When Durham grows up, will Major have wings?
This winged bull statue (pictured) stands outside Jefferson University in Philadelphia. Other winged bull statues adorn the City of Brotherly Love, next to fountains and atop buildings.
Where the Hell is Matt? (2008) from Matthew Harding on Vimeo.
An update to his 2006 and 2003 videos.
From Triangle Transit (formerly TTA)…
The draft Triangle Transit Short-Range Transit Plan (SRTP) is now available for public review and comment. The SRTP will guide improvements to current services and expansion of services into new areas over the next five years. Please visit the SRTP website to learn more about the draft recommendations, download a copy of the draft SRTP, and provide your feedback: http://www.triangletransit.org/srtp.
The Independent‘s cover story is a look at how digital technology is enhancing maps, and how maps have historically enhanced our understanding of and interactions with our environment. The article identifies anchors in the Triangle’s mapping community, people who share a desire to critique the world through spatially arranged lines and icons that, in sum, represent the world as we see it. Or don’t see it. Or think it should be.
It’s an excellent article, not the least of which because it features Gary’s Endangered Durham… go read it.
When I was on Durham’s Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission, the most frequently asked questions from the public (besides, “can you put a bike lane in front of my house?”) concerned bike maps. “Why don’t you have better bike maps?” “Is there a map that shows safe places to ride?” “Is there a bike map for Durham, you know, one that shows the bike trails and the bike shops?”
I have to confess that I have mixed feelings about bike maps per se. When someone asks “where are the bike trails in Durham,” I want to point to the nearest road and say, “right there.” North Carolina law makes it clear that neither cities nor counties can do anything to restrict cyclists from riding on roads (with the exception of Interstates and freeways, like 147). All roads, whether neighborhood cul-de-sacs or state highways, are bike-ways.
Folks ask for maps of bike trails, though, for many reasons.Some want quiet, bucolic surroundings in which they may lose themselves in thought. Some want smooth surfaces with low traffic-volume to teach children the art of balancing on two wheels. Some adults want space to gain their own confidence with shifting, braking, and pedaling before adding signaling turns to the mix. After talking with hundreds of people about cycling in Durham, I think most just want to ride in a space where bicycling is clearly sanctioned. For the same reason we go to parks to play, to rivers to canoe, or to mountains to hike, we go to greenways to ride. It’s what you do there.
My frustration with the question about bike maps is layered. It has something to do with the implied syllogism that bike maps show bike trails, that bike trails are where one rides a bike, so therefore bike maps show where one rides a bike. And since bike maps (at least ones I have seen in the past) usually highlight greenways or roadie routes though the countryside, the latent syllogism reinforces the perception that cycling is just for recreation.
Containing bicycles to linear parks, such as the American Tobacco Trail, or pastoral secondary roads on weekends is a kind of social relegation that is also reinforced every time someone sighs despondently about how dangerous the roads are. Yes, roads are dangerous places where collisions (some of which are accidents) kill and maim every day. It’s my belief, however, that drivers have an inflated sense of both their safety and cyclists’ danger. Habitually commanding with just your touch two-thousand pounds of steel and glass caging will do that, I suppose.
The perception that roads are unsafe has something to do with the fact that roads are one of the few places left in our daily lives where we do not choose, we do not even know, with whom we interact.
Riding a bike on a greenway is no doubt one of the best ways to spend a Saturday afternoon. It is also my favorite way to grocery shop, to commute to work, or to explore a new city while on vacation. Given the number of people who showed up to last week’s Bike to Work events, I’m not alone in thinking that roads exist to serve more modes of transportation than just the automotive variety.
Any bike map that’s worth its salt needs to reflect the various ways that people ride bikes. I continue to invite you, then, to help map Durham (or the other areas of the Triangle, if you’re not lucky enough to live in the Bull City) through the eyes of a cyclist. Like Gary says in the Independent article, Jack Edinger and I originally conceived of this map as something that’s community driven, something that “allow[s] for freer exchange and collaboration.” These maps (Durham’s below and the other cities’ behind the link) are currently based on Google Maps so that they can be collaborative, so that any number of people can design, edit, and create them. While I’m still not entirely convinced that bike maps are necessary, it has been fun to see what others add to the maps. And, in some small way, colluding with other Durham cyclists is a way of challenging the recreation-dominant model of cycling that the broader driving public swallows uncritically.
Portions of this also appeared at Op-Ed News. View Larger Map
The Freeway Ride I on Channel 4 News from RichToTheIE on Vimeo.
Looks like I-40 between RTP and Raleigh, doesn’t it? That’s because Raleigh has some of the worst commuting traffic in the country. Reader Dave Wofford notes, “I bet Raleigh doesn’t tout being on this list.”
The perfect commute is easy, inexpensive and reliable.
In cities boasting such factors, like Buffalo, N.Y., Salt Lake City and Milwaukee, the trip to work is a breeze. But for commuters in Atlanta, Detroit and Miami, the daily grind is just that, thanks to bad traffic, insufficient infrastructure and drivers who resist carpools and public transportation.
Other spots that came out on top include Oklahoma City, Okla., Pittsburgh, Corpus Christi, Texas, and Eugene, Ore. At the bottom: Orlando, Fla., Dallas, Birmingham, Ala., and Raleigh, N.C.
Thanks to Dale and Tino for the heads up on the video set. The Crimanimalz vimeo channel has more.
By way of reminder that Durham’s Critical Mass is tonight, check out (and vote for) this photo of the week. It’s from a recent Critical Mass in Budapest, Hungary.
hat tip to Dale for the link
As usual, meet at Major, the bronze bull statue downtown, at 5:35pm for the Durham ride.
Reader Seth tipped me off to this great cycling comic, Yehuda Moon and the Kickstand Cyclery. From the website, “Yehuda Moon lives on his bicycle, works at the Kickstand Cyclery, and dreams of a day when everyone does likewise.”
I identify with the strip from March 17th (pictured above), as people always ask me why I carry so much stuff to work.
In French Revolutions, British comic author Tim Moore lays out the case why drug use will never cease to be a part of cycling: simply put, it’s been there from the beginning. To Moore, the history of the Tour de France is the history of drug use in cycling. And early on, that drug use had very little to do with performance gains and had a lot to do with pain endurance. Riders would stop for lunch (with each other), drink copious amounts of wine, and then remount their trusty steeds for the remainder of the day’s pain.
Elizabeth Page, ride coordinator for the Gears & Cheers Bike Ride, wrote to me to let readers of this website know about a local cycling event that recognizes the civilized place wine has in cycling’s traditions. “This is the second year Grove Winery is hosting the ride which benefits the National MS Society,” says Page.
mmm… bikes and wine. Wine and bikes.
Wine tasting comes after the rides, however.

Grove Winery proudly presents
2008 GEARS & CHEERS BIKE RIDE
The only ride where wining is allowed!Saturday, May 31st
Fully supported 25 and 40-mi routes
Historic Chinqua Penn Plantation featured on the 40-mi route$35 registration includes ride support, lunch, event glass,
complimentary beverage, music by Expresso Brazil ($40 after 5/21)$15 Non-rider package includes lunch, event glass,
complimentary beverage and musicNew this year – Pre-ride Party and Registration Pick-up
Friday May 30th – 2 locations
-Trek Bicycle in Raleigh
-cycles de ORO in GreensboroCycling, picnicking, live music, wine-tasting, vineyard tours, and more!
Fun for everyone!Grove Winery is located north of I-85/I-40 between Greensboro and Durham on the Haw River Wine Trail near Elon. Ride benefits the National MS Society
Elizabeth Page | Ride Coordinator | 919-787-7706 | lizdan@nc.rr.com

There will also be some local artists at the winery this year during the Gears & Cheers ride, so May 31 sounds like a real cultural event.

Register here.