Monday, August 30, 2010

A Bad Year

Bike Lane Art

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Kitties at the Vet


IMG_0961, originally uploaded by tt2wheels.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Blackout Anniversary CM Saturday

Blackout Critical Mass this Saturday. Meet 8:45PM Spadina and Bloor to ride to the secret location of the Anniversary Party ...

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

The Art Of The Leather Handle Bar Wrap


Local Toronto Artist Iris Fraser makes the best leather handle bar wrap around. Just got a custom white and celeste wrap for my Bianchi bike. All custom work or you can get a kit at Hoopdriver cycles in town. For more sample check out her Flickr pages. Contact: iris.fraser@gmail.com

Houston Ghost Bike (Photo by Adrienne Lloyd)

Globe Editorial About Cycling: Dead Wrong

From Tuesday's Globe and Mail Published on Monday, Aug. 02
The benefits of bicycling as an alternative form of transportation are well known: almost no carbon emissions or pollutants; better cardiovascular health; less traffic congestion. Where cyclists and motorists are respectful of each other, cycling is a public good.

WRONG: Where motorists are respectful of cyclists, cycling is good.

Why don’t more Canadian city-dwellers cycle? Safety and distance are the key impediments, while some of the likely deterrents hardly register – even in Montreal, weather is fourth on the list. In Toronto, only one-third of cyclists say they are comfortable driving on major roads without bike lanes.

Women, in particular, give up the idea of cycling when they perceive urban streets as unsafe, but in Germany, 49 per cent of cyclists are women, in the Netherlands, 55 per cent; the Canadian numbers are hard to come by, but only one cyclist in three is a woman in the United States.

AHEM: The stats for women in Canada are there. You are too dumb to find them or ask. Besides you would not like the stats.


Cities in Canada have been built around the automobile. That cannot be altered, and distance keeps many commuters in their cars or, when it’s convenient, on public transit. Researchers estimate that the number of practical (as opposed to recreational) bicycle trips falls steeply beyond a 5-kilometre range.

WRONG: Cities can be changed. 5KM on roads without bike lanes. No wonder.

Much can be done to address safety and distance concerns. Jennifer Dill, an urban planning professor at Portland State University, says that a set of practices, rather than specific policies, can encourage cycling without putting undue burdens on motorists or pedestrians.

There should be “something that tells the cyclist, this is the space for you,” she says. Bikes are supposed to be road vehicles, but some cyclists claim all spaces, including sidewalks, as theirs, while some motorists don’t recognize the need to share the roads.

Studies have shown that dedicated spaces – off-road bike paths, bike lanes on streets or bikeways separated by barriers from the rest of the road – increase bicycle use.

But such spaces can be ill-conceived. Several projects in downtown Toronto have succeeded in reducing automobile capacity on major thoroughfares. Another similar plan was defeated by a single vote at Toronto City Council.

YUP. Share the road means give up some space.

Such proposals make no sense. The goal should not be to frustrate drivers. Dedicated bike lanes are best on roads that do not see major automobile traffic.

SIGH. You poor drivers. You own the road

Furthermore, a network of lanes and paths is more important than their precise positioning. Distance is less of a disincentive when cyclists can use dedicated lanes to get almost all the way to their destinations.

Not much public spending is needed – in six figures, rather than tens of millions of dollars. Sometimes, only a little paint suffices to make a bike lane.

RIGHT. We just need paint. Got some?

Some unlikely partnerships are emerging. Canadian Automobile Association chapters in B.C. and south central Ontario, for instance, now offer roadside assistance for members with bike problems; they recognize that many people use, over a day or a year, multiple modes of transit.

Cyclist lobby groups can help establish norms for good behaviour. Cyclists need to respect the rules of the road, and know that they will be respected. There is evidence there is “safety in masses”: As more people cycle, the accident rate per cyclist actually declines.

YEAH. Get out of the way. We are roadkill and we should shut about it. Got it.


Canadian cities will never be like European cycling havens. But a culture of mutual respect, with continuing, modest public and private investment, can make cycling safer. That will make everyone – cyclists, pedestrians and motorists – better off.

WRONG. DEAD WRONG. We can be anything we want to be and even better than Europe. There, I said it.