Druid Hill Farmers Market – Wednesdays 3:30 to 7:30

Something to bike to:

This week….Strawberries, cherries, herb plants, raspberries, sustainably pastured, all natural chicken/duck eggs, pork, beef, chicken, potted vegetables, flowers, freshly cut greens, potatoes, beets, handmade goat milk, apple, and carrot-based soaps, natural bath/body products (massage oil and lip balm), and more!

To celebrate Dairy Goat Awareness Week, Black Bottom Farms will be bringing a milking goat.Our friends at Stokes Creek Farm will be providing Wagon Rides!!!!! Rocking Horses, Hula Hoops, Yoga Class at the Conservatory and our world-renowned Conservatory Sprinkler!!!

Baltimore Bicycle Tours


                         
      
Baltimore Bicycle Tours


Star Spangled Banner Explorer

 

2.5  hours – $30 per person 
– 9am

Our bicycle tours are led by a guide that provides history and
information on the sites. Riders are given the opportunity to visit
within some of the sites while on the tour including Fort McHenry

Bicycles are all mountain comfort bikes with 21 gears. The tour
travels over 9 miles at a leisurely pace and is considered an easy
ride.

  • Jonestown – Little Italy,
    Shot Tower, Mary Pickersgill residence

  • Inner Harbor – Powerplant,
    World Trade Center, Battle Monument, Camden Yards

  • Federal Hill* – Visionary Arts Museum, BMI, Inner Harbor view

  • Tide Point – Home of
    Under Armor and Immigration port

  • Fort McHenry – War of
    1812

  • Silo Point* – Scenic
    Lookout

  • Harbor East – Katyn
    Memorial.

 

Continue reading “Baltimore Bicycle Tours”

How Car Dependency Turns Suburban Dreams into Foreclosure Nightmares

from Streetsblog Capitol Hill by Tanya Snyder
According to an analysis by the Center for Neighborhood Technology of 2002 mortgage data, 250 people applied for mortgages every day in Chicago, and only 150 were approved. The top reason for rejecting the other 100? Applicants had too much credit tied up in car ownership.

https://dc.streetsblog.org/2011/06/07/how-car-dependency-turns-suburban-dreams-into-foreclosure-nightmares/

Benefits of new and improved pedestrian facilities – before and after studies

[B’ Spokes: For a bit of an introduction, readers of this blog know that Maryland has a terrible pedestrian fatality rate and I will assert that we need to break the perception that roads are for the sole purpose of accommodating cars and that bicyclists and pedestrians are trespassers. If we can make things safer for pedestrians cyclists benefit and if things are safer for cyclists pedestrians benefit. Any thing that says “We accommodate ALL users of public space (roads) equally will help.]


image
It was broadly observed that the construction of an
improved pedestrian facility resulted in an increased proportion of pedestrians using the desire line at the
location of the improvement.
A key outcome of this analysis is the importance of pedestrian desire lines to the location of new or
improved pedestrian facilities. The utility of a facility is maximised when it is placed on pedestrians’ most
desirable crossing path – ie a facility that does not lie on the path that is most preferred by pedestrians
may not be utilised by a large proportion of pedestrians in the area, as was the case with the Collingwood
St kerb extensions.

[B’ Spokes: Now contrast that with Baltimore County’s (to name just one) and the “We do not accommodate j-walkers, we ticket them.” type of pedestrian safety “improvement” program.]

• Safety was rated as the most important factor considered by pedestrians when choosing a location to
cross the road.
• Pedestrians at all of the study sites reported feeling safer while crossing the street after the
implementation of the new pedestrian facility.
• At five of the eight study sites, the average ‘after’ safety rating was 2.5 or more (out of a maximum of
3), indicating that these facilities had been successful in providing the perception of an extremely safe
crossing environment.

image

[B’ Spokes: Can you guess what Maryland typically does to improve pedestrian safety? If you guessed the one on the bottom, your are right! I really think having the 4th highest pedestrian fatality rate gives us some right to demand that the State crank it up a notch for pedestrian safety and where needed crank it down a notch on the (over) accommodation of cars.]
Continue reading “Benefits of new and improved pedestrian facilities – before and after studies”

GM CEO: “We Ought to Just Slap a Dollar Tax on a Gallon of Gas”


Akerson told The Detroit News that, rather than have the government incrementally increase fuel efficiency standards over the next several years, “You know what I’d rather have them do — this will make my Republican friends puke — as gas is going to go down here now, we ought to just slap a 50-cent or a dollar tax on a gallon of gas.”
“People will start buying more Cruzes and they will start buying less Suburbans,” he said.
Akerson isn’t the first representative of a major U.S. automaker to come out in favor of a higher gas tax….
https://dc.streetsblog.org/2011/06/08/gm-ceo-we-ought-to-just-slap-a-dollar-tax-on-a-gallon-of-gas/

Cycling is NOT dangerous! Let’s stop pretending it is [audio]

From "More or Less" on BBC4: Good info about the safety of cycling beginning at about ten minutes into the broadcast, running for seven minutes.
https://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/moreorless/moreorless_20100903-1248a.mp3
There are a lot of good points here about comparing apples with apples. I will also note that the leading cause of death for 1-31year olds is automobile accidents. Additionally the 5-25 year olds make up the bulk of bicycle crashes so if you are outside of that age range bicycling looks more attractive then driving, at least in my opinion. Listen to the broadcast for more points why bicycling may not be as dangerous as we thought (we need more data to say so with any degree of certainty but the clues are there.)

New York ain’t got nothing on us

image

New Yorkers are killed in traffic crashes at a far higher rate than residents of peer cities. Bringing New York’s traffic safety into line with Berlin or Paris would save more than 100 lives per year. Image: Transportation Alternatives


B’ Spokes: Wow, that’s bad but how does that compare to Baltimore? Our fatality rate is 6.0, that’s almost twice the New York rate. Well Baltimore is crazy so surely things get better when looking at the State as a whole with all it’s rural areas. Maryland’s fatality rate is 9.6, three times that of New York City. But don’t panic yet, because of sprawl and “needing” a car to get around in Maryland we have a lot of miles driven so our fatality rate per miles driven is about average.

Seriously are we supposed to feel safer because we have a lot of cars zooming around versus the rate at which we pick off random members of the population via out of control cars? Should we be thankful for our longer commute times because the more people spending more time in the car makes us “safer”?

At least Baltimore is spending highway safety money for improved roads… for the Grand Prix??? In New York they are demanding Zero Tolerance for Traffic Deaths, maybe we should do the same?
Continue reading “New York ain’t got nothing on us”

CYCLIST RUN OVER TWICE BY SAME DRIVER

If you have not heard about this… totally outrageous:
The report reads: “The cyclist was westbound on MS 50 near the Truelove Loop intersection. V1 (vehicle one) was westbound on MS 50 approaching the cyclist from the rear. The front of V1 collided with the rear of the bicycle. The impact threw the cyclist into the air before landing on the hood of V1 and onto the windshield. V1 continued for a few feet before coming to a stop. The cyclist was then thrown to the asphalt when V1 stopped. The driver of V1 exited the vehicle and observed the cyclist while talking on the phone. D1 (driver one) then reentered her vehicle and ran the cyclist over again before being forced from her vehicle by a witness. V1 came to a final rest facing west in the westbound lane on MS 50 just meters west of the Truelove Loop intersection. The cyclist came to a final rest near the right front tire of V1.”
https://www.starkvilledailynews.com/node/5919
Continue reading “CYCLIST RUN OVER TWICE BY SAME DRIVER”

Can’t a guy ride a bike without being yelled at?

BY MARC SCHLOSSBERG
It finally happened. The other day someone yelled at me, “Why do you cyclists think you own the road?”
I had just finished an afternoon dentist appointment and was cycling home. I was riding on East 27th Avenue from Willamette Street to the Amazon Parkway in Eugene, a short, narrow, not-too-heavily traveled road with parking on both sides and no bike lanes — generally the type of road where things work themselves out.
I was riding downhill in the middle of the lane at the pace of the car in front of me, preparing to turn left on Amazon. A car entered the road behind me, accelerated around my left (into the opposite traffic lane), swerved in front of me, and skidded to a stop as we all reached the stop sign at Amazon Parkway. And that’s when I heard it: “Why do you cyclists think you own the road?”
Honestly, it was deeply disturbing to have a two-ton vehicle aggressively swerving around me and then be made to feel as though I was the instigator of some great injustice. I’ve heard from others that this is a fairly common refrain coming out of car windows, so I thought I’d try to answer this question using its component parts: “You,” “cyclists” and “own the road.”

In that day’s unfortunate situation, I was riding in the middle of the lane, both because there was no bike lane and because I was preparing to turn left. But beyond legality, where and how I was riding was just common sense. I was travelling at the same speed as cars on this short strip, so why wouldn’t I be a “vehicle” and act as one? What upsets me most about this situation is how easily someone felt they could enforce their view of right and wrong by aggressively swerving a vehicle around someone on a bike.
Perhaps this is the crux of the matter: In an ambiguous space, what are our community priorities? Should someone in a vehicle have priority, because after all, in a collision between a vehicle and a bike we know who would lose? Or in such situations, should our community default be to defer to the more vulnerable user?
I was confident I was right, both legally and morally (although I do wish I could have kept calmer after being yelled at).
But I worry for others who want to use a bike as a safe, convenient, less costly, more environmentally friendly — or whatever — way to move about.
I have taught my children to how ride responsibly, but I worry about them being confronted — actually, assaulted — like this.
More importantly, I worry about their physical safety simply because they are using the road as they should. I also worry about the thousands of others who are interested in biking but don’t because they worry about confrontations with vehicles similar to my experience.
So to answer the question: No, I don’t think I am an overentitled bicycle-­riding road owner; I’m just a guy trying to get to work, the dentist, pet food store or my kid’s ballet lessons, sometimes by bike, and hoping to do so without being yelled at.
Marc Schlossberg is an associate professor of Planning, Public Policy and Management at the University of Oregon.
Continue reading “Can’t a guy ride a bike without being yelled at?”