20 February 2008

Guest Photoliciousness from Estonia, London and Portland

A busy inbox we have.
Thanks to everyone who sends us guest photos of cycle chic around the world. Here's today's international collection:

One of our newest member states in the European Union, Estonia, has a blossoming bike culture and Rasmus sent us this pearl of a shot. Thanks for that. Even though mountain bikes [in urban settings] are so-o-o-o 1990's, the outfit makes this shot. Nice contrast.

Thanks to Eva for this groovy photo from the London New Years Day Parade where participants dress up in vintage clothes and ride vintage bikes.
Check out Eva's cool blog - Cyclepod.

Another report from our Foreign Correspondant Patrick Finn in Portland, USA:
Here is a shot of something we see very often in Portland, girls riding track bikes with no brakes. This has caused quite a controversy here due to police citing cyclists for not having a brake, but the lawyers looked closely at the law and saw that it said the vehicle must be able to skid to a stop. Some fixed fear riders can do this and some can't. I ride a fixed gear, with a front brake. I can certainly understand how Europeans see this fixed gear craze and think it's a bit frivolous, but what can I say? It's become part of the culture here.
Great shot yet again, Patrick. You're right, it's a strange fad that fixed gear thing. But fads fade. Bikes without proper brakes are not allowed here according to the traffic laws. If bikes are to enjoy an equal footing with motorised traffic then the rules should apply to bikes as well. That's an important step towards bike culture. Thanks for keeping us up to date from your side of the pond!

25 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have a couple of friends who ride single speed (fixed gear) in sydney, and i personally think that are mad. its hilly, they live on the side of a steep hill, and they are ruining their knees.

i am also glad to see that Denmark has some intelligent rules about riding without brakes. what happens if you get a flat tyre going down hill? or something blocks your path and you can't stop? riding without being able to stop just seems rather daft.

Anyway, love the blog - it is inspiring me to look more stylish when i pull out my red roadmaster.

cheers
Sophie

Xander said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Xander said...

great blog!

I have watched this silly "fixie" craze take hold in california for a few years now. hills + no gears - brakes = ridiculous. glad the europeans agree.

that being said, watching a skilled fixed-gear rider go backwards is quite something.

looking forward to studying abroad in copenhagen starting in august!

Eugene Lim said...

gorgeous photos (: the london new year's day parade sounds intriguing. i'd like to see a special day in the USA where people dress in vintage clothes and ride vintage bicycles...

Unknown said...

Once a fad turns "cool" it's easy for people to overlook stupid. i suppose the narrow bars lets you ride between closely spaced traffic when you're out with no brakes... oh well, I think I prefer Copenhagen!

Aaron78 said...

In the interests of balance, I would like to point everyone in the direction of this article detailing the attraction of fixed-gear cycling . . .

http://rouleur.cc/1_a-fixed-idea.html

DeepBlueSea said...

Hopefully tomorrow I will have time to read the oodles of text (it's French after all) of the piece Aaron linked to.

But today perhaps a fixed gear aficionado can explain the charm of riding that type of bike in an urban environment.

DeepBlueSea said...

Correction: the piece in roleur isn't french; i got fooled by the web address.
(Also has a cool piece on Kraftwerk...)

Colville-Andersen said...

For my part the aesthetic aspects of a fixed gear are appealing. A rider in total harmony with the vechicle.

I just don't think they should be allowed in urban settings if the bike wishes to enjoy equality in the traffic and gain the respect it deserves as a mode of transport.

If I took, for example, the bumpers off my car because I thought it looked cool and reduced the car to something more minimalistic and true to it's nature, I wouldn't get more than a kilometre from my flat before getting stopped and fined.

I don't think that fixed gear bikes should be allowed special privileges in the traffic. It's a backward step in creating a true bike culture in cities.

For the record, the laws here in Denmark dictate that you must have front and rear brakes. Most bikes come equipped with coasting rear brakes and hand brakes for the front wheel are added.

Fixed gear... a nice aesthetic idea... in your driveway. As for world champion track standing at the lights... this homeboy don't need no fixie. :-)

KULBE said...

fixed gear are nice on parquet rings, asphalt and concrete are hard enough with brakes, not to say about cars and buses...

but a friend of mine uses to see the adv of this new mode: this crazy people, despite their little number, are going to be the best contributors for organs donation (sad but true, same as who drives 300Km/h motorbikes)

bighead said...

oh it kind of makes me fuzzy inside to hear all of the anti-urban fixed gear sentiments. I just can't believe how terribly ignorant/misguided/un-informed alot of them are.

I have a hard time understanding exaclty how excluding an aspect of cycling culture be a step to "creating a true bike culture?"

or what the special privelages for fixed gear riders you speak of are?

And ontop of all of this, I am hoping that those who have expressed their anti-fixed sentiments have at least tried to ride them. Please don't make blind statements.

Wisconsin, US - 7 years - riding 350+ days a year - one fixed gear bike

Anonymous said...

Welcome to ice and snow with that road bike.

I do agree, that in the summertime riding a mountain bike "in an urban setting" or generally on a flat smooth surface is so 90's. But in the winter (defined as "when there's ice and snow"), the mountain bike is much easier and safer to handle than most other bikes -- it has been designed for rough surfaces, after all. I ride one with studded tyres (thinner than normal mtb. tyres, actually) in the winter, and switch to a touring bike for the summer (with a much more stable frame and more comfortable riding position, but not so good to handle on rough surfaces).

Colville-Andersen said...

While fewer people ride when it snows here, the ones that do just ride on their normal bikes. There is no need for different tyres.

With that said, the bike lanes are cleared regularly, but on occasion you have to muscle it through several centimetres of snow. I know my bike well and can adapt to the ice and snow if need be. City bike tyres and all.

Regarding your comment, bighead, people aren't necessarily ignorant because they don't share your opinion.

The laws in established bike cultures place the cycle on equal footing with cars. Bells are required, as are reflectors, front and back brakes, lights that meet strict standards, speed limits, etc.

Most of the people who visit this blog wish to see a sustainable bike culture, inspired by Copenhagen, implemented where they live. If bikes are to be a part of the traffic then it is only fair that they are subject to the same rules as cars. Then equality and co-existence between cars and bikes can be achieved.

Anonymous said...

Copenhagen has winter? While winter cycling certainly is doable with normal tyres, studded tyres and a bike easy to handle in snow does add a level of safety and convenience when you have ice and snow for many months of the year (or used to have anyway; these past two years the winter has been halved) and the multi-use path (what bike path?) maintenance is poor at best (especially when the surface starts turning into a mixture of slush and ice), not to even speak of the abundant slippery road crossings, where the motorists are allowed by law to run over you (if you're on a bicycle, but not if you're a pedestrian. Yet typically they don't let pedestrians cross either, expecting people to yield to their cages and rather stepping on the gas before a zebra crossing. The best way to get a chance to cross the road, is to approach it fast, and make a last second stop.)

No, I do not live on the north american continent. Not all of Europe is a bike/pedestrian paradise.

BTW, I do not want cars and bicycles on an equal footing; I want the noisy, smelly and dangerous cages away from my life.

DeepBlueSea said...

If fixed gear people own cars,
are they the Fred Flintstone type of vehicle?

2whls3spds said...

zak,
You have to remember that less than 1% (IIRC) of people in the US look at a bicycle as serious transportation. To the rest it is a toy, status symbol, sporting good or social statement. I fully agree that bicycles need to meet minimum standards to be used as proper transportation. You wouldn't drive a grand prix or drag race car on the freeways to work...
As far as fixed gear is concerned...they need at least one brake mounted for emergency use, if the chain breaks, cog unwinds, etc. To do otherwise is foolish, and yes I ride a fixed gear bike...with fenders AND brakes. ;-)

Aaron

Anonymous said...

I suppose you could still have a fixie but fit it with a front brake? It's the lack of a brake that's the problem. It would clutter up those clean lines I suppose.

I have to admit - I commit the fashion crime of riding a mountain type bike in the city (although mine dates from the eighties) - London is full of potholes and you need something pretty robust

DeepBlueSea said...

One day I'll post a pic of my bike.

Oh man...

Anonymous said...

Perhaps we need a 'Readers' Bikes' photo slot on this blog where we can all 'fess up what kind of bike we ride.

Mine was chosen mainly on the basis that it was the bike least likely to get nicked from outside the station...

2whls3spds said...

Disgruntled commuter,
All for the pictures...problem is I would have trouble choosing which one :-0

Aaron

Colville-Andersen said...

'Readers Bikes'... an interesting concept. Although I think I'd only include bikes that look like they've been Copenhagenized - no racing gear or fixies. Copenhagenstyle Ć¼ber alles. :-)
I'll discuss the idea with the Blog Council of Deciding Persons.

Anonymous said...

I promise I'll dress up!

My bike will have to come as it is though. But it's not a racer, just a rather elderly (in bike years) workhorse that has done me well for almost 20 years...

Anonymous said...

I ride fixed half the time, geared half the time, and front and rear brakes all the time. In fact most people I know who ride fixed do so with brakes and it's the rare few who go without. Anyway, fixie doesn't necessarily mean brakeless. That's a misconception, and the comments here betray a bias that seems based in ignorance and fear like other forms of bigotry. Also, fixed doesn't mean "no" gears (obviously absurd), and you can always gear a bike to suit your terrain and your knees.

Chris the Biking Penguin said...

for the fixie riders, while your rear brake, AKA your legs & the drive train, may be able to skid, it does not have the stopping power required in an emergency. To ride without a separate mechanical brake is foolhardy (and yes, I know many who do and most haven't had serious injury/accident yet, but the "yet" is precisely the issue).

Isaac Akira said...

But there is a brake. You just use the pedal to brake.

At the begining I used to doubt about the its effectiveness. But I got fixie addicted.