Critical Mass: Houston
#1
bill nyecycles
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Critical Mass: Houston
So, I just discovered this this afternoon because I stumbled across it on the Houston sub******, and then found this video on youtube
Holy balls.
Anyone here take part? I've never even heard of it, and having just moved here I think it'd be a great way to meet people (hopefully - we're in our early 30s and don't know anyone here yet). But man, that's a ton of people.
Is it worth it? Or has it just become a giant cluster****?
Holy balls.
Anyone here take part? I've never even heard of it, and having just moved here I think it'd be a great way to meet people (hopefully - we're in our early 30s and don't know anyone here yet). But man, that's a ton of people.
Is it worth it? Or has it just become a giant cluster****?
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I went on it a year ago and took some pictures. I live in Austin, so I don't make it to Houston too often.
From what I've heard, the size has at least doubled since then.
It was a big clusterf back then, but then again, that's what Critical Mass is. As for if it's worth it, if you live in the area, I'd say make it and make your own decision. You can always leave and head home if you find it to be not to your liking.
There *are* a lot of people who almost never ride (once a month) and so don't really know what they're doing, drunks, brakeless fixie riders with various levels of skill, hipsters, etc. But even if you don't relate to those folk, you'll find folk you can relate to. It's certainly quite interesting.
From what I've heard, the size has at least doubled since then.
It was a big clusterf back then, but then again, that's what Critical Mass is. As for if it's worth it, if you live in the area, I'd say make it and make your own decision. You can always leave and head home if you find it to be not to your liking.
There *are* a lot of people who almost never ride (once a month) and so don't really know what they're doing, drunks, brakeless fixie riders with various levels of skill, hipsters, etc. But even if you don't relate to those folk, you'll find folk you can relate to. It's certainly quite interesting.
#3
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The one or two times I went to CM here in Dallas, it involved standing around and talking for an hour, then riding a bike for 8 miles, then standing around and talking some more. So yeah, maybe a great way to meet people, not so great for cranking out the miles.
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From a rider I know:
I stayed at the front, best strategy. When we stopped at Randalls, the parking lot was full to capacity! The store overwhelmed. But, in all honesty...the vibe was incredible! Other than hitting a few uphills where the slower riders failed to stay right, i found myself enjoying the whole thing. As expected, staying in the front is optimal, allows greater speed and maneuverability than being in the pack.
Loved it, plan on repeating next month.
They had over 2,000 riders on the last one.
8,600 members
https://www.facebook.com/groups/62074084734/
I stayed at the front, best strategy. When we stopped at Randalls, the parking lot was full to capacity! The store overwhelmed. But, in all honesty...the vibe was incredible! Other than hitting a few uphills where the slower riders failed to stay right, i found myself enjoying the whole thing. As expected, staying in the front is optimal, allows greater speed and maneuverability than being in the pack.
Loved it, plan on repeating next month.
They had over 2,000 riders on the last one.
8,600 members
https://www.facebook.com/groups/62074084734/
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Last edited by 10 Wheels; 09-29-13 at 09:35 PM.
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They rode 25 miles.
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Last edited by 10 Wheels; 09-29-13 at 09:45 PM.
#6
bill nyecycles
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Yeah I joined the FB group earlier today.
Seems like there were over 1,000 people this pas weekend. That's crazy!
I haven't been properly downtown yet - just stuck to our west where our apartment is. We would obviously have to drive in for the ride, but man finding parking for that many people must be ridiculously hard.
Also, it said on the website the route does not always take you back to where you started - which would be a problem for me since I don't know my way around downtown.
Seems like there were over 1,000 people this pas weekend. That's crazy!
I haven't been properly downtown yet - just stuck to our west where our apartment is. We would obviously have to drive in for the ride, but man finding parking for that many people must be ridiculously hard.
Also, it said on the website the route does not always take you back to where you started - which would be a problem for me since I don't know my way around downtown.
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And a lot of the riders probably rode in or took the bus rather than driving in.
Also, it said on the website the route does not always take you back to where you started - which would be a problem for me since I don't know my way around downtown.
Last edited by dougmc; 09-29-13 at 10:26 PM.
#9
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It looks like a massive excuse to be a jerk on the road.
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#14
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I'm a singular jerk. I don't get together with a thousand of my jerk friends and block intersections for 20 minutes at a time.
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Because the roads between my house and work are bike-hostile. I'd ride much of the time if it were less so.
I don't block the intersections personally if I can avoid it, but all together we snarl traffic nicely for dozens of hours a week, every week.
I don't block the intersections personally if I can avoid it, but all together we snarl traffic nicely for dozens of hours a week, every week.
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You gonna eat that?
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#20
bill nyecycles
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anyone a subscriber to the chronicle?
i'd like to read this article: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/life...4857481.php#/0
i'd like to read this article: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/life...4857481.php#/0
#21
You gonna eat that?
#22
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But you don't send corkers into an intersection and take it over for 20 minutes, stopping all crossing traffic from using it. That's what Critical Mass Houston has been doing. Imagine trying to get somewhere on a Friday night (in a car, on a bike, whatever) and being stuck at a light for 20 minutes while an organized group occupies the intersection. That's just childish behavior, and I don't want to be around it.
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Though, again, what you've described -- "being stuck at a light for 20 minutes" -- happens many, many times during rush hour throughout the world. Now, it's not due to an organized group (not that Critical Mass is organized, mind you, but it is a group), it's just due to heavy traffic. Rush hour, like Happy hour, lasts many hours.
It's 2,000 vehicles, all taking the same route, They're going to snarl traffic no matter what they do. If they stopped for red lights, they'd take three times as long to get through intersections and therefore block traffic going the same direction as them more, but at least cross traffic would be better able to flow (as long as nobody was turning.) That said, I'd prefer they stop for red lights, if only just to reduce the criticism.
Also, where did the 20 minute figure come from? If they're corking, they ought to be able to move faster than that. Watching the video that was posted shows them going through the intersection at about four bicycles per second (and this seems to be the tail end, so presumably the front was even more densely packed), so at that rate 2000 bicycles should take about eight minutes. Still a long time to wait, but not twenty minutes.
In Austin, the police arrest corkers (when they catch them) for "Obstruction of a Highway or other passageway", a class B misdemeanor that's normally reserved for DWI plea bargains and sit-in protesters -- but totally describes corking.
That's just childish behavior, and I don't want to be around it
With a big ride like that, it's actually pretty easy to not run red lights personally. Just keep right, and pull off to the side when you encounter a red light even though everybody else is going, then go again when they're green. Some riders do that just to make a point.
edit: ahh, the 20 minute figure came from the Houston Chronicle article. Seems suspect, but I wasn't there so I'll leave it be.
Last edited by dougmc; 10-01-13 at 11:09 AM.
#24
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anyone a subscriber to the chronicle?
i'd like to read this article: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/life...4857481.php#/0
i'd like to read this article: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/life...4857481.php#/0
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20 minutes is about right for 2000 riders.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKROOjpbce4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cm-uIXbMXo8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKROOjpbce4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cm-uIXbMXo8
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