During my commute to work, I’d often see a bicyclist here or there but nothing that particularly caught my attention. On a personal level, I hadn’t even learned how to ride a bicycle until I was 14 years old and even then my learning curve with riding bikes was incredibly sloppy. I remember that at one point, I thought I had mastered the art of balancing on two wheels, so I took my borrowed, crooked old Schwinn cruiser up a steep hill and figured I’d coast down with ease.
Let’s just say the bike did make it down the hill – but without me on it.
Suddenly life happens. You get a job, a family, a car. Leisurely activities like bicycling become a ghost of the past and for many just a fond childhood memory. For me, the reinvigorated passion for bicycling as an adult came about through the tragedy of a busted Pontiac G6 engine. I was given a cheap mountain bike for free and luckily for me, I live and work Downtown so commuting was no issue.
I met Federico Villalba through a meet up of professional photographers at a trendy art bar called ‘The Red Room’. After a few minutes of lively conversation, we discovered that we both had a passion for bike riding and he eventually invited me to a Bike Month planning meeting.
Bike Month in El Paso was established out of coincidence but also spouted from a deep seated need to establish a better bicycling community for El Paso. “There is a bike master plan for El Paso,” said Federico, “the problem with the current layout is that it’s severely distorted. You might have 1 -2 miles of bike lanes and then it’ll just disappear; they don’t connect to anything.”
Though the approval of funds for this program is certainly a step in the right direction, the infrastructure is sorely lacking. “You might have 1 -2 miles of bike lanes and then they’ll just disappear; they don’t connect to anything,” Federico laments. I’ll have to agree with this one; I’ve panicked many times when the comfort of my bike lane has suddenly been swept from me and I’ve got nowhere to go but a sidewalk…if there are any around.
If you’d like to start bicycling or get involved in Bike Month events this month, go to http://elpasobikemonth.com. Crazy Cat Cyclery is offering a special on bike rentals this month, so if you’re feeling brave and want to give mountain biking a try, check out their website and look for the coupon to get a great deal on a rental bike & equipment. If you want to start cycling as a lifestyle, go to http://bikeleague.org. They’re the National organization that implemented Bike Month and you can find a wealth of information there, ranging from proper safety procedures to traffic laws and how to change a tire tube.
Happy cycling!
TEXT: CRYSTI COUTURE
PHOTOS: VICTOR BARAJAS ©2013 http://victorbarajasphotography.com/
Había tanta costumbre entre nuestras rutinas y nos sentimos dueños del tiempo que tuvimos que…
Sólo vas a tener que darme dos segundos en lo que dejo las bolsas de…
egendary turntable wizard and producer DJ Scratch is headed to El Paso as part of…