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Luv2roadride
05-16-2006, 10:12 PM
Please come out and support us tomorrow for the Ride of Silence. Below is a description of the ride. This is on Valley Spokesmen calender - but I wanted to let as many of you know about it as possible.

Wed 5/17/05 2L 12-15 miles 6:00pm. Join cyclists nationwide in a silent slow-paced ride in honor of those who have been injured or killed while cycling on America's public roadways. Over 120 US locations and eight other countries and adding more daily. We hope to raise public awareness that we are here and to promote share the road. Meet in front of Wells Middle School, Dublin. For more info contact Liz Marcoux (925)895-1295 lizzykins_2000@yahoo.com or Susan Gibbs (925)389-6279.

ChocolatePizzaR
05-17-2006, 04:12 AM
Ride of Silence in Westford Massachusetts
Wednesday, May 17th 2006
7:00pm

Meet across from Kimball's Ice Cream at 6:45pm to put on arm bands and discuss hand signals for this silent ride to honor cyclists who have been injured by motorists and remind everyone that we have a right to share the road.

Top speed is 12mph.

Thunderstorms cancel.

Optional post-ride socializing at Kimball's. Bring $ for ice cream!

To learn more about the Ride of Silence and find out if there's one happening in your area, visit www.rideofsilence.org.

Trek420
05-17-2006, 05:38 AM
Thanks Chocolatepizza & Luve2,

I am planning to join the Oakland ROS. Welcome to TE, stick around and surf on over to the "getting to know you" thread.

Popoki_Nui
05-17-2006, 09:17 AM
It seems there is a Ride of Silence here in Victoria too. I assume one can just show up and participate? I've sent an email to the ride organizer here; I hope to join the Ride this evening too.

~S.

bikerchick68
05-17-2006, 09:42 AM
Popoki... yup, just go join in...

I'm riding here in San Diego at 7PM as well... the ride here leaves from the corner of India St at Washington St...

Bike Goddess
05-17-2006, 04:39 PM
I am was not able to be part of a Ride of Silence today due to work commitments. How did it go for those of you who rode? Please share your stories- maybe on a Ride of Silence report. TREK 420- I know you're out there riding soon- maybe you could start a new thread.

withm
05-17-2006, 06:58 PM
I did the Ride of Silence in Rehoboth Beach (DE). We had about 30 riders. As usual, it is very somber. We rode 2 abreast, 8 miles through the stretch of main road here that has been the location of countless bike/car accidents, including several fatalaties every year. This stretch of road- 6 lanes, no shoulder, and lined with shopping centers, fast food, gas stations, offices and now condos is a nightmare to ride but there are no alternate routes so many are forced to traverse this area. Even with a police escort front and rear stopping traffic for us we had cars attempting to cut us off. Of two that I saw close up, both drivers were talking on cell phones, and a 3rd stopped just in time - he was eating a hamburger. As far as I'm concerned, this is this Ride of Silence HAS to be done but I would think very hard about negotiating this area any other time.

Tonight we rode with the threat of thunderstorms but we had only sprinkles at the end. Last year we had many more riders but that ride was held shortly after a particularly bad, and highly publicized, bicycle fatality where a young girl from Eastern Europe was hit and killed by an inattentive driver chatting on her cell phone. Participation was down I think because of the weeather and that fortunately there have not been any highly visible incidents in recent weeks. (Actually there have been several but a little farther away, and less publicized.)

Martha

GreenLady
05-17-2006, 07:18 PM
My BF and I did the Ride of Silence in Philadelphia; it's the first year the ride is happening. There were a few hundred people, from race teams to bike messengers, commuters, people on recumbents, people on tandems. Many of the people we met had stories of bad encounters with cars.

The police closed a 7-mile loop through the city, on some of the scariest downtown streets. It was a particularly sad ride, since a 6-year old boy on a bicycle was killed last Saturday, on a road that is supposed to be closed to cars on the weekend. A van just went through the barriers...

Unfortunately, I do not know how many drivers were "touched" by this ride. Many of those who had to stop were catching up on their cellphone conversations, eating or reading; others were annoyed for losing 5 precious minutes. I hope they won't take it out on the next biker they encounter.

Trek420
05-17-2006, 07:28 PM
I rode to work today so i could do this, probably would have ridden anyway. I took time off today to leave early otherwise I would have missed the ride. Since I had time to kill I rode up to Piedmont Ave to stop by and say hi to Spazzdog and Quidich-dog. BTW I can attest that Quid will try to eat your mtb tire left to his own devices :p ;) thought she was joking about that but he's very well trained.

We had lunch together than I headed to downtown.

At first I did not see where the ride started than I saw the Yellow Jacket club jerseys. They are hard to miss.

OT-Velogirl if you're lurking while we waited the talk turned to Bike Against the Odds and while several club members joshed that they thought it was a fluke that they beat the Velogirls in pledges last year I believe we've been challenged.

Then the ride start got serious, a moment of silence and we went round, several people said who they were riding for. a rider from Sacramento named bikerbilly from bike journal. One of the main organisers from EBBC talked about the ride history. It's amazing the hazzards we face but even in CA flagrant and deadly drivers may get less than a commuter lane ticket for killing us. It's just a cyclist.

We rode out, 2-3 abreast and the silence was odd, just the sound of clicking and unclipping, brakes, shifting. People signaled and silently mouthed instuctions. We rode through dowtown Oakland, Chinatown, by Laney College than around the Lake. Then out a bit south of Lake Merrit. We looped back to do the lake a second time. Near the Oakland Museum I mouthed and signaled Bye and dropped off the back. I stopped to watch them ride the few blocks back to the start than headed home.

Very poignient and emotional. I could use some cheering up.

So I'm off work tomorrow and though I have to meet a plumber in the afternoon (ah the joys of home ownership) I plan to bike to work, just not go to work and that's all for the pancakes at Downtown Oakland. I could use them right now.

Tri Girl
05-17-2006, 07:29 PM
I rode tonight in Oklahoma City. We possibly had a couple hundred riders (I'm a terrible estimater)- all shapes, sizes, ages and abilities. We had a police escort, and it was a somber mood. It was a really neat ride, and for such a great reason. As we rode through downtown, it made me giggle to myself because people would cheer us on and tell us "good job, keep going." I wish they knew the reason we were riding in silence, but it was nice that they cared.
It was a great experience, and I'll definitely do it every year.

Geonz
05-17-2006, 07:56 PM
Well, we were going to do a last-minute thing but there were these wall clouds and lightning.. tehre were still five of us out there but we figured it really would defeat the purpose of the ride to get ourselves killed.
One of the guys and I chatted about trying to *really* organize one next year. It's not a big town even when all the students are here - and they're not right now, it's not even summer session - but from what so many people have said, this is something that brings people out of the woodwork. IT also made me think - when I recalled how often the drivers don't get consequences for what they do - that maybe at some level people think that riders "ask for it," just as it used to be acceptable to think that women who walked down the wrong street / wore the wrong clothes "asked for it." I blogged about it (see signature)...

Popoki_Nui
05-17-2006, 09:32 PM
We had our first-ever Ride of Silence in Victoria this evening. There wasn't much -if any- advertising about the event; I saw it here on TE and had to do a Google to find the Victoria ride. Only about a dozen riders showed up; the woman who organized the Ride spoke about the significance of the event and it's worldwide recognition for a few minutes, and off we went from City Hall for a slow 40 minute ride through downtown Victoria wearing our black armbands. Upon our return, we held a minutes' silence in memory of fallen riders everywhere. In December, we have our own local version of this Ride, but I hope this international Ride of Silence is a permanent here event too.

~Sherry.

ChocolatePizzaR
05-18-2006, 04:03 AM
I did the ride last night in Westford, MA. It was small but special. It was a beautiful evening after a week of rain. As we ambled along at 12mph, I could smell the lilacs and apple blossoms. We saw the swollen ponds and streams, and heard waterfalls in places where there's usually just a trickle. It was very peaceful and a lovely way to remember those we've lost.

There were only 8 of us. (I'm not sure why so few, but will do more publicity next time.) I got to meet some good people and wish I could have talked with them more about why they were riding. The "silent" part was hard. And, I'm not sure, but I think we might have had the only unicyclist particpating in the Ride of Silence (www.unicyclemax.com).

I'll be doing it again next year.

Tara

Bike Goddess
05-18-2006, 10:20 AM
Thank you everyone who has reported so far. What a special moment for all of you that participated. Hopefully I'll get some of our cyclists in my small town to do this next year.

CorsairMac
05-18-2006, 10:26 AM
We did our Ride of Silence last night - don't know about many......24-30?? We rode in single file and most of us had blinkies so you could really see the line stretched out. We picked a route that had bike lanes but was on public streets in the hopes of making people aware of cyclists. It was amazing the number of cars that waited at stopsigns for all of us to pass. We obeyed every traffic law but people were being so gracious. One woman had a box on her rack with a fallen riders name on it, several wore black armbands (I forgot to....but I"m thinking a black arm warmer would be more fitting no?). There were several people there from the local club but most of the riders were there through word of mouth. It is still one of the most moving rides I've ever done.

Geonz
05-18-2006, 10:42 AM
Oh, I do like the idea of one black armband - it's a little more visible and says "cyclist."

Jo-n-NY
05-19-2006, 08:55 AM
Sorry, I didn't get on the computer yesterday. I just wanted to add that I also road the Ride of Silence with the Huntington Bike Club. It is the first time I had the opportunity to participated in this as I just signed up with the club this year. We road 12.8 miles and although somber, they were the most peaceful miles I ever road. The group was about 20 riders. I will definetely participate in this ride again.

~ JoAnn