Archive for the ‘Bike Month’ Category

Commute Challenge Corner: Three ways to wear your Commute Challenge souvenir

Thursday, May 2nd, 2013 by

Every year Cascade gives away a fee souvenir item to all participants in the Commute Challenge–usually something that adds a little safety and bling. This year we are giving away a laminated placard that can be used as a bike license plate, bag tag or spoke card.

Write your name or team name (or nickname, if you’re a solo rider) on the placard in permanent marker and show your Commute Challenge spirit! Use rubber bands, zipties, or twist ties to affix the card to your bike, your bag, or your wheel.

When you see other Commute Challenge riders around town, give them a wave and a smile! By displaying your souvenir you may be eligible for prizes at Energizer stations and Commute-Challenge only drawings.

1)   Attach it to your handlebars or seat as a bike license plate

2)   Tag your bag

3)   Insert it in your spokes

How do you show your Commute Challenge spirit? Send us a photo at photos@cascadebicycleclub.org and your image could appear as the Commute Challenge ‘Inspiration of the Day’!

Commute Challenge corner: Start or join a league

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013 by

According to the Chinese zodiac calendar, 2013 is the year of the snake. According to ancient Commute Challenge astrology, 2013 is the year of the league.

Leagues are one of the most awesome and underrated features of the Commute Challenge. We’ll debunk leagues with a little Q and A below.

What the heck is a league, and why would I want to join one?

Leagues provide a simple, easy way for teams to group themselves by industry, geography, or some other category, and see each others stats in one place. Connect with other people in your industry or neighborhood and challenge yourself to outride other league members in your own customized sub-Challenge.

The sky is the limit for your league. Start an intra-league contest, use the message board to organize a happy hour, talk some trash, or discuss commuting tips.

Okay, so how do I join a league? 

Team captains can create leagues and join their team to one or more leagues. Visit the leagues page to see if any leagues are relevant to you, and join one! All federal employees are encouraged to join the Federal Bike-to-Work Challenge league and ride alongside teams from teams from all over the country, including the White House! All downtown Seattle teams are invited to join the Downtown Seattle league and ride for a chance to win a free pizza party, courtesy of Commute Seattle.

Do leagues have special prizes or events?

Members of a league can create league-specific incentives, contests, or events for members. Plan a happy hour for members of your neighborhood league, offer a pizza party for the team with the most trips, or organize a bike buddy system. The sky is the limit!

Can I communicate with other league members?

Yes! Any league members can post in league message boards at the bottom each league page.

Other cool features of the Commute Challenge you never knew existed

  • Message boards: make an announcement, schedule a happy hour, or start a conversation on the message boards at the bottom of each team or league page.
  • Social media features on the trip log page: Now you can LIKE bicycling even more by posting on Facebook and Twitter!
  • Challenge another rider or another team
  • Add Bike Month events from the trip log calendar to your personal calendar simply and easily. Heck, why now view and add the whole Bike Month calendar to your personal calendar?

DIY events: turn your workplace or neighborhood into a bicycling hotspot

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013 by

Cascade Bicycle Club is rolling out an all-star line-up of events and activities for Bike Month. Now it’s your turn! We invite communities, companies, and individuals to produce your own Bike Month events.

All smiles at a 2012 Capitol Hill DIY station

Show your support for bicycling this May and turn your neighborhood or workplace into the most bike-friendly space in town. It’s  fun, easy and could turn your friend or coworker from a one-time rider into a year-round commuter. Cascade has some handy toolkits for organizing DIY events to help get you started.

 

Host a DIY commute station on F5 Bike to Work Day (or any day!)

Be a part of the largest rolling street party of the year! Tens of thousands of people will hit the road on F5 Bike to Work Day –Friday, May 17– as part of a nationally recognized celebration of bicycling, and you can be part of it simply and easily! Set up a morning commute station in your neighborhood or at your workplace and offer treats, giveaways and encouragement to passing bicyclists. Use our simple toolkit to get started and let Cascade know about your station so we can publicize it on our online commute station map. Email Mary at btw@cascadebicycleclub.org to register your station. Commute stations can be a simple or robust as you make it–the sky is the limit! Remember, you can organize a commute station anytime during the year and make every day bike to work day!

 

Host another DIY event

The possibilities for fun, easy DIY bike-related events are endless. Here are a few suggestions to get your coworkers, friends and neighbors excited about getting around town on two wheels.

Organize a ride

  • Ride with your CEO
  • Ride with your elected official
  • Neighborhood bike-ability audit
  • Themed costume ride
  • Kid-ical Mass neighborhood ride

Plan an events

  • Rally
  • Please feed the bicyclists (free breakfast or lunch at work)
  • Bicycle fashion show
  • Kids bicycle rodeo
  • Bicycle Happy Hour
  • Flash mobs and cash mobs
  •  Bike scavenger hunt
  • Full moon midnight alley cat ride
  • Bicycle film night

Random Acts of Bikey-ness

  • Group photos
  • Hand out flowers to passing cyclists
  • Post thank you notes on parked bicycles

 

 

Organizing a DIY event is your big opportunity to make Bike Month your own and give bicycling a boost in your community. Remember, more people riding helps build a stronger case for bicycling improvements and safer streets for everyone. Not to mention that your community will be a more pleasant place to be.

Bike Month Weekly Contest

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013 by

This Bike Month we’ll be hosting weekly contests for your chance to win some really cool prizes. Kicking off Bike Month, we’ll test your creativity with a bike haiku contest.

Post your best bike haiku to the Bike Month Facebook event for a chance to win an Electric Houndstooth Cleverhood! We live in the rainy PNW, people, and you know that sooner rather than later, you’re going to need some rain gear. And this particular piece of rain gear looks mighty stylish!

So get your poet hat, hood or helmet on and share your best bike haiku with us! We’ll start:

Sunshine and blue skies
Lure us to two wheel travel
Happiness ensues

The winner will be announced Monday, May 6 at noon. Good luck!

Now is the best time to begin a good habit

Tuesday, April 30th, 2013 by

Commuter: Khatsini Simani, new commuter
Commute Challenge Team: Bike Ambassadors

One of our newest Cascade Bicycle Ambassadors, Khatsini Simani, is still fairly new to bike commuting herself but armed with maps and safety brochures, she and her fellow Cascade Bicycle Ambassadors are out in the community to share their own experiences and bike commuting tips with you.

A firm believer that now is the best time to begin a good habit, Khatsini began commuting by bike out of the desire to create more time to be active, an urge to travel with less dependency on the bus and, most recently, for the opportunity to be an ambassador for all forms of bicycling.

But like so many others, her hurdle to bike commuting was the fear of cycling alongside cars and potentially getting hit.

“The Urban Cycling Techniques class gave me a chance to push my boundaries in a safe yet challenging environment. During the training I learned that I enjoyed riding on the road as much as anywhere else (before I would ride mostly on trails and sidewalks),” said Khatsini. “Now that I have the basic road safety skills down, I can challenge myself to ride on busier streets on my own. I feel less limited when I plan trips and have found that sharing my story can help others gain confidence as well.”

Khatsini increasingly commutes by bike now.

“My main goal is to gradually make commuting by bike a more consistent part of my lifestyle,” she said.  “I think that bike month will definitely help me hold myself to that goal- as will contributing to the commuting miles of my [Commute Challenge] team and finding more people to ride with,” she said.

Khatsini said she’s discovered that bike commuting reduces stress and challenges her to be more aware of her surroundings.”

“I like taking photographs and will often take my camera with me when I ride,” she said.  “Recently I’ve seen a lot of younger women out on their bike- it’s awesome! The more bikers I see out and about, the more confident I feel and I hope the same applies to others.”

When she’s not biking to local events with her fellow ambassadors, Khatsini takes the bus from Seattle’s First Hill neighborhood to Kirkland where she attends school.

“My next commuting challenge is to bike for at least 50 percent of my commute to and from school consistently- that would be about 20 miles,” she said. “Now that I’ve put it out there, it will happen!”

 

We’re glad to have you as a Bike Ambassador and good luck with your challenge! Ride on!