Team Wonderbike


Make a pledge of riding your bike into work and see how many pounds of CO2 Team Wonderbike will prevent from entering the atmosphere.

Also there is a delightful collection of witticisms of responses to those motorists who feel compelled to say something to discourage you from riding your bike.

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'She Got Bike' lets women ride



By Tom Pelton | Sun reporter

Fifty women on racing bicycles, wearing sunglasses, helmets, gloves and bright jerseys, gathered in a fiercely competitive-looking group at Oregon Ridge Park in Baltimore County yesterday.

But instead of racing, they shared. One by one, they went around the circle introducing themselves, describing why they love to ride and how much it means for their mental and physical health.

"I feel like this is A.A.," one rider confessed, referring to Alcoholics Anonymous. And then they took off on a 25-mile ride under a glorious blue sky.

Susan Olson, a business consultant from Westminster, helped organize the event, which was sponsored in part by Joe's Bike Shop of Mount Washington and Trek bicycle manufacturing company.

"This is the only all-women riding event in the Baltimore area - and one of the very few in the U.S.," Olson said.

"We want to be a model for other cities that want to hold similar events."

She explained that men are barred from riding to provide an atmosphere comfortable for women who are just learning how to handle racing bikes.

"Some women are nervous about riding with men, because the men are what we call 'hammerheads,' and that can be a little intimidating," Olson said, bullhorn in hand, as she rallied a team of riders.

By "hammerheads," she was referring to the aggressive maneuvers cyclists can make in packs of other cyclists, which can result in wipeouts.

Part of the goal of the annual cycling event is to encourage women to climb back into the saddle. Many rode bicycles as kids, but then took decades off to focus on careers and family.

"It's good exercise, a good mental release, and it's good for reducing carbon dioxide emissions, which is how I see the world," said Elizabeth Ridlington, one of the organizers.

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Bike Map Baltimore


I just moved to Baltimore 4 weeks ago - and one of those weeks was spent having fun in Santa Fe New Mexico, so it doesn't count. I didn't really think to check up on the bike transportation network before I moved to town and was shocked to find 1) the buses have no bikeracks! and 2) there is no real bike network with city-incorporated lanes, paths, and signed routes, and 3) no city bike map. Just this last weekend I saw my first bike path on my way to Hampden (I have no car by the way) and got really excited. I went to the library and searched online but found no bike map other than the one published by a UMBC student over 5 years ago.
I just finished working for the City of Rockville, MD producing their 2007 CIty Bike Map, showing bike lanes, paths, and signed road routes. I just transferred to Towson U. and would like to keep doing the same. Since I have access to the necessary software at school, I would like people to help me identify and map out the appropriate routes for the map. Does anyone want to help? Does anyone know someone already working on a project like this so I can help?
Thx, and happy riding in this crazy place.

Victor
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Cy.Fi Speaker, a Wireless iPod Dock for Your Bike


If you want to wake up the neighbors and bother everyone with your music while you ride your bike, the cy.fi wireless iPod dock is the bike speaker for you. And as a special bonus, it looks like an orangutan's ass! Working with the old-school iPod nano (and probably working with any iPod with a dock connector), it's a wireless speaker, and no, it's not using Bluetooth. It's using the Kleer Audio transmission that claims to be 10 times more energy efficient than Bluetooth.

The Cy.Fi speaker is about the size of a deck of cards and mounts on your handlebars. It spreads its stereo sound to let to the left and right, and makes it so you don't have to wear earphones that might obscure important noises of impending danger. Get more speakers, and one iPod can broadcast its signal to everyone in your riding group.

The company says the Cy.Fi's transmission is 100% lossless, sent from your iPod tucked safely away in your pocket. You can also control volume and skip tracks right from the speaker. Available sometime in 2008, it'll cost you $149.

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Teen To Stand Trial In Bicyclist Shooting


(AP) PHILADELPHIA An 18-year-old man who fatally shot a 14-year-old bicyclist who wouldn't get out of his way was ordered Wednesday to stand trial on homicide and weapons charges.

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Law was bicycling with friends on July 14 when a car driven by Meyers pulled up behind them on the narrow South Philadelphia street and began honking for them to get out of the way, police said.

Four of the five bicyclists obliged. Law, however, got off his bike and walked around to the passenger side of the stopped car, and he and Meyers argued briefly, according to police. The boy was killed with a single bullet to the chest that passed through his lungs and heart, according to a coroner's report.

Officer Joseph Acavino, who was in uniform but in his own car on his way to work, was behind Meyers' car when the shooting occurred. He testified that as Meyers' car inched up to where Law stood on the side of the road, he saw the driver's arm extend toward the rolled-down passenger side window and he heard a gunshot.

"Tykeem Law, with both hands, grabbed his upper chest area. He looked at his chest and looked at the car," Acavino said. "He looked to his right and to his left, then he went back on his heels and fell backward."

The car sped off before running a stop sign and being broadsided by another car about a block away. Police said they found a loaded .22-caliber revolver on the ground next to the driver's side door.

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Studies show diesel smog increases chances of deadly blood clots.


By Ewen Callaway

Study after study has shown a connection between smoggy days and an increase in deaths. Now two experiments, one on mice and the other in men, clarify why. Diesel fumes, they find, encourage blood clots that can bring on heart attacks and strokes.

The study in people helps to prove the correlation between heart problems and a city's poor air quality and hints at the role of clotting in this process. And the work in mice exposed to smog suggests that the immune system kick-starts the process.

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