Started as a ladies group to ramble about town stopping at the farmers market, bakery, coffee house, greenway, cafes, pubs and whatever was local. We biked there, enjoyed friendship, and our town. No cars needed or allowed. #westsideladieswhorideinskirts
Sunday, October 27, 2013
passing the torch
she rides a pink fuji commuter with lovely orlieb waterproof panniers. her commute is a mile across the downtown to the local school and she hugs the crossing guard maxine who lets her walk her bike thru the morning chaos once she arrives at school.
so i'm passing the torch, laura you can write the blog for a while. pictured in the center is laura.
roll model,
trace
Thursday, August 29, 2013
betty or bridget? new cycling panty
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/cguzman/urbanist-cycling-chamois-panties
Thursday, May 2, 2013
a chance to be a big fish in a small pond
and that's a good thing. i wanted to simplify my life, slow it down, and focus on what i love doing, while adjusting to menopause symptoms, slight as they are, thankfully. so i took a gig in griffin, georgia, an hour south of ATL and served only by rural shuttles. no bus, subway, train, but lots of trucks and interstate highways. may thru september i just biked to work, ate in the 3 local downtown cafes, walked my dog on looooong walks to the creek or park nearby, or both. called my honey on the phone in the evenings and exhaled.
after a few months of learning a new job, forming a mobility council and getting out in the 10-county area i began biking on weekends to new parks, trails, and in community events. in no time i found the cycling community, out on the road where they belong. that led to the big fish moment.
a local shop owner wanted to do some advocacy but felt he was trapped in a stale town that would never change. he heard i was good at bike/ped advocacy but others told me to steer clear because he was a bit of a bull in a china shop and needed direction. i'm good at directions.
but i coasted another month without getting involved and then the october bike challenge began. i looked around for a team and at first didnt find one, so i competed as an individual. then suddenly they came out of the woodwork, and indeed October is a fine month in georgia to come out, of anything. its gorgeous outside and temps are crisp and delightful. suddenly i was on the 4Ps team out of griffin and we were logging miles every day, all 5 of us, and going gangbusters. we went on to place 7th in the state, well ahead of plenty of ATL folks. why? because we rode every day. because we all rode, all 5. and even my measly 1.5 route counted because it wasnt about miles, it was about commuting! our team ringer placed 5th in state.
needless to say, that set things in motion and with the support of a colleague who was the city transportation planner, a quasi governmental/advocacy bike/ped committee was formed. my teammates were all on it. then the local indie newpaper, the GRIP called and did a story, first on us commuting and then on the support from city hall which followed in March. then clean air campaign asked me to blog about the economics and lifestyle choice of commuting by bicycle. then our local radio station at UGA campus put me on the air to talk about it. and we rode in local parades including a newly refurbished GDOT bridge over the tracks smack in downtown that the mayor and all citizens north and south were relieved to finally see open again. bikes on the historic bridge! that had never happened, in griffin.

and that folks, is how you get things rolling in a sleepy small town, that had the advocates, but they werent connected, they didnt know how to organize or what steps to take first, they didnt know the sources of bike/ped funding and the power of a relationship with the city/county...but really wanted to be on bikes and get others out there too for health, for fitness, to save $$, and to make it safer for all.
griffin bicycle coalition is on the map people. they are rolling with bike cops back in force, share the road signs in place, new bike racks popping up all over downtown and at workplace destinations, safe route to school in the works, commissioners who bike, city/county support, a logo, a facebook page, and stickers! check them out and go ride in griffin. slow spokes sundays from blue moon bicycles.
https://www.facebook.com/griffinbicyclecoalition
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
new business cards to hook me up in ATL/Decatur
Friday, November 2, 2012
a tipping point for bike commuters and a silver lining
Post Hurricane Sandy blog 11/2/12
Okay i've resisted for 4 days, but now that Mayor Bloomberg suggests biking as a way to move through the city (NYC) i'll share the others who are jumpin on that wagon train. i also did so on the frankenstorm worry page i set up while the storm was brewing and no one could reach anyone. 2 links are articles and 2 are videos that all suggest that right now, a bike is a perfect solution to the logjam that is NYC. with subway, airport, and transit lines still underwater and connections impossible to lower manhattan, one is faced with long lines to wait for cross town busses, ferries from the docks, or waits at working petro stations for fuel, to only then sit in gridlock while folks figure out how to circumnavigate their city given the obstacles. oh, new yorkers can do it if anyone can, and some have already figured out a better solution and are even boasting about how quickly they can arrive for work, BY BIKE. what? yep by bike. so when i say silver lining or tipping point, it is not without concern and appreciation for the loss and devastation that the super storm victims are feeling, but it is with some hope that an idea's time (a perfectly good one in fact), has finally come.
bicycle commuting.
not bike racing, not spandex, and certainly not tour de l@^(* armstrong. no i mean bikes as transportation, and the freeing, economical, healthy, unscheduled, zen-like, creative, and practical solution to how to get to work. or school. or the doctor. or the transit museum (i hear they are open and free to visit).
now certainly the ground work was already laid for bicycles as transportation by J.Sadik-Khan - NYDOT, Ray LaHood - USDOT, NYC Mayor Bloomberg, Mike Lydon - Street Plans Collaborative, ALTA bike shares and many other advocates. so to know that the city has been acclimatizing to bikes on the streets, bike facilities have increased exponentially, and citizens have become more aware are all great foundations for a moment when all else fails except the bike. and then what does the city do?
just hop on a bike, pump up the tires, and take off, as usual. to know that NYC might, from this day forward, or for many months currently, rely heavily on and dedicate space to and make policy for bikes/pedestrians as a preferred way of travel is why i say that it is the silver lining in Sandy and possibly a tipping point to set us on the path to look and function like copenhagen or amsterdam one day. and with all of that will come better health, less diabetes/obesity, cleaner air, less stress, alternative commutes, and fatter purses.
1 http://go.bloomberg.com/hurricane-sandy/2012/10/31/advice-for-post-sandy-new-york-traffic-take-the-bike/
2 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/nyregion/with-transportation-snarled-in-brooklyn-bicycles-roam-free.html?ref=nyregion&_r=0
3 http://www.nytimes.com/video/2012/11/02/nyregion/100000001880180/after-sandy-two-wheeled-commute.html
4 http://player.vimeo.com/video/52640864
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
My Review
light as a feather, and a great fit
Pros: Light Weight, Saddle, Ergonomic Grips, Easy shifting, Color
Best Uses: Commuting, Rail trails, Weekend Rides
after 15 years on the 7500 hybrid, i finally let myself buy a new trek, my 4th over my lifetime. the FX7.4 is so light weight, well specked for women's torsos, has comfy grips, well formed saddle and lovely pearl color with eggplant + gold accents and all trimmed out in black vs. chrome. i commute daily and ride weekend rail trails or charity rides. bike has mounts for future rack w/panniers and a wireless bike computer (no more messy wires!) the ride is smooth, fast, shifts well, and if i enter another duathlon with my partner i bet i'll even place better. i love it. oh, and its so much easier to lift this to my subaru roof rack than the last 15 years. i'll probably need a replacement arm workout now. :) oh, and with the bomber kevlar tires, lets just say i wont be stressing any flats. all this for $799, only $150 more than i paid 15 years ago. Way to maintain a bargain on a fantastic product over the years Trek.
taking the new ride home

Tags: Picture of Product
bike commuter parking...if you're the only one

Tags: Picture of Product
(legalese)
Monday, October 15, 2012
a new ride, after 15 years...and new homes for the others


- 1st trek = 420 touring bike, bought in DC at citybike in 1987...oodles of miles
- 2nd trek = 7500 hybrid bike, bought in Berkeley at missing link in 1997...~800 miles per year commuting for 15 years
- 3rd trek = 1000 road bike bought from YHC pal paige in Athens in 2010...barely tried it
- 4th trek = FX7.4 hybrid bought in ATL Trek southside in 2012...we shall see
- i sold the touring bike to a para-athlete at lake tahoe who wore a blade on one leg; she needed a bike without those clipless pedals, in other words, an old fashioned pedal cage was best suited to balance her prosthetic on the pedal and not trap her
- i still have the hybrid bike, and as recently as this weekend, she was my go to ride. but admittedly she was much heavier than aluminum or carbon fiber frames, with a welded seat post, and well worn shifters, and thus holding me back a bit. she'll serve as a bike for weekend guests
- i sold the shiny red road bike to my pal Ilka who loves her and prefers the road style ride whereas i could no longer hunch over and knew pretty quickly after i rescued her from paige's dusty garage, that i preferred a sit-up straight style and there was no use denying it.
- that brings me to the new pearl hybrid beauty that i will commute on, and do charity rides, rail-trails, and as of last weekend, perhaps a few more events, like the duathlon jeff and i entered in griffin, which was great fun. and she only weighs 24 lbs. so i will finally find it easy to load my bike on top of the subaru for travelin.