European Tribune

Weekend Bike Blogging: Freedom versus Bikeways

by BruceMcF
Thu Jan 3rd, 2008 at 12:28:36 PM EST

Crossposted from Docudharma ...
... the world can't end today, its already tomorrow at Docudharma.

The Friday before Christmas, I did something different ...

... I decided that I would Take the Long Way Home

... as that Tom Waite{NB} lyric says at the beginning:

Well I stumbled in the darkness
I'm lost and alone
Though I said I'd go before us
And show the way back home
There a light up ahead
I can't hold onto her arm
Forgive me pretty baby but I always take the long way home
{NB. No, that is not Tom Waite singing the song. Good eye!}

Now, I wasn't literally lost. What I did was decide that, with four days off coming up, I could take the long way home, which ought to be very pretty this time of year. Instead of going down the county highway to turn left onto the township highway to turn right onto the main county highway that goes straight to my (current) home town ...

... I decided to turn right to go past the Quarry, then cross the state route to go along the Lake road then the bike trail that runs to my home town.

And I was glad I did, because it was a terrible route, and I set me thinking about bikeways versus freedom to ride.

Diary rescue by Migeru


::::::

Sometimes you have time to think ...

... when you Take the Long Way Home

... and (with some line prompting from the Intertubes) I recall that that lyric includes something about:

Cos you're the joke of the neighborhood
Why should you care if you're feeling good
Take the long way home
Take the long way home
... which also says something to the winter transport cyclist in a USA where most people's imaginations on transport is trapped in a 1970's daydream.

It had been in the high 30's during the day, and had been for several days, so the roads and even road shoulders were clear. The occasional patch of slush requires attention but poses no serious risk.

Until the bikeway, when there is snow on top of slush. The bikeway, after all, is crushed gravel with a layer of sand on top. Since it runs through shady woods, it gets less direct sunlight than most of the road, and since it is a light color, it doesn't melt the snow as fast if some of the bikeway surface starts to peak through.

And, of course, since the bikeway is only for three season use, since of course it is for recreational biking rather than existing as a transport route, it of course is not cleared of snow after a snowfall ... as even the township highways are, once the state routes then county highways have been cleared.

Indeed, if I had strap on belts with spikes for my tires, I definitely would have strapped them on ... but apart from the little question of whether anyone makes any such useful thing, and that I probably couldn't afford them anyway, but they would be most useful for coping with my on-road nemesis of freezing rain ... with several inches of snow on top of slush, I imagine they would of some use, but not quite as effective.

So far, in my crash course as a transport cyclist in the winter, I have coped with most road conditions, and my biggest concern has been with balancing retaining sufficient heat with shedding excess heat and sweat. But that has been because I had already switched to a route that was almost entirely on-road.

If I had still been using my original route that went via the bikeway to the Lake road, I would have been forced to abandon.

Of course, it was no catastrophe ...

... because after all, I was intending to Take the Long Way Home

Turned up in places that I never intended to go
And so ended my youth
I once depended on proof, now I'm in the flow ...
There are things I know beyond knowing,
I've never seen a seed growing

I was going back home, when a man said Stop
I want to have what you have,
and get what you got ...
I got it sleeping rough on the streets in the rain
I got it learning to share my peoples pain
I got it making flowers grow in hearts of stone
I got it 'cos I always take the long way home

... so I went with the flow. I dismounted and walked much of the first leg, until it crosses a county road. It is paved at that point since it rises to the county road and then falls back to the grade of the branch rail line that it follows from that point on. Turns out, slush is little problem free wheeling down in a straight line ... and after that, by some accident of drainage or slope, I found drier snow. And, of course, cycling on fairly dry snow two or three inches deep is about the same work as cycling on a gravel and sand track.

And on one point I was definitely right ... it was beautiful at this time of year.

Of course, when I came to the point where the path brushed a back road that got onto one of the main roads coming into my home town, I left the cycleway, and got back to the road, and freedom from slush.

Mind you, this freedom from slush is entirely due to sharing the road with cars. First the snowplows came along and got most of the snow off the top, dropping salt behind them, and then the cars drove the resulting slush into melt water, and then in the series of days in the high 30's, the melt water in turn melted the snow pile on the shoulder until the dark pavement of the shoulder in the wan winter sun could do the rest.

On the other hand, most of our freedoms are collective goods. If I am going to be paying for those roads, those snowplows and that road salt, through my city and state income taxes and local and state sales taxes, I see no reason to deny myself the use of them just because I am using a two-wheeled non-motorized road vehicle to get to work.

And As Before ...

... you can also take this as an open weekend cycling thread, where you are mightily encouraged to add European content.

Now, one of these days, I will be reporting on cycling with a folding bike on a different continent, and if I blog that on the EuroTrib, uh, I'll probably still be saying the same thing, because it'll probably be Australia.

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... I'd be catching a train at the center of town to the interstate-exit-hamlet south of the warehouse, and finish biking from there. Eight kilometers biking is fine ... 23 kilometers is just too far to ride to work.

Utsukushikereba sore de ii
by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sat Dec 29th, 2007 at 11:46:12 AM EST
I'm fortunate to live in a city (Saint Paul/Minneapolis, MN) with a decent trail system. Not in great shape, but mostly paved and, more importantly, plowed in winter.

Can't much ride on 'em with a proper road bike, but with a winter bike with studded Nokian tires, it's really great to be able to train outdoors throughout the winter and commute to work as well. Hate the indoor trainer, though when it gets below around -20 centigrade, that's really too cold to take.

"C'est un scandale !"

by redstar on Mon Dec 31st, 2007 at 02:44:11 PM EST
I have not much experience winter-biking (don't need the bike at present even to try), but uncleaned bike roads, yeah that is a problem. And slush covered with snow is not the worst -- I think half-melted dirty snow on roads (with passing cars propelling it into your face) is just as bad. But when the bike road is lazily traced next to a river/creek, which floods, you first can't pass due to water, then the flood recedes -- and leaves behind slippery mud and tree branches as obstacles, which you can wait and wait for being cleaned away...

*Traitor*, n.
A benighted individual who perceives an illusory distinction between serving his nation and abetting the criminals who govern it.
by DoDo on Mon Dec 31st, 2007 at 03:03:28 PM EST
A lot of riders around here have this to ride on offroad in the winter. I've ridden one, very easy to handle on snow, mud or anything else you throw at it, but expensive.

I've got an old road bike frame with horizontal dropouts re-built into a single-speed, fixed gear (that way you don't have to clean it, and going down hill forces the cadence up in the 150 or so range which is good speedwork) and tires with metal studs in it, the fixed gear helping also with handling, you can counter pedal while cornering when you start losing your rear wheel. And my favorite saddle, with quality hand-stitching of a cartoon character calling out siediti sulla mia faccia...

It looks like a wreck, my winter bike, but actually the tires are worth stealing (USD 80/per). Good thing the theives don't know anything...

"C'est un scandale !"

by redstar on Mon Dec 31st, 2007 at 03:25:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Ah, but a rain cape copes with half melted snow thrown off the road by cars, if that's a problem (its not been a problem so far, but that might be the rolling hills of Northeast Ohio) and I got a rain cape ... I ain't got no snap on belt with studs to cope with the snow on the slush.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii
by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Thu Jan 3rd, 2008 at 04:08:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]
If bikes are the most efficient way to get around--at least for distances up to a few km--then why do we not have proper bikeways? Smooth pavement, gradual hills, and COVERS to keep the snow/wind/rain off? Imagine a countryside with little bike tunnels going here and there, with cozy, dry riders efficiently making their daily trips...
by asdf on Thu Jan 3rd, 2008 at 11:18:47 PM EST
In order for proper bikeways to get use that justifies the (modest) investment, then ordinary suburban streets have to be seen as the mixed-vehicle transport corridors that they are in law (at least in Ohio).

The idea of an entirely parallel system of bikeways is simply unworkable. A system of bikeways that provides the main bike arteries, with ordinary streets being used to access the bikeway system, that is eminently workable.

The obstacle there is not the design, but the idea. Most bikeways are put in place where bikes are somewhat popular as a way to get the bikes off the road so they do not bother the drivers, who are the rightful users of the public rights of way. Putting bikeways in place where they provide the most benefit to the most residents, with each resident viewed as a potential cyclist ... that is a total paradigm shift.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sat Jan 5th, 2008 at 12:32:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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