1/30: Cool on two wheels
31/5/13 16:14![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This picture of an attractive Dane on a bike was posted on BikePortland the other day.
I have since decided that I will signal no other way than the cool way that Mr Copenhagen there signals. (How else could you signal, you wonder? Well, I'm typically more emphatic and full-armed about it because Portland, though bike-aware, does not have Copenhagen-levels of bike-awareness. But screw that. I'm going to be cool Danish-signaling gal from here on.)
The extraordinary editor of BikePortland, Jonathan Maus, is currently posting dispatches from the two great world bike capitals, Copenhagen and Amsterdam. He has mentioned the amazing bike-riding skills of the citizens, and since we're not talking Tour de France racing, I'm assuming he means stuff like riding steadily in slow and crowded conditions, navigating safely around pedestrians, riding handlebar-to-handlebar with your friends while conducting a conversation, gauging traffic, or riding with two kids, a cigarette, a cellphone and no helmet.
No, I'm not being facetious about that last item. Americans think of cycling as a competitive sport requiring speed, power and endurance. (My daily commute is often made uncomfortable and even dangerous by cyclists of that sort.) We don't seem to place much emphasis on casual ease. And let's face it, casual ease requires skill.
I shall henceforth be all about the casual ease. (I'll probably keep the helmet, though.)
Crossposted to
bicycles
I have since decided that I will signal no other way than the cool way that Mr Copenhagen there signals. (How else could you signal, you wonder? Well, I'm typically more emphatic and full-armed about it because Portland, though bike-aware, does not have Copenhagen-levels of bike-awareness. But screw that. I'm going to be cool Danish-signaling gal from here on.)
The extraordinary editor of BikePortland, Jonathan Maus, is currently posting dispatches from the two great world bike capitals, Copenhagen and Amsterdam. He has mentioned the amazing bike-riding skills of the citizens, and since we're not talking Tour de France racing, I'm assuming he means stuff like riding steadily in slow and crowded conditions, navigating safely around pedestrians, riding handlebar-to-handlebar with your friends while conducting a conversation, gauging traffic, or riding with two kids, a cigarette, a cellphone and no helmet.
No, I'm not being facetious about that last item. Americans think of cycling as a competitive sport requiring speed, power and endurance. (My daily commute is often made uncomfortable and even dangerous by cyclists of that sort.) We don't seem to place much emphasis on casual ease. And let's face it, casual ease requires skill.
I shall henceforth be all about the casual ease. (I'll probably keep the helmet, though.)
Crossposted to
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(no subject)
1/6/13 02:50 (UTC)(no subject)
1/6/13 02:53 (UTC)You'd fit right in down here.
(no subject)
1/6/13 03:09 (UTC)(no subject)
1/6/13 03:15 (UTC)* This is an idea we're tossing around at ESR right now. Basically, it's living simply by choosing to live smaller, lighter, and with less. This blog post is making the rounds on Facebook. Warning for Christian language contained therein.
(no subject)
1/6/13 22:39 (UTC)But the concept of growing downwards resonates in the blogger's thoughts. It certainly seems true that there's nothing more to gain by expanding our footprint on the earth. Contract-or-die, I'm pretty sure, is where we are now.
The question of bikes as "elite intentional down-shifting" versus necessary transportation for the poor seems to be a politically fraught one, and it's true that most bike activism comes from the former. I would imagine the latter don't have much time for blogging and critical mass. Still, those of us like me who could conceivably afford to own a car but choose not to have many of the same concerns and needs as the urban poor--safe streets, freedom from harassment by drivers, recognition of cycling as an equal travel mode, etc.
Further--and I speak from experience--once you voluntarily give up car ownership at a certain time of life, the prospects of ever returning to it begin to vanish. You very soon realize that you couldn't really afford it in the first place, and soon your life re-forms around the new financial picture and you probably won't be able to afford it in the future without considerable sacrifice.
(I don't know what ESR is and Google wasn't much help. Care to elaborate?)
(no subject)
2/6/13 04:00 (UTC)(I don't know what ESR is and Google wasn't much help. Care to elaborate?)
ESR is Earlham School of Religion, my seminary and a Quaker institution. That explains why I officially live in two places.
(no subject)
2/6/13 07:12 (UTC)