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Thursday, 20 February 2014

Ahh, winter, what a PITA.

I started keeping statistics on my cycling a few years ago, just for the hell of it.

Last winter I averaged 4 days a week on the road. My standard winter riding rule is [dry roads= riding weather]. Last winter we had cold days, but much less snow, so the riding conditions were good enough for me most of the season. I've been on the road in fairly cold conditions (-24 with the wind chill is the coldest I remember), but as long as I'm properly bundled up and I don't have skin exposed to the wind I find that the heat I generate while riding keeps me perfectly comfortable (scroll down for more tips on winter riding from a previous post).

This winter has been a cycling disaster, tons of snow, even rain and sleet, wet, icy, snowy and crappy roads for long stretches. My riding is down to about 1 day a week on average, and some weeks not at all. I have an hour long commute, I'm not pushing through deep snow for that.

I am riding on the dry days though, and I have to say it has proven to still be a challenge as there is so much "crap" built up at the side of the road (snow, salt, dirt, all mixed into a chitinous "stuff" that is hard to ride through) that you are essentially forced to be a vehicular cyclist (e.g. riding with, rather than beside, the cars) to get anywhere. Motorists don't like this, particularly in winter when the conditions are already dodgy.

And the bike is a filthy mess, covered with salt and dirt, I have to clean and oil the chain regularly or it grinds my gears. Every time I take the bike out in these conditions I wonder if I'm doing long term damage to my ride.

So yeah, winter, PITA.

Instead of complaining any more, I thought I would post some pictures from sunnier months, just as inspiration. Please keep in mind that most of these photos were taken from a camera phone WHILE RIDING, LOL. So they are not top quality. Still, they give a decent picture of the two primary river trails (the Humber and the Don), particularly in the summer and the fall when I took a lot of pictures.

Enjoy!


Waterfront around Keele



Don River Trail under the Danforth Bridge





The Don River Trail, just before Sunnybrook Park



Don River Trail, looking South near Danforth Bridge

  

Don River Trail, looking South, near the Brickworks


Don River Trail, bridge crossing looking North near Riverdale Farms


Waterfront Trail, near Southern end of Humber



Pedestrian Bridge, Lake Shore West Trail



Humber Marshes, South End of Humber River Trail



"Entry" to South End of Humber River Trail


Public Pavillion, South End of Humber River Trail



Don Trail, looking East to the DVP



Don Trail, looking South 



Don Trail, looking North, just past Danforth Bridge



 Don River Trail, near Bayview Extension




 Don River Trail, looking North



Don River Trail, North past York Mills



 Riverdale Park, East Side




Don River Trail, looking South



Don River Trail, Bridge near Eastern Avenue


 Don River Trail, Near Flemingdon Park


 Don River Trail, near Flemingdon Park


Don River Trail, Near Millwood



 High Park, East End



High Park, East End



Don River Trail, Near Wilket Creek Park, just after a heavy summer rain


Don River Trail, Near Wilket Creek Park, just after a heavy summer rain 



Don River Trail, Near Wilket Creek Park



Don River Trail, Near Wilket Creek Park





Don River Trail, looking South near Riverdale Farms


Don River Trail, Bridge near Riverdale Park, right after a summer storm.


Bridge crossing Don River Trail at Riverdale Farms, looking South on DVP


 Humber River Trail, near Baby Point



York University Campus, near Rexall Centre



York University Campus, near Rexall Centre



Black Creek Parkland Trail, just South of York University


Humber River Trail, North of Eglinton




 Humber River Trail, North of Eglinton


Humber River Trail, North of Eglinton 




Pedestrian Bridge, Junction


Crossing Under the highway on the Upper Humber Trail



 Stairs, Don River Trail, just South of Sunnybrook Park




Don River Trail, near York Mills


Behind my map case and compass, Don River Trail, looking South near Brickworks




Humber River Trail, just North of Eglinton



Downsview Dells Park, looking East


Downsview Dells Park, looking East


Upper Humber River Trail


Upper Humber River Trail


 Upper Humber River Trail



Upper Humber River Trail 



Upper Humber River Trail 


Upper Humber River Trail



 Upper Humber River Trail




Upper Humber River Trail 



Upper Humber River Trail 


Lower Humber River Trail


Lower Humber River Trail, just past Baby Point



Lower Humber River Trail, just past Baby Point


Lower Humber River Trail, just past Baby Point


Lower Humber River Trail, just past Baby Point



Train tracks at Caledonia just South of the 401


Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Alright, time to get on my soap box:

Herb at IBIKETO posted recently on a change that has been happening in bike planning. 

http://www.ibiketo.ca/blog/avid-cyclists-policy-makers-are-going-extinct-and-theyve-no-one-else-blame

He argues that those with the most influence these days are women, and in some cases neophytes to cycling. They bring concerns about safety (can my kids ride using this infrastructure?) to the table, and have been pushing for more separated infrastructure.

This goes against the grain of the past advocates, who pushed for minimal intervention, and were critical of established infrastructure. These advocates, mostly men, pushed for “vehicular cycling”, learning to drive with the traffic rather than in separated infrastructure.

I think that Herb has presented an interesting issue in an unfortunate way. Old experienced white guys playing fast and loose with your safety versus hip, female neophytes who are safety-conscious may read well, but it is certainly reductive. Pointing to female cycling planners and claiming they have some special insight or “more safe” approach is no more sensible than pointing to all the existing male cycling planners in other parts of the world that are progressive about cycling and saying that it has something to do with the fact they are men. It’s a factor, but the far more relevant one is experience. This may have been Herb’s main point, but it was needlessly obscured by discussion of gender and clothing.

There is a historical dimension to this question. The bike advocates he is challenging are rooted in a tradition that emerged from the cycling environment of the time. Bike infrastructure was non-existent until recently, and a vehicular cycling maximized safety in a car-dominated environment. This is why Herb’s take on this is reductive, vehicular cycling is designed for safety too.

An experienced cyclist can work with less bike infrastructure, and may actually prefer a lack of infrastructure in certain cases. A separated lane constrains you from exiting earlier, and limits your ability to pass in certain situations. Experienced cyclists like the freedom of left turning with traffic, exiting where desired, etc. But this is entirely separate from the question of how to set up bike infrastructure from a planning perspective. The planner has to think through who is going to be using the infrastructure, and how they want to meet the needs of these users.

In the case of new cyclists you have two broad choices, train them to be road safe first and have minimal infrastructure, or build separated infrastructure so they can be safe and learn while they ride.

The problem with Option A is that it forces cycling education on people, it pushes the minimum cycling age up, it restricts its use to those with access to training, etc.  But from the perspective of early, experienced cycling advocates like John Forest (who is conspicuously absent from Herb’s post) everyone should go to cycling clubs and gets good enough to ride on the road with the big dogs.

So what you are really talking about here is not a shift to a focus on safety, as Herb suggests. Rather you are talking about a shift in perspective about what constitutes a safe environment for cyclists, one that emphasizes training and experience with minimal infrastructure, or one that emphasizes separated infrastructure and slow, “on the job” learning (with *access* to training and education).

The problem is that posts like Herb’s just exacerbate the tensions between the groups. I know plenty of experienced cyclists who also like the idea of more separated infrastructure, as they have friends, co-workers and family that would like to ride but don’t due to safety concerns. And the presentation of this dichotomy also sells short the very real political and safety concerns that advocates like Forest made the centerpiece of their work. Pushing for separated bike infrastructure emphasizes the idea that bikes don’t belong on the road: roads are for cars. The presence of more separated infrastructure will no doubt exacerbate this trend.

And it is also worth mentioning that, for better or worse, bike infrastructure will always lag need for that infrastructure, which means that, with very few exceptions, cyclists will ALWAYS have to drive with cars, at least for part of their trip. So the model of trained cyclists and minimal infrastructure may not be as unrealistic as it sounds.

The thing that I think is lacking from Herbs post is some sense of the larger picture. A few thoughts in that direction.

First, I personally know a great deal of people who live in the downtown core and have a very short commute. They could cycle to work. Separated bike infrastructure would work for them as they are in the dense, downtown core. So I’m all for separated infrastructure to encourage the casual rider to ride more often.

I also know a great deal of people who commute “cross town”. I’m one of them. I cross the city N/S from Bloor to Steeles, and EW from Ossington to Jane.  So not completely across the city, but a good chunk. I have an 11 mile commute. It takes me 45 minutes or so to get to work by car in rush hour, or about 75 minutes or so on the TTC and a rock solid reliable 50 minutes on the bike to get to work.

The mid-to-long distance commuter are simply ignored by most cycle advocates, either they are assumed to be experienced and not worth the concern, or they are ignored as they are not part of the untapped masses of neophyte cyclists who don’t want to ride due to safety concerns.

However, they could represent  the largest untapped portion of the potential cycling population. How many people do you know that commute to work cross town and take more than a ½ hour at rush hour to get where they are going? These people are all perfect candidates for cycle commuting.

However, here’s the catch. Once you get beyond short hop trips in the core the demand for separated infrastructure is unrealistic. A densely packed downtown core is an ideal spot for separated cycling infrastructure, but the spread out main arteries and secondary roads outside the core will never support the bike traffic to justify widely distributed separated lanes.

In addition, the city is spread out over a lot of space. Amsterdam, a good comparative case since everyone seems to agree that the Dutch have figured this out, is approximately 230 square KM, Toronto is around 650 square KM in size. Unless you plan to spiderweb the city with separated infrastructure over a 650 square KM area, you will have to rely on multiple cycling infrastructure modes (separated lanes, non-separated lanes, trails, secondary roads and even some main arteries) and then knit them together to form a city wide cycling infrastructure.

In short, presenting this as a neophyte (separated lanes only) versus experienced (little infrastructure needed) fundamentally skews the discussion towards simplistic and non-inclusive options. Considering where we are going with traffic and congestion, if all you are shooting for is the short-hop casual downtown commuter the future of gridlock in Toronto is bleak indeed.

The exclusive focus on any one part of the cycling population is a hindrance to progress. I have discussed long-trip riders as one example, but there are others. Mixed mode riders (take the bike then the bus, take the bike on the bus…), non-peak riders, night riders, all season riders, etc.  All season riders are just as concerned with road clearing on non-infrastructure routes as they are with the installation of more separated infrastructure. In the winter large, higher traffic roads are more likely to be clear and thus more easy to ride for cyclists. Night riders and off-peak riders encounter less traffic so are more willing to use main roads. Long distance commuters need more than just separated infrastructure, etc.

It would make more sense to portray this as a problem of inclusion: how do you maximize the number of cyclists on the road? To my mind this implies looking at all the options and considering them: separated lanes, non-separated lanes, recreational paths marked side roads, traffic re-routing, recommended routes, sharrows, etc. It also suggests not only that both the novice and the expert need to be accommodated, but also that short trip and long trip riders, off peak riders, night riders, multi-seasonal riders, etc. all need to be considered.

This is what is missing from cycle advocacy, an approach that recognizes the inherent multiplicity of users and the wide range of needs within the scope of “safe” riding.

Cheers,

Ian