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My bike is one of my main modes of transportation, even in this incredibly un bike friendly town I live in. I ride it everywhere, and almost everyday I get yelled at by some rednecks and almost get run over by douches in big trucks. Yeah, for most people a bike isnt their main mode of transportation but for a few of us it is. I could drive my car everywhere but thats wasteful and you get fat. Id rather bike and stay in shape and save money instead of buying gas.
I was also a bike messenger in downtown Houston for a summer, that was awesome. I nearly got doored one time but now whenever there are parked cars I always make sure to ride a good distance so that wont ever happen to me. I love my bikes, dont know what I would do without em. |
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New inventions don't retroactively invalidate the classification of their predecessors. A transportation device that is used less or ceases to be used is nevertheless... a transportation device! |
A bike is not a transportation device when a city starts posting up signs everywhere which say, "bikes not allowed." Signs, signs, everywhere are signs, don't do this, don't that, can't you read the signs?
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Well, still... it's a transportation device... that you're not allowed to use. :P
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One of those signs would look sweet on my wall...next to my bike.
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I totally agree, there are nowhere near enough stables in our cities anymore. maybe we could turn bike sharing stations into hybrid bike sharing/horse stables?
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What we know about bike infrastructure: people want it
April 26, 2010 Read More: http://fastlane.dot.gov/2010/04/what...e-want-it.html Quote:
http://usdotblog.typepad.com/.a/6a00...b675970b-500wi |
A National Network Of Bike Trails? It Could Happen
April 25, 2010 http://media.npr.org/chrome/news/nprlogo_138x46.gif Read More: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...ryId=126263488 Quote:
http://media.npr.org/assets/news/201...1272230494&s=4 |
I thought the US already had a nationwide bike trail system?
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Bicycles and the ‘Immigrant Effect’
April 25, 2010 By Elisabeth Best http://www.miller-mccune.com/wp-cont...-LOGO_0416.gif Read More: http://www.miller-mccune.com/health/...-effect-14744/ Quote:
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Americans Sick and Tired of Motorized Transportation, Transportation Secretary Says
May 03, 2010 By Christopher Neefus Read More: http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/65068 Quote:
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Although I would bet that, just as the Interstates were built around the extant parkways and turnpikes (like the New York State Thruway and the Pennsylvania Turnpike), the bike trail system will be built around the extant and under-construction trails already in place (e.g. the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal/Great Allegheny Passage system from D.C. to Pittsburgh or the East Coast Greenway). P.S. According to this page, the Great Allegheny Passage also provides a bike bypass of central Pittsburgh, via its south and west, as well as a way to get there. Pretty cool. P.P.S. It would be cool to be a systematized bike-trail-numbering scheme, like the U.S. Highways or Interstates. It would also easily show how the extant network would fit into the eventual system. |
America's Top 50 Bike-Friendly Cities
http://www.bicycling.com/article/0,6...1901-1,00.html Interactive Map & Details 1. Minneapolis 2. Portland, OR 3. Boulder, CO 4. Seattle 5. Eugene, OR 6. San Francisco 7. Madison, WI 8. New York City 9. Tucson, AZ 10. Chicago 11. Austin, TX 12. Denver, CO 13. Washington, DC 14. Ann Arbor, MI 15. Phoenix/Tempe, AZ 16. Gainesville, FL 17. Albuquerque, NM 18. Colorado Springs, CO 19. Salem, OR 20. Scottsdale, AZ 21. Louisville, KY 22. Chattanooga, TN 23. Long Beach, CA 24. Cary, NC 25. Milwaukee 26. Boston 27. Philadelphia 28. Pittsburgh 29. Charleston, SC 30. Arlington, VA 31. Sioux Falls, SD 32. Boise, ID 33. Kansas City, MO 34. Columbus, OH 35. Tulsa, OK 36. Grand Rapids, MI 37. Billings, MT 38. St. Louis 39. Cleveland 40. Greensboro, NC 41. Lexington-Fayette, KY 42. Omaha, NE 43. Salt Lake City 44. Miami 45. Indianapolis 46. Fargo, ND 47. Anchorage, AK 48. Baltimore 49. Little Rock, AR 50. Rochester, NY To prepare this list, we referenced the Bicycling and Walking in the United States 2010 Benchmarking Report, prepared by the Alliance for Biking and Walking; the League of American Bicyclists Bicycle Friendly America project; data from Mediamark Research, Inc., Dun & Bradstreet and The Nielsen Company; and advice from national and local bike advocates. |
There's already a thread about this
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