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Stay on Your Bike*: Cold Weather Commuting for the Bike Commute Challenged

Green Buffalo
CHRIS STOCKNER / Monday, November 5, 2007 02:11 PM

*not because you’re frozen to it like a kid’s tongue on a flag pole

Take it from someone who has watched others do it: biking in the cold, the dark, the rain, or any combination of the three is mostly a matter of preparation. Alright, preparation plus some true grit for the days when fog seems to be freezing onto your brake handles. (I’m pretty sure this was actually happening to me one morning last week.) Grit may also be called for on those days, arriving soon, when you find yourself both coming and going in the dark, and being deluged by buckets of rain on both rides for good measure. More...

TAGS: GO, bikes

You-Haul (Everything You Own By Bike)

SpokeN Word
STEPH ROUTH / Friday, November 2, 2007 08:02 PM

U-Haul to You-Haul. It's a switch you'll never regret, so hang up the moving van keys, grab your helmet and join the parade.

Need to move to a new house or apartment but hate renting the truck and the process of packing and unpacking? Boy, have I got a solution for you: Move by Bike. Moving by bike is a dearly-loved event in Portland's bike community and a great, sustainable and cheap alternative to renting a motorized behemoth by yourself. Lots of furniture, you say? Bring it on, I reply!

Anyone who has seen or participated in a moveXbike can easily say that it's an experience not to be missed. It's like a barn-raising for the urban environment, a gangly parade that migrates the innards of one's living room from hither to thither to the melodious sounds of bike bells and "car up!" We've moved puppet theatres, small businesses, file drawers, a chinchilla, more than one hide-a-bed, countless bookcases and chest of drawers, accordions, plants, saplings, and a documentary crew, to name just a few items. You don't need a trailer, just moxy and a sense of fun and adventure.

I've now done nine bike moves (one mine, 8 for other people), and I can tell you there's nothing finer. My bike move occurred in chilly January 2007 with a record 22 friends helping. We moved all of my stuff (including a futon and chest of drawers) almost seven miles from SE to North Portland in three hours, including loading and unloading time, and ended with a four-hour gala housewarming party.

Steps to Moving By Bike
1. Choose a weekend day and invite your friends, family, and Shift's moveXbike lovers. Good weather helps but is not required
2. Pack your things beforehand with some thought to distributing weight. Small boxes and bags are highly recommended
3. Plan a bike route that avoids busy intersections and big hills
4. Buy coffee and breakfast munchies for the beginning, prepare for pizza or food for your new home as a thank you (and fuel)
5. Enjoy the parade that is your Move by Bike!
Common move by bike tools include a trailer, used bike innertubes, panniers, backpacks, bungee cords, duct tape, string, tarp, and small padding equipment.

My friend, Aaron Tarfman, moved one week ago with a record number of trailers and new people. Nineteen people, five of them brand new moveXbikers, hauled the entire contents of his apartment on a gorgeous Saturday afternoon.

Of course, the best way to learn how moving by bike works is to help someone move by bike. Check out Shift's "MoveXBike" webpage for the next move. You'll be hooked immediately, I swear. And just think how much cheaper coffee is than gas.

I leave you with a video of Aaron moving his chest of drawers by bike, taken by Matt Picio.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIj4QgZrw6w

If that's not enough, here's a longer bike move video with more explanation from StreetFilms:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fq3oSyvXLiY

See you in the bike lane.
Next week: all-weather cycling More...

TAGS: GO, bikes

Small Things Come in Fast Packages...

Celebrity Watchblog
CARY MELTON / Thursday, November 1, 2007 05:53 PM

The New South Wales Government (of course I knew this but that's Sydney, Australia for all you lay people) has a new "No one thinks big of you" ad campaign to stop young men from speeding and driving old mustangs: More...

TAGS: GO

ACT III: Mom, Please Don't Wear Your Helmet at the Supper Table

SpokeN Word
STEPH ROUTH / Thursday, November 1, 2007 02:49 PM

She started riding it in the cul-de-sac near her house, just to get the feel of it. Once she had mastered the left turn and felt comfortable braking, she took off down the street and around a few blocks. Little by little, the inevitable Bike Fever took hold. The Curves gym of which she is a member was two heavy-traffic streets away, but she started riding the 1/4 mile when before she drove. Way to go, Mom! Since Curves gym doesn't have bike parking in front, Mom struck a deal to park it in the gym's back room, much to the delight of the other patrons. More...

TAGS: GO, bikes

ACT II: This Bike Is Just Right!

SpokeN Word
STEPH ROUTH / Thursday, November 1, 2007 02:38 PM

In our last exciting episode of "Get On Your Bike: One Mom's Story in 4 Acts", my intrepid Mom and I embarked on the quest for the perfect ride - a "comfortable", "stable", and "easy" ride (and, oh yes, "red") that would hum odes and etudes to her as she careened on the boulevards and alleys that connected her neighborhood in outer NE Portland. We checked out the Electra Amsterdam, the Electra Townie, the Breezer Uptown, and the Trek Lime. With so many choices that fit the bill, how could we be sure that this was my Mom's true heart's desire? We were beginning to feel like two Goldilockses confronted with entirely too many chairs and beds and bowls of porridge. More...

TAGS: GO, bikes

Dorking-Out on a Bio-diesel Conversion: Part 2

Enviroconomy
COLLIN WHITEHEAD / Wednesday, October 24, 2007 06:22 PM

Warning detailed car geek rant to follow:

Friday night I sat next to Seattle Biodiesel founder and president John Plaza at a table at the Northwest Energy Coalition annual banquet in Seattle. We spent a good portion of the dinner talking about the modifications we had done to our cars.

John has a Mercedes-Benz CDI that he has chipped and done other performance mods to as well as a Chevy pickup with a Duramax diesel. Wandering to the technical side, John said the Chevy was putting about 650 ft-lb of torque to the rear wheels. To put that in perspective, in a gasoline fueled motor, you’d need a more than 600 horsepower motor to make those kinds of numbers! I said, “Holy crap, you could pull a house off its foundations!” He just grinned and said, “Pretty much.”

I use this anecdote to illustrate a difference in the architecture between diesel and gasoline engines. Gasoline engines are about horsepower, diesels are about torque. Torque does the work, horsepower is simply a measure of the power available to create torque. Peak power and peak torque occur at different RPMs--where torque is created by horsepower.

The diesel engine, for which Rudolph Diesel was granted a patent in 1898, was designed as an agricultural engine to run on peanut oil. The diesel engine with lower operating temperatures and fewer moving parts embodies a philosophy of doing more with less. Commercial diesel engines routinely surpass 1,000,000 miles on the odometer. It isn’t unheard of for diesel passenger cars to reach 300,000-500,000 miles.

Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen have been manufacturing diesel engines for as long as they have been making cars. The current Volkswagen TDI power plant in its most popular 1.9 liter configuration responds extremely well to aftermarket tuning and has become the diesel hobbyist platform of choice.

When I purchased my Jetta TDI, I chose to follow the modifications detailed on the website www.stealthtdi.com, in which the author specifies the engine modifications he has done to his Jetta in order to enter into amateur racing events. I simply chose to run mine on biodiesel.

By utilizing two relatively cheap engine modifications, I saw remarkable increases in performance. I highly recommend reprogramming of the engine control unit (ECU) in any TDI engine. I had mine done by Jeff Robertson at Rocket Chip for $285, whose site is now offline. Rich and Marcel at Fix-Um-Haus swear by the Alligator chips in their Volkswagens.

Diesel engines have dramatically larger torque to horsepower ratios and produce the power at much lower rpms than gasoline engines. My Jetta’s torque power curve climbs steadily to about 2,500 rpm where it flattens out and drops considerably at 3,500 rpm. Given that the car redlines approaching 4,500 rpm, there’s no reason to ever over tax the engine to benefit from full power.

Any reprogram is simply a rewrite of the hard code on your car’s ECU. It should be noted that if you do this to newer car, you’ll probably void any manufacturer’s warranty. I also swapped of my factory diesel injector nozzles with larger ones that created a more uniform spray pattern, thus more complete combustion (ie., power) in the cylinders.

Those two modifications alone garnered me a 40% increase in torque to well over 200 ft-lb, or approaching the useable power of a Subaru WRX, in my previously sedate, 90 hp diesel Jetta. To confidently handle this increase in power, I installed rear heavy duty Bilstein shocks myself, had my mechanic install front Bilstein struts and finished out the suspension work with a rear anti-sway bar and 16” Volkswagen BBS mesh wheels purchased used on ebay.com. All told, the modifications and labor set me back less than $2,500 and have given me the most fun to drive car I have ever owned.

By running B99 biodiesel in the summer (99% biodiesel) and B50 biodiesel in the winter (50% biodiesel for temperatures 20-40 degrees F), I have radically decreased my purchase of petroleum, create 50% less carbon dioxide per mile driven than a diesel or gasoline car, have only minimally impacted my mileage and can say eco-powered performance sedan without snickering.

So what happened to Rudolf Diesel after the creation of his revolutionary engine nearly 110 years ago?

On September 29, 1913, while in Antwerp, Diesel boarded the SS Dresden ferry to cross the North Sea. The next morning, the steward discovered that Diesel's cabin was empty. Diesel's body was found in the Scheldt river on October 18.

A theory in the death of Diesel is based around the hope that his engine would provide power using alternative/cheaper/greener fuels. This revolutionary thinking may have scared some oil investors. Rudolf Diesel said, "The use of vegetable oils for engine fuels may seem insignificant today. But such oils may become in course of time as important as petroleum and the coal tar products of the present time."

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Comment below or email Collin through his profile.

Read more EcoMetro articles about local biodiesel resources here or learn how to convert home oil tanks to biodiesel here. Find all biofuel retailers here in our directory. More...

TAGS: GO, biofuels, green cars

Tales of the Bike Commute Challenge(d)

Green Buffalo
CHRIS STOCKNER / Monday, October 22, 2007 05:41 PM

Portland in October… The leaves are turning, pumpkins are appearing on porches like huge urban mushrooms sprouting from concrete, and fair-weather bike commuters such as myself are turning a skeptical eye to the sky before settling down to pore over bus schedules. The Bicycle Transportation Alliance, an awesome local bike advocacy non-profit, has just wrapped up their annual Bike Commute Challenge, an event in which Oregonians (and Southwest Washingtonians) are encouraged to bike to work during the month of September. Participants can track their trips using a nifty web-based log sheet, and at the end of the month the number of commutes taken by bike are tabulated by employer, allowing a diverse list of eco-conscious workplaces bragging rights over less two-wheel inclined folk (the local offices of ExxonMobil, perhaps).

Much as I love riding my bike to work, the end of the Bike Commute Challenge also serves as my signal that it’s time to hang up the helmet for the season. That goes double this year, when the rain has begun to fall early, washing an entire summer’s worth of accumulated road crud to the curb. But as I walked to the bus stop in a near-downpour one recent morning, transfixed by the oily street streams flowing along the curbs and into the storm drains like so many little Cuyahoga Rivers*, I pondered my abandonment of the bike.

Two paradoxical thoughts hit me. The first was: “this nasty stuff (the heavy metals, antifreeze, asbestos brake dust, and oil floating by) is a perfect example of how driving is harmful to the environment.” The second was “this stuff is a major reason why I don’t ride my bike to work in the winter.”

It’s true that I can be found among the teeming armies of Portland bike commuters on many a bright, sunny summer morning. And more often than not, I can be found soaking up the forcefully delivered heat on a Trimet bus when the weather turns bad. But you’ll never get any sermon delivered from atop the handlebars or from beneath the blue bus stop sign from me. Oh no. Try as I may, I am easily as much of a fossil fuel sinner as an alternative transportation saint.

On certain chilly, dark, not-necessarily-even-rainy mornings I’ve been known to fire up a 15-year old pickup truck that somehow managed to pass DEQ inspection again this year and drive to work with hardly a second thought. For effect, add to that image a factory stereo playing Thunder Road (on cassette, of course) and you’ve got the visual – a country kid turned bike commuter turned back again in the face of adversity. Blame it on my rural upbringing, which instilled into me that bikes are great for kids, then vanish without a trace when you learn to drive. Busses didn’t exist outside of the school version. If someone had ever mentioned alternative transportation, I suppose they would have been referring to a snowmobile.

But I digress… the point of all this (yes, there may be one yet) is that this year I’ve decided I’d like to buck my own trend. I am going to try (try, mind you, and Yoda be damned) to keep riding my bike to work at least a few days each week this winter. And while I’m at it, I think I’ll look into the impacts of the old truck to make sure it’s as clean as it can be.

The first thought now is “I need gloves” followed by “I’m going to need more help than that…”

To be continued in Part 2

*[Great/terrible moments in environmental history: The Cuyahoga River in Ohio is famous for having been so polluted that it would catch fire on a semi-regular basis during the 1940s, 50s, and 60s. The attention this phenomenon drew helped galvanize Congress to create legislation such as the Clean Water Act.] More...

TAGS: GO, bikes

Get on Your Bike! One Mom's Story in 4 Acts

SpokeN Word
STEPH ROUTH / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 05:22 PM

Until mid-July of this year, Mom hadn't been on a bike since she was in high school.  Of course, she lives in outer east Portland, where streets' bike friendliness tends to take a backseat to SUVs and speeding fender-strutting cars, so it's not too difficult to understand her reservations.  The number of women bicyclists in a given region has been recognized as an indication of a healthy bike network, and the outer eastside has registered a paltry 13% women cyclist ratio according to recent studies (Oregonian, June 19, 2007). More...

TAGS: GO, bikes

Traveling Green around Town

Messays
LAURA GARWOOD MEEHAN / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 02:49 PM

In the name of finances, I have once again been forced into living out my ideals. My husband Jeremy and I decided to sell one of our cars, the newer, more reliable one of course, using the proceeds to pay down some of our debts.

 

It was tempting to immediately buy another old car, like our 1989 Volvo station wagon, which I love, and which we bought for $575 several months ago. However, I thought to myself, “How much more money would we save if I didn’t use any gas or car insurance for a while?” I told Jeremy we didn’t need to buy another car for my daily use until the weather got worse.

 

Of course, I should mention, that it took so long for us to get our act together and actually sell our Honda, that the weather has ALREADY gotten worse. So now, here I am, reconciling myself to the idea of having to put my money where my mouth is. It is easy, when a tired parent, to do what is easy (especially when it’s cold and rainy!), but I know at the same time it feels great to do what is best.

 

I already occasionally rode my bike to work, hauling 19-month-old Selah behind me in her Burly Bee (purchased by our dad at REI here in town). She generally likes this, though I sometimes find myself trying to pedal up the Alameda Ridge, enraged while she wails and whines behind me. I generally like this too, at least on the way there, which happens to be the downhill half of the ten-mile trip.

 

I have to admit, too, that having a bike trailer actually makes commuting easier, if heavier, as I have a built-in little wagon for all of my goodies, like my laptop, purse, and lunch. Of course they are buried under cracker crumbs, leaking sippy cups, and prey to the wandering fingers of a toddler, but I am grateful not to have to wear a backpack. My bike is a Gary Fisher mountain bike, which I bought River City Bicycles (after my one I bought in CA got stolen in Hawthorne!). We have also bought accessories at Bike Gallery, and bought our toddler bike helmet at Target.

 

Now I am girding up my loins to be a bicycle commuter (with child!) come rain or come shine. I have done it through the freak summer rains, but those rains fall on 65-degree days, not on the frozen wasteland of winter streets. I keep thinking I really need to take the fenders off Jeremy’s bike and put them on mine. I also keep thinking I really need to get a new raincoat to replace the one that has mysteriously disappeared. I guess, in the back of my mind, I really keep thinking I will just take the bus if it rains too hard and I am fender- and raincoat-less. Last time Selah and I took the bus, she loved it--but was much less mobile at that point.

I will keep you posted, and in the meantime, if you drive up 42nd Avenue, and see a fuming, wet, mud-splashed woman riding her mountain bike 2 miles per hour up the hill while towing a Burley Bee, just accelerate. More...

TAGS: GO, bikes, kids

Lovin’ Portland in Anything but a Car

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 02:04 PM

It’s official. Paris has become the first world capital to roll out 10,000 bicycles available for rent at modest cost. The latest in Parisian Mayor Bertrand Delanoe’s anti-car war, the program is supposed to double the number of bikes equipped with anti-theft devices by the end of 2007 and predictions are that car traffic will be reduced by 40% within 13 years. So far the result has been fantastic according to the London Times, with 1.2 million rentals in the first three weeks and many commuters hopping on who would otherwise be standing still in gridlock traffic, spewing exhaust fumes. Personally I think biking in Paris could be suicide, but that’s another column. More...

TAGS: GO, bikes, biofuels, green cars
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