pull up display
by James Lively
As we were riding along on Sunday, I was asked about the bike signs on the
roads. Here's the first information going out to the public. Let me know
what you think as this is a first go, and I'll take your comments back to
the Active Communities Committee.
Thanks
James.
Hello everyone. This pull up display (x2) will be placed in the Wallaceburg
and Chatham Libraries for the month of August. (a bit too large for the
other Libraries), then they can be relocated elsewhere as needed. There
will also be a similar, accompanying poster on the wall - with the
informational tear off sheets. Please advise if anything needs to be
changed. We wanted to keep it light(meaning not too many words) - focused
on the Share the Road and the two different road signs. It is intended for
an adult audience.
14 years, 3 months
Riding for MS Year 2
by Ann McKenzie
Last year I journaled my experience during the MS Ride and shared it with as
many people as I could think of. This year i've written a letter to the people
that sponsored me, not only to thank them but to explain why I ride for MS.
I'm sharing this with this group in hopes of encouraging others who rode last
week to share their experiences on the ride. And hopefully to encourge even
more people to join us next year.
I'm also sharing because I need to say thank to so many others on this list
for helping me make it to the MS ride this year. Strength and inspiration can
and will come from places were you least expect it.
Thank you Jen J and Nikki for sitting with me during my appointments and being
there when I needed you.
Thank you to everyone who told me I looked good even thought I knew better.
Thank you to Randy and Vic and many others for riding with me when I wasn't
100%. Staying back with me even thought I didn't think I needed them to. They
new better, I did.
And...Thank you to my partner, John, for tell me I was being ridiculous when I
was being ridiculous. And for being my hairdresser for almost a year and not
charging me.
It is amazing to be part of this ycling community that we have created.
"This chapter is closed" Time to start a new one. Hope to see you all next
year on the MS ride.
Ann
oh...BTW I think we can start signing up for next year in Nov. :)
_____________________________________________________________________________
Thank you for sponsoring me this year in the Rona MS Bike tour. My team,
Roger’s Angel’s raised almost $18000 between 33 riders this year. The events
total was over $1 240 000.
Last year I rode for MS for the first time because a friend of a friend was
doing it and I thought it would be a great opportunity to test my new abilities
as a cyclist. This year I rode for a completely different reason.
Below you will see a picture of part of my team crossing the finish line on
Sunday in Grand Bend. I’m the 5th person coming in the gate. The man in the
wheel chair is Mike. Mike has MS. Each year Mike sits at the finish line both
in London and in Grand Bend and “High Fives” us as we cross. This year, in
London , Mike sat in the rain and sun and rain waiting for each and every
person to cross the finish line. There were 1725 people who started arriving at
11am and didn’t stop until 4pm.
Last year Mike spoke at the MS awards ceremonies on the Saturday night. He
spoke of his dreams, his goals for the next year, how he was planning to train
to climb Mount Everest and how he was planning to ride with us in 2011 on an
adapted bike. I found Mike’s speech very inspiring. It’s hard to believe that
someone one with so much going against him could find the strength and the
motivation to continue to challenge him self so. Mike’s speech inspired me to
promise myself to stay strong and motivated no matter what challenges came up in
my life. Three weeks after Mike’s speech I was diagnosed with cancer and had to
put this newly made promise to the test. It’s funny how things always work out.
Seems like more often than not the universe or what ever you choose to call it
offers up just what you need when you need it.
So why did I ride for MS this year. There are two reason. The first was to
challenge myself……to prove to myself that I had come out the other end of my
diagnosis just as strong, motivated and happy as before. The second reason was
to thank Mike on Sunday morning after crossing the finish line for being the
inspiration that got me through one of the roughest challenges of my life.
Why will I ride next year? To ensure that Mike and others who have MS have what
they need to live as healthy and productive lives as possible, including a cure,
as you never know who they may inspire in the future and under what
circumstances. They might just “Say the right thing at the right time to the
right person” and inspire them to great things.
Once again…Thank you so much for sponsoring me.
Ann
14 years, 3 months
Moving Forward.
by James Lively
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? Because this is the discussion
we're having.
Do we need bike lanes, do we need bike racks, do we need education? Yes, yes
and yes but which should come first?
And it all depends on the rider and their purpose.
For the Active Transportation cyclist, safe and secure parking is essential.
However, if the rider doesn't feel safe on the road, the racks will go
unused as no one will ride. Likewise, if the rider can't find a safe and
secure place to park, the lanes won't get used.
John, despite you assertions about where the Tues, Weds, Sun groups ride,
many of us ride to and from the departure point through the urban setting,
as well as riding to and from work. Doesn't this constitute AT? Likewise our
recreational routes take us through the urban setting, for example the full
length of King Street. So when it comes to roadways, there is no distinction
between an active transportation cyclist and a recreational cyclist. Why
we're riding on the road is irrelevant. The fact is we're there and we have
to provide for everyone's safety, pedestrian, cyclist and motorist.
And in all of this education, for cyclist and motorist alike is essential.
Maybe the ACSC has been a little slow in getting this of the ground, but
we're also dealing with funding issues requiring us to get approval from
City Council before we spend any funds. The large displays are just the
start of the education process. But I would ask that in your conversations
with CKPS, you ask them to be part of this process. If they see a cyclist
disobeying the traffic rules, they should stop and educate them. Maybe in a
few months, they could then start issuing tickets. The same scenario as the
cell phone ban. I know people still use them while driving, and many
cyclists will continue to disobey the rules, but that shouldn't be an excuse
for doing nothing. And if they see someone riding wreaklessly, on the road
or sidewalk putting others in danger, no questions, issue the ticket.
And finally, as I have pointed out many a time, the comparison with Europe
is comparing apples to cabbages. When gas hits $3/litre, when the annual
road tax hits $500 (that's what my father-in-law just paid in the UK), when
it takes 1 hour to travel the full length of Lacroix, Sandy's, Orangewood
because of traffic congestion, when parking is at a premium due to lack of
space then you'll have a fair comparison. If you look at Canada's major
cities which are investing heavily to encourage cycling as an alternative;
Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, you see that the last two issues, congestion
and lack of parking are the case.
And fixing Chatham-Kent is going to take time. We're 10 to 20 years behind,
we're not going to fix it in 10 weeks. You know the plan is a 20 year plan.
Now we've started, we've got to keep moving forward. Arguing which should
have come first, the chicken or the egg, is not the way to do it!
Discussing what comes next, bearing in mind everyone has a different opinion
for different reasons and respecting those opinions, is.
James.
-----Original Message-----
From: ckcycle-bounces(a)lists.ncf.ca [mailto:ckcycle-bounces@lists.ncf.ca]
On Behalf Of Daniel Brousseau
Sent: Wednesday, July 28, 2010 3:32 PM
To: Chatham-Kent Commmunity Cycling Group
Subject: Re: [CKcycle] pull up display
John,
Sorry to say but I don't agree with all your statements...
As stated in the meeting where Matt, James and I where... a Bike Rack is
the least of the riders concerns. It's all about education as with no
education they won't come out.
The police department here in Chatham is just a joke in their dealing
with the rules of the road with cyclists and cars...
The LAWS are there already in place to enforce SAFE Cycling but they
just opt to ignore them and only enforce them at their discretion.
Also note that our Sunday/Wednesday rides do not consist of just
starting and leaving from one location... we do stop at various
locations and sometimes leave our bikes leaning against a wall. This
does not stop us cause there is no bike racks.
So again, Bike Racks & Bike Lanes/Paths will not get more people out if
they feel unsafe to even be on the road/sidewalk(Kids Only) so they can
get to them. Don't forget there are MANY EMPTY Bike Racks here in the
Chatham area. So putting more in won't help on getting more cyclists
out.
Also this discussion is about the poster in it self and where they
should be placed. This is where the Cyclist of this group come into play
as you would be surprised how many also cycle as a mode of
transportation but also drive a vehicle. So we know both side of the
coin on this topic.
I know John you have this great envision of what Chatham-Kent should
turn into but it won't happen over night. That is why Education is your
most important factor in this planing... Mostly when your local police
force is just a farce on enforcement of the Moving Violations.
When I got pulled over on Grand Ave early summer for "Going to fast"
then changed to "Taking to much room on the road". I was hopping he
would try and fine me... this way it would of been a foot in the door to
show them local officers that the law is the law and can't just apply it
at their discretion.
Yes it can take as much time to fine a cyclist just as a automotive
driver... but still the rules are the same for both.
Same Roads, Same Rules, Same Rights
John Sigurjonsson wrote:
Some super ideas in this discussion of driver/rider education and its
great to see CK Cycle Community take an interest in cycling advocacy.
There is unspent budget from a grant for the educational program in 2010
so a lot of ideas are affordable this year but may not be next year.
When considering what should be done to promote cycling in Chatham-Kent
be aware that the primary community benefit from Active Transportation
comes from replacing motorized trips with people-powered trips. So the
ACSC needs to create conditions that attract cyclists ranging from the
ten year old commuting to school (instead of being Chauffeured by mom)
to granny with her shopping tricycle. These cyclists are very different
from the average member of ckcycle. For example:
Their cycle routes are urban, not the rural roaming ckcycle
does on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings and Sunday mornings..
The purpose of their trip is utilitarian - get from A to B
to work, shop, play, etc.. They enjoy the ride but the primary purpose
of the ride isn't recreational. So they want direct routes to their
destination without having to make detours to find low-traffic routes.
They are not comfortable in traffic. They need bike lanes or
paths separated from motor vehicles. We're trying to get those built.
They need end-of-trip facilities (e.g. secure bike racks).
It might be nice if your Sunday breakfast stop had decent secure racks,
but otherwise it's probably not an issue for your recreational rides
that basically begin and end at home. For utilitarian riders who are
going to park the bike where they work, shop, play tennis, attend
classes etc secure parking is an issue.
If these folks in Chatham made the same percentage of their trips by
bike as is done in some European cities, we would have about 10,000
bikes on Chatham streets at rush hours. Wouldn't that be something to
see!
Regards
John Sigurjonsson
Member Services
Cycle Chatham-Kent
519-352-0883
-----Original Message-----
From: ckcycle-bounces(a)lists.ncf.ca [mailto:ckcycle-bounces@lists.ncf.ca]
On Behalf Of Josette deBrouwer
Sent: Monday, July 26, 2010 11:27 PM
To: Chatham-Kent Commmunity Cycling Group
Subject: Re: [CKcycle] pull up display
They should be visible at all municipal info centres and other municipal
properties, especially arenas. Also, how about the drivers licence
bureau (whatever that is called) and car dealerships? Like Geoff, I had
three incidents on one ride along hwy 3 west of Blenheim on Sunday. Not
fun.
On 10-07-26 4:12 PM, "James Lively" <jalively(a)cogeco.ca> wrote:
As we were riding along on Sunday, I was asked about the bike signs on
the roads. Here's the first information going out to the public. Let me
know what you think as this is a first go, and I'll take your comments
back to the Active Communities Committee.
Thanks
James.
Hello everyone. This pull up display (x2) will be placed in the
Wallaceburg and Chatham Libraries for the month of August. (a bit too
large for the other Libraries), then they can be relocated elsewhere as
needed. There will also be a similar, accompanying poster on the wall -
with the informational tear off sheets. Please advise if anything needs
to be changed. We wanted to keep it light(meaning not too many words) -
focused on the Share the Road and the two different road signs. It is
intended for an adult audience.
_____
_______________________________________________
CKcycle mailing list
CKcycle(a)lists.ncf.ca
http://lists.ncf.ca/mailman/listinfo/ckcycle
_____
_______________________________________________
CKcycle mailing list
CKcycle(a)lists.ncf.ca
http://lists.ncf.ca/mailman/listinfo/ckcycle
14 years, 3 months
All MS2010 Grand Bend-London Picture
by Daniel Brousseau
I did a search and located many pictures for all of you's
If anyone has some that they did not share, certainly welcome to send it
to me at my GMAIL address
bikerdude221(a)gmail.com
I will only share them with those that wish to get them... so just let
me know
There is about 100 pictures including 1 video = about 40MB
No worries Nikki and Jen I already have you covered as per your previous
request :-)
Dan
14 years, 3 months
Ride tomorrow?
by Jennifer Laevens
Anyone up for a ride tomorrow 8 am?
Cheers, Jennifer
Sent from my iPhone
14 years, 3 months