Shampoo-Banana! --- locals joke about the name Champaign-Urbana!![]()
Shampoo-Banana! --- locals joke about the name Champaign-Urbana!![]()
Nice! I'll remember that. I'm a Leatherneck from WIU in Macomb - any good jokes about U of I or their home is good for me!
It was very refreshing to see a community trying to be bike friendly. My community has put up a few bike lanes, but frankly, it doesn't cut it at all. It is the perfect town for biking - some hills, but everything is within easy bike reach - but you simply see very few people doing it. I was really amazed by the numbers of cyclists I saw the last few days in C-U. It was really interesting.
As an example of our "bike progress," a few years ago they designated two bike lanes....both on one-way roads. When the newspaper did the feature story on them, the picture they took was a bicyclist going THE WRONG WAY ON THE ONE-WAY. Ugh.
200x Electra Townie 24D/Brooks B67
I have to giggle at "bike friendly" signs. My suburb is pretty good, but I've seen other parts of St. Louis with "bike friendly" signs on a 1-foot-wide shoulder with 4-lane traffic going 45 mph. Rush hour on a weekday and you'd be road kill.
Bike communities are refreshing. They tend to center around colleges. Too bad bicycles weren't the rage when I wash in college--I may have found my passion sooner![]()
"Well-behaved women seldom make history." --Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
'09 Trek WSD 2.1 with a Brooks B-68 saddle
'11 Trek WSD Madone 5.2 with Brooks B-17
I've thought the same thing. We live in Chapel Hill now, which is where I went to school. Back in those days (I grad. in '83), no one rode bikes (or ran, for that matter). I do vaguely remember a bike rack at my dorm but no bikes on it at all. Girls were less likely to ride than guys back then, and this was an all-girls dorm. Now, we ride through campus all the time, and every dorm has a full bike rack; we see students cycling everywhere, there are just bikes everywhere you look. It would be neat to be a student in such an environment. Especially since I was so broke in my college years, it would have saved me on gas money and time (since I walked so much).
Emily
2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
2007 Trek Pilot 5.0 WSD "Gloria" - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
2004 Bike Friday Petite Pocket Crusoe - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
The designation from the bike league is based on five criteria: engineering, enforcement, encouragement, Education, evaluation/planning. I think that by casual observation, it seems that success at one of the "e's" will get you to bronze, 2-3 will get you to silver...etc
The applications can be 50-100 pages...while you may giggle, you're just observing one of the e's...and for the record, I wouldn't be uncomfortable on the road you described (I'm presuming it's near Washington University)... But I'm one of the bold 1%. I don't think bike friendly means paths everywhere...give me a tight road with educated motorists, and half the war is won...
If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers
I got to visit Bloomington this weekend for my sister's graduation from law school. The last time I visited was in 2006 before I became a cyclist, so I saw it differently this time.
Anywhere I go now, I'm aware of how many cyclists and pedestrians I see. There were plenty--but it is a college town, so I would expect that. My sister lives down the street from the biggest park in town. All weekend we saw dog walkers heading there. Even during the cloudy rainy part of the weekend I saw cyclists regularly. When we walked to the luncheon we 2 bikes & a car pass so we could cross a street.
Perhaps more revealing than how many cyclists & pedestrians you see on a nice weekend in a college town is the infrastructure. On the one-way street that we waited for the bikes to pass: Concrete curbs divide it into a bike lane and a regular lane. The curbs don't run the entire length of each block, only the last few feet before each intersection. The regular lane is narrow which causes vehicles to slow down as they approach. These curbs look like they've been there a while. I thought this was a clever design and it proves that Bloomington has been taking its bicyclists seriously for some time. There were also plenty of bike lanes, bike routes and sharrows. We didn't go many places in town, but where we did walk there were sidewalks. I did see one bike lane that includes parked cars and is a risk for getting doored.
I wondered who provides the purple Bicycle Friendly Community signs? The reason I ask is because they are the same as the ones I saw in Lawrence, KS, and Lawrence is only bronze while Bloomington just got its silver. I can't remember seeing them in Columbia, MO yet and it got silver last year. I mention it because I'd like to see it as a big deal for cities to announce on every major road that enters the city, the way Ernie Pyles was announced repeatedly as we drove through some part of Indiana. I don't know who Ernie Pyles was but he was clearly important to the area! (I just wiki'd him--he was a WWII journalist.) Anyway cities should be very proud of the designation and should be able to proclaim their silver or bronze status.
The road we came in on (Hwy 46) looked like one cyclists might take, in fact we passed two scooters, but I can easily see a serious injury or fatality happening on it. Half-shoulders "invite" the scooters & cyclists to ride there but they aren't really wide enough for them. I suspect in the surrounding areas are probably some great roads for recreational or training rides, and Hwy 46 is not one of them, but those who live on that road may be hoping for some improvements, given that some of them are riding scooters.
In my brief visit I could only see a couple's of the E's, but from what I did see, it seems further ahead than Lawrence (a bronze BFC--at least it was a few years ago) and at least on par with Columbia (a silver BFC). So my impression is that it merits its silver status.![]()
2009 Trek 7.2FX WSD, brooks Champion Flyer S, commuter bike
By the way--I got to meet Mr. Bloom this morning as a great end to our visit to Bloomington. So I actually did get a little more insight into what Bloomington is doing to earn its BFC status than just what I saw. Bloomington has a great advocate working for it in Mr. Bloom!
2009 Trek 7.2FX WSD, brooks Champion Flyer S, commuter bike
It was great meeting you and your family! DD was a sport! I can also vouch for the fact that your dad has a VERY PRECISE cyclists' tan line on his sleeve!
Since we just got upgraded, I imagine they're ordered and on the way...it will takes months before we see them everywhere.
Yes, you won't see many using it...but on the Hilly Hundred weekend, most people will park at their hotels in Bloomington and ride 46 into Ellettesville. Most of this highway is in the county...but the county is placing a priority on "interconnectedness"...there are multiple, lower traffic routes that are frequented...
Education is one that you wouldn't see...but it's a big deal here...but lots more that we can do...particularly with the "invincible" college students
Let's look forward to riding together sometime!
If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers
Dad's doing Bike Across Kansas. He "retired" in December, meaning he is still teaching & taking care of Granddad, the only thing he stopped doing was his full-time job, but he has a lot more time for biking, especially once his class ended. I was really surprised at how much weight he has lost already. He said he weighs about the same, it's just shifted from body fat into leg muscle! He's been putting in a lot of miles.
I'll be picking your brain about bike advocacy as our efforts in Kirksville get underway. Well, actually before then...but after we move!
2009 Trek 7.2FX WSD, brooks Champion Flyer S, commuter bike