Friday, June 10, 2005

Annoucements


Bike Chained to Pole, originally uploaded by Green Biker.


Today, Friday June 10th is the 2nd Friday of the month and that means Brooklyn Critical Mass. Remember, it's not how big your mass is...its what you do with it. For a leisure ride escorted by the NYPD at all times meet at Grand Army Plaza at 7pm, that big arch at the mouth of Prospect Park. The police have not backed off on this ride and watch it with an observant eye and plenty of scooter cops and vans of officers. For a less patroled ride...meet in South Williamsburg at 6:45 at the park on the Brooklyn side of the Williamsburg Bridge. Right where the bike path ends. In the past these rides have linked up, but recently they have been their own animals.

There is a new coffee table book out there about Bicycles chained to poles in New York. Its a photography book called "Bicycles locked to Poles" by Jen Bekman www.jenbekman.com. She is having a show in Soho that ends tomorrow. 6 spring street (between Elizabeth & Bowery) She will be on hand to sign the book June 11th from 2pm-4pm

Time's up is has a bunch of free rides this weekend for bikes.

Friday June 10th is the Prospect Park Traffic Calming ride. There has been a 10 year fight to get cars out of prospect park and this ride continues to send the message to drives that city parks are no place for motor vehicle traffic. The cyclists roll side by side around the park's loop roads. This is a nonconfrontational ride to slow down car traffic during the hours the park is open to cars. The ride lasts about one hour or until the start of the park's auto-free hours.
Meet at 6:15pm at the entrance to the park at Grand Army Plaza. Yes the same date as the Brooklyn Critical Mass.

For more info on bike rides from time's up check the website:

www.times-up.org

and remember Bicycle Messenger World Championships are coming to NYC June 30th-July 4th

Get more info at the New York Messenger Association website:

www.nybma.com

Featured on there site is a recent NYTimes article about messengers racing at the veledrome in Queens.


By COREY KILGANNON
Published: June 10, 2005

Need a package rushed across car-clogged Manhattan? Hand it to Alfred Bobe Jr., a 31-year-old bike messenger from Brooklyn.

He lays claim to the title of America's fastest messenger on a track bike, the type of high-speed vehicle preferred by some messengers who favor its single fixed gear and lack of brakes.

Bolger is the captain of Team Puma.
Mr. Bobe is a member of Team Puma, a cycling team consisting of city bike messengers that, since forming last July, has been dominating many of the messenger races held across New York and the country.

"We're taking urban street biking to the track to represent New York and show we have the fastest messengers," said Mr. Bobe, who finished first among all track bikers participating in last month's North American Cycle Courier Championships in Portland, Ore.

According to Mr. Bobe, working as a city messenger is the best training for track races, where bikers ride in tight packs.

"Messengers have better instincts and reflexes and a lot sharper peripheral vision," he said. "If you're not conscious and in the moment at all times, you can die on someone's car door. That's what separates us from regular racers. We have a different inner core and strength because our messenger work is our training.

"We ride wearing a 20-pound lock and a 40-pound bag," he added. "When you finally get to the track and take all that off, you feel explosive, like you have wings or you just took a shot of Red Bull or something."

After work on a recent Thursday, Mr. Bobe gathered with five other team members in front of Trackstar, an East First Street bicycle shop that sponsors its own messenger team. The messenger-racers unloaded their heavy chains and large messenger bags. They checked their route sheets from the day's deliveries and traded work stories.

The team was formed by Puma after it sponsored weekly races last year at the refurbished Kissena Park Velodrome, a 400-meter cycling track in Flushing, Queens, said Kevin Bolger, the team captain and a veteran racer. Puma officials selected nine cyclists for the team and provided them with expensive racing bikes, uniforms and other apparel.

Puma, the athletic footwear and apparel company, also provides its team members with emergency medical insurance for the track and the street, and picks up the tab for them to race around the country.

Puma's involvement reflects a recent rise in the popularity of track racing, which team members think will become as prevalent as skateboarding, in-line skating and snowboarding.

Along with Mr. Bobe and Mr. Bolger, other team members include Felipe Robayo, Eddie Ortega, Hugo Giron, a master of bike tricks, and Carlos Ramirez, 30, from Brooklyn, who organizes Monster Track, popular races held on bustling Manhattan streets that emphasize messenger skills and allow only track bikes. Then there is Todd Marszalek, 29, a Polish immigrant who is also a well-known graffiti artist, and Massamba Niang of Harlem, 22, a handsome Senegalese immigrant with a flashy smile. Charlotte Blythe, 17, is the only woman on the team.

Mr. Bolger, 33, has worked full time as a courier since 1992 and is known by his nickname, Squid. He lives in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, with his wife, Amy, a former bike messenger. He works for several courier services and delivers take-out food in Williamsburg for extra money.

"We want people to think more of us than just that guy who ran over their foot," he said. "We also want to improve work conditions, since most messengers are underpaid and get no medical insurance."

Mr. Bolger rarely wears a helmet despite having suffered five concussions as a messenger, he said. He has been hospitalized only once, after "dooring," a term for slamming into a quickly opened car door.

Most team members work their routes on their custom-made Cannondale team bikes. Each bike weighs 14 pounds and has the Puma emblem and colorful graffiti built into the red glossy finish.

Mr. Bolger has attached a hip flask to his bike. "In the winter, you put your Schnapps in there," he explained.

So how does one stop a fixed-gear bike barreling 30 miles per hour down crowded, bumpy streets of Midtown Manhattan with no brakes? By sharply locking up on the pedals and applying reverse pressure. Riding a fixed-gear bicycle takes much practice and is a badge of honor for many elite messengers, said Bucky Turco, publisher of Fixed magazine, which is devoted to fixed-gear bikes.

Team Puma members frequently invoke the name of Nelson Vails, a New York City messenger who won a silver medal in cycling at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.

Last month, at Kissena Park in Queens, several Team Puma members raced against Marty Nothstein, America's most decorated track cyclist and a gold medalist in the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney. Puma members came in several seconds behind him. After the race, a winded Mr. Nothstein said he was impressed with the caliber of their riding.

"There's a certain ability you get by messengering that you can't get from the road or the track," he said.

Last Friday, Mr. Bolger knifed effortlessly through a herd of taxis and trucks, delivering packages and running errands in preparation for the Cycle Messenger World Championships in New York City that will take place over the Independence Day weekend. He was trying to solve a visa problem for the Warsaw Car Killers, a Polish messenger team.

Experienced messengers earn about $100 a day, Mr. Bobe said, but a really good one can almost double that by "being fast, knowing your way around the city and having a good dispatcher." Mr. Bobe has worked as a bike messenger for 12 years and supports his two children with his courier earnings, which he supplements with prize money and bonuses from Puma for top finishes.

Mr. Bobe hopes to qualify for the Olympics. "I'm one second off the qualifying time for the 200-meter sprints," he said

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

jujst a reminder, a womyn was killed yesterday in park
slope, while passing btwn two trucks.
maybe the BKLYN mass tonight could go by 5th and warren the location where she was murdered.
theres some small blurbs in the NY post, the daily news, and newsday.
to all cyclists-keep riding
to all cars-get the fuck off the road

1:00 PM  

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