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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)MO
mosscap @slrpnk.net
Posts 11
Comments 51

Culver City and the Expo Bike Path

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16790112

> Just tried commuting on my bike from Santa Monica to downtown Culver City today. I took the Exposition bike path, which was fine until I needed to get off of it to head south. > > Google recommended I take National and--lo and behold--there's no bike lane with cars flying past at 55mph+ on blind hills. That's a death trap. > > On the way home I left early to avoid traffic. I took Venice Blvd, since it has a protected bike lane all the way until McLaughlin which Google Maps called "bicycle friendly." No bike lane, of course, with cars flying past leaving a foot of distance between me and death. One testy driver in a BMW didn't want to wait the 15 seconds for me to pedal into the left turn lane to get back onto the Exposition bike path, honking and then flying by nearly killing me. Jeez lady, I'm not the city planner. Don't kill me to save 15 seconds. > > How does Culver City put zero bike lanes going north to south connecting to the Exposition path? How do these drivers maintain their licenses? > > What's a cyclist to do?

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Coal Rolling Is a Menacing Crime—And It's on the Rise
  • As a current biker, I've gotta say I don't care what you think is overblown. Thanks for your unnecessarily crass comment that contributed nothing of value to the thread. Have a downvote and don't feel obligated to hang around here any longer if you feel triggered by cyclists who don't appreciate coal rolling.

  • The staggering health improvements from bike commuting (Shifter)

    cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/33429181

    > The staggering health improvements from bike commuting (Shifter)

    5
    www.bicycling.com Coal Rolling Is a Menacing Crime—And It's on the Rise

    In a rural community outside Houston, a violent incident shattered lives. A teenage boy was charged with assault, but was justice served?

    Coal Rolling Is a Menacing Crime—And It's on the Rise

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/15958402

    > Coal Rolling Is a Menacing Crime—And It's on the Rise > > Paywall-free link: https://archive.ph/3tLtL > > The crash occurred on September 25, 2021, the first crisp day of fall after a hot Texas summer. Claudius Galo intended to ride a hundred miles or more that morning. “There was a chill in the air. It felt so good. The energy was high,” he recalls of the small group that gathered to ride with him. > > Galo had moved to the Houston area from Rio de Janeiro, about 14 years prior. A calm and inquisitive engineer who works in the oil and gas industry, Galo had become unhealthy and overweight in his late thirties. He tried running but got hurt, so his doctor recommended adding swimming and cycling. Now 45, he’d lost 60 pounds and completed six Ironmans and almost a dozen half Ironmans. > Tamy Valiente, 45, had come to the United States from Costa Rica nine years before. Inspired by the Ironman World Championship in Kona, Hawaii, in her twenties, she’d dreamt of becoming a competitive bike rider, but first, “I had to raise my babies,” she says. After going through a divorce, she eventually saved enough money to buy a bike frame and slowly began building her first racing bike part by part. She would often wake at 4 a.m. to train on the narrow roads close to her home back near San José, where buses crept by within inches of her handlebar. To Valiente, the U.S. felt like paradise. “The roads seemed safe. The traffic laws were actually enforced,” she says. > > On the day of the crash, David Reynolds, a 45-year-old tattooed photographer with two teenage children, had ridden 11.5 miles to meet the group at Hockley Community Center, about 30 miles west of downtown Houston. Cycling was his “Zen time,” when he could zone out and let all his worries wash through him. Though he wasn’t training for an event, he had ridden for nearly 600 consecutive days. > “I just like to ride,” he says. > The group that rolled out that morning included three other experienced cyclists: Craig Staples, Brad Stauffer, and Keith Conrad. The six regularly met up to ride through Waller County, an agricultural and ranching community just outside the sprawling metropolis. The group would become known as the Waller 6. > > . . .

    10
    Gig workers in B.C. to be paid minimum of $20.88 an hour
  • I mean, if you can afford to pay your workers a living wage, then you can't afford to field that job in the first place.

    Getting rid of a company that pays my neighbor poverty wages is better for my community (and therefore for me), than letting said company keep delivering me a service of convenience while my neighbor can't afford to buy food.

  • Selfhosted alternatives to Goodreads?
  • To be honest I've found a really incredible community of like-minded people on BW and regularly find top quality book suggestions just from seeing what these people are reading. One key is to find your favorite books, and then follow lots of the same people who felt similar to you. Some will be misses and have bad recommendations going forward, but at least a handful will be very like-minded readers.

  • www.bikeradar.com The safest road, mountain bike and urban helmets as rated by Virginia Tech

    Virginia Tech has published the results of its latest report on which road, mountain and urban bike helmet is the safest.

    The safest road, mountain bike and urban helmets as rated by Virginia Tech

    cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/20850985

    > The safest road, mountain bike and urban helmets as rated by Virginia Tech

    0
    Question about longer-distance cycling
  • Thanks, friend! I appreciate the reply! Randonneuring is definitely the goal that I have been working towards. Finishing a 200km ride this year is my peak goal, as that would qualify me as a legit randonneur!

    I think that perhaps I will pump the breaks on the 157km ride, since it's on Canada Day and I think my spouse would appreciate me being available for childcare, but I think I'll find a better training plan for completing the 200km in September.

  • Question about longer-distance cycling

    Hi friends! I feel like I'm at a bit of a crossroads with my cycling journey right now, and I'd really love to get some feedback from some of y'all.

    For background, I started getting into longer distance cycling events last year as a way to stay healthy and fit, especially since my partner and I have an 18 month toddler. Cycling is both a mental health and physical fitness outlet for me.

    I'm riding a Surly LHT with 700x32 Schwalbe Marathon Plus tires, so I'm almost always at the back of the pack. I am not part of a team, so I'm never able to draft behind people either.

    Last year I completed 2 Gran Fondos, one of which was the Whistler Sea to Sky Fondo. Yesterday was my first ride of the year and despite spending all winter with TrainerRoad 3 times a week, my time was actually slower than it was a year before and I missed the cutoff time.

    Granted, I had an exhausting week leading up to their ride, I got slightly drunk 2 nights before the ride which resulted in bad sleep, and then a toddler-induced bad nights sleep the night before the ride.

    Needless to say, that was pretty discouraging, especially since my plan has been to try and go for even longer rides this year (a 157km ride on July 1 and a 200km in September). My partner wants me to back down from leaning into these fondo style rides (and the longer ones too obvi), and in my disappointment from this weekend I'm inclined to go along with that.

    But here are my questions:

    • How much should I read into my results this weekend? Could it just be chalked up to a hard week and a bad nights sleep?

    • If I had a really hard day going for 120km on June 9, should I pull back on trying to go for 157km on July 1 and 200km in September?

    • If anyone is a toddler-parent who works full time and engages in long-distance cycling, I'd love to hear how you make that work

    5
    [\#Germany](https://mastodon.uno/tags/Germany), where [#cycling](https://mastodon.uno/tags/cycling) is normalized, but marginalized.
  • Having known a few Germans, I can blindly extrapolate that they love cars even more than Americans do. Although, they love cars because of the science and mechanics of how cars work. Americans, on the other hand, love cars because they are lazy and homicidal people who will literally burn the world to ashes as long as they can get to Costco 15 minutes faster.

  • Does anybody here ride a folding bike? If so, what kind do you ride and how's your experience been?

    A common frustration in my part of the world is that transit does not run very often, and there are only 2 spots for bikes on the front of buses. There have been many times when I've had to wait an extra hour just to see if the next bus happens to have a spot for my bike.

    Every time this happens, I promise myself that I'm going to someday spend the money to buy a folding bike (which can be taken on the bus if it's folded).

    In my head, riding a folding bike is a joyous experience, partly because of Dr Sharon riding a Brompton in Ted Lasso, but I'm curious what it's actually like.

    My dream folding bikes are any model of Brompton, a RadExpand 5, or a Tern Link D7i.

    14

    A thought on the Spittin Chiclets drama with Babcock

    Maybe both Biz AND Babcock are insufferable pricks...

    4

    Frostbike by Tom Babin (of Shifter fame on YouTube) is a must read about winter cycling that is fun, informative, and informational

    bookwyrm.social Frostbike - BookWyrm

    The bicycle is fast becoming a ubiquitous form of transportation in cities all over the world, making our urban spaces more efficient, more livable and healthier. But many of those bicycles disappear into basements and garages when the warm months end, parked there by owners fearful of the cold, sno...

    Frostbike - BookWyrm
    1
    coloradohockeynow.com Avalanche, Tomas Tatar Agree To One-Year Deal

    Tomas Tatar showed up to Captain's Skate for the Avalanche on Tuesday. Moments later, the team announced he's joining the organization.

    Avalanche, Tomas Tatar Agree To One-Year Deal
    0