Well it another round up of the bike blogsphere and news.
First stop...
Bikesnob. Now why our delightful purveyor of snarky bike culture bashing needs anymore mention is a unclear but he is really workin into the press so I will give him props.
Right before bike month he had an article in Time Out in their Great Rides section for
Brooklyn Now he is mentioned in the back of the latest Velo News...
(Notice the cartoon, Wait a sec? I'm the bike blogger with the big Schnoze!!)
And he was mentioned in this article in the
nytimes about an art show in Berlin using bicycles.
The trend in fix gears has spawned blogs like bikesnob...to completely flush out the ridiculous nature of bikes becoming fashionable. Like this crap.
RVCA and Cinelli are getting together and making 50 limited edition bike frames. OOOh, and I'm sure they'll be affordable too. To hang on the wall of your 400square ft studio in East Williamsburg for 600,000 bucks.
I mean, I'm all for making biking cool, marketing, getting more people on bikes, but when I see things like this its hard to keep from vomiting...
or this...
But, I will stay positive even when DKNY didn't learn anything and keeps doing
this. Yes they have their orange bikes locked up in the U.K. Hey, this article links to me..Yeah.
But in really important bike news...former Talking heads front man David Byrne...are you ready for this?
Got drunk and crashed his bike on some cobble stones in the Meat Packing district, according to
Gothamist. The Horror. Well its this kind of a thing that will get something done about our roadways...just like Gardens are knocked down and activists loose fierce battles to save them until rich celebs like
Bette Midler decide to do something about Gardens. Then, poof...they're saved.
Maybe David can start the "New York, I'm too Drunk to bike home Project."
"This is not my big beautiful bike...MY GOD, What have I done?"
Speaking of treacherous roadways...no matter how drunk you get...
Forget about fixie riding hipsters making Williamsburg the new hot trendy spot, or East Williamsburg...I think its going to be Middle East Williamsburg, in the far off reaches of Afganistan. Joe Hendry at
Messmedia.org sent out this article of how people are becoming bike messengers in Kabul.
Afghan mine victims proudly work as bicycle couriers
Reuters India, May 22, 2008
By Jonathon Burch
KABUL (Reuters) - Abdul Saboor rides his bicycle as far as 18 miles a day through the dusty streets of Kabul delivering packages. Most people might be daunted by such distances but not Saboor who peddles through the hilly streets using his only leg.
Thirteen years ago Saboor had to have his right leg amputated after stepping on a landmine near his house in western Kabul. It happened during the civil war when the city was subjected to regular rocket attacks, shortly before the Taliban took control in 1996. Many of the roads were riddled with landmines.
Saboor, now aged 35, had already moved his family to the relatively safer northern part of the city but from time to time he would check on his old home, and it was on one such trip that he lost his leg.
According to the United Nations an average of 60 people every month are killed or wounded by landmines or explosives left over from war in Afghanistan and an estimated 270 square miles are still contaminated with explosive devices.
But that has not stopped Saboor from earning a living, albeit a hard one. He and his fourteen colleagues work for Afghanistan's first and only bicycle messenger service, the Disabled Cycle Messenger Services (DCMS). They deliver letters and packages between offices in the city.
"Of course it's hard work, even for an able bodied person," says Saboor, leaning on his crutches.
"But the fact that I can work and I don't have to sit on the side of the road and beg for money and can provide food for my family gives me a big sense of pride."
The concept is simple and has been employed in large cities such as London and New York for many years, as cycle couriers can often guarantee a faster delivery time than other vehicles as they are not held up by traffic.
Kabul's roads often come to a standstill due to the sheer amount of cars but also because of the numerous security barriers that have sprung up in the city which restrict the flow of traffic and are a great cause of complaint from residents.
Saboor is different from the rest of his colleagues in that he chooses not to use a prosthetic leg, opting for crutches instead. His leg was amputated high above the knee making it more difficult to use a prosthesis, he says.
"I used to use a prosthetic limb but it caused me a lot of discomfort," he says, as one of his colleagues massages his own stump.
Asked if he uses an artificial limb when he cycles, Saboor quickly rejects any doubt over his abilities.
"No, I use my one leg! If you want, I can carry you all the way to north Kabul. I'll show you!" he says strapping his crutches to the bicycle frame and using his only leg to pedal effortlessly around the mud courtyard of the DCMS office.
He and his colleagues use heavy Chinese manufactured bicycles costing around $50 used by Afghans all over the country.
DCMS was set up by an Afghan NGO in 2002 but two years ago disagreements over pay caused them to break away and go it alone. With the move went the donor funding and much of their client base. They have been struggling ever since.
"We're taking our last breath," says Mohammad Amin Zaki, the director of DCMS who is also a mine victim and messenger.
"We have 20 days until the rent is due and after that we don't know what will happen."
The company's struggle reflects the wider economic instability of a country ravaged by almost three decades of war. Unemployment is at least 40 percent.
"The financial situation is bad throughout the country so people usually prefer to deliver things themselves," says Zaki referring to the lack of business.
Each of the messengers earns a meager $10-16 a month depending on the amount of work; well below the national average. On top of this they receive around $10 from the government in the form of disability allowance. All the men work other jobs.
Zaki works in the evenings as a laborer, mixing concrete while Saboor helps his son sell rubbish bags by the side of the road. Another makes bricks.
"We don't have breakfast or lunch. Usually we wait and have dinner together with the family because we don't have enough money for food," says Saboor.
Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world with half of its 25 million people living below the poverty line. The country has also been hit hard by the rising global food prices.
But despite the odds, Saboor remains pragmatic about his future. Asked what he will do if the business shuts down, he says: "I will definitely get another job. I don't like not working. If I lose this job I will find another one somewhere else."
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The first Kabul alleycat should be happening shortly.