Utrecht’s Vredenburg is the busiest cycle path in all of the Netherlands
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#27
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I don't like or dislike bike commuting. I like saving money, and I like listening to my podcasts. A quantum of exercise is a side benefit for me. A quantum less environmental impact is a side benefit for the rest of you. You're welcome.
I certainly never cycle on the road for recreation. That's what mountain bikes and trails are for.
I certainly never cycle on the road for recreation. That's what mountain bikes and trails are for.
#28
Banned
I don't like or dislike bike commuting. I like saving money, and I like listening to my podcasts. A quantum of exercise is a side benefit for me. A quantum less environmental impact is a side benefit for the rest of you. You're welcome.
I certainly never cycle on the road for recreation. That's what mountain bikes and trails are for.
I certainly never cycle on the road for recreation. That's what mountain bikes and trails are for.
I can walk within 30 mins (£3-6).
I can take a train for a reasonable cost (£4).
I can take a bus for a reasonable cost (£3).
I can cycle commute (free).
I can über/taxi in (£3).
I can drive in (free).
I can run in (£3) but would rather run along the sea before the workday starts.
I do like saving money, hence my long-term BSO thread.
I do like doing well for the environment as I enjoy it every day.
I usually just do what I like, or else why do it? Hence by initial post.
#29
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You aren’t alone. But sometimes you have to do things you don’t like. I commute by bicycle because I do like it..even in snow and cold weather. It beats fighting traffic. That said, the density of people like those in the video would make the ride a lot less pleasant. It’s the same as fighting car traffic except with less predictable (and perhaps dumber) people.
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Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
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#30
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Not surprising, we're different people living different lives.
How do you figure driving is free but walking/running is not?
I can walk within 30 mins (£3-6).
I can take a train for a reasonable cost (£4).
I can take a bus for a reasonable cost (£3).
I can cycle commute (free).
I can über/taxi in (£3).
I can drive in (free).
I can run in (£3) but would rather run along the sea before the workday starts.
I can take a train for a reasonable cost (£4).
I can take a bus for a reasonable cost (£3).
I can cycle commute (free).
I can über/taxi in (£3).
I can drive in (free).
I can run in (£3) but would rather run along the sea before the workday starts.
#31
Banned
#32
Junior Member
I raise you the busiest in the world (40k/daily): https://vimeo.com/141516172 ...it’s actually on my daily commute!
#33
Banned
I raise you the busiest in the world (40k/daily): https://vimeo.com/141516172 ...it’s actually on my daily commute!
#34
Senior Member
They must not measure bike commuters in China. They probably have 40K an hour.
https://images.app.goo.gl/T2Tv6a84Td5tWgcK6
https://images.app.goo.gl/T2Tv6a84Td5tWgcK6
#35
Junior Member
They must not measure bike commuters in China. They probably have 40K an hour.
https://images.app.goo.gl/T2Tv6a84Td5tWgcK6
https://images.app.goo.gl/T2Tv6a84Td5tWgcK6

#36
Senior Member
Makes me appreciate that I don’t have quite so many bikes on my commute route. Of course, I ride on mixed use trails that aren’t very wide and probably encounter 100 oncoming bikes at fairly high speed every day during high season, which is really unpleasant. And don’t get me started on the damn scooters strewn about. Or the damn dog walkers. Or the side by side peds who are apparently oblivious to anything going on around them. Or the people who can’t ride faster than 10 mph. Or the joggers with earplugs so they don’t hear anything, including my bell. Can’t wait for winter.
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#37
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#38
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#39
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#40
Junior Member
I am however enormously thankful/grateful daily whenever I commute by bike anywhere in my hometown of Copenhagen... and is one of the main reasons I’ll have difficulty thriving anywhere else - and that abstinence from biking was a large part of being miserable while living in Vancouver.
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#41
Banned
I really disliked (and was disappointed with) biking in Amsterdam... trekking across the Netherlands was alright but not really indicative - didn’t experience Utrecht - but it’s basically a large village so not really an applicable model for large scale commuting.
I am however enormously thankful/grateful daily whenever I commute by bike anywhere in my hometown of Copenhagen... and is one of the main reasons I’ll have difficulty thriving anywhere else - and that abstinence from biking was a large part of being miserable while living in Vancouver.
I am however enormously thankful/grateful daily whenever I commute by bike anywhere in my hometown of Copenhagen... and is one of the main reasons I’ll have difficulty thriving anywhere else - and that abstinence from biking was a large part of being miserable while living in Vancouver.
Utrecht is essentially a university town and not a capital city. I was quite sad to see scooters/moped in use in the bike lanes in AMS. That **** gets shut down in Germany straight away. Also never saw it in CPH.
The UK is a mess, however everyone is quite friendly and bike-aware, even moreso than CPH/Germany.
Getting out of the city for midsommer?
We're headed to a house in Lille Sverige (of all placenames!) in Hillerød.
#42
Banned
I also think there is an important distinction being missed by many posters in this thread.
That's being a tourist and cycling around and living there and actually commuting with such infrastructure. These are totally different.
There are a lot of commenters saying that it's not nirvana and it's too busy. When I first moved to Stockholm, then Copenhagen, I would have agreed. However, after a few weeks. It makes a huge amount of sense. A quick handdrop and I get on/off the cycleways and do all my shopping. It's actually super nice.
Coming from commuting in Maine and Texas where it's a barren wasteland for commuting (with the exception of Austin), it's bliss and it makes a huge amount of sense.
However, I can appreciate that Midwesterners here stating that it's too hectic in those videos. I think they'd get used to if they gave it a shot in earnest or actually needed it to commute on a day-in/day-out basis. Thus, I can't really hold it against the people in thread without the proper experience.
CPH is still by far my favourite place to live/commute. Frankfurt was a good second option though. And, contrary to what's stated in the thread, enforcement is quite serious (especially in Germany) and people don't **** around in general.
That's being a tourist and cycling around and living there and actually commuting with such infrastructure. These are totally different.
There are a lot of commenters saying that it's not nirvana and it's too busy. When I first moved to Stockholm, then Copenhagen, I would have agreed. However, after a few weeks. It makes a huge amount of sense. A quick handdrop and I get on/off the cycleways and do all my shopping. It's actually super nice.
Coming from commuting in Maine and Texas where it's a barren wasteland for commuting (with the exception of Austin), it's bliss and it makes a huge amount of sense.
However, I can appreciate that Midwesterners here stating that it's too hectic in those videos. I think they'd get used to if they gave it a shot in earnest or actually needed it to commute on a day-in/day-out basis. Thus, I can't really hold it against the people in thread without the proper experience.
CPH is still by far my favourite place to live/commute. Frankfurt was a good second option though. And, contrary to what's stated in the thread, enforcement is quite serious (especially in Germany) and people don't **** around in general.
#43
Junior Member
...yes - I'm sorry about that >_<
I'm a little surprised at UK'ers being more "bike-aware" than people in CPH? You can't really survive CPH without being attuned to cycling, there's more bikes than people!
I often work from London - where biking seemingly remains largely an extreme sport.
Taking a little trip with the girlfriend to Flensburg south of the German border in July... I reeeaally hope our new rack+panniers arrive in time: https://www.tailfin.cc/products/x-se...ges-by-tailfin
There's some wonderful MTB trails in the two adjacent forests (Tokkekøb Hegn and Dyrehaven)... I should get back there sometime... I actually picked up a pair of Cosmic Pro wheels from a biking- enthusiast couple who live more or less exactly where you're headed - any affiliation?
I reckon you're right it takes a bit of a mental adjustment - if you're used to being a unicorn cyclist - only sharing the road with a few select other idealists (and a whole bunch of cars)... suddenly being engulfed in an absolute ubiquity of comme-il-faut biking culture... it both challenges your identity as a cyclist ...because there's absolutely nothing "special" about that at all in that setting... there's literally more cyclists than cars in Copenhagen... and the contrast inevitably makes everything feel crowded as you suggest... but once you get accustomed to the general infrastructure... dedicated traffic lights giving cyclists head starts over cars... public bike pumps every few 100 meters and not least the unquestioned right-of-road being the socially preferred traffic compared to motorists... I think it's hard not to appreciate how much quality of life that yields - and to be fair - the bike paths here are generally nowhere nearly as congested on average as these videos indicate. I easily commute at +30kmph on my carbon flatbar straight through the city centre (including that bridge from the video).

Taking a little trip with the girlfriend to Flensburg south of the German border in July... I reeeaally hope our new rack+panniers arrive in time: https://www.tailfin.cc/products/x-se...ges-by-tailfin
There are a lot of commenters saying that it's not nirvana and it's too busy. When I first moved to Stockholm, then Copenhagen, I would have agreed. However, after a few weeks. It makes a huge amount of sense. A quick handdrop and I get on/off the cycleways and do all my shopping. It's actually super nice.
I reckon you're right it takes a bit of a mental adjustment - if you're used to being a unicorn cyclist - only sharing the road with a few select other idealists (and a whole bunch of cars)... suddenly being engulfed in an absolute ubiquity of comme-il-faut biking culture... it both challenges your identity as a cyclist ...because there's absolutely nothing "special" about that at all in that setting... there's literally more cyclists than cars in Copenhagen... and the contrast inevitably makes everything feel crowded as you suggest... but once you get accustomed to the general infrastructure... dedicated traffic lights giving cyclists head starts over cars... public bike pumps every few 100 meters and not least the unquestioned right-of-road being the socially preferred traffic compared to motorists... I think it's hard not to appreciate how much quality of life that yields - and to be fair - the bike paths here are generally nowhere nearly as congested on average as these videos indicate. I easily commute at +30kmph on my carbon flatbar straight through the city centre (including that bridge from the video).
#44
Banned
...yes - I'm sorry about that >_<
I'm a little surprised at UK'ers being more "bike-aware" than people in CPH? You can't really survive CPH without being attuned to cycling, there's more bikes than people!
I often work from London - where biking seemingly remains largely an extreme sport.
Taking a little trip with the girlfriend to Flensburg south of the German border in July... I reeeaally hope our new rack+panniers arrive in time: https://www.tailfin.cc/products/x-se...ges-by-tailfin
There's some wonderful MTB trails in the two adjacent forests (Tokkekøb Hegn and Dyrehaven)... I should get back there sometime... I actually picked up a pair of Cosmic Pro wheels from a biking- enthusiast couple who live more or less exactly where you're headed - any affiliation?
I reckon you're right it takes a bit of a mental adjustment - if you're used to being a unicorn cyclist - only sharing the road with a few select other idealists (and a whole bunch of cars)... suddenly being engulfed in an absolute ubiquity of comme-il-faut biking culture... it both challenges your identity as a cyclist ...because there's absolutely nothing "special" about that at all in that setting... there's literally more cyclists than cars in Copenhagen... and the contrast inevitably makes everything feel crowded as you suggest... but once you get accustomed to the general infrastructure... dedicated traffic lights giving cyclists head starts over cars... public bike pumps every few 100 meters and not least the unquestioned right-of-road being the socially preferred traffic compared to motorists... I think it's hard not to appreciate how much quality of life that yields - and to be fair - the bike paths here are generally nowhere nearly as congested on average as these videos indicate. I easily commute at +30kmph on my carbon flatbar straight through the city centre (including that bridge from the video).
I'm a little surprised at UK'ers being more "bike-aware" than people in CPH? You can't really survive CPH without being attuned to cycling, there's more bikes than people!

Taking a little trip with the girlfriend to Flensburg south of the German border in July... I reeeaally hope our new rack+panniers arrive in time: https://www.tailfin.cc/products/x-se...ges-by-tailfin
There's some wonderful MTB trails in the two adjacent forests (Tokkekøb Hegn and Dyrehaven)... I should get back there sometime... I actually picked up a pair of Cosmic Pro wheels from a biking- enthusiast couple who live more or less exactly where you're headed - any affiliation?
I reckon you're right it takes a bit of a mental adjustment - if you're used to being a unicorn cyclist - only sharing the road with a few select other idealists (and a whole bunch of cars)... suddenly being engulfed in an absolute ubiquity of comme-il-faut biking culture... it both challenges your identity as a cyclist ...because there's absolutely nothing "special" about that at all in that setting... there's literally more cyclists than cars in Copenhagen... and the contrast inevitably makes everything feel crowded as you suggest... but once you get accustomed to the general infrastructure... dedicated traffic lights giving cyclists head starts over cars... public bike pumps every few 100 meters and not least the unquestioned right-of-road being the socially preferred traffic compared to motorists... I think it's hard not to appreciate how much quality of life that yields - and to be fair - the bike paths here are generally nowhere nearly as congested on average as these videos indicate. I easily commute at +30kmph on my carbon flatbar straight through the city centre (including that bridge from the video).
Reading / writing is somewhat easy with German / Swedish knowledge. Speaking is entire different. Even saying Købnhavn didn't make sense at first! But, I got better over time.
London isn't really the UK in my opinion, it's like NYC or Tokio, which supercede their host country.
I'll be running in those forests with a dog (house sitting for 2 weeks after the party!) The couple has three children (and two cars!), so no money for wheels I would wager. Throwing that Midsommerfest will probably break the bank, I would wager!
I did get some riding in from Hillerød to city center and that new "cycle superhighway" is great.
https://www.google.com/maps/@55.9043...7i13312!8i6656
twas about 30km from there to our flat at Gråbrødretorv.
I would wager that most posters here would rapidly adjust and learn to love it if they had the option to work/live there.
Enjoy Flensburg (and don't get any points

#45
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The scooters have been banned from the bikelanes, and now have to join the cars, with a helmet. It was introduced about two months ago but enforcement has only started this week. It doesn't go down very well. The main problem was a certain age group on (illegally) tuned scooters, the mopeds already had to ride with the cars with a helmet on. The idea to have the low power scooters on the bike lane wasn't that bad, it just got out of hand. Now the people on scooters that still have the intented speed have to ride between cars, also where the max speed isn't 30 km/h but 50 km/h. I guess they should have lowered the max speed at the same time. But we'll see.
When riding in Amsterdam as a tourist I found navigating the bike paths a challenge. The traffic is so dense that you have to plan ahead when you want to change lane. When you slow down you risk irritating someone from behind or worse. If you need to stop because you lost your way or something, you need to look for some niche where you will not risk getting run over and sometimes you miscalculate because there is some other stream of traffic there that you did not anticipate. If you are slow when lights change from red to green, you disturb traffic. Obviously locals are all well versed in this but an outsider has trouble adjusting.
It would be a bit rude wouldn't it. People cycling with little kids and all and then someone shows up dressed to crash, makes them wonder what he is up to.
#46
Banned
Not really. Utrecht is a 400K city in 650K agglomeration. It has been the capital twice. Universities have been in mostly in the big cities for ages, that doesn't make them university towns.
The scooters have been banned from the bikelanes, and now have to join the cars, with a helmet. It was introduced about two months ago but enforcement has only started this week. It doesn't go down very well. The main problem was a certain age group on (illegally) tuned scooters, the mopeds already had to ride with the cars with a helmet on. The idea to have the low power scooters on the bike lane wasn't that bad, it just got out of hand. Now the people on scooters that still have the intented speed have to ride between cars, also where the max speed isn't 30 km/h but 50 km/h. I guess they should have lowered the max speed at the same time. But we'll see.
The scooters have been banned from the bikelanes, and now have to join the cars, with a helmet. It was introduced about two months ago but enforcement has only started this week. It doesn't go down very well. The main problem was a certain age group on (illegally) tuned scooters, the mopeds already had to ride with the cars with a helmet on. The idea to have the low power scooters on the bike lane wasn't that bad, it just got out of hand. Now the people on scooters that still have the intented speed have to ride between cars, also where the max speed isn't 30 km/h but 50 km/h. I guess they should have lowered the max speed at the same time. But we'll see.
I was blown away to see scooters on the bike lanes after living in CPH where I never saw that. (Maybe that has changed since I left.)
Glad to hear that enforcement is starting.
#48
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Decades of experiencing high volume traffic certainly can make one a bitter old man. Travelling amongst hordes of people for the last 30+ years has made me a bitter middle aged man.

#49
Banned
#50
Banned
High volume traffic is high volume traffic, no matter if on foot, on bicycle, or in a car.
Decades of experiencing high volume traffic certainly can make one a bitter old man. Travelling amongst hordes of people for the last 30+ years has made me a bitter middle aged man.
Decades of experiencing high volume traffic certainly can make one a bitter old man. Travelling amongst hordes of people for the last 30+ years has made me a bitter middle aged man.

On foot or on a bike one is in control of one's destiny even in the London tube.
One can get out by just standing next to the wall as the trains come every 90 sec, which is unbelievable really.