Archive for the ‘Put a bike on it’ Category

“Live life. Bike. Eat Baklava!”

Tuesday, August 28th, 2012 by

There’s a new vendor in town and she hauls her entire business from place to place by bike. 

Serving “Artisan Peddled Baklava,” Frosene Sacco is a second generation Greek who knows how to make one delicious pastry.

“I learned how to make baklava from my grandmother and mother who made it often, especially during the holidays. I think of them as I’m baking. They taught me well,” said Sacco, who together with her husband founded Bikelava.

Baklava is a rich and sweet pastry made of layers of filo dough and filled with chopped nuts and syrup.

“It takes more time than the average pastry,” said Sacco, who worked as a baker before starting a career as an ESL teacher. “It can take almost two days.”

Sacco came upon the idea of becoming a bike vendor when leafing through a bike magazine a few years ago.

“I found this story about cargo bikes and the bike vendors who use them and I thought, ‘We could do that. We could sell pastries from a cargo bike’,” she recalled, adding that she has always been captivated by the bike vendors she encountered in Indonesia. “It took two years but that’s how Bikelava happened.”

Sacco said the bike simplifies the business and allows her to go out into the community and do something in a nontraditional way.

“I have biked all my life, especially long distances and self-contained tours,” said Sacco, a four-time STP-finisher. “And I enjoy meeting people and sharing culture through food and cooking.”

Sacco currently uses her vintage three-speed Schwinn or her husband’s touring back to haul the pastry-laden selling station to the Des Moines Waterfront Farmers Market on Saturdays and the South Lake Union Farmboat on Thursdays.

They are awaiting a mobile vending permit and hope to share Sacco’s food and culture to more places.

But growing her business isn’t necessarily her goal.

Sacco said she bakes her baklava in a commercial kitchen, about 140 pieces per baking session.“I have a regular job so my main goal is to just have fun,” she said.

“I sold out last week but you never know how each day goes,” she said.

Since she launched her business a little over a month ago, Sacco has already gained repeat customers and word-of-mouth about the delicious pastries is travelling quickly.

“So far, so good,” she said.  “This was something I wanted to do and I made it happen. It’s nice to have my own thing.”

Bicycle decorating abounds in Southeast Seattle

Thursday, August 16th, 2012 by

This Saturday, we will be celebrating community at the Rainier Valley Summer Streets event down in Columbia City.

Bike in the parade:

The day kicks off with the Rainier Valley Heritage Parade, and we welcome you to decorate your bikes with Cascade and then show them off by biking in the grand finale of the Heritage Parade Meet in the Greater New Bethel Baptist Church, 5279 Rainier Avenue South parking lot between 10:30 a.m and noon. After the parade, Rainier will be opened up to all non-motorized users to enjoy while getting to know the neighborhood.

Play at the Bike Extravaganza hosted by Bike Works:

Bike Works will be hosting their first ever Art Bike Contest will take place at 2 p.m. in front of Bike Works. Anyone and everyone is encouraged to participate. No rules apply. Entry fee is a suggested donation of $5 and a nonperishable food item which will be used to build Seattle’s Largest Canned Food Pyramid before being donated to the Rainier Valley Food Bank.

Additionally, there will be test rides, information booths and more bike decorating.  It is the one time of year you get to play in the street on Rainier Ave. For more information, please visit: http://www.seattle.gov/transportation/summer_rainier.htm

 

Cuteness alert: Cat in hat enjoys bicycle ride

Wednesday, August 1st, 2012 by

The cat even has its own handlebar. Well, pawbar, that is.

News round up: California gets bike-share; Cavendish calls for better laws; National Women’s Bicycling Summit; and more bike news

Tuesday, July 24th, 2012 by

California gets its first municipal bike-sharing program

Courtesy of Bike Nation

California got its first-ever municipal bike-sharing program on Saturday with the launch of a pilot project in Anaheim. Tustin-based Bike Nation opened up its initial kiosk with 10 hassle-free bikes that have airless tires and chainless drivetrains. [Read more…]

 

World champion Mark Cavendish calls for laws to protect bicyclists

In this clip from The Times, road race world champion Mark Cavendish calls on ministers to consider European laws to protect cyclists. “In Holland and Belgium the actual law is if the driver of a motorized vehicle has an accident with a cyclist, unless the driver can actively prove it was the cyclist’s fault it is the driver’s fault. There is an assumption of guilt on the driver,” he says. “I would like to see it examined, for sure. Cyclists can be in the wrong a lot of the time. They have got to ride within the law … but if people know there is a problem if they hit a cyclist they will look more, they have to be more aware of cyclists.” [Read more…]

 

First-ever National Women’s Bicycling Summit coming up in September

Courtesy of League of American Bicyclists

Hosted by the League of American Bicyclists and the Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals, the National Women’s Bicycling Summit is aimed at increasing the number of women who ride bikes and empower female leadership at all levels of the bicycle movement while providing a unique opportunity to network, share best practices and develop action steps to close the gender gap in American bicycling. [Read more…]

 

8-year-old killed while riding his bike in Federal Way

Eight-year-old Wayde Rodriguez-Fale was struck and killed by a car on Sunday night.

Wayde was riding his bicycle in Federal Way around 10 p.m. when he was hit by a vehicle on SW 333 Street. [Read more…]

 

Swedish company markets ‘invisible’ helmet

Courtesy of Hovding

Hövding is marketing a bicycle helmet unlike any other currently on the market. Claimed to be  ergonomic, practical, and complient with all the safety requirements, the helmet is ‘invisible’ and, like an airbag, pops out in case of “abnormal movements of a bicyclists in an accident”. [Read more..]

 

 

Author dies from complications of a bike crash

Author Stephen Covey passed away last week due to complications from a bicycle accident back in April. He was best known for his bestselling book The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.  In April, he suffered bleeding in his brain, cracked ribs and a partially collapsed lung after a bicycle crash. [Read more…]

 

Cyclocross: The Mommy Race

Courtesy of Outdoors NW

As we’re getting ready for CX season, here’s an inspiring story from a local mom who, after years of cheering on her kids and husband on the sidelines, decided to jump in and do a cyclocross race herself. [Read more…]

 

 

A history of bicycling in Chicago

The Huffington Post featured an interesting look at Chicago before it was a bicycle-friendly city. A video released by Chicago Park District last week takes viewers back to the introduction of “high-wheelers” in 1870 as well as to a time when two-wheelers were banned in the city. [Read more…]

 

E-Bike to be part of U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame exhibit

EVELO, Inc., a New York City-based electric bicycle company, announced today that one of their electric bikes will be displayed as part of an exhibit at the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame located in Davis, California.

The bike, one of three models currently manufactured by EVELO, is a pedal-assist electric bike equipped with a NuVinci N360 drivetrain , can reach speeds of up to 20mph on electric power, and is powered by a lithium battery with an estimated battery range of 40 miles. [Read more…]

 

Op-Ed: Are conservatives engaged in a war on bicycling?

Bangor resident examines the new transportation bill and wonders when bicycling became a political act in this Op-Ed in The Bangor Daily news. [Read more…]

Stranded with your bicycle? Call AAA…or not

Monday, July 16th, 2012 by

AAA Washington recently launched an emergency bicycle service, offering roadside assistance to those stranded with their bicycle.

As of July 1, 2012, Washington cyclists can call the AAA hotline when they run into trouble, and like the emergency road service for motor vehicles, AAA will dispatch a service car to come get them.

The AAA crews won’t fix your bicycle however. Instead, they will transport you and your bicycle to a safe location of your choosing, such as a nearby bike shop or your home.

The transportation distance depends on the mileage covered by the membership plan, ranging between five miles for classic members to 200 miles for premier members.

Washington is the fourth AAA region to offer this service, following British Columbia, Oregon and Idaho.

AAA is yet another company that, while recognizing a need for assistance for bicyclists, has rather limited service. Like most companies, the emergency bicycle service can only be added to an automobile policy. It is not offered as a stand-alone policy for those of us who do not own or drive a car.

Perhaps then, a bicyclist-specific policy might be a better option.

The Portland-based Better World Club, the nation’s only environmentally friendly auto club, on the other hand, offers a roadside assistance program for cyclists and can be purchased with or without automobile policy.

They, too, will offer the stranded cyclist a ride to a location of their choosing (within 30 miles) and while they will also offer to bring commonly-available tools (to fix a flat), they will not fix the bike for you.

Additionally, BWC announced last week that it is teaming up with Gales Creek Insurance Services to add comprehensive accident and liability coverage to its bicycle assistance program for a complete insurance package.

And then there is California-based Spoke Bicycle Insurance  which offers a package that not only includes roadside assistance, but also includes bicycle liability coverage for both the insured cyclist as well as other road sharers, bicycle theft coverage, bicycle damage coverage to covers repairs needed due to collisions or unforeseen occurrences, trip interruption coverage. Their insurance is currently only available in Arizona, California, Nevada, Utah, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Hawaii.