some radio stations will do free advertising of local events.
talk to your library; how about the bike shops in your area?
(I'm starting to feel spoiled living in Seattle!)
some radio stations will do free advertising of local events.
talk to your library; how about the bike shops in your area?
(I'm starting to feel spoiled living in Seattle!)
Also put notices in:
Schools
Colleges
Mother and Toddler Groups
Creches
Nurseries (Kindergarten?)
Community Centres
Businesses
Local Shops and Stores
Supermarkets
etc.
and advertise well in advance.
There are a lot of unwanted, unloved bikes out there - go on give a bike a good home
Just a thought here. I tried to organize one here but had an insurance issue. The city required a permit which required an insurance policy WITH unmbrella. Without the umbrella the insurance was $350. The local bike club would have donated $100 but without being able to charge for the ride I would have had to go on a donation campaign. One bike store said he would contribute but then wouldn't committ to a dollar amount. Any one else run into this and what did you do?
Dar
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“Minds are like parachutes...they only function when they are open. - Thomas Dewar"
What, exactly, does the city require a permit for? I'd want to see the written policy.
I think most places get around that by not making it a parade or a race. After all, there is no registration, no t-shirt, no fee; if people decide to make a caravan and drive to the same place together, they don't need separate insurance. Bicycles as vehicles don't, either.
Now, if an edict has already been laid down and doing it anyway would be in defiance of that, I don't think I'd do it 'cause the point of the ride is to *get* respect, not build barriers. However, I would be sniffing around to see if somebody sitting behind a different desk would have a different perspective. And... I'd be looking well in advance for the donations.
About publicity: around here, email is turning out to be the most effective wayof getting people out for things. Of the 62 people at our Urbana Master Bicycle Plan meeting, 30 of them were there because of emails. Flyers, etc. had reached little groups of 7 or 8. I think it went the same way here... and Iwas kicking myself for *not* making sure I got to the bike racing email list because they had not gotten the word (one of 'em joined us halfway through coming back from a training ride). However, we're a college town and it seems the active people are active online.
A cheap way of spreading the word is putting up posters in bike shop and gym windows, too.
Last edited by Geonz; 05-17-2007 at 12:00 PM.
Geonz, it goes before the city council here and about 10 different departments to decide how to rate it: class A, B or C. According to their documentation, a bike ride is considered class B thus, the insurance requirement. Pretty sad I think....
Dar
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“Minds are like parachutes...they only function when they are open. - Thomas Dewar"
So it's already setLooks like you want to start collecting... what a RACKET.
well, MTB you are moving, right?![]()
maybe your new hometown won't be so ridiculous!
besides, you could always just all magically meet and ride together for a while...