Well duh... the answer's San Francisco Bay Area. 
I wonder how many other people are going to say their hometown is the best?
I wonder how many other people are going to say their hometown is the best?
good point, butto be clear, i'm actually a chicagoan, and while the bike community and infrastructure are great, and theres a few great rides there, the weather is what inspired me to look elsewhere and i ended up here because of the bikingfriedmikey said:Well duh... the answer's San Francisco Bay Area.
I wonder how many other people are going to say their hometown is the best?
That all depends on where in the Bay Area you are, but in general, no, it is not difficult to get to good roads. San Francisco proper is a relatively small big city, so it won’t take you long to get out. Every day, scores of SF cyclists ride across the Golden Gate Bridge to get to hundreds of miles of suburban and country roads in Marin County, where I live. Folks in the south bay (Palo Alto, San Jose, etc.) have easy access to great roads in the Santa Cruz Mountains, Mt. Hamilton, etc. East Bay has the Berkeley Hills, Mt Diablo, etc.raynim said:... To anyone in the Bay Area: Looking at maps, so much of the area looks Urban, do you find getting out to good road riding country difficult?
This is my 34th year in Palo Alto, CA home of Stanford U, about 20,000 cyclist and lots of hills. One can reach single track by taking CalTrain and VTA light rail south of San Jose. The biggest problem is housing cost but ideal weather, good jobs (mostly) and preserved space make it pricey. My 50,000 biking miles are mostly commuting to work by trail and quiet streets. I put my bike on CalTrain for 5 years. I now ride everyday home from work. Cheap company I work for has no shower.raynim said:Thanks for the input. I am finishing my undergrad degree in 6 months and I am plannning on moving somwhere where I can have acess to places that have great conditions for the activities I love; primarily cycling and backpacking. The Front Range, CO and Bay Area, CA were already the top two on my list but I wanted to see what else was out there.
To anyone in the Bay Area: Looking at maps, so much of the area looks Urban, do you find getting out to good road riding country difficult?
scotty72 said:We (my family) are moving to the US next year. It is interesting that New England has a very low representation in that list. We are either going to Harvard U, Mass or Hartford/Farmington Ct.
Anyone have any feedback on either place?
I've spent a couple of years as a pre-teenager riding and racing BMX in central New York; more specifically the Mattydale-Liverpool-North Syracuse-Clay area (Onondaga County?) where there weren't too many people, and the roads were big enough with multi-lanes for a city of much larger population, AND the roadside shoulders were HUGE! No bike lane needed..... I think the locals around there pretty much accept the shoulders as bike lanes..... but of course, the weather there is an exemplarary four-distinct seasons...... winters will be mostly trainer-time.....astroluc said:anywhere with roads that have wide shoulders and temperate climate... in other words, not where I live![]()
artmichalek said:Here's a good place to start:
http://www.bicyclefriendlycommunity.org/May2005Pressrelease.htm
I'll put a second vote for the South! LoLe-doc said:Hummm, the south (though only know about NC, SW Va and NE Tenn) No leash laws, cars that honk at you and drivers that tell you to "Get the F*CK of the road", hit you because they are drunk then drive off, even throw things at you. Makes life interesting (except the trucks with the gun racks.) The weather is nice though (except in NC mountains which are like Vt, only not as cold)
BTW, am a native NC boy
Blademun said:I'll put a second vote for the South! LoL
Florida is kinda bicycle friendly..Perfect Climate, sunny almost all the time, perfectly flat, my community has buses with bikeracks on them, very loose, non restrictive laws, Low Living Costs.
There is some bad points..Roads are ****, the drivers are old and blind, sidewalks are spotty, Oh, and the BUGS. In the summer, after a rain, clouds of gnats fill the air. Its the most horrible experience to ride into one of those. YOu ride out literally covered in little black specks with wings. Most of this though is only bad out here in the backwood parts of FL.
If you stick to the big citys you'll be alright. Clearwater in particular gets my vote for the Best Bicycling City.
huhenio said:My bro in law says Seattle
Yep.friedmikey said:That all depends on where in the Bay Area you are, but in general, no, it is not difficult to get to good roads. San Francisco proper is a relatively small big city, so it won’t take you long to get out. Every day, scores of SF cyclists ride across the Golden Gate Bridge to get to hundreds of miles of suburban and country roads in Marin County, where I live. Folks in the south bay (Palo Alto, San Jose, etc.) have easy access to great roads in the Santa Cruz Mountains, Mt. Hamilton, etc. East Bay has the Berkeley Hills, Mt Diablo, etc.