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Bikes: the better way to travel

This morning as I was pulling out of the driveway of my apartment building, my neighbour whizzed by on a bright yellow gravel bike. I was excited, because I recognized this bike.

This morning as I was pulling out of the driveway of my apartment building, my neighbour whizzed by on a bright yellow gravel bike.

I was excited, because I recognized this bike. It鈥檚 often locked up at an office building just down the way from where I work. I realized that this was a chance for an experiment. I was going to see who would get to work first: me, a driver navigating traffic, construction and finding parking, or him, a cyclist on the same route, but with a clear bike lane and the ability to just roll up to the front door.

The race was on.

It wasn鈥檛 long before he lost me. After the first set of lights, for which he dutifully waited until they turned green before proceeding, he was gone. I was stuck behind a few other cars and he had a clear lane all to himself at the side of the road. The bike lane bypasses the next few lights, and he was quickly out of sight. I tried to see if he was crossing the bridge or riding up the hill, but he was long gone. I figured he鈥檇 take a more direct route than I, since he didn鈥檛 have to worry about going around to the back of the building where the parking lot is. By the time I鈥檇 parked and walked around to the front door, the bike was locked up outside and the rider was probably already sipping his first cup of coffee. He had handily won.

That wasn鈥檛 even the way that I wanted to start this story. What I wanted to say was that I like bikes because you don鈥檛 have to scrape them off when it gets frosty. But I鈥檓 fine with having more than one reason to be excited about bikes.

I鈥檝e used this quote before, but I think it just makes so much sense and feel like I need to use it wherever I can: 鈥淏ikes deliver the freedom that auto industry ads promise.鈥 That was first said by Tom Flood, a road safety advocate. My neighbour just proved that this morning, but I feel it every time I choose to ride my bike over driving my car.

I have seven bicycles that I ride regularly. Some of them are admittedly not great for commuting 鈥 I won鈥檛 be hauling groceries on my BMX 鈥 but with those seven bicycles I can go pretty much anywhere and do pretty much anything I want. Ride up to the top of Forbidden Plateau? Yeah I have three bikes that I would use for that.

What about going camping with the kids? Well I don鈥檛 have kids yet, but when I do I鈥檒l load them and all of my camping gear up on the cargo bike. What about getting a week鈥檚 worth of groceries? Cargo bike all the way. Quick jaunt to the brewery? All of the above. What if I signed up for a local race? Well depending on the race, I鈥檇 have my pick between road, cyclocross, gravel, mountain and bikepacking. I鈥檓 not going to win any of those races, but sure, I鈥檒l sign up. What about taking the kids to school? Cargo bike. Commuting to work? Well that鈥檚 hypothetical because I鈥檓 required to have a car, but it would depend on how I鈥檓 feeling that day. And yes, I can do a session at the skatepark if I want, too.

I鈥檝e spent less on all of these bikes, plus the four my wife has, and the two I have that I鈥檓 building as projects, than I have on my car in the past four years. I have an excessive amount of bikes, I know that. But it鈥檚 also my hobby.

For anyone normal (he said in a self-deprecating tone), one bike is fine. Right now there are at least ten used bikes for sale in the Comox Valley for between $40 and $200. I can鈥檛 even fill up my car for $40. If you鈥檙e e-bike curious, you can always use the new Evo e-bike rental network.

Bikes are quickly becoming the symbol for freedom of mobility that cars once were. With the advent of electric bikes, that鈥檚 even more true. Now the average e-bike commuter won鈥檛 even be tired by the end of their ride.

What about the weather? While it is true that if you ride in the rain, you鈥檒l get wet, there are a lot of ways to mitigate that. Fenders do a lot of good work, and a decent rain cape or jacket will do the rest. We have it much, much better than places like Edmonton, Alta. where I cut my cycling teeth riding all year round, through blizzards, arctic temperatures and snow that was deeper than the hubs on my wheels.

When I ride, and I ride all year round here, I make sure my bike is suitable for the conditions, and then just dress for the weather.  There鈥檚 no such thing as bad weather, just a lack of preparation. Then if it鈥檚 truly terrible weather out (bomb cyclone, anyone?), then it鈥檚 fine to take either the bus or even your car. Remember it鈥檚 a sliding scale.

A person on a bike is actually the most efficient among travelling animals and machines in terms of energy consumed as a function of body weight. We鈥檝e known that for a long time. That figure comes from a 1973 report in Scientific American.

鈥淚ts purpose is to make it easier for an individual to move about, and this the bicycle achieves in a way that quite outdoes natural evolution,鈥 writes S.S. Wilson at the time.

That鈥檚 very likely even more true when e-bikes come into the calculation, though that technology was not even part of the discussion when Wilson was writing. Many publications this year were touting the fact that e-bikes are even more environmentally friendly than conventional bicycles, when the impact of the cyclist鈥檚 food is taken into account.

Bikes are also much, much, much better for the roads than even the lightest car. Bikes benefit from something called the 鈥渇ourth power law,鈥 which states that the stress on the road caused by a motor vehicle increases in proportion to the fourth power of its axle load. That means it would take 41,082 journeys on my cargo bike to do the same damage as one trip in my car (or 112 years of doing the same trip every day).

Check out and do some of your own calculations. So those with arguments about cyclists not paying their share of road taxes (also, not a thing in Canada, and I don鈥檛 have the space to get into that here), I agree. It would also mean cyclists get paid out thousands of dollars per year. But I鈥檓 not holding my breath.

I can clearly go on and on about the good that comes from cycling. But I think the most important point I have to make is that I have never had a bad time on a bike. Even commuting in the worst weather, I鈥檓 riding around with a smile on my face. The physical activity, fresh air and ability to feel like I鈥檓 part of the landscape as opposed to watching it roll by.

I鈥檓 so jealous of my neighbour. Maybe someday I can challenge him to a fair race, not one where he has a huge advantage over me.



Marc Kitteringham

About the Author: Marc Kitteringham

I joined Black press in early 2020, writing about the environment, housing, local government and more.
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