Tagged with georgia

Bill would let bikers pass legally through red lights

If this passes (though it probably won’t) I think they should give the same consideration to cyclists, who also cannot trip the light sensors…

From the AJC article

When Ann Purcell is tooling around the state on her Honda motorcycle, the weight of the sport bike is often not enough to trip the sensors at red lights.

Most people would grumble — and worry about the safety of being trapped in an intersection — in silence. But Purcell is a Georgia legislator, so she is pushing her colleagues to approve a measure to let bikers go through red lights when the signals don’t know they’re there.

“We just want to make it so you can go through without, quote, breaking the law,” said Purcell, a Republican representative from Rincon. “We understand we would have to go through with great caution.”

House Bill 161 basically would allow motorcyclists to treat red lights like stop signs.

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Critical Mass Halloween Atlanta…a few pics

Wow, I drastically underestimated the turnout for this thing. Thats what happens when you live so far away from the city I guess. This little clip of the mass crossing Moreland doesn’t even show the whole group. I hope homeboy found his wife lol (42secs)…

Since I lost my camera in a “party mishap” earlier this year, all i had to grab snaps with was the iPhone, so the quality isn’t very good on these pics, but you can get an idea of how everyone was in the halloween spirit for the ride.

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I couldn’t tell if this guy was running the full Rock Racing kit as a costume or if this is his normal riding gear.
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bicycle,atlanta,critical mass
AYHSMB southeast remix
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Probably the best “in theme of the event” costume I saw…
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bicycle,atlanta,critical mass
There was a whole gang of smart phone icons…Angry Birds! Wish I could have gotten a pic of the whole group together…
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bicycle,atlanta,critical mass
Probably my fave costume was E.T and Elliot. Great job on the E.T. sculpture/model…the only way it could have been better were if she would been riding the actual Kuwahara E.T. BMX bike.
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The ride was a blast, although I ran out of beer waaaay too early. Next year I’ll rig up some sort of way to bring more suds. One thing I thought was pretty rad was when the mass got out onto Moreland in East Atlanta and cruised up to Little Five Points. Since I don’t get to come to many of these events I have never been to one where such a long stretch of such a major road was infiltrated. I had some other things to do that night, so when we got to L5P I dropped off so I could ride back to Kirkwood since I had parked there, but the ride kept trucking along headed up towards Ponce and who knows where else. While I was riding away in the opposite direction I could hear all the ruckus from the crowd and the car horns from quite a distance away. I hope it went long and everyone had a great time.

If you only do one CM a year, Halloween is the one to do for sure.

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Share the Road Georgia License Plate

Really wish I had enough of a lootstack to get the Share The Road license plate on the new car I just got, but I don’t.

I have a very complex relationship with the whole “Share the Road” concept. On one hand it seems so simple…self explanatory, and easy to follow. But in practice, I am a believer that a lot of cyclists use the “Share the Road” ethos to get away with riding like assholes. There are some instances of car/cyclist interaction where it is better for everyone involved if the cyclist just get the hell out of the way, or at least rode “defensively”, which is something that I think would prevent a lot of accidents.  Unfortunately I lack the wordsmithing technique to accurately describe what I am trying to say here, but the main point is that I see a lot of cyclist around the North Georgia area doing stupid shit that might get them killed and you can just tell they are trying to force the whole “Share the Road” issue in a way that just creates more car vs cyclist anger.

Anyway, I would hope that I would never have to stoop to the level of using my horn, or creating any kind of dangerous situation between myself and someone who is making it impossible not to. But if it ever came to that, when they saw the tail end of my car, and realized that they had just been in a negative interaction with one of their own, that they might take a sec to ponder whether they could have played the whole thing differently, since obviously I am on the cyclists side, and not one of the ignorant bicyclist hating masses that love to harass any rider they see on these shoulderless back roads.

Ugh, I prolly didn’t explain that right, or maybe I made enough of a point that you know what I mean…

The other issue is that I am skeptical of how the extra money it will cost to get this plate will be used.

Here is the breakdown from the Georgia Department of Revenue website:

 

Cost and Fees Distribution:

Initial cost: $80 plus applicable ad valorem tax.

Cost to renew annually: $55.00 plus applicable ad valorem tax.

Of the Initial $80 fees collected for the issuance of these tags, the fees shall be distributed as follows:

$20 Annual License Reg. Fee

$1 to the County Tag Agent

$22 to Sponsoring Organization

$37 to State of Georgia General Treasury

Of the $55 Annual Renewal fees, the fees shall be distributed as follows:

$20 Annual License Reg. Fee

$22 to Sponsoring Organization

$13 to State of Georgia General Treasury

Where do the funds go? Governor’s Highway Safety Program

 

Hmm, maybe I need to learn more about what the Governor’s Highway Safety Program does and how it relates to bicycles on Georgia roads. Regardless, buying the car eliminated any fundage I may have had to get the fancy tag, so it isn’t going to happen til next year renewal if I decide to take the plunge.

 

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I wonder if they are having a “Harvest Jam” BMX contest at Skatepark of Athens this year? I am so out of the loop. The 2008 one was a blast and I got some great photos.

In other news, rumble strips suck if you are on a bike. The ones in the picture are from Peachtree Industrial Blvd, which is a road I am unsure if it is even legal to ride a bike on. It’s a divided highway with a grass median in the middle. Occasionally I have seen other folks riding there, but not many, so maybe we are all just “getting away with it”. Anyway, the rumble strips are freakin gnarly and as you can see, if you want to avoid them then you have to ride the edge that basically puts you almost out into the road.  Since people whizzing by in cars are unaware of the rumble strips unless they run off the road, when they pass a biker who is hugging the outside edge they most likely think that they are doing it to -claim space-, which does nothing to help the car/cyclist relations around here. From the drivers perspective we are just smug cyclists trying to hog up their road. The sad thing is, it would be perfect if they would have ran the rumble strips up to the edge of the white line and then left some blank space at the furthers right edge of the shoulder. The same goal would have been accomplished, and the cyclists could have had a much safer way to use the road. Oh well. Just furthers my belief that ALL the bad road engineers get sent to Georgia.

While I was out and about I passed by Board & Bike, which wasn’t open but had this rad vintage Schwinn Collegiate on display in the window. It has just the right amount of wear to let you know it isn’t a restore, it has just been well taken care of. LOVE the generator lights. I am betting that this is an American made bicycle. Classy move for them to give this some window time.

Right now, the riding weather here in Georgia is PERFECT. Mid 70′s, no humidity, not too windy and lots of Fall color. I hope you are getting to take advantage of it.

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Worst Ride of 2010

Without a doubt today kind of sucked. Regardless, I never got mad or sad or even mildly annoyed. The tale is as follows…

After taking care of my morning errands, the beautiful weather mandated some seat time, so I decided to head over to Gainesville College Trail on the ‘Goose. Before this could happen though, I had to fix the rear flat, which was no big deal. No big deal except that I had to have a little fight with Ye Olde 17$ Avenir Pump, which for some reason decided that it would work fine for tubes that already had some air in them, but would not work for a tube that was totally empty. Strange, I know. But patience, and switching to a presta adapter, ended up getting the job done.

Once I got to the trail, it was evident that something was not the norm. There were several cops, and when I turned into the lot I almost creamed some SUV that was coming up the wrong side of the road. The cop that was standing there didn’t seem to have an issue with this, but if you ask me, Mr SUV deserved a ticket.

Apparently there was some sort of running event there earlier that day, and the cops and wrong way drivers were lingerers. There was also a line of like 13 port o potties right next to the path leading into the trail.

Since the running event was completed, it was ON for the ride, and so the ride began. Things were straight up squirrelly from the start. Just felt weird. Too much air in the tires, too much loose dirt, old tire on the front with no real traction to speak of…I was sliding and bouncing around with wreckless abandon. Felt very disconnected from the bike, and popping little jumps off roots and stuff just had no flow at all.

At this point in the ride, my legs were feeling okay though…made it up the first and non-climb climb (there are no -real- climbs at GCT) in the big ring without getting too winded. Then, it happened.

The First Blood Drawing Wreck of 2010

Aside from the trail rash, it was a thing of beauty. I had seen some article a zillion years ago about how when you crash, you can dissipate the energy of the fall smoothly by tucking and rolling instead of just smashing to the ground. So, that’s what I did…and it wasn’t really a conscious effort, I just sort of automatically did it. The reaction was automatically triggered by ultradeep programming from a zillion BMX crashes. Seriously, I could have made a “How To Crash” instructional video, it was that proper.

I’m just sayin.

On the downside, I would love to tell you about how the wreck was the result of going full tilt and carving some sick line around an off camber curve or something that would puddle the ladies undies, but it was actually much much the opposite. As I had said earlier, things were going way squirrelly, and there is a point in the trail with a slight rise that has a horizontal root going across the crest…I usually pop a little jump off it…but today my right hand pedal clipped it at the bottom of a pedal stroke, which threw me off balance just enough to send me OTB.

I stood up, brushed it off, laughed, because it seemed appropriate to do so, then got on to finish that lap, thinking that he worst was behind me. Everything about this ride HAS TO get better from here on out.

No major mishaps occurred on the remainder of lap 1. Lap two started without incident, and stayed relatively standard, albeit a little weak and still super squirrelly, for about the first 2/3rds of the way. I always do the first and second laps in opposite directions and this particular direction is what I consider the “slower” route.

Then it happened.

I was coming to a portion of the trail that has some  “S” turn action. I carved into the turn at a very mediocre speed, and immediately felt the ass end of the bike sway outward in a very unnatural way. Kept going and carved through about two more sections which netted the same fishtailing type feel, so I hopped off to see wtf was going on.

Turns out I broke what I will call the “Pivot Bolt/Brearing Assembly”, or PBBA for short. In the pic you can see about a half inch of the shaft sticking out of the pivot assembly, which is normally flush with the bearing. In the other side, the which I couldn’t get a good pic of because the drivetrain is in the way, the bearing has completely disintegrated, and since the shaft has pushed through, it basically is just sitting there unrestrained, and has about in inch to an 1 to 1.5 inches of play in any direction. Needless to say, the ride was over. I have to give the old bike credit though, she didn’t make me walk. I was able to pedal back to the car, so long as I took it extremely slow, and took it way easy on the curves and downhills. One interesting thing I found, was that using the granny made the fishtailing MUCH worse. It made it happen when I was just pedaling in a straight line. Damn…Damn the man.

On the way back to the car, it was evident that this may be the death of the old Otero Super(tanker). I have already broken the rear triangle once, which Mongoose replaced under warranty, but I am really not thinking that they are going to replace this part under warranty, since it is actually subject to “wear”. We’ll see though…I will take it in and ask. Hell it may work out that they hook a brotha up! If they try to pull some kind of “we’ll float you the part but you’ll have to pay the labor” then I’ll try to get them to just give me the part and fix it myself. If the repair will cost parts and labor, and it’s more than say…$40…then my old friend will be disassembled and turned into a pile of spare parts, and the aluminum frame components will ceremoniously be taken to the recycling center or someplace where I can cash them in for loot.

Can you believe that by this point I actually still wasn’t pissed? I even suprised myself with that one. Why bother getting angry though? Now at least I know ONE bike I cannot take to Baltimore in November…at least at the moment.

The best part of the whole thing was when I got home. My folks had my 2 year old niece Kaiyah out running around the yard, and she made her way into our workshed. She heard me bugging out about the bike and started saying “I fix it” in that too cute to be real kind of way, then stumbled around looking for a tool so she could “fix it”. She found a rubber hammer, and proceeded to “I fix it” for Uncle Bob, by repeating the phrase over and over while clocking the pedal with the hamer. See,  she loves old Uncle B and knows that even though it didn’t make me mad that the bike was broken today, it will surely bother me eventually when I start to miss my time in the woods…and when I think about the lootstack I am going to have to lay out to get this thing fixed or get another bike. Even if the bike never runs again, as far as I am concerned Kaiyah “I fix it” just fine…it was almost worth breaking jst to have that moment.

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Bicycle Ride Across Georgia (BRAG) Bikefest 2010

October 15-17, 2010 | Tifton, GA

Come and enjoy the warm days and cool evenings of Georgia in October. Ride the flat, scenic terrain of Tift, Ben Hill, Irwin, Berrien, and Cook counties. This will be the second year Georgia BikeFest has been held in Tifton, GA. The town is looking forward to our visit. Georgia BikeFest is an opportunity to rekindle BRAG friendships and enjoy the fellowship of other cyclists.

Rides of varying lengths for all skill levels throughout the weekend.

Man I wish I would have known about this a little sooner…kind of looks like a good point of entry for someone (like me) who has never done an organized ride. Maybe next year…(sigh)

need more info? click this linkotronic

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Georgia Bike Summit 2010

The first Georgia Bike Summit will bring together advocates, business leaders, on-road and off-road recreational cyclists and commuters, elected officials and staff from across Georgia to meet in a state-wide forum, setting the stage for bicycling gains. We will network, collaborate, educate, and empower advocates and attendees; identify common issues in our local communities; and set priorities for Georgia Bikes in 2011.

GA Bike Summit Website

GA Bike Summit Facebook Page

biketivism

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new fave route

Hmmm, I have only just recently started riding right from my front door. Fear of standard redneckery such as being hollered at from a passing truck window or having things thrown at me while riding had prevented me from doing so til now. But so far it hasn’t  been too bad, and this morning it got even better.

The route I have been doing takes me up through old downton Buford which runs along some train tracks for a while, then spills out onto Peachtree Industrial Parkway before heading back to the hut. I have now done this route twice but today is the first time I have done it so early in the morning.

Doing it early netted two bonus levels:

Bonus #1 — It wasn’t so ungodly hot and humid that you practically suffocate as you pedal through the quicksand like air…

Bonus #2 — I was on Ye Olde Talera, my old school tro-moly framed mountain bike with the insane fork rake, yet still managed to do the entire ride in the big ring ANNNND, caught up with 2 different totally kitted out road bike tour de france wannabe’s who were out for their morning spin. It was pretty rad to be able to use them as a rabbit to keep my pace up. Totally caught them both by suprise.

I saw at least 6 different road bikers out and about over the course of the route today, which makes me want a road bike even more. Now that I know they are out in the mornings I will start to integrate early A.M. rides into the weekly routine.

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1000 miles so far this year!

Yes! I have rode just over a thousand miles this year so far. I know that for a lot of super fit people that isn’t so big a benchmark but for me it is pretty rad. It is over three time the mileage I did last year and certainly the most I have ever rode in my life.

There is no way to ignore the fact that at this point logging miles is no longer a factor in my long term goal of doing a ride from Georgia to Baltimore MD. I can make the miles, now I need to learn how to camp and be self sufficient on the road.

It is hilarious to me that I have three of pretty much the same computer for each of the three bikes I regularly ride…

When you find something that works, stick with it I always say. These no frills CatEye comps have ben totally rad, reliable, and inexpensive. I know I can use each one on more than one bike but buying just the mounting bracket kit is more of a pain in the ass than just buying the whole shebang, so I went the “keep it simple stupid” route. On the upside, now that there is a mount on each bike, if I ever lose one of the units I can do the whole multi bike thing with one of them.

The only downside to passing 1000 is that I got there in fairly little chunks. I’d love to do longer rides but time constraints make that unrealistic. Lately I have ben on a program of actually making my rides shorter but more intense. It has been pretty easy to do that since I have ben back on the mountain bike so much lately.

Overall, I am pretty happy with things as we approach the half year mark.

EAVB_VBKGSQYISJ

EAVB_DQBAPBRIGU

EAVB_NCIADHPYUO

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The Keiran @ Dick Lane Velodrome 5/8/2010

Saturday evening Graham said “come to DLV and get yourself in a better mood”, so I packed up a cooler full of cold ones and headed that way. The final rounds of their first pro racing series were due to start about 6ish. Waaaay rad poster for the events this year:

The weather was fairly cool which made it a great evening to take in some racing. Bonus level:  hottie NPR interview babe-tron Graham was recorded by last time was spacing around again with her headphones on. I love her so much.

The racing was great! We got there in time to catch some of the young riders from Bicycle Little League doing their thing. Those kids really have the spirit and it is great to see people that young already into the racing scene. My only other experience seeing young riders like that was BMX racing at Oregon Ridge Park in Baltimore circa like 1983 or something.

The adult riders were caning it proper. I took my camera but for some reason the only shots I got of any racing were on the iPhone:

Speeds were HIGH and there were a few spills. Track racing is just freakin sick when you are there in person to witness it. My favorite rider of the day was this dude Spiderman, who was all kitted out as the web slinger.  He might have gotten discounted for the novelty gear and considered an also-ran if he would have just brought up the rear every race, but he was riding fairly aggressively which made the wacky kit seem all the more wicked.

The whole evening (and I suppose a bunch of qualifying earlier in the day but I could be wrong) lead up to a really kick ass final. Here is a little vid of the final laps:

Please excuse my vertically oriented iPhone vid quality, I did the best I could. What I really want you to see if the energy of the crowd. People were hanging over the rail banging on the boards cheering on the riders…the whole mess coming to a huge crescendo with the that song from ROCKY running in the background.

While I was spacing around I grabbed a couple of snaps of this really interesting vehicle, which is used to motor pace the starts of the Kieran races.

Can’t help but wonder if it came with the Rock Shox or if someone did a little -upgrade-. I noticed that the driver was pedaling the entire time even though the motor seemed to be delivering the power. You think you can push a gear this tall?

One other thing I noticed was that the speed this thing would travel at seemed remarkable consistent. It may be diferent when you are actually on the thing, but from the bleachers it looked like there was almost no variation in speed once it got going, which is probably important when leading out a pace line of bikes that cannot stop or slow down quickly.

All in all it was huge fun, and Graham was right…it did get me into a better mood.

add me on twitter @RobertAshton :)

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