2018 On Two Wheels

2018 has been an action-packed year for Love to Ride: our members have clocked up millions of miles and encouraged thousands of new riders to experience the joys and benefits of cycling, and we have worked with workplaces, governments and advocacy groups to get more people on bikes worldwide.

We’ve run national events in New Zealand, the UK and – for the first time – the USA, where we teamed up with the League of American Bicyclists to run the National Bike Challenge. Over 76,000 people took part in these national programs, joining the growing international movement to get more people on bikes and helping to introduce new riders to a simple, cheap and accessible way to become happier, healthier and wealthier.

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This year our flagship workplace event, Cycle September, went global for the first time, with early adopters of our new Love to Ride for Business product taking part. Love to Ride for Business gives companies their own platform to help their staff switch to cycling for fun, fitness and transport, with friendly competition within and between offices to get more people on bikes. Find out more here.

We also completed a successful pilot in partnership with the National Union of Students and the Environmental Association of Universities and Colleges in the UK to get more staff and students cycling in further and higher education. The Department for Transport awarded us an Innovation Challenge Fund grant to work with six universities and we used cutting-edge behaviour change techniques to design impactful interventions on campuses. Find out more about it on the NUS’s website here.

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Wherever we work we are keen to support local bike shops. During Cycle September we gave away well over £10,000 of local bike shop vouchers in the UK and we’re responding to feedback from members to develop a dedicated category for bike shops and other cycling organisations so they can compete with each other in 2019.

We have also launched a new clubs and groups feature, which allows cycling clubs, informal groups and larger organisations like football clubs to invite their members to register on Love to Ride. This is currently in Beta and we are inviting feedback to help us make it a great new feature of the site – look out for Cycling Club league tables and the opportunity to ride for your beloved football club!

But our whistle-stop tour of 2018 on two wheels isn’t over yet… In December we’ll be running our hugely popular Winter Wheelers promo for the third time. We are delighted to welcome back our brilliant sponsors from 2017, Proviz, Beryl (formerly Blaze) and Torch – and to announce that Muc-Off will be offering top-notch bike cleaning kit this year too!

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As well as top-notch gear to help you keep riding through the winter, we’ll be giving away a £500 local bike shop voucher to one lucky winner who logs a ride on Sunday 16 December and a £750 voucher will be drawn on Christmas Day from everyone that logs a ride between 1 and 25 December!

Although prizes are restricted to members in funded areas or at workplaces or universities that have bought into our programs, everyone who registers and records a ride will be eligible for huge discounts from our sponsors – so make sure you join today to bag some bargainous winter cycling gear from the best brands in the business!

If you’d like to incentivise your colleagues to ride in during December, we have teamed up with VitaLife to offer a Boxed Bike Breakfast for twenty people for just £50 – it’s full of warming winter bike fuel like porridge pots and is a great way to celebrate and reward riding to work in winter.

We hope you’ve had a great year on two wheels so far and we look forward to riding through the winter with you! Keep in touch via Facebook and Twitter, or drop us a line if you have any questions: support@lovetoride.org

How cycling has made me happier, healthier & wealthier

Back in September we linked up with Babboe to promote a cleaner, greener, healthier and more economical way to do the school run – with electrically assisted pedal power! We invited members of the Love to Ride community to submit a short post about how cycling has made them happier, healthier and wealthier. We received so many fantastic entries that it took longer than planned for us to pick a winner – and Babboe were so impressed they have asked two runners up to become Babboe Ambassadors too! Congratulations to our worthy winner, Natalie from Southampton, whose fantastic post about discovering the joys and benefits of riding for transport follows:

I love to ride!  11 years ago, I didn’t even own a bike.  The thought of cycling on the roads was frightening.  What about the cars?!  Images of being stuck on the side of the road with a punctured tyre left me cold.  I didn’t want to have to shower and get changed every time I arrived anywhere, and what about the weather?!

Then I got a job where my employer insisted on not using a car and I had to not only buy a bike, but also use it.  Suck it up, Natalie, you’ve got to do this!  I really wanted that job…

At first I was wobbly and, frankly, petrified.  I fell off.  It wasn’t anyone else’s fault.  I had been cycling in the gutter like a nervous mouse.  My previous cycling had been in a relatively car-free environment, as a child, not with an HGV behind me!  But with some practice, and some top tips from colleagues and friends about road positioning and how to mend (and avoid) a puncture, it felt as if I had been liberated!  I’ve not had an accident since.

Suddenly, I understood why people bother.  Cars (and HGVs) were now giving me the space I needed to cycle safely.   I started to build up a level of fitness that meant it didn’t daunt me to go to work by bike if I missed the train, or the congestion was bad, and I would get there sooner.  I discovered all the quiet, alternative routes that you can’t use in a car, but that make a journey by bike a real pleasure, calmly beating the traffic without building up a sweat (or needing a shower), and discovering places I didn’t know existed.  I’ve had just three punctures in 11 years that meant needing to actually stop and do something about it, and actually felt quite a rush from being able to do it myself.  As for the weather, I’ve got soaked to the bone twice, and both times I had actually chosen to go out in the rain.  It rains a whole lot less that I thought it did.

So, where am I now?  I’m not a ‘lycra racer’.  I still get puffed following my amazing colleagues, and I really rarely use my bike just for fun, but despite a busy life, two children and no time for ‘me-time-exercise’, I am fitter than I ever was, just by going to the places I need to go to.  It’s taken a while to psych myself up to it, but I’ve actually sold my car.  It saves us about £1,000 a year.  I love arriving home with the children with all of us refreshed and buzzing, instead of grumpy and in a cloud of toxic fumes.  Who knew?!  I learned to love to ride and I’m so glad I did!

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Go Dutch! > Win a Babboe cargo bike!

Cycle September is all about going Dutch: the aim is to help people to break down the barriers they face to cycling and, in the process, to make the bicycle the normal mode of transport for all short journeys. In the Netherlands it’s completely normal for people to use bikes for short journeys, even to school or nursery with small children.

Electrically assisted cargo bikes mean it’s now possible to go Dutch even in hilly cities like Sheffield (see below). We’ve teamed up with Babboe to spread the word about how their beautiful cargo bikes can make the pedal-powered school run mainstream in the UK. If you want to transport your little ones in sustainable style, here’s what you have to do to win:

  • Submit a short blog post about how cycling has made you happier, healthier & wealthier
  • Let us know why you want a Babboe cargo bike and how you would use it
  • Accompanying photos and videos are welcome and encouraged!
  • Agree to be a Babboe Ambassador for six months & produce follow-up posts about your brand new Babboe!
  • Deadline Friday 5 October, winner will be announced w/c Monday 8 October

To enter, see this page for instructions and Ts & Cs.

Can’t wait? All Love to Ride members can get £150 off the price of any Babboe cargo bike, email hello@lovetoride.org from your registered address with BABBOE in the subject line for a unique code.

 

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We have beautifully branded Cycle September Babboe cargo bikes in Sheffield, Brighton and Leeds. The Babboe Curve in Sheffield recently scored a first, transporting a beer barrel up the steepest urban street in England as between-race entertainment at the Blake Street Bash!

If you want to win one of these beauties, make sure you’re registered for Cycle September & get your creative thinking cap on!

 

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K977: how Leanne Owen uses cycling to raise awareness & find a cure for Parkinson’s

Parkinson’s Disease (PD) is a degenerative condition affecting the nervous system. Symptoms start when the brain can’t make enough dopamine to control movement properly and there are three main kinds: tremor (shaking), slowness of movement and rigidity (muscle stiffness). However, there are many other symptoms and PD manifests differently in each of the 7-10 million people living with it worldwide.

There has been medical research into the strange relationship between cycling and PD symptoms for some time. The amazing video below shows how a PD patient with advanced frozen gait can cycle perfectly, suggesting that the physical and neurological processes that allow us to balance whilst riding a bike are separate to those that help us to walk independently.

There’s lots of information online about medical research into the effects of cycling on PD symptoms – simply search ‘Parkinson’s cycling research’ for a reading list to get you started. Leanne’s amazing story, though, is a compelling account of one individual’s experience of living with PD and using cycling as a way to control symptoms and raise awareness at the same time as raising funds for research to find a cure.

Leanne was a watch manager in the West Yorkshire Fire & Rescue Service, making life-saving decisions at fires, road accidents and other emergencies until she was forced to retire due to PD symptoms in 2011 at the age of 42.

Leanne became heavily involved in Parkinson’s UK, raising funds through sponsored walks, events, a sky dive – and bike rides. Leanne rode London to Paris, the Humber 108 and her very own 477-mile tour of all the Parkinson’s Support Groups in Yorkshire and Humberside.

With her symptoms advancing, Leanne decided she had one last epic ride in her. Not one to make life easy for herself, she planned a 977-mile circuit round the UK visiting all of the regional Parkinson’s UK support groups. The aim is to raise £20,000 and wider awareness through social media and press coverage.

Over seven months of training Leanne got into the best shape of her life and felt the symptoms slowing as she clocked up thousands of miles. But there was the cruellest of twists in the tale.

Following a successful training trip to Mallorca, Leanne was riding near Doncaster when she spotted a pothole as she cornered in a tight country lane. The dappled shade meant that she didn’t see the gravel next to it, lost traction and fell hard, sustaining a serious head injury despite her helmet.

As Leanne says, there is no way of articulating what she felt when she understood the seriousness of her injuries: ‘There is no point in trying to communicate my disappointment, there are no words.’

But they’re made of strong stuff in Yorkshire. Leanne continues: ‘It’s been a tough few weeks but my time in the West Yorkshire Fire Service taught me to always have a plan B.’ The rest of the K977 Team will still complete the challenge between 28 June and 8 July and Leanne will ride in the support car. ‘Between us we still raise awareness and together we will reach our total of £20,000.’

Not only is Leanne adamant that her K977 Challenge will go ahead, she’s also targeting a return to the saddle. If her recovery goes well, she wants to ride Pedal for Parkinson’s unique two-day sportive in September, the BOXCAM200.

Find out more about her incredible story here – K977 is well and truly under way – and support her heroic fundraising efforts here.

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The K977 at the start in Leeds on 28 June

 

You can find out more about PD and the great work of Parkinson’s UK here and check out their fantastic series of fundraising rides on the Pedal for Parkinson’s website here (we’ll have a post about these soon).

You can also see Enzo Cilenti talking about BOXCAM200 here:

8 Times the Bike Has Revolutionised the World

From infrastructure to equality, media to innovation, bikes have had a massive influence on every aspect of our society. Proviz has rounded up eight of the most profound and memorable ways in which bikes have changed our lives and our outlook.

Turning the Wheels of Feminism1. Turning the Wheels of Feminism

The last decade of the 19th century was a golden age for the bike, with its popularity rising among men and women alike. Indeed, the introduction of the ‘safety’ bike – chain-driven with equal-sized wheels – coincided with the rise in feminism and helped to break down gender barriers, although clothing presented something of a problem. Victorian dress was notoriously restrictive and in 1881 the Society for Rational Dress was formed in London, opposing tight corsets, high heels and impractical skirts. Not everyone approved of the dress or the bike riding, but in 1893 Tessie Reynolds made history by cycling from Brighton to London in 8.5 hours wearing pantaloons, a shirt and coat. More women followed suit, with divided skirts that allowed for easier mount and dismount growing in popularity. And as American women’s rights activist Susan B. Anthony said in an interview with the New York Sunday World in 1896: “I think [bicycling] has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world…the moment she takes her seat, she knows she can’t get into harm unless she gets off her bicycle…”

Tackling Poverty through Empowerment2. Tackling Poverty through Empowerment

Set up in the wake of the 2004 tsunami, World Bicycle Relief now helps poor, widely dispersed communities in Africa, South America and Southeast Asia access affordable transport in the shape of its £95 Buffalo Bicycle. For the same cost as five large takeaway pizzas, each specially designed, locally assembled bike provides a child with a fast, safe means of getting to and from school. Indeed, since its inception, WBR has helped 126,104 students stay in education and says that every bike it donates has an impact on five people’s lives.

There is evidence to demonstrate that providing schoolgirls with bicycles in this way greatly empowers young girls, resulting in a positive impact on pregnancy rates. WBR is now working on a longitudinal study to assess this evidence more fully.

“The Buffalo Bicycle is the Ford of bicycles,” says Alec Seaman, World Bicycle Relief’s development director, UK. “It’s basically the simplest design possible, which helps ensure less can go wrong and spare parts are both readily available and affordable, which makes our supply chain more cost effective and helps us to ensure the availability of low cost parts.”

World War Bike Batallions3. World War Bicycle Battalions

The British army was using volunteer cycle units as far back as early as the 1880s, typically for reconnaissance and communication since a bicycle tended to be lighter, quieter and lower maintenance than a horse. By the start of the First World War, some 14 cyclist battalions had been raised and were initially deemed so important to the home front effort that none served overseas. In 1915, the battalions became the Army Cyclist Corps and recruitment posters went up squarely aimed at cycling fans and those with a passion for all things mechanical. Eventually some battalions were sent abroad and one particular group carried out a daring raid on German ammunition wagons. The British were not the only ones to use bicycles in wartime. In 1937, Japan deployed around 50,000 bicycle troops in its invasion of China and most Polish infantry divisions in the Second World War included a company of bicycle-mounted scouts. During the Vietnam War bicycles reinforced to carry loads of up to 200 kilograms were integral in moving North Vietnamese supplies along secret jungle trails.

E.T. – The Modern Legend4. E. T. – The Modern Legend

No other film has quite ever made kids want to get out on their bikes like E.T. did. BMX cycling was all the rage in the early 1980s and director Steven Spielberg brought in eight fully-grown stunt riders to film the iconic scene in which Elliot, E.T. and friends are chased by the police. All of the stunts were carried out on Kuwahara BMX bikes – made in Osaka, Japan. When one of Spielberg’s assistants called the company to order 40 bikes, the person on the other end thought it was a joke and hung up. Luckily, the assistant persisted and E.T. bicycles would eventually become a huge sales hit. Universal Studios signed an exclusive licensing agreement with Kuwahara and the US distributor Everything Bicycles, owned by Howie Cohen. After the film was released Kuwahara mass-produced three types of E.T. bike and Cohen ended up taking orders for Elliott’s Model 3003 from more than 1,000 retailers. Among those inspired by what they saw on the big screen was Olympic gold medal-winning cyclist Sir Chris Hoy.

Roads as We Know Them5. Roads as We Know Them

You’d be forgiven for thinking that smooth roads owe their existence to the rise in car use, but, it was, in fact, down to the growing popularity of the bike throughout the 19th Century. In the UK, the railway had largely killed off the coaching trade, leaving British roads to crumble. However, the growing use of bicycles, particularly among the working class, led to an exodus from cities out into the suburbs. Cyclists began to travel longer distances and it was the UK’s Cyclists’ Touring Club (CTC) that first lobbied for safer roads and improved infrastructure. According to the Department of Transport for every mile of UK motorway there are 95 miles that were originally intended for non-motorised forms of transport, like the bike. By the 1950s, the car had become king of the road, but with renewed popularity in cycling over the past decade, coupled with concerns over air pollution and congestion, more and more cities are looking to create bike-friendly environments. 

Power of Flight6. The Power of Flight

Everyone knows that the Wright brothers – Orville and Wilbur – were pioneers in aviation but they were, in fact, bicycle men first, setting up a successful repair, rental and sales business in 1892. While Wilbur was known for his love of long treks into the countryside, Orville was said to be a racer at heart. Their passion for two wheels lies at the heart of their flying experiments, using the profits from the Wright Cycle Company to finance their work. Bicycle parts also featured in some of the early experiments, such as in 1901 when they hacked a St Claire bicycle to study airfoil design. They also built a six-foot wind tunnel at one of their six repair shops and drew on several important cycling principles when designing their aeroplane, such as the importance of balance, the need for strong yet light structures and the chain and sprocket transmission system that enabled propulsion. The Wrights weren’t the only aviation pioneers with a passion for the pedals – Germany’s Otto Lilienthal was a cycling fan while American Glenn Curtiss also owned a bike shop and was a keen racer.

Deliveroo graphic - riders with burgers on their back7. Deliveroo!

The idea of using bikes to deliver things is nothing new – indeed almost as soon as the pedal-powered velocipede was introduced in the 1860s people began to ferry packages about. In the Second World War, it wasn’t uncommon to see lads that were too young for active service to become bicycle messengers, running important messages between air raid and civil defence teams. In the 1980s the bike courier was a ubiquitous sight on London’s streets and even now a courier can find themselves delivering anything from hard copies of legal documents to blood samples. But, in the 21st century it’s all about delivering food. More specifically, the rise of Deliveroo, set up in 2013, has radically changed the way in which we order our good old-fashioned Friday night takeaway. With its distinctive turquoise branding, the company says it has helped restaurants that partner with it increase their revenue by up to 30% while cutting delivery time by 20%.

Bike share revolution8. The Bike Share Revolution

Londoners fell in love with the ‘Boris Bike’ almost as soon as the bike sharing scheme was launched in 2010, with one million journeys recorded in a matter of months. But bike sharing is not a new concept. The first recorded scheme dates back to 1965 and the Dutch White Bicycle plan. Devised by Luud Schimmelpenninck, part of the Provo anarchist movement, which encouraged radical news ways of living, 50 white bikes were distributed – unlocked – around Amsterdam for anyone’s use. The only problem was that leaving a bike unlocked was a criminal offence, and police soon cracked down. Provo retaliated by adding locks and painting the code on the frame, but even so, the scheme never really took off. Today, it is regarded the seed from which all other bike share programmes grew, including the first coin deposit system launched in 1991 in Denmark. Today, more than 1,000 cities have some sort of shared cycle programme, with an increasing number now investing in the dockless variety, which can be found and unlocked using a smartphone.

 

PLUS: SOME MORE BIKE RELATED FACTS AND STATS

  • The bike is 201 years old this year.
  • According to Science Daily, the use of shared bicycle systems across 12 cities in Europe avoids 5 deaths and saves 18 million euros per year in each of those cities.
  • Mass cycling could save the NHS £17bn in 20 years, cut 500 road deaths a year and reduce smog, says a study for British Cycling.
  • In 1890 a bicycle cost about half the annual salary of a US factory worker – five years later it cost just a few weeks’ wages.
  • The first modern bicycle was called the ‘safety’ (think Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid) and was invented in England in 1885.
  • At the Stanley bicycle show in 1895 200 firms displayed 3,000 models.

 

Be part of the ride revolution and sign up for Cycle September, our biggest event of the year > lovetoride.net