Author Archive

“Are you okay?”

Monday, May 14th, 2012 by

Robin Randels, Cascade’s classes coordinator extraordinaire, owns a set of hot pink tire levers, and she’s not afraid to use them.

The scene: I’m pedaling fast (for me) on the Burke-Gilman Trail with Pete and Serena, rushing to Ravenna for an impromptu barbecue with friends. I hear that familiar hiss. I stop to check, and, sure enough, my rear tire is flat. I tell my friends I’ll be okay, borrow an Orca pass and head for the nearest intersection on foot.

As I’m contemplating my next move, Robin pedals up behind me in her characteristic skirt, boots and floral helmet. “Are you okay?” she asks.

“Uh, yeah, I have an Orca pass,” I reply.

“You don’t want to fix it?” She gives me a look of reproach. I tell her that I have trouble with my tires. My hand are small and not so strong, my tires and rims a particularly tight fit. On more than one occasion, my attempts to pop the bead back into place have caused me tears of frustration.

I explain all this, but she’s a stubborn lady, and she’s not taking no for an answer. Out come those pink tire levers. She has me on the road again in minutes.

While we were hunched over my bike on the Burke-Gilman’s narrow shoulder, five or six friendly passers-by echoed Robin’s initial question: “Are you okay?”

Yes, we were. But on another day, I would have welcomed the help — even though at first, I wasn’t sure I wanted it.

And so, here’s a word of thanks to those of you who ask if you can help.

And those of you who won’t take no for an answer.

“Bike to School Day is our favorite holiday.”

Friday, May 11th, 2012 by

This article first appeared as the Cyclist of the Month column in the May 2012 issue of the Cascade Courier, our membership newsletter.

Nominate a Cyclist of the Month!

Cyclists of the Month: CLINT, LESLIE, BERKELEY AND EMMIE LOPER 
Ages: 50, 49, 13 & 10
Occupations: River Engineer, King County; Assistant Athletic Director, Bush School; student, Eckstein Middle School; student, Bryant Elementary
Wheels: Lots of ‘em

From left to right, Clint, Berkeley, Leslie and Emmie Loper

“Bike to School Day is our favorite holiday,” Clint Loper tells me with a chuckle. “It’s better than Christmas.”

And I believe him. The evidence is everywhere. There’s a bike rack positioned prominently on their front lawn. As we talk, he and his wife, Leslie, pull out bikes and bike paraphernalia – ramps, rumble strips, A-boards – that they use for events at the kids’ schools. On the day that I meet her, Berkeley Loper, a seventh grader, is wearing a Bike to Work Day t-shirt from 2011.

“When it gets dirty, she puts on her other one. Or she wears it anyway,” Leslie tells me. Berkeley makes no comment, but disappears into the garage, emerging later with a tandem in tow. Emmie, her little sister, rides in circles around the yard.

The Lopers’ crusade started on Berkeley’s first day of kindergarten at Bryant Elementary. The school was less than a mile from their house, so they arrived on foot. “I remember seeing the line of cars,” Clint tells me. “It was total traffic mayhem. I remember being distraught, thinking, ‘90 percent of these people live within a mile of the school. None of them need to drive.’”

He continues, “I thought, ‘This isn’t the school I want my kids to go to. Living this way doesn’t fit with our broader cultural goals.’” So he and Leslie set out to change things.

They started with their neighbors and friends, organizing people to walk and bike together. Then they volunteered one Friday morning to bring donuts for kids who showed up on bikes, and their efforts grew from there.

“We didn’t know what we were doing,” Clint says. “We winged it for Bike to School Day in 2006. We got people to volunteer to do maintenance and bring treats.”Six years later, 50 to 60 kids – 10 percent of the student body – park their bikes outside the school on a typical spring day.

What’s the key to their success? Energy, enthusiasm and fun. They have grant money, which they spend on prizes and donuts. More importantly, they have the “bike fairy,” their very own Bike to School mascot.

Leslie Loper as the Bike Fairy

The bike fairy has mysterious origins. According to Leslie, it’s the brainchild of Ellen Aagard, a dedicated community volunteer and biking mom who’s on the board of Cascade’s Education Foundation. “She got the costume somewhere and presented it to me,” she says.

Leslie took it from there. “Laurelhurst has a bike fairy, too, but they have rotating fairies,” she tells me. “I’m the steady fairy. One time I had to go away, and you were the Bike Wiz,” she says, with a nod to her husband.

Every Friday during May, Leslie bikes around the border of the school looking for kids on bikes. When she finds them, she taps them with her wand and awards them with prizes. “I love being the bike fairy,” she says.

“This is how we volunteer,” she continues. “We don’t do an auction or anything else. This is just what we do. And we invented it, six years ago.”

So, how’s the school taking it? “We’ve worn them down,” Clint tells me. In the early years, parents questioned whether it was safe enough for kids to ride to school, and they had to push the school to put in bike racks. But the kids love it, and no one can argue with that.

Indeed, everyone seems to be coming around. In January, SDOT and the Seattle School District presented Bryant with the First Annual Golden Shoe award in recognition of the school’s success in shifting its students to walking and biking. The school board also integrated walking and biking into its transportation services plan – thanks, in part, to testimony from Clint.

Clint and Leslie have big plans for the coming year. They’re scheduling more “donut days” – on which they meet students at Top Pot before school and ride in together. They’re also reaching out to other schools, including Eckstein Middle School, where Berkeley is a student, and they launched a website to help people at other schools share ideas.

But more than any of their other successes, it’s their daughters that impress me. Berkley has ridden to school every day since first grade. These days, she meets two of her friends at a street corner before school and rides in with them. Emmie, who’s just ten, rides home from Bryant by herself.

“Mom, I’m going to bike Emmie to dance,” Berkeley calls from the captains’ seat of the tandem.

As the girls set off on the mile-long trip, their mom tells me, “Sometimes I ask Berkeley if she wants a ride, but she’ll never take it. Emmie will, sometimes.”

“Yeah, she drives to dance, even in the sun,” Berkeley says.

 

Remember to pump it up

Monday, May 7th, 2012 by

Not good. Not good at all.

I had come in with a flat tire, but the mechanic eyed my brake pads. “Did you know that these are on backwards?” he asked, his tone faintly accusatory.

“I, um. Yes, so they are,” I mumbled, offering a sheepish grin. But he didn’t crack a smile, informing me instead that my brake pads needed replacing, too. And my wheels?

“I’d start saving your pennies now,” he told me. “You should replace your wheelset within a couple of weeks, and your tires within a month. You’re getting to the danger zone.”

The danger zone. It’s no place where any cyclist wants to be.

It’s true, my bicycle has suffered some serious abuse in the three years I’ve been making a daily, 6.7-mile, all-weather trek to work and back. I dribble lube on the chain maybe three times a year. The brakes are caked with winter mud, the cables frayed and loose. When it makes weird noises in complaint, I sometimes ignore them, opting instead to seek out the nearest bike shop when (and only when) it gives out in protest.

All of which is to say, if there’s hope for me, there’s hope for all of us. In honor of Bike Month, here’s a simple (yet important!) tip that will keep your wheels rolling smoothly:

Check your tire pressure

You probably know that keeping your tires properly inflated will make your bicycle more efficient, which means you’ll sweat less on the hills. But you may not know that riding with under-inflated tires makes you vulnerable to pinch flats, since your tube could be pinched between your rims and the pavement if you hit a curb or pothole too hard. (Incidentally, that’s how I ended up in the aforementioned bike shop with the aforementioned bike mechanic.)

How often should you inflate your tires? I learned recently that as a commuter who rides about 70 miles per week, I should be using a bike pump once or twice per week. (I had no idea! And maybe some of you lurkers don’t either. It’s OK, I’m there with you.) Depending on how much you ride, you may need to do it less or more often.

And what’s the proper tire pressure? Tire manufactures specify the optimum tire pressure; usually, it’s written on the sidewalls. Depending how much you weigh, how much gear you carry, whether you’re more interested in speed or comfort, and what kind of terrain you’re riding on, you’ll want to adjust it slightly.

Ride slowly with me

Thursday, May 3rd, 2012 by

Slow down and smell them.

I’ve never had much interest in speed. Indeed, that’s one of the reasons I choose to ride a bicycle: 12 miles per hour through the elements holds more appeal than 70 miles per hour in a climate-controlled vehicle. I still remember my drivers’ ed teacher explaining the laws of physics as they apply to head-on traffic collisions. No, thanks.

Even among two-wheeled travelers, I move relatively slowly. And I would like to to take a moment to extol one of the many benefits of taking your time on the trail: accidental bike trains.

When I’m riding in to work on the Burke-Gilman Trail, my coworkers come up behind me more often than not. We talk about the weather, or we talk about our weekends. We trade stories and share smiles. And it’s nice.

So if you’re rushing to the office during Bike Month, I urge you to slow down and take a moment to chat with whomever you meet on the trail. You’ll probably also sweat less and run down fewer unsuspecting pedestrians — and you won’t add more than a couple of minutes to your commute time.

Time for a little spring cleaning

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012 by

Last week, I noticed that every time I attempted to switch gears, my chain clunked around in my cassette. I took a closer look, and — lo and behold! — my cassette was crammed with mud and (impressively) dead leaves. No wonder.

I’m no bike mechanic, but I trusted myself with this one. Give me half an hour, an old toothbrush and a bucket of soapy water, and that mud’s no match for me. Plus, unlike most bike maintenance projects, there was little potential that I’d make matters worse.

I’m guessing that my gears get neglected more than most. But I’m also guessing that your chain and cassette could use a good scrub-down, too. I promise you, this is something that anyone can handle, and it will make your life a whole lot easier during Bike Month (because you’ll be riding every day, right?).

How often to clean? According to various sources all over the internet, you really should spray down your bike every time it gets dirty. Trouble being that, if you’re anything like me, the last thing you feel like doing when you get in from the rain is hosing down your bike. Once a week seems like plenty to me; if you’re fastidious, more is better.

What to use? There are a number of commercial products out there designed for cleaning the grease off your chain, but I found that a bucket of warm water with dish soap worked just fine. An old tooth brush will help you get into hard-to-reach places, and an old rag comes in handy. Spray it with the hose first to remove loose dirt.

Where to clean? You’ll want to clean your cassette, chain, the rims of your wheels and your brakes — really, anywhere you see dirt. The added friction from the grime causes all your components to wear down faster, so keeping things clean will keep you out of the repair shop.

How to clean? This is mostly self-explanatory, but it bears mentioning that cleaning a chain is best accomplished by turning your bike upside down and rotating the pedals backwards so that the chain moves through your soapy rag. Make sure you rinse things thoroughly and oil your chain when you’re done.

What are your sources? I’m no expert — so don’t take it from me. There’s a thorough blog post on Cycle and Style from back in 2010 that will tell you everything you need to know. If you like visual aids, Youtube videos abound.

Have bike-cleaning wisdom to share? Feel free to share!