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#16 |
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Matt O'Toole wrote:
>>> There's no doubt that we'll see astronomical gasoline prices soon >>> in the future. Of course, one would think that this would lead to >>> an increase in cycling. >>> However, I think human beings (especially Americans) are too lazy >>> for bicycles, and we'll probably see an increase in horses for >>> transportation [according to this it's already happening:http://www.wyff4.com/news/15968363/detail.html]. >>> But, I have to admit that - yes, I'm surprised - I've actually >>> seen an increase in cyclists? >>> Have you guys too? >> 1) I don't think there's any evidence that Americans are any more >> lazy than the citizens of any other country. > If anything it's the opposite, with cultural pressure to always appear to > be productive, not "wasting time" on a bicycle. In the US, bicycles are > seen as toys for children and immature adults. > I think this is why there's so much emphasis on racing in bike > marketing in the US. Americans feel they have to justify their > interest in cycling by pretending it's a serious athletic pursuit. >> 2) Horses, besides not being too welcome on city streets unless >> they are pulling a couple snuggling in a carriage or being ridden >> by a police officer, require a heck of a lot more work than does >> riding a bike. Ever mucked out a stable or unloaded a truckload of >> alfalfa? > This is true. > We'll never go "back to horses" because we never came from horses to > begin with. This idea comes from our own car culture projected > backwards. No one ever saddled up to fetch a quart of milk! Most > people walked. Draft animals for pulling heavy loads were as likely > to be mules or oxen as horses. When bikes came around in the late > 1800s they were immediately popular among those who could afford > them (about $4000, adjusted for inflation) -- not just for their > novelty, but their transportation value, practicality, and economy. > 3) I haven't noticed any increased bicycle usage. > I have, but it's a trend that started before the latest runup in > fuel prices. > BTW, in the UK they've been paying $8/gallon for years. If > anything, it's the congestion pricing in central London that has put > more people on bikes. As I see it, the US appreciation of bicycles agrees with yours and may go even farther: http://draco.acs.uci.edu/rbfaq/FAQ/6.1.html Jobst Brandt |
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#17 |
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Matt O'Toole wrote:
> As the chief trainspotter here, what have you heard lately about the > CA high speed rail line from LA to SFO through Bakersfield and > Fresno? Sounds like a good deal to me, especially if they allow > bikes aboard. Quentin Kopp is haeding up the task force and he is making good progress. The big noise (smoke but no fire) is wheterh the cut-over from the Californina Central Valley to the SF Bay Area crosses at Los Baños or the existing rail corridor over Altamont pass. Other than that, funding is available and has been voted for. Jobst Brandt |
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#18 |
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<jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org> wrote in message news:4828f2d4$0$34526$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > Cullen Carter wrote: > >> There's no doubt that we'll see astronomical gasoline prices soon in >> the future. > > Are you sure it won't be in the past? That might be truer than you intended. Peak Oil theories aside I would not be surprised if we eventually repeat the 70's 80's 90's.... errrrr.... cycle again. Grossy summarized, the price spikes of the 70's caused a huge gain in efficiencies. Car kilometerage increased dramatically, insulation and energy efficiency similarly improved. And yes previously uneconomic sources of oil came online. In fact it took pretty much two decades before that excess supply was sopped up by the low price driven craze of massive SUV's and prolifigate usage. I suspect that within 5 years the 'cycle' will be repeating. >> Of course, one would think that this would lead to an increase in >> cycling. > > I'd rather not. If they are riding because they are financially > pressed, they won't be friendly toward avocational riders, especially > ones that flaunt expensive "racing" equipment and dress up like their > professional idols. Most might fit that description. But amnongst the dross some might be converted. |
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#19 |
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In article <4828f2d4$0$34526$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net>,
jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org writes: > Cullen Carter wrote: > >> There's no doubt that we'll see astronomical gasoline prices soon in >> the future. > > Are you sure it won't be in the past? > >> Of course, one would think that this would lead to an increase in >> cycling. > > I'd rather not. If they are riding because they are financially > pressed, they won't be friendly toward avocational riders, especially > ones that flaunt expensive "racing" equipment and dress up like their > professional idols. I'd like to think that the more people get away from their POVs, the more sociable and amicable they're likely to become. Maybe incidents of so-called "road rage" would wane. Nobody can have a chip on their shoulder while riding a bike. It would blow off. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |
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#20 |
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Matt O'Toole wrote:
> On Mon, 12 May 2008 18:53:12 -0700, Bob wrote: >> 1- I don't think there's any evidence that Americans are any more lazy >> than the citizens of any other country. > > If anything it's the opposite, with cultural pressure to always appear to > be productive, not "wasting time" on a bicycle. In the US, bicycles are > seen as toys for children and immature adults. That's a mighty wide brush you're painting with. I've ridden seriously in various parts of the U.S. as an adult for something like 35 years now. While this is anecdotal evidence, I don't think I've ever encountered the label of immature adult or toy user in that time. I have encountered aggressive behavior from some people, but those are not the common reactions. > > I think this is why there's so much emphasis on racing in bike > marketing in the US. Americans feel they have to justify their interest > in cycling by pretending it's a serious athletic pursuit. Maybe, or perhaps the bicycle makers push the high priced bicycles because the profit margin is much greater there. I will make one observation about cycling that I have noticed in the U.S. but not in Europe, where I have lived a couple of times. In the U.S. bicycle advocates often live bicycling and pretty much not much else, to the degree that some of them are boring and more than a little annoying. IME, in Europe, people just ride bikes for transportation or for exercise/entertainment and don't tend to claim any moral superiority because of it. > 3- I haven't noticed any increased bicycle usage. > > I have, but it's a trend that started before the latest runup in fuel > prices. I am seeing more adults riding in neighborhoods and on running/bike paths...not so much on the roads where I ride. There is a fear factor involved here, I believe. High speed auto traffic and bicycles are a mix that's daunting for many folks, and in suburban areas, which is where a significant part of the local population resides, there are a lot of neighborhoods connected by highspeed arteries. Out here in the burbs, there are no safely accessible places to shop by bicycle either. > > BTW, in the UK they've been paying $8/gallon for years. If anything, it's > the congestion pricing in central London that has put more people on > bikes. Actually, in the UK, gasoline is priced in English pounds. Converting the prices to dollars right now simply indicates how far the dollar has fallen against other currencies. FWIW, petrol prices in the U.K. have been high for years due to high rates of taxation. The same is generally true in the rest of Europe. One more point. Places like London, Paris, Rome etc. have mass transit that is effective for two reasons. First, the cities were built way before the advent of automobiles so retrofitting an automobile culture is difficult and second, they have population densities that make mass transit more cost-effective. An alternative to vast daily migration to places of work from homes would be to distribute work closer to peoples' homes, or to implement more telecommuting options. > > Matt O. -- They wrote in the old days that it is sweet and fitting to die for one's country. But in modern war, there is nothing sweet nor fitting in your dying. You will die like a dog for no good reason. -- Ernest Hemingway |
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#21 |
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Bob wrote:
> 2- Horses, besides not being too welcome on city streets unless they > are pulling a couple snuggling in a carriage or being ridden by a > police officer, require a heck of a lot more work than does riding a > bike. Ever mucked out a stable or unloaded a truckload of alfalfa? ;-) Hey, I did a double-take last month when I came across one of Boston's finest on a bike. I asked when the unit was started & he replied it was new this year. Apparently the mayor just started riding last fall and is now something of a convert (don't know if the two are related). He's been talking up bike lanes and parking. The bike-cop actually seemed to be really enjoying himself. |
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#22 |
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On May 15, 11:32 am, JCrowe <bongof...@hotrats.org> wrote:
> Matt O'Toole wrote: > > On Mon, 12 May 2008 18:53:12 -0700, Bob wrote: > I am seeing more adults riding in neighborhoods and on running/bike > paths...not so much on the roads where I ride. There is a fear factor > involved here, I believe. High speed auto traffic and bicycles are a mix > that's daunting for many folks, and in suburban areas, which is where a > significant part of the local population resides, there are a lot of > neighborhoods connected by highspeed arteries. Out here in the burbs, > there are no safely accessible places to shop by bicycle either. Yep, the burbs were built to be inhabited by car people. But maybe the can be reclaimed by humans in the post petroleum era. |
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#23 |
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Matt O'Toole wrote:
> > We'll never go "back to horses" because we never came from horses to begin > with. This idea comes from our own car culture projected backwards. No > one ever saddled up to fetch a quart of milk! Most people walked. Draft > animals for pulling heavy loads were as likely to be mules or oxen as > horses. When bikes came around in the late 1800s they were immediately > popular among those who could afford them (about $4000, adjusted for > inflation) -- not just for their novelty, but their transportation value, > practicality, and economy. I think the main problem for the bike was that it was so quickly superseded by the auto that it never really took hold culturally in the US. It's remarkable that only 20 years passed between the invention of the pneumatic tire (and the safety bike) and the Model T. As for horses, I think street cars were an important form of transport in urban US, and until they went electric late in the 19th century, most were horse drawn. The auto killed the bike and the street car. Americans are technophiles, and it's a culture that we've exported successfully. Bikes are considered backwards, not only in the US, but the other cultures we've influenced. The Segway produced quite a stir, the EBike, scarcely a ripple. It's possible that energy cost/shortages may bring a short-term boom(let) in bicycling, but that same motive (necessity) will doom it by further connecting it with lack of status. As tempting as it is to poke fun at "fitness" cyclists, that seems to be the only segment with real growth potential. |
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#24 |
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In article <6e91e5cf-ec02-44e9-8c90-194e8bb84920
@l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com>, frkrygow@gmail.com says... > On May 12, 9:53 pm, Bob <hunr...@aol.com> wrote: > > > > > > I don't think there's any evidence that Americans are any more lazy > > than the citizens of any other country. > > Try spending a few weeks east of the Atlantic, then returning to the > US. > > I've done that a few times. Each time, the body fat walking around in > the US airport shocks me. The difference is very noticeable. I don't think this is evidence of greater laziness in the U.S., rather it's evidence of urban design that panders to laziness in ways other cultures would reject out of hand. There's plenty of evidence that communities designed for walking promote public health, not because the people who live there are less lazy, but because their environment is more conducive to walking than driving. Make walking the easy choice, and lazy people will walk, while dedicated motor enthusiasts will drive. Make driving the easy choice, and lazy people will drive, while dedicated pedestrian enthusiasts will walk. -- josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam <http://www.phred.org/~josh/> Braze your own bicycle frames. See <http://www.phred.org/~josh/build/build.html> |
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#25 |
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On May 15, 6:55 pm, Peter Cole <peter_c...@verizon.net> wrote:
.... > It's possible that energy cost/shortages may bring a short-term > boom(let) in bicycling, but that same motive (necessity) will doom it by > further connecting it with lack of status. I thought cycling was "the new golf". http://www.usaweekend.com/08_issues...323cycling.html http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/04/f.../04SILICON.html http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=497889 |
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#26 |
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On May 15, 11:30 pm, <j...@phred.org> wrote:
> In article <6e91e5cf-ec02-44e9-8c90-194e8bb84920 > @l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com>, frkry...@gmail.com says... > > > On May 12, 9:53 pm, Bob <hunr...@aol.com> wrote: > > > > I don't think there's any evidence that Americans are any more lazy > > > than the citizens of any other country. > > > Try spending a few weeks east of the Atlantic, then returning to the > > US. > > > I've done that a few times. Each time, the body fat walking around in > > the US airport shocks me. The difference is very noticeable. > > I don't think this is evidence of greater laziness in the U.S., rather > it's evidence of urban design that panders to laziness in ways other > cultures would reject out of hand. > > There's plenty of evidence that communities designed for walking promote > public health, not because the people who live there are less lazy, but > because their environment is more conducive to walking than driving. > > Make walking the easy choice, and lazy people will walk, while dedicated > motor enthusiasts will drive. > > Make driving the easy choice, and lazy people will drive, while > dedicated pedestrian enthusiasts will walk. American obesity levels are not proof of greater laziness, but I suspect they are an indicator. Regarding community design: I'm lucky to live in a suburban village that's known for its pedestrian friendliness. My wife and I (and, back in the day, our kids) used this. My wife walked my daughter to kindergarten, our kids walked to school, we still frequently walk to church, to the library... and it's always drawn comments! When my wife volunteered at the grade school, a fellow volunteer needed to fetch something from the pharmacy, one block away. The woman said to my wife, somewhat embarrassed, "I know you'd walk, and I know I should, but I'm going to take my car." But that doesn't beat the record: when visiting a friend, we watched her neighbor walk out of his house, get in his car, back 50 feet down to his curbside mailbox, reach out for his mail, then drive back up and return to the house. How would you rate laziness of different cultures? Would the popularity of automatic garage door openers do it? The use of leaf blowers instead of leaf rakes? Riding lawn mowers vs. walk behinds, and self-propelled vs. push versions? Portable remotes for everything up to and including overhead fans and digital picture frames? Automatic dish washers? - Frank Krygowski |
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#27 |
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On Thu, 15 May 2008 22:55:59 GMT, Peter Cole <peter_cole@verizon.net>
wrote: [---] >The auto killed the bike and the street car. > >Americans are technophiles, and it's a culture that we've exported >successfully. But not the point of killing trams (and bikes) in Europe. Fortunately. |
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#28 |
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On Thu, 15 May 2008 22:55:59 +0000, Peter Cole wrote:
> Matt O'Toole wrote: >> >> We'll never go "back to horses" because we never came from horses to >> begin with. This idea comes from our own car culture projected >> backwards. No one ever saddled up to fetch a quart of milk! Most >> people walked. Draft animals for pulling heavy loads were as likely to >> be mules or oxen as horses. When bikes came around in the late 1800s >> they were immediately popular among those who could afford them (about >> $4000, adjusted for inflation) -- not just for their novelty, but their >> transportation value, practicality, and economy. > > I think the main problem for the bike was that it was so quickly > superseded by the auto that it never really took hold culturally in the > US. It's remarkable that only 20 years passed between the invention of > the pneumatic tire (and the safety bike) and the Model T. This is true. The difference between the US and Europe on this point is that Europe remained relatively poor for longer, with average folks unable to afford cars until well after WWII. In the US, new development was car-oriented as early as the 1920s. > As for horses, I think street cars were an important form of transport > in urban US, and until they went electric late in the 19th century, most > were horse drawn. This is true but the horse/person ratio was still pretty low. > The auto killed the bike and the street car. This is true too. The oft-cited case is LA's streetcar system, perhaps the best in the world at the time, supposedly killed by a conspiracy of big auto and big oil. In fact GM/Firestone/Standard continued to run it at a great loss with declining ridership for over a decade. The death knell was from motorists demanding the streetcars be removed because they were blocking traffic. > Americans are technophiles, and it's a culture that we've exported > successfully. Bikes are considered backwards, not only in the US, but > the other cultures we've influenced. The Segway produced quite a stir, > the EBike, scarcely a ripple. > > It's possible that energy cost/shortages may bring a short-term > boom(let) in bicycling, but that same motive (necessity) will doom it by > further connecting it with lack of status. As tempting as it is to poke > fun at "fitness" cyclists, that seems to be the only segment with real > growth potential. You may be right, but bike/ped oriented communities are increasingly seen as high status, desirable places to live, and the ability to ride a bike or walk to work a luxury. In the current market, prices in these villagey areas aren't slipping much, compared to the commuter towns and McMansion areas. Our sensibilities really *are* changing. Matt O. |
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#29 |
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On Thu, 15 May 2008 20:30:26 -0700, josh wrote:
> There's plenty of evidence that communities designed for walking promote > public health, not because the people who live there are less lazy, but > because their environment is more conducive to walking than driving. > > Make walking the easy choice, and lazy people will walk, while dedicated > motor enthusiasts will drive. > > Make driving the easy choice, and lazy people will drive, while dedicated > pedestrian enthusiasts will walk. The problem is when walking or biking is a hard choice because the environment is so hostile to it. Then even those who would walk or bike will drive instead. Matt O. |
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#30 |
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On Thu, 15 May 2008 20:30:26 -0700, <josh@phred.org> wrote:
>> I've done that a few times. Each time, the body fat walking around in >> the US airport shocks me. The difference is very noticeable. > >I don't think this is evidence of greater laziness in the U.S., rather >it's evidence of urban design that panders to laziness in ways other >cultures would reject out of hand. And probably diet. The same striking difference (particularly amongst the young) is visible between Germany, on the one hand, and France and Italy on the other. |
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