek the benefits available to alternative commuters. Only seven area bicyclists are signed up for the RideShare's "guaranteed ride home," which sends taxis to alternative commuters facing virtually any type of emergency, and-- until the recent adoption of free fare for bicyclists-- JAUNT has no remembrance of any biker using the bike racks on the front of their six commuting buses.

Patricia Paisley, a 20-year-old waitress and student at Piedmont Community College-- who each day travels on her bicycle six miles roundtrip from Grady Road to downtown's Monsoon restaurant, and 18 miles on the days she's in class-- may be the perfect example.

In addition to the societal benefits her bike commuting provides, she focuses on personal benefits: "As soon as I started learning anything about the effect of cars, I started doing what I could to stop making things worse," she says. "If you ride, you're getting stronger everyday. Bicycling is my tool for developing myself."

Hackett, Kretsinger, Rowe, and Ellsworth heartily agree, as do the 4.9 million Americans who travel to work or school on two wheels.

"It's kind of sad when you live in a situation with disincentives to having kids bike three or four miles to school," Kretsinger, 70, sighs from 20 feet up a ladder where he's trimming pine trees. "How can you expect kids to be halfway fit if they're driven everywhere?"

"That's the culture today, though," he says. "It's considered almost a sign of impoverishment if anyone walks or bikes."

#

Randy Salzman is a former communications professor and now a Charlottesville-based freelance writer. His last cover story in the Hook was a late February piece on a proposal to create a Charlottesville street car system.


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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Improve Your Intersection


PORTLAND, OR - I'd like to think the reason Clarence Eckerson, Jr. came to town was to have me film him cavorting in a Bigfoot suit. The real reason he was here last week was to shoot this video this great Street Films video on Intersection Repair.

Intersection Repair is part of Village Building Convergence where hundreds of people come together to build diverse projects for the benefit of their communities and to take back their streets. The Sasquatch Video was just bonus.

This is an important and very well done film but at 10 minutes it runs a bit longer than most of our videos. Set aside a few minutes to watch and think about how your neighborhood could be improved by a community building project like this.

Three neighborhoods repair projects are highlighted in this video and the main task was to repaint the street. There is definitely a “Eugene” vibe (a good thing in my book) but each neighborhood had it’s own feel. As this concept takes off it will be interesting to see the different flavors particular neighborhoods bring.

The grid system combined with motor vechicles has a way of separating us as neighbors. Intersection repair seems like a great way to bring us back together.






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Friday, May 25, 2007

New Sasquatch Habitat in Oregon



PORTLAND, OR - The elusive Sasquatch aka Bigfoot has finally been conclusively captured on video tape in the quiet neighborhood of Ladd's Addition.

Perhaps it is calm nature of the neighborhood streets, which were laid out in the late 1800's and designed to reduce the speed of passing carriages. Or, perhaps it's the additional traffic calming designs that make Bigfoot feel comfortable on a bicycle.

Regardless of the reason, this Sasquatch (named Clarence) is in love with his new home.

This video report was produced by Street Films Clarence Eckerson and yours truly. Streetfilms.org is a video blog that tackles the issues of the livable streets movement. In this tongue-in-check movie we take the concept of "Clarence: The Traffic Calming Maniac" one step further!

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Show Me The Pink, Judge Mathis



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WARNING: NOT EXACTLY BIKE RELATED


BUT Show Me The Pink is a bicycle band and they are playing with Japanther this Saturday at "Mississippi:May" @8 PM, you also strongly encouraged by the good Reverend Phil to join in bicycle polo and beach cruisin over to the gig from Alberta park. More info here.

CHICAGO, IL - A Portland band torn apart by broken promises, daytime television, and self medication. Current members of the Electro Dance Punk band, Show Me The Pink, ask Judge Mathis to settle their dispute with a former member.

Woven through this courtroom montage is an actual depression commercial that played during a station break.
Video by RevPhil.



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The Bicyclist - Act 7: Sir Conrad and the Demon SUV


The Demon SUV catches Conrad in the act and Steve declares peace.


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Sunday, May 20, 2007

Hellway



PORTLAND, OR - Many a brave zoobomber has descended the famous strech of Highway 26 known as "Hellway". In Episode 4 of Fat Man On Bike we enjoy a daytime view of the ride set to AC/DC's rock'n'roll classic "Highhway to Hell". You hope you won't be too scared!

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Saturday, May 19, 2007

Eric Kautzky Point-a-Lap Race Men's Cat 1/2



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PORTLAND, OR - I captured a lot of good footage from The 2007 Eric Kautzky Memorial Track Race last Saturday but didn't have time for editing this week. Here is just one of the many races that happened that day. It's the men's category 1/2 point-a-lap race (35 laps total). The first place finisher for each lap gets one point. The winner of the race and the days events for Men's category 1/2 was Mark Blackwelder.

I hope to circle back around and make a montage piece of the days events when I have more time.

This video runs 12-minutes.



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Friday, May 18, 2007

The Bicyclist - Preview ep. 7-9


The Bicyclist adds more characters, more adventure, more fun in episodes seven, eight and nine!

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

CrankMyChain! Store Now Open



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I am officially starting a new category called "store" and I'm going to sell stuff.

I hope to sell hard to find, quality products, at a fair price and make money, money that I can pump back into making cycling videos and things like food, diapers, and new bicycle chains.

To kick it off, I have a couple of new items that'll help you get noticed when your out on your ride.
Let's start with the CrankMyChain bicycle horn. Rated at 105db it's loud enough for motorists to hear you when their windows are closed. I've tried several bike horns and this one is it. It's already saved my ass several times. It goes on and off easy and is weather resistant.
Next it's the CrankMyChain orange bicycle safety flag. Did know all the top racers are using flags these days? Okay, that's a lie. Bike flags are making a comeback, though, especially with those who are less concerned with wind resistance and more concerned with getting noticed. The first folks to order get to be beta testers of added light. It comes with a breakaway feature for storing your bike in tight spaces and includes a mounting bracket.

A couple of these items you may have seen already. The Cross Crusade '06 DVD. It's chock full mud, bike mayhem, music, and, of course, cyclocross racing. This collection of videos looks way better on DVD but you canwatch internet versions here for free.

The other DVD is BikeCar. It's a human powered snowboarding tour of the Pacific Northwest (watch trailer here). These crazy cats travel from their hometown Moscow, Idaho to ski resorts in Washington and Oregon all on a four human-powered bikecar.



Buying these products helps keep this site operating.


But let's say none of these items interest you and you don't feel like sending paypal $ to dan(at)pdxk.com just because.

Well, you can still help CranMyChain! Foremost, send me your captivating cycling videos. Subscribe to our video podcast at iTunes or democracy player, make pdxk.tv one your top friends at friends at MySpace, cross post our videos or email your friends when we publish some you like. Let me know about mistakes on the site or what you don't like. And I always love getting comments on the videos.

It's going to be great summer for cycling so don't forget to crankmychain!

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Thursday, May 10, 2007

The Bicyclist - Act 6: Drink and Bike




Steve and Ariel make an entrance at Jose's party just in time for Conrad's big moment.

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Friday, May 04, 2007

Sprockettes Duo Foil Bike Thief



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PORTLAND, OR - Agent Chaos and Agent Trouble of The Sprockettes reenact their amazing recovery of a stolen bicycle. FIGHT EVIL CRIME!

Agent Chaos and Agent Trouble can also play as Eliza and Shantasitc in the awesome-band Show Me the Pink


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Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Welcome to the Velodrome: Eric Kautzky Race



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Watch this dynamic Track Racing Promo Video produced by Spool.Music by Aural Produce. Re-edited and titled by CrankMyChain! Cycle TV.


PORTLAND, OR - If you are not already signed up or planning to attend the 2007 Eric Kautzky Memorial Track Race then get out your calendar and mark down Saturday, May 12th. Racing begins at 10AM at Alpenrose Dairy. information here. Cancelled in the event of rain.

Track Race Sponsors



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Portland Cyclists Rally for Bike Master Plan



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Report by Jonathan Maus of BikePortland.org
PORTLAND, OR - Nearly 200 cyclists, well over twice the usual amount, joined city bike coordinator Roger Geller on his Bike Master Plan Ride last night. Riders of all stripes came out to show support for the embattled Master Plan, which Mayor Potter recently decided to cut from his proposed budget.
As expected, Transportation Commissioner Sam Adams, flanked by his policy analyst Roland Chlapowski and his Chief of Staff Tom Miller, made an appearance. During interviews with the various media outlets he said,

“I just think that this (the Bike Master Plan) is more important than some of the other items proposed in the Mayor’s proposed budget…It’s absolutely critical that we continue to be a leader in bike mobility and that comes by having a good plan…Bikes have never been more important to the mobility of this city. It’s an affordable way to get around; in some cases, it’s the most reliable way to get between two places; it’s good for your health; you burn fat instead of oil; and it’s good for the environment.

The Bike Master Plan allows us to develop a bike system, not just do it piecemeal, but develop a system…As transportation commissioner I have a responsibility to get people around the city safely and bikes are a key part of my strategy. I think you can argue that we don’t spend enough money on bikes, not that we need to cut back on our spending.”

After Adams’ remarks and brief words from Roger Geller, the ride began amid the chaotic cacophony of May Day Parade revelers, which passed by Terry Schrunk Plaza right as we rolled out. After a quick loop around the South Park Blocks, we made our way over the Willamette River (via the Hawthorne Bridge), up the Eastbank Esplanade, and onward through North Portland.

As we made our way to our destination (Kenton Park), we experienced a diverse array of bikeways and environments;
Bike Master Plan Ride #4

* We rode through the innovative, bike-only “scramble” signal near the Rose Garden Arena,
* worked the sometimes tricky connection from Weidler to N. Williams,
* enjoyed the serenity of residential streets near N. Ainsworth,
* got a first-hand look at the new bike/ped refuge medias at N. Portland and Willamette Blvd.,
* shared a narrow bike lane with fast-moving motorists on N. Willamette near the University of Portland,
* basked in the bucolic splendor and spring time aromas of the Peninsula Crossing Trail,
* pedaled over the bike/ped bridge over the Columbia Slough,
Bike Master Plan Ride #4
* rode next to nature along the Columbia Slough Trail while huge packs of lycra-clad racers careened through corners at Portland International Raceway,
* and finally, we passed by Paul Bunyan at the entrance to up-and-coming Kenton.

I talked to several people on the ride (unfortunately I can’t use the audio due to excessive wind noise), and they all expressed a deep concern about the Mayor’s decision to cut funding for the plan.

Dave Sohigian was there with his wife and two kids. They live in Lair Hill, just south of Portland and as a carfree family, the continued improvement of Portland’s bikeway network is very important to them. Another women I spoke to said she moved to Portland (from Ohio) in large part because of it’s bike-friendly reputation and she wants to see that continue.

Shamus Lynskey of St. Johns towed his young daughter along and said he has a vested interest in improving bikeway connections from that area to downtown. BTA volunteer Lee Hoffman lives in Tanasbourne and came out to show his support for the Master Plan.

Once at Kenton Park, we re-assembled, filled out comment forms had a Q and A session with Roger Geller. It was a constructive, informative discussion that brought up a wide range of topics; from the potential of a bike-only lane on the Hawthorne Bridge (Geller said bikes were 16% of the total trips last summer), to problems with the new bike/ped refuge island at N. Willamette and Portland.

It was inspiring to see both the large showing of support for the Bike Master Plan, and the high level of concern and engagement for improving the bikeway network.


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