Tag Archives: bikes

Colorado Velophobia – Bike Fear and Backpedaling

Photo credit Arvindgrover @ flickr. Never mind that it is hard to define what a “U.N. city” might be, nor why it would be so horrible. Colorado Republican gubernatorial candidate Dan Maes said this week that Denver will soon become this unsavory thing, and it’s all due to those dang bicycles. Huh? Velophobia, which simmers in Colorado, now seems to be bursting out with Mae’s proclomation that a “bike agenda” will lead the state’s capital city to be a den of…… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Colorado Velophobia – Bike Fear and Backpedaling

The Bikeloc Project: A Potluck Bike Tour

Image credit: GOOD GOOD has teamed up with Pepsi to help bring positive change to communities. The Pepsi Refresh project gives away millions of dollars in grants for some really amazing ideas. One of which is helping to fund the Bikleloc project…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Bikeloc Project: A Potluck Bike Tour

People Tree Kicks Off Humanity in Fashion Campaign, Support Fair Garment Workers Conditions Now!

Daily Mail’s Liz Jones and People Tree founder Safia Minney, left to right, in Bangladesh’s first organic cotton farm. Image via Daily Mail . The not so sweet reality of garment workers conditions in Bangladesh is, in short, very bad . Thanks to tipster Elliot for sending us this news bit: UK-based ethical fashion label People Tree has just launched a year-long campaign called Humanity in Fashion. The campaign… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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People Tree Kicks Off Humanity in Fashion Campaign, Support Fair Garment Workers Conditions Now!

Ugandans Struggle for Solutions to Fix War-Torn Water Infrastructure

Image via YouTube video Uganda has been the site of severe turmoil since civil war broke out in the early 1980s. For the last few years, people have been returning home to northern Uganda to find that their water infrastructure is in ruins. However, with organizational help from Action Against Hunger, ACF International and financial support from European and American governments, residents are being empowered … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Ugandans Struggle for Solutions to Fix War-Torn Water Infrastructure

The Fatwa Against Female Cyclists

This oil painting by Vita Di Milano is from “Women and Wheels” dedicated, according to the artist, to “women’s freedom from the dogmas and the doctrines of religion.” Female cyclists have a hard enough time – we are generally a bit more safety-conscious and reticent when it comes to getting out on city streets , and the athletic among us who do fearlessly dive into bike racing and other cycling sports do so with less support or acknowledgment from the rest of the sporting world than men cyclists get. So … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Fatwa Against Female Cyclists

Private Parking Lots Forced To Offer Space For Bikes In Buenos Aires

Image copyright: McClellanParkTMA.org . In a city where bike theft is a very good reason to make you doubt about riding somewhere, providing parking facilities is almost as important as creating new bike paths . This is the case in Buenos Aires (and many cities around the world), and the reason why it’s so good to hear that the government has pushed a new law to provide several bike-parking facilities, including spaces inside pri… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Private Parking Lots Forced To Offer Space For Bikes In Buenos Aires

Fight Obesity With 10 Miles of Cycle Tracks Per State

Photo Tobyotter via flickr. Harvard’s Anne Lusk is a Department of Nutrition researcher extremely interested in the ways bicycles can help our overweight society. Her most recent publication documents research she and colleagues did using data from the famous Nurses Health Study II and compared biking and fast walking and their surprising role in keeping women slimmer..for just a few minutes of exercise each day. “Adult obesity rates increased in 28 s… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Fight Obesity With 10 Miles of Cycle Tracks Per State

Five Benefits of Cycle Commuting

Photo: Richard Masoner, Flickr Cycle commuting is apparently safer than not cycling to work. A Danish study assessing the health status of 30,000 people over a 14 year period found that, with all other factors being equal, simply cycling to work lowered the risk of death by 40%. Studies have indicated that cyclists have at least 15% lower absenteeism than non-cyclist workers, with the higher the frequency and longer the distance cycled, the

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Five Benefits of Cycle Commuting

European nudes and American prudes

(Tribune Media Services) — It was 1978. My vagabuddy Gene and I were heading for a Turkish bath. With tattered towel around my waist, I walked gingerly across slippery marble into a steamy world of shadowy Turks under Byzantine domes. I felt gawky … and more naked than naked. After an awkward sit in the sauna, a muscular Turk, who doled out massages like cannery workers gut salmon, laid me onto a round marble slab. With a loud slap, he landed on me, his hands working as if kneading dough in a prison bakery. He smashed and stretched each of my tight muscles. Finally, like lobotomized Gumbys, we were led to marble thrones to be doused in hot water and scrubbed with coarse mittens. Dirt curled off of us in rolls. Finally, we emerged onto the streets of Istanbul, cleaner than we'd ever been. Any traveler to Europe who's visited a bath, perused a newsstand, hung out at a beach or park on a sunny day, or channel-surfed broadcast TV late at night has noticed that Europeans are more relaxed than Americans about nudity. In the south of France, sunbathing grandmothers have no tan lines. In Norway, young children play naked in fountains. On summer days, accountants in Munich head to the park on their lunch break to grin and bare it, trading corporate suits for birthday suits. It's quite a shock to Americans (they're the ones riding their bikes into the river and trees). In Belgium, huge billboards advertise soap by showing a woman's lathered-up breasts. A Copenhagen student tourist center welcomes visitors with a bowl of free condoms at their info desk. I'm not comfortable with all of this, though I do think Americans tend to be overly prudish. But if you can leave your inhibitions at home, you can better appreciate some of the amazing experiences Europe has to offer. In Finland, a trip to a public sauna — warmed by a wood-fired stove topped with rocks — not only feels good, but is a living slice of this culture. Historically, Turkish baths weren't just for getting clean — they were also a place for socializing, where Muslim women could look for a suitable bride for their sons or celebrate the birth of a baby. Croatia has some of the best beaches — many of them without any dress code. The trend dates back to royalty: In 1936, England's King Edward VIII visited the island of Rab on holiday. Wanting an all-over tan, he went through the proper channels to have one of Rab's beaches designated for nudists. Inspired by his example, other travelers followed suit (er, dropped suit) … and a phenomenon was born. Not everyone in Europe is comfortable with nudity. At the Vatican Museum, fig leaves cover many statues. From 1550 to 1800, the Church decided that certain parts of the human anatomy were obscene. Perhaps Church leaders associated these full-frontal sculptures with the outbreak of Renaissance humanism that reduced their power in Europe. Whatever the cause, they reacted by covering classical crotches with plaster fig leaves, the same kind of leaves that Adam and Eve used when the concept of “privates” was invented. Years ago, I faced my own fig-leaf dilemma. An early edition of my art-for-travelers guidebook featured a naked David on the cover. My publisher was concerned that bookstores in more conservative areas wouldn't stock it. A fig leaf would help sales. I proposed, just for fun, that we put a peelable fig leaf on the cover so readers could customize the level of nudity. I even paid half the cost and had the fun experience of writing “for fig leafs” on a check. Things get trickier when it comes to public television. Because of FCC regulations, we can't easily show spas, saunas, or beaches in Europe where nudity is the norm. And because I show paintings and sculptures of naked bodies, my programs are flagged by the network and, in some regions, aired only after 10 p.m., when things are less restrictive. In recent years, programmers actually got a list of how many seconds that marble and canvas body parts appeared in each episode. They couldn't inflict a Titian painting or a Bernini statue on a conservative viewership without taking heat and risking having to pay enormous fines of $275,000. You may not want to bring the more casual European approach to sex and the human body back home with you. And I'm not saying we should all run around naked. But I like a continent where the human body is considered a divine work of art worth admiring openly. added by: eden49

CNN.com Extols Europeans’ Nudism versus ‘Prudish’ Americans

Travel writer and public television personality Rick Steves lauded Europeans’s “more relaxed” attitude about nudity in public and on television while labeling Americans ” overly prudish ” by comparison in a Tuesday column on CNN.com: “I like a continent where the human body is considered a divine work of art worth admiring openly.” Steves’s ode to European nudity began six paragraphs into the column, ” European nudes and American prudes ,” after giving a detailed sketch of his 1978 experience at a Turkish bath: “Any traveler to Europe who’s visited a bath, perused a newsstand, hung out at a beach or park on a sunny day, or channel-surfed broadcast TV late at night has noticed that Europeans are more relaxed than Americans about nudity .” The writer, who, back in 2003, feared that the American flag was being “hijacked” as a “logo” for support of the war in Iraq, then spent several paragraphs describing how widespread this practice is on the European continent and how apparently great it is (including his “overly prudish” label about Americans): In the south of France, sunbathing grandmothers have no tan lines. In Norway, young children play naked in fountains. On summer days, accountants in Munich head to the park on their lunch break to grin and bare it, trading corporate suits for birthday suits. It’s quite a shock to Americans (they’re the ones riding their bikes into the river and trees). In Belgium, huge billboards advertise soap by showing a woman’s lathered-up breasts. A Copenhagen student tourist center welcomes visitors with a bowl of free condoms at their info desk. I’m not comfortable with all of this, though I do think Americans tend to be overly prudish . But if you can leave your inhibitions at home, you can better appreciate some of the amazing experiences Europe has to offer . In Finland, a trip to a public sauna — warmed by a wood-fired stove topped with rocks — not only feels good, but is a living slice of this culture…. Croatia has some of the best beaches — many of them without any dress code. The trend dates back to royalty: In 1936, England’s King Edward VIII visited the island of Rab on holiday. Wanting an all-over tan, he went through the proper channels to have one of Rab’s beaches designated for nudists . Inspired by his example, other travelers followed suit (er, dropped suit) … and a phenomenon was born. Steves leaves out that Edward VIII had to abdicate the British throne after his proposal to an American divorcee. Edward was also ahead of the curve in terms of another European phenomenon: a childless marriage. Later, Steves complained about conservatism of Americans’ attitudes toward nudity due to its effect on his occupations as an author and public television host: …An early edition of my art-for-travelers guidebook featured a naked David on the cover. My publisher was concerned that bookstores in more conservative areas wouldn’t stock it . A fig leaf would help sales. I proposed, just for fun, that we put a peelable fig leaf on the cover so readers could customize the level of nudity . I even paid half the cost and had the fun experience of writing “for fig leafs” on a check. Things get trickier when it comes to public television . Because of FCC regulations, we can’t easily show spas, saunas, or beaches in Europe where nudity is the norm. And because I show paintings and sculptures of naked bodies, my programs are flagged by the network and, in some regions, aired only after 10 p.m., when things are less restrictive . In recent years, programmers actually got a list of how many seconds that marble and canvas body parts appeared in each episode. They couldn’t inflict a Titian painting or a Bernini statue on a conservative viewership without taking heat and risking having to pay enormous fines of $275,000 . You may not want to bring the more casual European approach to sex and the human body back home with you. And I’m not saying we should all run around naked. But I like a continent where the human body is considered a divine work of art worth admiring openly . Well, Steves might be able to rest easy now, since the Second Circuit Court ruled against the FCC’s indecency regulations on Tuesday , finding them “unconstitutionally vague.” Earlier in the column, the author took a not-so-subtle shot at one European faction that he must have thought was too “overly prudish” – the Catholic Church: Not everyone in Europe is comfortable with nudity. At the Vatican Museum, fig leaves cover many statues. From 1550 to 1800, the Church decided that certain parts of the human anatomy were obscene. Perhaps Church leaders associated these full-frontal sculptures with the outbreak of Renaissance humanism that reduced their power in Europe . Whatever the cause, they reacted by covering classical crotches with plaster fig leaves, the same kind of leaves that Adam and Eve used when the concept of “privates” was invented.

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CNN.com Extols Europeans’ Nudism versus ‘Prudish’ Americans