New York City Cycling -- CRAZY!!!
#51
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I just saw this in my email box. I'm not sure how accurate Whoopi's claims are; however, I did find it interesting when she seemed to think that the fact that traffic fatalities were down wasn't worth any amount of congestion/inconvenience issues (~6:55 time).
https://www.bicycling.com/news/a2593...paign=15747037
https://www.bicycling.com/news/a2593...paign=15747037
#52
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Rode a Citi Bike this past Monday, took photos of the 6th Ave Bike Lane.
#53
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#54
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Speaking of rude, I learned when I was a kid that it's rude to insult someone's home. Then I learned that some people make an exception to that rule when talking about New York. It doesn't make any sense to me. It's just something I've observed.
I would tell you about how truly rude behavior here isn't that common, but might not believe me.
I would tell you about how truly rude behavior here isn't that common, but might not believe me.
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@flyjimmy, quite right! My father made New Jersey jokes even when I lived there. I lived there for 26 years and learned the good and the bad of it, which non-New Jerseyans don't really know. It was a good place for me for all that time.
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#56
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@flyjimmy, quite right! My father made New Jersey jokes even when I lived there. I lived there for 26 years and learned the good and the bad of it, which non-New Jerseyans don't really know. It was a good place for me for all that time.
A coworker of mine always said “Jersey has “everything. Not the best of anything but still everything”
Last edited by flyjimmy; 01-21-19 at 01:59 PM.
#57
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Yup!
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#60
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#61
LET'S ROLL
South County trail to the North County trail:

Van Cortland Park, da Bronx by 1nterceptor, on Flickr
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#62
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I loved NJ when I bike toured through there. Except the corridor of course, but I biked North to South and just had to endure crossing through that area. I really enjoyed the Pine Barrens. I like quiet and solitude. I also enjoyed the other extreme - beaches! I was in NJ just over a week and do not have one bad memory, no incidents, decent road surfaces and/or shoulders, plenty of support (food, drink, lodging) and really easy cycling. I exited via the Cape May ferry. The Garden State is OK by me!
#63
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I loved NJ when I bike toured through there. Except the corridor of course, but I biked North to South and just had to endure crossing through that area. I really enjoyed the Pine Barrens. I like quiet and solitude. I also enjoyed the other extreme - beaches! I was in NJ just over a week and do not have one bad memory, no incidents, decent road surfaces and/or shoulders, plenty of support (food, drink, lodging) and really easy cycling. I exited via the Cape May ferry. The Garden State is OK by me!
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Check out the 5 day Tour de Pines always in late summer. Heres a link to last years info. Tour de Pines Bicycle Tour, Pine Barrens Bike Trips - Pinelands Preservation Alliance / Believe this year is first week in October too. Fun, economical, beautiful riding and lots of options on rides. Ride as many days as you like. Supports a good cause too!
#65
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I stay out of the bike lanes. I would rather be a PIT@#! 'taking the lane'. Than being dead meat. Courtesy of being treated like an afterthought.
#66
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It's funny how some people like riding here in NYC. I grew up here, and I generally don't find it to be the nicest place to ride. Yet I know some people who make a trip into the city just to ride here. I also know people who live here (such as @ascherer and @wilfried) who are great at making adventurous routes within the city limits. I've gone with them sometimes, and I did have some great times, but all things being equal, I'd rather be on a country road, at least for a fun ride. Maybe I wouldn't like commuting on a country road. I don't know.
Suburban riding can be bad, depending on road design. Traffic can be dense, and people are impatient. I lived in New Jersey suburbs for 26 years.
Suburban riding can be bad, depending on road design. Traffic can be dense, and people are impatient. I lived in New Jersey suburbs for 26 years.
To an extent, it's what you know. When I go elsewhere, I sometimes feel a little nervous. Traffic may be lighter, but it moves a lot faster. People behave differently, and I'm not entirely clear on the rules. For instance, I'm happy to take the lane most places in the city, but then I can generally go pretty close to the speed of traffic (and very often go faster). If the streets are crowded, I can likely go faster than the cars. If traffic is light, I'm slower (but still in the ball park), but they have plenty of room to get around me. I don't know that I'd be comfortable taking the lane on a suburban arterial.
Riding in Ulster County is lovely. On the back roads, there's virtually no traffic, and the drivers are as polite as polite can be. But it can be a bit dull. You're mostly in the woods, which is pretty enough, but after a while, trees are trees. You do get a grand vista once in a while, though. But then, on a bike you get glorious views of the city that few other people see.
As far as bike lanes go, I don't need them, and sometimes avoid them, but I also ride them. I am however glad they're there; I want more people on bikes on the streets. I want space for people who aren't happy to mix it up with cars. Ridership goes up when they go in, and crash rates go down. I'm very happy to ride in them when it's raining, or there's a bit of snow on the ground. If I skid out, at least won't hit the ground right in front of a moving taxi.
As far as the ride in lane law goes, you must stay in the lane unless conditions are "unsafe" or you have a reason not to, like you're preparing to turn. So the law is actually really ambiguous. Do the cops actually know or understand the law, or care? Of course not. Yeah, the cops do completely moronic, pointless, and arbitrary ticket stings, but unless you get caught in one, they roundly ignore you. Unless you're unlucky, you can ride in the traffic lane, blow lights, etc. right in front of them, and they'll act like you you don't exist. Police bike enforcement is capricious, arbitrary, and utterly infuriating, but has little real impact on riding in the city, except to scapegoat people on bikes, while they are utterly unwilling to adequately enforce laws against the people who actually kill on the streets and make them unsafe, drivers.
Anyway, I figured I'd respond to a few things in this thread.
#67
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Those are really good points, @wilfried. Maybe I will appreciate riding in NYC more now. We will see. Today I got a Citi Bike e-bike, and I thought to myself I could extend the ride just for fun. The bike is genuinely fun. But I didn't. I manage to deal with traffic handily, but I don't seek it out. There really are many adventures to be had in NYC. I should seek some out.
It's funny that I know a guy who lives in a Westchester suburb, and he comes in on weekends to ride in the streets. The only place I really like riding is the Hudson River Greenway when it isn't too crowded.
It's funny that I know a guy who lives in a Westchester suburb, and he comes in on weekends to ride in the streets. The only place I really like riding is the Hudson River Greenway when it isn't too crowded.
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“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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#68
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Those are really good points, @wilfried. Maybe I will appreciate riding in NYC more now. We will see. Today I got a Citi Bike e-bike, and I thought to myself I could extend the ride just for fun. The bike is genuinely fun. But I didn't. I manage to deal with traffic handily, but I don't seek it out. There really are many adventures to be had in NYC. I should seek some out.
It's funny that I know a guy who lives in a Westchester suburb, and he comes in on weekends to ride in the streets. The only place I really like riding is the Hudson River Greenway when it isn't too crowded.
It's funny that I know a guy who lives in a Westchester suburb, and he comes in on weekends to ride in the streets. The only place I really like riding is the Hudson River Greenway when it isn't too crowded.
It's not like I seek out traffic, but in the city it's not like you have much of a choice. So, I made the best of it, and learned to deal with it. It helps that for some reason I'm irrationally fearless. It would probably be sensible to be more afraid of traffic than I am.
Westchester has some great riding, but it also some nasty arterials that are almost impossible to avoid, and like I said, since I'm not used to them, I'm not sure how to handle them. So it's a mixed bag.
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Those are really good points, @wilfried. Maybe I will appreciate riding in NYC more now. We will see. Today I got a Citi Bike e-bike, and I thought to myself I could extend the ride just for fun. The bike is genuinely fun. But I didn't. I manage to deal with traffic handily, but I don't seek it out. There really are many adventures to be had in NYC. I should seek some out.
It's funny that I know a guy who lives in a Westchester suburb, and he comes in on weekends to ride in the streets. The only place I really like riding is the Hudson River Greenway when it isn't too crowded.
It's funny that I know a guy who lives in a Westchester suburb, and he comes in on weekends to ride in the streets. The only place I really like riding is the Hudson River Greenway when it isn't too crowded.
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I agree, bike is very often the fastest, and pretty much always the most predictable way to get around town. The difference between a slow and fast commute is +-1 minute. I ride 10 miles up to Inwood more or less once a week, and 13 miles back down. The difference between a slow and an fast ride each way is probably about five minutes.
Back earlier on when I started riding in the city, after I got over the hump of learning to handle the streets, I would go out for joy rides if I got bored. On a good night (it was usually well after dark), I would have this transcendent feeling, like I was one with the road, and the city, even with traffic. I would dodge potholes and cars with complete calm and ease, like some kind of flow state. Now that riding a bike is old hat, I don't get that feeling so much anymore. Sounds sappy, but I miss that feeling.
Back earlier on when I started riding in the city, after I got over the hump of learning to handle the streets, I would go out for joy rides if I got bored. On a good night (it was usually well after dark), I would have this transcendent feeling, like I was one with the road, and the city, even with traffic. I would dodge potholes and cars with complete calm and ease, like some kind of flow state. Now that riding a bike is old hat, I don't get that feeling so much anymore. Sounds sappy, but I miss that feeling.
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I spend most of the year avoiding the Greenway, cause it's such a frigging madhouse. And all those barricades "protecting" us only made it worse. Heading up to Inwood, I have a nice route through the park, to St. Nicholas, and onto the path next to the Harlem River. It does require going up Madison, where only madness lies, to get to the park, but after that it's quite nice (well, you're in the land of double parked cars, yes, worse than elsewhere, but it's manageable). But then I'd have to go through Midtown to get to the Greenway, where drivers are equally sociopathic.
#72
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On a good night (it was usually well after dark), I would have this transcendent feeling, like I was one with the road, and the city, even with traffic. I would dodge potholes and cars with complete calm and ease, like some kind of flow state. Now that riding a bike is old hat, I don't get that feeling so much anymore. Sounds sappy, but I miss that feeling.

Seriously, good points, @livedarklions and @wilfried. City traffic has its pluses. And as you point out, predictability is best on a bike. I have been delayed by traffic, but it's unusual and never extreme as it is in a car. And yes, suburban arterial roads can be hell. And some suburbs don't even have alternatives, depending on how things are laid out. The older towns in NJ are better than the newer ones. The newer ones were designed with the idea that small residential streets should not lead anywhere, so there is no choice but to take an artery. This turns out not to be good even for motorists!
And yes, Madison Avenue is awful. I found out a couple of weeks ago. Next time I had to go up the east side, I took 1st Ave.
I should look at your rides and routes for inspiration.
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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
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“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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