Chris Keam : accomplished copywriter & video editor

Fri, October 14th, 2011

On Bicycles


Please join People’s Coop Bookstore for an evening of books and bikes!

Wednesday, October 19
People’s Coop Bookstore
On Bicycles talk & signing:
Wednesday, October 19 at 7:30pm – 9pm
1391 Commercial Drive

Join editor Amy Walker and writer Lori Kessler for stories from On Bicycles – 50 Ways the New Bike Culture Can Change Your Life. Stay for a discussion and share your stories of how cycling has changed your life – and how it is changing life in your city.

Refreshments provided by East End Food Coop.

Bike culture is exploding in cities like Portland, OR, New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Montreal, and Vancouver, BC. Whether people are riding folding bikes to the commuter train, slipping through traffic on streamlined single speeds, or carrying children and groceries on their cargo bikes, bicycles are making urban life more dynamic and enjoyable — simply better.

On Bicycles features 33 writers including locals Terry Lowe, Lars Goeller, Todd Litman, Stephen Rees, Carmen Mills, Ulrike Rodrigues (aka Mitey Miss), Wendell Challenger, Chris Keam, Finley Fagan, Lori Kessler, Ron Richings, Eric Doherty, Sarah Ripplinger, David Hay, Bonnie Fenton, Amy Walker, and Denise Wrathall.

Topics covered in this amazing collection of wisdom, wit and information include:
Because It’s Fun!
Cycling is Faster
Cargo Bikes
Freakbikes
Fixed-Gear Bikes
The Art and Craft of Handmade Bicycles
Folding Bikes
Recumbent Cycles
All Abilities Cycling
E-bikes
Biking with Kids
Ciclovia – A Celebration of Car-Free Streets
Bike Party
Bike Sharing
Bike Parking
Cycling for Health, Wealth and Freedom
The Physical Gifts of a Bicycling Lifestyle
Environmental Good of switching from Car to Bike
Re-localizing
Bicycle Bodhisattva
How to Help a Bike Shop Help You
A Rough Guide to the City Bike
Every Day Cycling Style
The Case for Internally Geared Bicycle Hubs
Lights!
Shopping by Bike
Riding in the Rain
Bicycle Space
The Well-Tempered Cyclist
Bicycle Travels
Women and the Benefits of Biking
Collective Bike Shops
Earn-a-Bike Programs
Individuation of the Cyclist & the Law
A History of Bike Advocacy
Grassroots Bike Advocacy from Vision to Victory
Bike Friendly Workplaces
Small Bicycle Businesses
Bike Craft & Industry Boom for North America
Mixing Cycling with Other Modes
Safe Routes to Schools
Designing Our Cities for Bikes
Cycling Rights of Way
Disappearing Car Traffic
…and more!

Visit the On Bicycles website: http://www.OnBicycles.com

& “like” our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/On-Bicycles/269474596425760?notif_t=page_new_likes#!/pages/On-Bicycles/269474596425760


Tue, September 27th, 2011

Give Your Old Bike New Life

Maybe your apt or condo bldg has a bike locker with a few old bikes left behind by former tenants? You have an old mtn or road bike that’s looking lonely and unused while the new bike gets all the mileage? Here’s a great way to do some fall cleaning and help out kids in need.

Bikes.Community is holding a bike drive on Sept. 29th from 1:30 – 5pm at King George Secondary at 1755 Barclay St in the West End.  They’re looking for bicycles that can be used as part of a program that teaches intercultural and inter-generational leadership skills to youth in the downtown peninsula through recycling bicycles and cycling together. Click on the PDF link below for more information:

Donation Brochure

Fri, September 2nd, 2011

Stories by the Campfire

This was a great day of shooting. Great music, lots of engaged visitors, and excellent presenters offering a taste of local history.

Fri, September 2nd, 2011

Kids’ Bike Seats, Trailers, and Towing

I would not recommend a back-mounted child seat because I think it puts the weight up too high and makes the bike more unstable. It’s also bad for kid’s necks when they fall asleep in those seats and their heads flop over. The seats for small children where they sit in front of the parent are good, but it’s for small children (max 3 yrs), so they grow out of it quickly.

A double trailer is good because you can take both kids and take turns pulling the trailer. If possible get the kind that has a really sturdy connection with a ball on the trailer fitting into a socket attachment at the rear wheel, such as on a Chariot brand.

You can also consider a trail-a-bike for your older child. Your younger child can grow into it by the time the older one has their own bike. For short trips, if you already have a kids bike at your house, one of these trail-gators might work for you.

Wed, August 31st, 2011

Healthy Parks, Healthy People Highlighted in Youth Videos

This summer, three groups of young people collaborated on videos about Healthy Parks, Healthy People as part of Metro Vancouver’s 2011 Youth Video Project. I wrote the script for this behind the scenes look at their experience.

Mon, June 6th, 2011

Our Community Bike Club Launches Summer Bike Camp for Kids

Hey folks,

Did you know that the organization behind Our Community Bikes has been running after-school Bike Clubs in Vancouver Public Schools for the last four years?
This year (after winning on the Social Enterprise Dragons competition) they are pleased to be offering Our Community Bike Club SUMMER BIKECAMPS!

The rider learns to safely shoulder check by spotting the instructor's signal

The rider learns to safely shoulder check by spotting the instructor's signal

What’s Summer BikeCamps about?
FUN , safety,   fitness, and   independence

Your kids will learn to ride their bikes safely and confidently while having fun exploring the neighborhood.
Days will consist of Fun Games! plus Bike Safety, Bike Rides, & Basic Repairs.

No bike? No problem! Loaner bikes available to kids who need them.

For more information, subsidy inquiries, or to register
CONTACT
Steph, Tyler or Kelly at: bikeclub@pedalpower.org

See this article in the Vancouver Courier about the upcoming BikeCamps.
Or See the full poster here
Web: OurCommunityBikeClub.org

Program Basics:
1 week camps for kids AGES 8 to 13
TIMES: 9:00am – 2:30pm, daily

Cost:
$265 per session***
$245 Early-bird rate before July 1.
***Many subsidies available please inquire.

Locations & Dates:
Grandview/¿uuqinak’uuh Elementary (2055 Woodland Dr. Vancouver)
August 2 to 5* or August 8 to 12

Hastings Elementary
(2625 Franklin St. Vancouver)
August 8-12 or August 15-19
* August 2 to 5 Camp is four-days only, due to August 1 Holiday. Cost is adjusted to $205 for the week.

Did you know?
- Our Community Bike Club has been running in Vancouver Public Schools for 4 years as an after-school program. We are excited to be offering summer camps this year!

- Our Community Bike Club is the only summer bike camp in the Lower Mainland with Nationally Certified Instructors (CANBIKE).

Fri, April 15th, 2011

Bike Lane Eats in Vancouver

Here’s a map of restaurants, coffee shops, and fast food outlets
along the Hornby and Dunsmuir separated bike lanes.

View Bike Lane Eats in Downtown Vancouver in a larger map

Fri, April 15th, 2011

Flying with Folders

Folding bikes are quickly becoming more popular as the technology, performance, and design of these portable pedalers improves. Here’s my recent article for Granville Online, listing three folders light enough to meet Harbour Air’s weight restrictions for luggage, as well as an accompanying piece describing the Vancouver floatplane company’s carbon-offset program.

Folding bikes make travel by float plane easy and affordable

Harbour Air: North America’s first carbon-neutral airline

Tue, March 22nd, 2011

World Bicycle Relief Adds Three Members to Board of Directors

Chicago Cubs owner, AIDS United president, Trek Bicycles Founder join Board

PR Newswire

CHICAGO, March 21, 2011

CHICAGO, March 21, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — World Bicycle Relief, a Chicago-based not for profit that provides quality bicycles to people living in sub-Saharan Africa recently welcomed Todd Ricketts, Chicago Cubs owner; Mark Ishaug, president of AIDS United; and business owner Elaine Burke to its Board of Directors.

World bicycle relief coal seller

This coal seller's next purchase will be a World Bicycle Relief bike bought through a micro-finance program. They appreciate the durability of the bicycles because loads can weigh up to 250 pounds. The bicycle enables them to bring more goods, faster and to further markets. It is an inexpensive sustainable choice to aid in economic development. Photo by: Leah Missbach Day

“We are very grateful and excited to have Todd, Mark and Elaine on our Board, each of whom are passionate business and organizational leaders, and will help guide our vision for World Bicycle Relief into the future,” said F.K. Day, founder & president of World Bicycle Relief.

Ricketts joined the Chicago Cubs’ Board of Directors in 2009 when he and his siblings acquired a controlling ownership interest of the club from the Tribune Company.  Among other businesses, Ricketts also owns the Higher Gear bicycle shops in Wilmette and Highland Park, IL. Mark Ishaug is the president of the newly formed AIDS United, a not for profit whose mission is to end the AIDS pandemic in the U.S.  He was the former president of the AIDS Foundation of Chicago 1998-2011, and has worked and studied extensively in Zimbabwe and Mozambique. Elaine Burke, a former teacher, has been a long time supporter of World Bicycle Relief. Elaine and the Burke family have made a huge impact on the global bike industry through their creation and development of Trek Bicycle Company.

Recently listed as one of Barron’s Top 25 most effective philanthropists, World Bicycle Relief has distributed 75,000 specially designed, culturally-appropriate bicycles to students, healthcare workers and entrepreneurs in Asia and Africa, which have improved the lives of more than 700,000 people. Specifically, World Bicycle Relief bikes help students get to school, connect healthcare workers to patients living with HIV & AIDS in rural areas and enable farmers to carry heavy loads while transporting goods to market.  Compared to walking, biking is four times faster and allows five times the carrying capacity, significantly increasing productivity and service range.

“A bicycle is a gift of time. In developing countries a bicycle can mean the difference between getting to school, to a doctor or making a living or not,” says Day. ”What we have found in Africa and are working to change is the fundamental gap that exists between the availability of quality, sturdy and culturally appropriate bicycles and the millions of its residents living at the bottom of the market.”

By partnering with other relief groups and using existing supply chains, World Bicycle Relief has created an efficient, sustainable method for delivering aid to high-risk populations that offers not just a means of transportation, but access to independence and livelihood.

For more information visit: www.worldbicyclerelief.org.

Other World Bicycle Relief Board members include: Brian Benzer (Chair), Director of Corp. Development, SRAM Corp.; Stanley Day, Founder, President & Chairman, SRAM Corp; Michael Herr (Treasurer), Chief Financial Officer, SRAM Corp.; Johan Bruyneel, Sports Director/Trainer, responsible for nine Tour de France victories; Bob Perkowitz, serial entrepreneur, founder/president EcoAmerica, partner, Arqua Equity Partners, LLC, and managing partner, Viva Terra, LLC and ecoSalon, LLC.

SOURCE World Bicycle Relief

Web Site: http://www.worldbicyclerelief.org

Mon, March 21st, 2011

Upcoming Cycling Courses with the VACC

A great way to get ready for Bike Month. Learn the skills to be safe in traffic. Not every bike route is a separated lane you know!

 

VACC Streetwise Course
This fun, practical and hands-on course is for anyone (16+) who’d like to be more comfortable riding in traffic. Through classroom and on-road training you’ll learn about the safest place on the road to ride, how to maneuver your bike effectively, communicate with other road users, handle riding at night and in the rain, and much more. You’ll gain the skills and confidence you need to enjoy riding in the city!
Upcoming Streetwise Courses
Saturday, March 26 – 12-4:30pm – Kitsilano Community Centre, Vancouver
Sunday, April 17 – 12-4:30pm – ING Direct downtown branch, Vancouver
Sunday, May 1 – 11am-3:30pm – Centennial Community Centre, New Westminster
Sunday, May 1 – 12 – 4:30 – Riley Park Community Centre, Vancouver*
Saturday, May 21, 12-4:30pm – Thompson Community Centre, Richmond
Sunday, May 29 – 12-4:30pm – VACC Office (3 W. 3rd Ave, Vancouver)
Sunday, June 12 – 12-4:30pm – John Braithwaite Community Centre, North Vancouver

Registration Info
Click here to register

*For the Riley Park course, please register directly with the community centre.

If you have any problems, please call the VACC office to register at 604-878-8222.

Cost:
VACC Members: $36 – a 20% discount!
Non-Members: $45 (includes 1-year membership with the VACC, including discounts at bike shops and off courses and events)
What to bring:
- your bike, in safe working order
- helmet
- bike lock
- a snack & water for the road ride

 

Visit the VACC website for the FAQ on this course and information on other cycling skills courses.