Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta bicycle week. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta bicycle week. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, 22 de septiembre de 2018

2018 Bike Week Kicks off With a Family Feud

Learning to ride.
Bogotá's 2018 Bike Week kicked off today with activities near the Virgilio Barco Library - and an unusual fissure in the bicycle advocacy community.
Cargo bikes, by EnCargo.

A friend and cycling advocate explained to me that historically Bicycle Week has been financed and organized by grassroots cycling organizations themselves. However, this year the city government stepped in to organize and partially finance the events. That generated resentment among some cycling groups, who saw it as an attempt to co-opt the cycling agenda by Mayor Enrique Peñalosa, who is deeply unpopular among leftists. As a result, my friend said, this year some half of the those who participated last year are boycotting the activities, and some cycling organizatioins from south Bogotá are even actively protesting Bicycle Week.


Go figger. While Peñalosa's policies leave lots to be desired, in this term and his previous one his governments have built many kilometers of bike lanes, and recently the city's Turism Institute has done a good job promoting mountain bike routes outside of Bogotá.

The full schedule of events is available at. https://www.planbici.gov.co/

Bogotá, 'World bicycle capital'? Very debatable.
A stationary bike spinning race.

Cyclist self-defense exercises: Necessary in the face  of bike thefts, and even murders of cyclists.

The Batmobikebile!
A tall bike.
By Mike Ceaser, of Bogotá Bike Tours

sábado, 15 de noviembre de 2014

The Bici-Expo


The 'Pazcicleta.'
A year ago Cesár Salamanga had a dream: He saw a white bicycle crossing a bridge, while a godlike voice told him: 'You are going to make a peace bike.'

The prediction came true, and Salamanga founded Pazicleta, which, with the help of corporate sponsors, is distributing bicycles in poor, violence-wracked Colombian provinces to enable children to get to school, making them less likely to join outlaw organizations such as guerrillas and narcotraffickers.
The peace bikes' rear wheels are red,
meaning that they leave behind violence.

Salamanga displayed his 'peace bicycles' today during Bogota's annual Expo-Bici, part of Bicycle Week, held in the Gran Estación shopping mall. Salamanga's initiative was one of the most idealistic and least commercial of the expo's offerings, which also included high-tech bikes, folding bikes and wooden bikes, as well as lots of accessories.

Near Salamanga's stand was Bicisi, which aims to produce custom-made yet affordable bikes, "so that nobody has an excuse not to buy one," explained Juan Camilo, one of the founders of the three-month-old company.

Juan Camilo with a Bicisi bike. 
Don't drink this junk, no matter
how pretty the salesgirls.
Much of the expo, which wrapped up with a group ride to Bogotá's velodrome, was unabashedly materialistic. I even saw a Pepsi photo booth, with curvaceous young women. Why let such destructive products into what's supposed to be a health-promoting event?

Bogotá bicycling jerseys.
The city published a bicycle book, altho I didn't wait around to get a copy.
Ciclobleas. Obleas, a sweet cracker treat, by bike.
A four-wheeled vehicle lent by the city.
Bike bag on a wooden bike by Gaia.
Rice with milk and bananas, by bike.
The big screen displays the downside of Bogotá bicycling: smog-belching vehicles.
During the ride to downtown, riding behind a bus which belches smog. 
This cyclist, sadly, feels the need to wear a pollution mask. 
Bikes beside the Gran Estacion's fountain pool.
Riding down 26th St. How many bikes can fit in the space of a single car?
Gimme five!
A smile and a colorful bike.






The event was held at the Gran Estación shopping mall.
Low-rider bikes.

A mature cyclist.
How many cyclists can fin into the space occupied by a single car?
A tiny bike.
Blog by Mike Ceaser, of Bogotá Bike Tours.

miércoles, 12 de noviembre de 2014

A Grab-Bag of Bikes

Kathy and Santa, who have a bike shop and do circus cycling.
write them at zua.zaa.cirko (at) gmail (dot) com
As part of Bogotá's seventh-annual Bike Week, bike makers and enthusiasts displayed their work on the plaza of the Jorge Tadeo University this afternoon.
Santa on his trick bike. 

Trick bikes. 
More and more bamboo bike makers have appeared in Bogotá.



Bogotá once had the region's largest network of bike paths, but I suspect that other cities have surpassed it.

Bikes lent by the Gran Estación shopping mall.

Mejor en bici is the city's best-known bike advocacy organization.
Bikes designed by Mejor en bici.





By Mike Ceaser of Bogotá Bike Tours