viernes, 23 de julio de 2010

Wednsday Night Bike Tours

Every Wednesday night (every other when school is on) dozens or hundreds of cyclists meet at 6:45 p.m. at the Welcome bike shop on Calle 92 and Carrera 11, in north Bogotá, and then head out for a good-natured Ciclopaseo de los Miercoles. The Ciclopaseos usually last several hours and pass through some obscure and even sketchy parts of the city.

The best thing about the rides is the celebration of cycling in mass, as well as a cycling demonstration of bicycle power! They are the nearest thing Bogotá has to its own Critical Mass.

This week, the Ciclopaseo visited Bogotá Bike Tours.

domingo, 11 de julio de 2010

Forget About Carbon Fiber!

Dario, a Colombian native, has bicycle toured for about three years on his light, mean machine, complete with a four burner electric stove, a beer crate full of belongings and a bulletin board of newspaper articles tacked on the back. Each place he goes, he works in painting or repairing shoes to pay his way to the next place. 'It's the best way to see the country,' he said.

Dario's spent three years traveling and pedaled to Brazil and plans to go to Ecuador.
This blog by Mike Ceaser of Bogota Bike Tours

miércoles, 7 de julio de 2010

The Shortsighted National Bicycle Congress

It's time for the National Congress of Bicycles, when everybody working in the industry - or at least the manufacturers and retailers - get together to - market more bicicletas!

The bicycle industry appears to carry real economic weight in Bogota - go down Jimenez Ave. and you'll find the city's 'bicycle row' - many blocks crowded mostly with bike shops, and many businesses, including some big ones such as beer companies, use bikes or tricycles to do deliveries. Yet, bikes aren't very visible in advertising. Open the paper or turn on the TV, and it's all about cars, cars, cars (and tobacco and liquor).

However, the biggest failing of the industry, it seems to me, is the lack of notable efforts to promote a cycling culture. Related to this, I suspect, is Colombia's unequal distribution of wealth - a lot of people (over 40 %) are poor, and a small proportion are very, very rich. And Colombians are very class conscious!

Many low-income people ride bikes to work, or for work, just because it saves them money. But the bicycle industry takes them for granted. These people HAVE TO buy bikes. And, anyway, they use cheap or used bikes, which generate small profit margins, if any at all. Rather, it's the rich who buy the pricey, high-margin Treks, Cannondales and aluminum frame bikes. This is the expanding market and the one retailers chase after.

But these cyclists don't ride their bikes to work: Don't be silly! That makes you look like a poor person! These folks drive their cars to work and then load the bikes onto them on weekends for a pedal around the countryside.

So, what we really need here are more cars to load those bikes onto.

Call the bike industry's focus on selling short-term thinking. Perhaps someday Bogota could be like Portland, San Francisco or Amsterdam, with reams of yuppies pedaling to work on their Dahons. But that's a long way off. So, why bother to work toward it?

Looking at the Bicycle Congress's agenda, I see talks by economists, a bicycle race announcer, an expert in customer relations. I see nothing about transit or commuting - which is natural, if these bikes are never intended to touch an urban road.

jueves, 1 de julio de 2010

Bamboo Bikes Come to Colombia!

The new wave in bike manufacture is one of the oldest building materials known to humanity - bamboo! 

Bike builders say that bamboo has great flexibility and strength characteristics, which mean bamboo can turn into all sorts of bikes, including even high-preformance racers. Now it turns out that someone in Medellin is building bicicletas de bambu. It'll be nice if someone finally starts building hi-performance bikes in Colombia, particularly if they're made from an environmentally-friendly material.


It'll be even better, however, if someone starts making practical cargo and basic transport bikes out of bamboo. It's being done in Africa. Why not here?

This blog written by Mike Ceaser, of Bogota Bike Tours