Gainesville Cycling Club
June 19, 2020 eNews

In This Issue

Update on GCC Group Ride Policy
Pink Ribbon Jersey
John Forester


Update on GCC Group Ride Policy

Greetings one and all,

The GCC Board met on 15 June, and reviewed club member input and other data with regard to group ride policy.

The Board continues to support bike riding during the pandemic, and encourages GCC members to get out and ride.

However, the Board also acknowledges the recent rise in COVID-19 cases in Florida, and sees difficulties in enforcing social distancing and other measures to limit transmission risks during group rides.

Therefore, the Board maintains the current policy of no sanctioned group rides.

The Board will continue to monitor COVID-19 and will revisit the group ride policy at future Board meetings.

Stephen Perz
President, GCC


Get Your Pink Ribbon Jersey

Barb Thomas will be doing a new Pink Ribbon Jersey order soon.  If you need a size that she does not carry in stock, now is the time to contact her to get one ordered. She currently has men's and women's short sleeved and sleeveless, as well as women's running singlets, and unisex gloves.

 

Contact her at bnbbarb@gmail.com by Monday, June 22, to place an order or purchase from current stock. See full info at www.pinkribbonjersey.com.

Delivery of the new order is expected by Labor Day.


Requiem for a Heavyweight
John Forester - 1929-2020

by John Schubert

Back in my misspent youth, I dropped 60 cents on the then-new February 1973 issue of Bike World Magazine. In it was the first-ever article by a guy named John Forester.

John Forester photo with note of appreciation.Forester was steaming mad.

The city of Palo Alto, California, had decided it wanted bikeways. The city got them by putting up signage, requiring bicyclists to ride on the sidewalks. Forester tried them and found them dangerous at very ordinary cycling speeds of 10-12 mph, and so he chronicled the hazards in a two-page article.

Forester cited two fatal bike/pedestrian collisions to underscore the danger of mixing bicycles and pedestrians. He wrote about turning conflicts, poor sight distances at driveway intersections, and the impossibility of making a safe and sensible left turn. Forester wrote that he hoped to get arrested, so he could challenge the city's sidewalk requirement.

That article sparked an epiphany for me. Until then, I'd dreamed of sidepaths along all my favorite roads. Three feet wide, and just for me! Wheeeeee!

The epiphany was, "Be careful what you wish for." Because even a city as sophisticated as Palo Alto got it completely wrong.

I learned: Sometimes, a well-intentioned intervention is far worse than leaving well enough alone. And that is just the beginning of what I learned from John Forester.

Forester died on April 19, half a year shy of his 91st birthday. The cause of death was a lingering flu, not suspected to be Covid-19. Forester left behind nearly 50 years of immense contributions to the cycling community, in ways that weren't even imaginable before he articulated them.

My own Forester-related epiphany pales in comparison to those of many thousands of others. I was already a bike rider. Forester made me a better bike rider. Others were liberated to use their bikes to go anywhere, when they previously couldn't.

See the rest of this article at the Cycling Savvy web site.



Gainesville Cycling Club, Inc.
5015 NW 19th Place
Gainesville, FL 32605