Gainesville Cycling Club
April 26, 2022 eNews

In This Issue

Bikes 4 Vets
This Weekend
Construction Zones, A Love Story
GCC History


Bikes 4 Vets Update

Hi folks,

For those of you who have been following our project, I'd like to give you an update.

Just this past week we've been allowed to run our bike clinic at the Honor Center on Wednesdays for 2 hours. The Honor Center is a VA run facility for up to 45 vets who've been homeless. Since the pandemic we weren't allowed on the property.

What we could use, in addition to any donated bikes, are bike accessories such as rear bike racks, front baskets, and plastic milk crates. We get many bike donations which we share our overload with the Repurpose Project. We aim to convert the rehabbed bike to a useful vehicle for transporting groceries and other purchases. Drop off donations at 5015 NW 19th Place; if we're not home, leave bikes in the driveway and parts on the front porch. If you need us to pick them up, email Diann.

We get new helmets which we provide with each bike from the PedBike Resource Center which is funded by the Florida Legislature. Please don't donate any old bike helmets as they no longer provide full protection in case of a crash (if yours is over 6 years old, replace it!).

Monetary donations can be made here. Funds are needed to buy tires, chains, cables, grips to make donated bikes usable.

Bikes 4 Vets is a Service Group of the Gainesville Cycling Club.


This Weekend

GOC Bike Day May 1st

Come ride with us to support the Gainesville Opportunity Center on Sunday May 1st, meeting on the Cade Museum patio. Registration begins at 8 AM with ride at 9 AM. Pre-registration is available at GOC Bike Day on Eventbrite. Our friend/fund raising ride will leave the Cade and follow Hawthorne Trail until Boulware Springs, riders can ride distance and speed commensurate with their ability.

The Gainesville Opportunity Center helps individuals with chronic mental illness become productive members of society. Our international model prides itself with lower incarceration and hospitalization rates amongst our members.

Thank you!

Tour de Forts

A classic ride in St Augustine. Register here.

SBA Spring Pedal 'n' Paddle Festival

Sign Up here for this event in White Springs that starts on Friday.


Construction Zones, A Love Story

If you ride enough, sooner or later it will happen: you'll encounter road work. Chances are, you won't have known about it when you sallied forth on your machine, intent on riding one of your favorite routes. But then you'll see the signs that say "Right Lane Closed Ahead", the construction cones (or barrels! They got barrels, too!), and perhaps even the machinery and workers.

It's often too late to turn and follow a different route, as the signage often begins mid-block. So then the decision is whether to find a place to turn around or to move over into the motor vehicle lane and proceed.

My experience is that these inconveniences are the least of the matter. I've found that the road surfaces tend to get complicated, whether due to the removal of lane stripes or the transport of loose gravel and sand and whatnot across what's left of the remaining roadway.

Worse yet are those cases where the cones (or barrels! Watch out for those barrels, now!) are not placed in a neat row. So if there is still a sort-of bike lane in the case of a lane shift, some cones (or especially barrels) end up blocking the lane.

Sounds like a pain, right? I have actually found just the opposite to be true. First, let's remember that construction zones represent a better road surface in the future. In the present, cyclists - and construction workers, too - can also contribute to better transit.

For one thing, I've found lane closures and lane shifts great opportunities to practice the look-over-your-left-shoulder bit. This is of course the first move before signaling for a lane shift or turn. I've found that the look gets the attention of motorists. They pay more careful attention to their lane position. That's important when a lane shift or lane closure is coming, you know? When the look is followed by a hand signal pointing down at the lane to the left, most everybody gets it. I move over, and we form a nice line of slow-moving drivers who pokey-poke our way thru the zone.

For another, when those wayward barrels (actually, it's most always barrels) are sitting in the middle of the ersatz bike lane, I've learned to take matters into my own hands and move them over, neatening up the line. Here's the technique: you lean the barrel over, then roll it. I can do this while still standing over my bike. Woo-HOO!

Here is where the story gets even better: if construction workers are present, and they see me coming, and I see barrels blocking my way, they are often happy to move them for me. All that's required is I crane my neck to tilt my head like a confused puppy while looking at the barrel. It's as if I'm saying, "Gee, that doesn't belong there!" Most everybody gets it.

Okay, there's the inconvenience of lane closures, new stripes, barrels, and so forth. But construction zones provide opportunities for proper communication with other drivers, and they serve to slow down the traffic. Both are of tantamount importance to traffic safety. Cyclists can positively influence both. So keep riding, and see you in the zone!


GCC History

Rob Wilt has taken pictures of the GCC History exibit that we had at the Annual Meeting. You can see them here.

The history document that is pictured can be better read online on our website at https://gccfla.org/history.shtml.


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