I’m typing this in Blue Smoke, the barbeque joint above the Jazz Standard on E 27th St in Manhattan. I’m in town to interview saxophonist John Ellis for my show The Jazz Session.

This is the first time I’ve been in the city since becoming a regular bicycle rider, and thus the first time I’ve really looked at the city with cyclist’s eyes. Let me tell you, you’ve really gotta want it to ride here.

I’m amazed at the bike handling skills of the messengers I see, and amused at the lack of skills of the pseudo-messengers. Yes, it’s cool to have more folks on bikes, but some of these riders are asking to be killed.

I also got a good laugh out of several of the bike lanes, which are little more than additional parking spaces for cars and delivery vans. Not a new observation, to be sure. In fact, BSNYC has written about it several times.

All that said, I’d love to try riding a bike here. I almost brought my bike today, but decided not to add one more complication to the joy of driving here and navigating to the club. (Tip: OnStar is useless in Manhattan. At least mine was.)

I did spot one thing I’ve never seen mentioned — a cycling map of New York City. It was outside the Barnes and Noble in Union Square, on one wall of a covered bike rack. The map shows various “bicycle-friendly” routes through the city, and it also shows the location of quite a few bike shops. I forgot that I had my camera with me, or I would have taken a picture.

Anyway, my hat’s off to all the folks who make riding a bike here part of their regular day. Huzzah!

hpim4288.jpg

So here’s me, modeling my new Yehuda Moon t-shirt. And by “modeling” I mean “wearing” as opposed to “causing to look attractive and therefore enticing you into buying.” That said, the shirts are cool, the comic strip is cooler, and I recommend outfitting your cycling wardrobe with one or two of these.

When the “model” isn’t tubby and hunched over, the shirt looks rather more like this:

Here’s the link to the swag at CafePress.com, and here’s the official Yehuda Moon site.

I would also like to point out that I took this shot in front of my 1957 Raleigh Sprite, thus enhancing my Yehudaness.

From The Bike-O-Sphere

In The News

I’ve been refurbishing The Packet Boat (Xtracycle) recently with the help of the gang at the Down Tube bike shop on Madison. The two major changes are new trekking handlebars:

HPIM4277.JPG

HPIM4281.JPG

And new front and rear disc brakes:

HPIM4278.JPG

I’m really digging both changes. Those handlebars (which I purchased from Nashbar.com for cheap) give me many new hand positions, which is a big relief on longer rides. I can also grab them down low for more climbing leverage, which I like a lot. When I reach forward to hold the shifters, I’m much lower out of the wind than was the case with my old riser bars. I’m not saying the Boat is aerodynamic, but it’s as close as something nicknamed “The Packet Boat” is likely to get.

The disc brakes, which I also purchased from Nashbar, are a welcome change. Much more stopping power than the old side-pulls, and — from what I’ve been told — more all-weather reliability. Unfortunately, I bought a front-and-rear kit from Nashbar that had a smaller rear rotor than Xtracycle calls for. I also had wheels on my low-end Giant hybrid that didn’t accept disc breaks. So I got a slightly better set of Shimano wheels and a larger rear rotor, and all was well.

Jen’s Xtracycle kit arrived today. It’s going to be built this weekend by the fine folks at the Down Tube bike shop on Madison Avenue.

HPIM4276.JPG

Xtracycle #2 (in box) next to Xtracycle #1. The other box is a PeaPod child seat for Jen’s X.

HPIM4285.JPG

Not how I’ll be transporting the boxes to the bike shop…

The bicycle facilities at the Stewart’s convenience store on Osbourne and Sand Creek may not be that attractive…

HPIM4266.JPG

…but they do have a cherubim watching the bikes, so there’s some extra security.

HPIM4267.JPG

From The Bike-O-Sphere

In The News

Documents early days (2000) of Xtracycle LLC, makers of the FreeRadical hitchless bicycle trailer — http://xtracycle.com/ . Shot mostly in San Francisco, where inventor Ross Evans and musician-president Kipchoge Spencer introduce the product to sometimes quizzical, sometimes skeptical, sometimes euphoric people.

I love Bike Snob NYC for many reasons, one of which is writing this good:

But as cruel a fate as that may be, he knew perfectly well when he swung a Docker-clad leg over that gel saddle, flipped up the kickstand with the heel of his Rockport, and set out on his way to the comic book store that he risked feeling the cruel sting of Anserine ire.

(Read the rest of this post.)

And lest you think I’m making fun of other cyclists, I will come clean and admit that while I don’t wear Dockers, I have flipped up my kickstand with my Rockport on the way to the comic book shop.

If you’d like even more BSNYC, give a listen to his appearance on our podcast, The RocBike Review.

I’m a member of the Parents Panel of The Albany Times-Union newspaper. That means I write a little piece for the print edition of the paper each month, and it also means I contrbute to the “Parent To Parent” blog. Recently, they asked me to write about our family’s plan to go car-free. Here’s what I’ve written so far:

Jason Crane interviews Jenn Clunie, program manager of the New York Bicycling Coalition, about Bike Month in New York State. NYBC is sponsoring activities across the state, including classes in basis cycling skills, urban and mountain bike rides, Bike To Work Day, the Ride of Silence, and the annual Legislative Breakfast.

(Theme music provided by The Magnetic Fields. The song is “The Luckiest Guy On The Lower East Side.” Find out more at The House of Tomorrow.)

 
icon for podpress  The RocBike Review #5: New York Celebrates Bike Month [28:27m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

I have finally joined the elite cycling ranks. No, not by winning Le Tour or completing Paris-Roubaix or Paris-Brest-Paris. I did it the hard way — by getting hit with a full box of french fries thrown from a moving bus.

I was on my way home from Schenectady to Albany today, riding up State Street, when I felt a bunch of little stinging sensations on my back. The next thing I knew, I was riding through a cloud of what appeared to be McDonald’s french fries as a school bus passed within inches. I could see the kid who threw them jumping back from the window into his seat.

I tried to catch up, but an Xtracyle is not a great pursuit vehicle. The bus hit five or six green lights in a row going uphill, and I broke off the chase.

To add insult to injury, I wasn’t even able to catch a fry in my mouth!

« Previous

© 2007 Jason Crane. Login
"Driving a car versus riding a bike is on par with watching television rather than living your own life." -- Bruce MacAlister

Close
E-mail It
Socialized through Gregarious 42