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  1. #51
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    Is anyone familiar with riding on Queens Blvd? It's a wide road, but maybe too many cars and they run fast? There is at least one fatal accident on the Queens Blvd I saw on the ghost bike site, though he was running the red light.

  2. #52
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    though he was running the red light.
    There's a big problem in crossing Queens Blvd on a bike.

    The transition time for green to red on a NYC traffic light is 4.5 seconds (3.0 sec yellow and 1.5 sec both sides red). A bike going at 10 mph will traverse 66 feet in 4.5 seconds. Queens Blvd is 170 feet wide from curb to curb. That means a bike seeing a green light and trying to cross Queens Blvd may get only 39% across the roadway before cross traffic sees a green light. If there's a collision, it's not all that obvious that the bike was running a red light.

    There are some other problems. If the biker saw a light changing while he was crossing, then he might stop at one of the traffic islands. However, lights for cross traffic extend for only half the crossing width. Thus after a bike rider crosses half the boulevard, he is potentially in no-man's land. He's got no clue that the light may have changed while he was crossing.

    It's worse for streets that cross at a diagonal. The crossing at 51st Ave is 390 feet. The crossing at 69th St, the location of a Ghost Bicycle, is 180 feet wide.

    51st Ave is my preferred route to Lower Manhattan and Downtown Brooklyn. My failsafe technique for crossing Queens Blvd is wait for a red light and cross only when that red light turns green. That way I'm sure that I will have the full green cycle and enough time to cross.

  3. #53
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    Thanks for the information! Your knowledge of this blvd. is incredible!

    Quote Originally Posted by SBinNYC View Post
    The crossing at 69th St, the location of a Ghost Bicycle, is 180 feet wide.
    That's exactly where the accident I referred to happened.

    So far you were talking about crossing the Queens blvd. What about riding on it, safety-wise? If you want to go from the close-to-Manhattan side of Queens to the western side (E/F/R trains direction), what is the best way?

  4. #54
    Bike addict, dreamer AdamDZ's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by vol View Post
    Is anyone familiar with riding on Queens Blvd? It's a wide road, but maybe too many cars and they run fast? There is at least one fatal accident on the Queens Blvd I saw on the ghost bike site, though he was running the red light.
    There is a reason Queens Blvd is known as the Blvd of Death. It has some of the highest rate of pedestrian deaths and I suppose it's not that much safer for cyclists. Ironically, one of NYC cycling advocates was killed while crossing the Queens Blvd and yes, he run a red light. Perhaps that's the ghost bike you saw. I used to live in Forest Hills and avoided the Blvd at all cost. Perhaps it has changed for the better in the last few years, but I doubt it's much safer.
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  5. #55
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    Quote Originally Posted by AdamDZ View Post
    There is a reason Queens Blvd is known as the Blvd of Death.
    Oh my, didn't know that! Thanks for mentioning this! I rode only once right up to the 69th st, but I walked across the blvd. I usually like wide road and thought it not a bad blvd. to take. (The link in my last post is probably about the advocate you were referring to?)

  6. #56
    Senior Member FattyArbuckle's Avatar
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    The fatality rate is down from what used to be an average of 10 people per year: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queens_Boulevard#History

    If I'm on QB, it's always for less than a mile, during daylight, & obviously only on the pothole-ridden service road. Or I'm crossing it, preferably not @ Yellowstone where it's 16 lanes wide. What a monster...

    Quote Originally Posted by vol View Post
    If you want to go from the close-to-Manhattan side of Queens to the western side (E/F/R trains direction), what is the best way?
    I don't think there's an easy way. I use this route to stay as close to QB as possible but stay on mostly residential roads. Unfortunately you gotta use a footbridge across the L.I.E. though. There's probably a better way out there...

    Somebody on this site once said the street layout of Queens was made by a spider on LSD. At first I agreed, but after a summer of riding here, I guess that's what happens when you have a lot of pre-existing obstacles like criss-crossing railways, highways, industrial areas, cemeteries, and farms. Particularly in central Queens there are a lot of neighborhood pockets where there are only a couple ways in or out.

  7. #57
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    Yes QB is not a good place to ride and I avoid it. I do ride the sidewalk over the train tracks to access the 59th St bridge.

  8. #58
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    Going for a bike ride right now it is 33 degrees, I will see how my new booties and related cold weather gear perform.

  9. #59
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    bayside small.jpg

    Photo of Bayside near Fort Totten. It was a great day for a ride.

  10. #60
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    Here is a story about a commuter/rider from Queens



    A Queens man dropped 30 pounds in less than a year by hopping off the train and onto a bike.
    Marcus Woollen, 36, abandoned his 40-minute commute on the E train in favor of riding a bicycle from Jackson Heights to his office in midtown.
    "By midsummer, the weight was falling off and I had to buy new pants," said Woollen, who testified in support of extending the city's network of bike lanes at a Thursday City Council hearing. "I don't have to worry about watching what I eat anymore."
    Woollen was cagey when asked how much he weighs, but hinted that he's about 20 pounds from being considered overweight. A writer, actor and Web developer, he looks like a new man.


    Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/...#ixzz1805FSvdu

  11. #61
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    Quote Originally Posted by vol View Post
    Is there a better way to ride from Manhattan to Queens than crossing the Queensborough Bridge?
    That depends on the locations in Manhattan and Queens and what your definition of "better" is.

    For midtown, UES and UWS locations in Manhattan and locations in Queens north of Metropolitan and Jamaica Aves, the Queensboro is probably the shortest and most direct route.

    For Manhattan areas below Houston, I've prefer using the WB even though I live new LGA. Similarly, people going to/from southern Queens may prefer using one of the downtown bridges and riding across Brooklyn. There are not decent connections between the Queensboro and southern Queens. Newtown Creek gets in the way.

  12. #62
    Senior Member Not the Slowest's Avatar
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    Maybe Blvd of Death for Older people or those that do not use crosswalks

    Quote Originally Posted by AdamDZ View Post
    There is a reason Queens Blvd is known as the Blvd of Death. It has some of the highest rate of pedestrian deaths and I suppose it's not that much safer for cyclists. Ironically, one of NYC cycling advocates was killed while crossing the Queens Blvd and yes, he run a red light. Perhaps that's the ghost bike you saw. I used to live in Forest Hills and avoided the Blvd at all cost. Perhaps it has changed for the better in the last few years, but I doubt it's much safer.
    Hmmm, QB may not be as bad as some of you make it. In fact I can tell you that part are much safer for cyclists than many pedestrians.
    My commute from teh 59th St Bridge to the end of QB(not today) allows me to see the good and bad of the roadway and actually I find it a very easy and fast morning commute. Since most major stores do not open until after 9am and are on the opposite side of the roadway I can fly towards Jamaica. The most dangerous areas are by Highway entrances for the BQE, LIE and Van Wyck. Knowing
    where they are simply requires you to stay to the LEFT most lane. My return commute does have the issue of many more cars in the service lanes and bottle necks by Queens Center Mall etc.
    Are there better=safer ways to go back towards the city, Yes. I leave those for the warmer days when a longer ride is less of an issue and a Subway bailout is not a factor (ie Mechanical or similar).

    As my commute can take an 1:40 or so and is 23 miles, I like to choose QB as my "known" evil. Other routes with Stop signs allow too many chances for drivers to run them
    and thus run me over.

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  13. #63
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    Another day another ride and photo
    Kissena Lake 2010-12-17_.jpg

  14. #64
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    Quote Originally Posted by v70cat View Post
    The Motor Parkway Bike Path
    Attachment 176289

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Island_Motor_Parkway

    "The western portion of the Motor Parkway in Queens was reopened a few months after closure as a bicycle path from Kissena Park to Alley Pond"
    It is beautiful car free section with some hills to train on.
    I rode that path a few times during the summer and fall. It's a really nice ride but it can get a little congested at times with all the joggers and people walking their dogs. My bell doesn't always get them to move out of the way, so a lot of times there's a bottleneck and I have to hit my brakes unnecessarily. It gets quieter going northbound towards Fresh Meadows, but then I get all these squirrels darting across the path right in front of me. One time for sure I didn't think I would brake in time and I would get a mangled squirrel in my spokes. But at the last second it did some crazy acrobatic move and jumped out of the way.

  15. #65
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    Quote Originally Posted by FattyArbuckle View Post
    Oh yeah, & to the little old asian lady doing her morning arm-swinging calisthenics in Kissena park wearing headphones:

    Could you not walk backwards on the greenway path while you do it? Forwards is fine, thanks.
    LOL, I've had the pleasure of almost crashing into her as well. She should just do like the rest of them and stick to that jazzercise dance routine they do on the grass.

  16. #66
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    I was riding the Motor Parkway path about a week ago and startled a lady as I passed. She yells ass, yet I did nothing wrong? Funny how walkers and riders are supposed to share the path and I was a "ass".

    They have a sign asking riders to go slow but nothing asking the walkers to share the path.

  17. #67
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    Snow, today I wanted to get out for a ride but we are supposed to get over 10 inches of snow.

    I guess I will set-up the trainer and give it a run. Got to work off some of the holiday weight.

  18. #68
    Bike addict, dreamer AdamDZ's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by v70cat View Post
    Snow, today I wanted to get out for a ride but we are supposed to get over 10 inches of snow.

    I guess I will set-up the trainer and give it a run. Got to work off some of the holiday weight.
    Studded tires?
    Check....
    Snowboarding goggles?
    Check...
    Sealskinz?
    Check...
    Amfib bibs?
    Check...

    Looking forward to riding my bike tomorrow morning
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  19. #69
    Bike addict, dreamer AdamDZ's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by AdamDZ View Post
    Studded tires?
    Check....
    Snowboarding goggles?
    Check...
    Sealskinz?
    Check...
    Amfib bibs?
    Check...

    Looking forward to riding my bike tomorrow morning
    Uh oh.... announcing defeat! Snow is knee-deep and the streets aren't plowed yet here.
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  20. #70
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    Quote Originally Posted by AdamDZ View Post
    Uh oh.... announcing defeat! Snow is knee-deep and the streets aren't plowed yet here.
    You walking?

  21. #71
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    Tuesday is a better shot.

  22. #72
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    I was looking forward to your tale of conquest!!
    "The antithesis of self-reliance is collectivism..."
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  23. #73
    Bike addict, dreamer AdamDZ's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by 10 Wheels View Post
    You walking?
    Nah. Stayed home My train wasn't running either, so....
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  24. #74
    Bike addict, dreamer AdamDZ's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by sourdoughT View Post
    I was looking forward to your tale of conquest!!
    Well, tomorrow will be a challenge too, I'm sure. Although, plows finally made it to my neighborhood so hopefully by morning more streets should be passable.
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  25. #75
    Bike addict, dreamer AdamDZ's Avatar
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    OK, I made it today without any problems. I took sidewalks to the main streets that were plowed, but since the sidewalks along those were buried under piles of snow pedestrians walked on roadways which force the few cars out there to drive slowly and carefully. I had to walk through piles of snow twice maybe. Some blocks had hard packed snow which wasn't bad and the Williamsburg Bridge bikeway was plowed and salted! So it was slow and harder than normal (30psi, studded tires) it was actually kind of fun. But I'm going to leave early so I can ride still during daylight.
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