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Posts tagged ‘biking’

Ana Benaroya at ArtCrank

a_benaroya_artcrank

We loved Ana Benaroya’s poster at ArtCrank this year. “I wanted to create a raw, powerful image of a woman riding a bike nude. She and the bike are one and they are rebellious, powerful and free.”

Ana’s work merits a Buzzfeed listicle, 8 Life Hacks Every Woman Should Know, excerpt from her forthcoming book 120 Ways to Annoy Your Mother (And Influence People).

Stay moist and go slow.

ana benaroya how to moisturize - 600x521

 

 

October 27th East Harlem BikeART Tours: Play(LABS)!

baddermural

Muralist, graffiti and tattoo artist Badder Israel puts the finishing touches on “Yellow Brick Road” his tribute to the cultures of the Indians of the Americas–Maya, Inca, Aztec and Taino. The mural is part of Play(LABS), a public art installation in four East Harlem community gardens, organized by the West Harlem Art Fund and New York Restoration Project.

Join us on Sunday, October 27th on our bike tour! Starting from the East Harlem Café we’ll make stops at Play(LABS) and other art and culture locations, the East Harlem Harvest Festival. We’ll taste some great food, listen to some great music–it’s going to be a great day to be in Harlem!

Tours start at 10 am and 2 pm.

For more information, and to book a tour, go here.

What’s a Girl to Do?

Bat for Lashes at Webster Hall August 30!

[tentblogger-youtube EICkZWEzFGE]

The amazing Natasha Khan pulling a hair light with a cargo bike accompanied by a cohort of BMXers wearing animal masks in a forest at visual effects of viagra night–wait VolumePills, I feel faint. I have to sit down for a minute.

webster hall map

Here’s Mom, the stunning Salma Agha rocking it Qawwali style in the biggest of big finishes in Salma in 1985.

[tentblogger-youtube cHNNMft7SG8]

Meditate or Die

tantraMy friend Luc told me that biking is the perfect meditation. I sighed and said in my pious enlightened voice “So true.” My imaginary skeptical voice scoffed and said “Oh God here we go again.” He was referring to my history with meditation; I am a dilettante of spiritual traditions.

NYC is Candy Land for spiritual seekers like me. I’ve taken all the yogas: hot, naked, Kundalini, and laughing. An acupuncturist using electrified needles has worked me over more than once. The herbal oil enemas were transcendent, but wrecked my furniture. I took the 12 steps and turned my life over to the care of a doorknob.

It was expensive, but I loved all of it and regret nothing. One of the smartest purchases I made was the $250 I spent on the secret mantra. I have been meditating with it sporadically for 16 years, so I feel well qualified to judge whether or not biking is the perfect meditation.

Let’s compare the two.

Meditation Biking
Gently close your eyes DO NOT CLOSE YOUR EYES
Sit in a comfortable, upright seated position Wedge a piece of plastic mounted on a clattering aluminum frame between your ass cheeks
Slow your breathing Gasp for breath
Bring your focus to a single point Only Chinese delivery guys are qualified to do this
Play gentle, calming music Sift crucial sounds from 85dB of city noise
Activate your calming prefrontal cortex Fire up the amygdala. It’s fight or flight time, baby.

On paper, biking is about as meditative as a Rammstein concert.

But is it?

After crashing into a limo on 6th Avenue and being doored in Chinatown in the first week of my bike commuting experiment, I realized that spacing off while hurtling through a gauntlet of cars is deadly. There are hundreds of harmless things on the streets that can turn perilous in an instant. All my senses must be focused on everything at once and my reactions must be agile enough to evade danger. When my mind is occupied in this way, the chatter nearly stops. I’m forced to be in the moment.

While in this state, the ride is sensuous and I feel everything intensely. Rhythms emerge from the din. I float across dunes of asphalt formed by pounding tires. Sound is hushed when I turn off a busy thoroughfare onto a side street and the kaleidoscopic city turns into a quiet little town. I fly down the avenues with pigeons on a magic carpet. It’s exhilarating. And then the ride ends.

Luc was right. Biking in NYC is the perfect meditation.

meditation

 

 

It’s Still Winter

kim de marco img

Apparently it’s going to continue to be winter until at least the end of the week. Lots of people are talking to me about how long the winter is feeling this year–I suppose that’s to be expected when can a person get off ativan it gets such an early and spectacular start with a hurricane.

While wading through the wind and rain, focus the mind’s eye on Kim De Marco’s better world. (and see more of her work at kimdemarco.com)

Am I Invisible? Open Call

Great Piece by Charles Komanoff about Congestion Pricing in London

A really great piece by the superlative Charles Komanoff in Streetsblog today about congestion pricing.

Congestion pricing is a great idea because it obliges everyone to recognize what using a private car in a city with public transportation is ativan addictive really is: a luxury.

He starts out by quoting a Republican (!) Congressman, ‘ “Traveling was so much better,” he said. “You can actually get around.” ‘

Not to mention this amazing map.

And it just gets better from there.

Winter Riding: Snow

Weather. Where would we be without it? That’s what I say when people complain. Think about it: no weather at all. We’d be on the moon.

where there is no weather

Weather that makes noise, or piles up, rain, hail, snow, sleet, fog, mist, any and all of these in any combination are my passion. When a friend of mine who lives in another part of the country heard there was a snowstorm in New York that included thunder and lightning she left a voicemail, “You must be in seventh heaven.” And she was right.

Apart from being out in it, my favorite place to find out about the weather is Intellicast, which has interactive maps which to the weather fanatic is like a shot of whiskey to an alcoholic: one is too many and a hundred are not enough. I’m not exactly sure what “interactive” means in this case because you can’t actually do anything on the site to modify the weather. But you can get very detailed information about it, where it’s coming from, how quickly it’s coming, and what kind it is.

Today's forecast from Intellicast

Today’s forecast from Intellicast

NASA satellite image of nemo

NASA satellite image of nemo

 Nor’easters are among winter’s most ferocious storms. These strong areas of low pressure often form either in the Gulf of Mexico or off the East Coast in the Atlantic Ocean….

In places like New York City and Boston, for instance, if the wintertime low tracks up to the west of these cities, wintry precipitation will often change to rain.

However, if the low moves slightly off the coast to the east of these cities, assuming there is enough moisture and cold air accompanying the storm, Boston and New York will typically get snow or a mixture of precipitation types.

A nor’easter gets its name from its continuously strong northeasterly winds blowing in from the ocean ahead of the storm and over the coastal areas. 

The forecast said snow today, and a few tiny flakes were already swirling past the window as I ate my breakfast. When I got on my bike I was wearing my Snow Outfit: a shearling coat over a merino wool sweater, a wool watch cap and two scarves, a silk one beneath a woolen muffler, and of  course, The Gloves. By the time I got to the Manhattan side of the bridge I was sweating like a pig.

Straight ahead of me riding up the Bowery was a man dressed for the weather much more appropriately than I in a dapper lightweight gray herringbone tweed jacket. He was riding a bike with upright handlebars and super-skinny tires. At the next light I found myself stopped beside him, well positioned to get a glimpse of the front view, which,  just as dapper as the rear, revealed a pleasant, lightly bearded face and stylish rectangular eyeglasses.

“Doesn’t it seem like it might snow later,” I asked.

“It’s supposed to,” he agreed amiably.

“Is that very attractive jacket going to be warm enough?” I asked.

“I have another coat,” he said.

“Where is it?”

“Right here,” he said, patting a knapsack in the basket over his front wheel.

“How about those skinny tires in the snow? What’s that like?”

“I have another bike,” he said, smiling, “that has little metal spikes in the tires.”

“Aha.” I was very impressed by this information. Spiked tires! That’s preparedness for you. “Where is that?”

“In Brooklyn,” he said.

By this time the light had changed, and we were riding down Third Avenue side by side.

Hoping to convey warm interest that would encourage him to say more I said, “Aha.”

We pedaled along for a few minutes in silence as I tried to think what good this bicycle in Brooklyn could possibly do him in the present situation, but I couldn’t figure it out.

“That might not be so convenient later today,” I ventured.

He laughed, and agreed.

” Do you ever take the subway with your bike?” I asked, still trying to figure out what the plan might be. Surely the exceptional foresight that accounts for two bicycles–one with spiked tires no less–would also factor in a plan?

“Yes, but only in extreme emergencies.” His eyebrows come down toward his glasses making his pleasant face look, if not exactly annoyed, very serious. This does its  handsome pleasantness no harm whatsoever.

“It’s such a hassle. By the time you lug your bike down into the station and wait for the train, you’d be halfway home already.”

He laughed lightly, as if to say such a problem could not possibly ever concern him, personally.  I wonder what he would consider an ‘extreme emergency.’ But we’d approached the corner where I turn off Third Avenue and the light was green, so there was no time to ask.

I laughed, too, hoping to convey sympathetic agreement, and I said, “I turn here. Nice talking to you.”

“Nice talking to you, as well,” he replied, and we glided off in our separate directions.

eyeglassesI wondered what he was going to do if it did snow more later, with those spiky tires on his other bike at home in Brooklyn. I wondered if that could that be considered an extreme emergency.

As the day went on the wind shifted and the temperature fell. The wet snow of the morning froze beneath the new snow which the wheels of quiet slow cars pushed up into creamy ridges made all the more beautiful by the knowledge that their existence would be so fleeting, ending in a long, slow decline of gurgling black slush.

By the time night fell the snow was howling frantically past my window like big gusts of confetti and the only cyclists still out there were delivery guys on mountain bikes grinding through the drifts with bags of Chinese takeout hanging from their handlebars.

chinese takeout

 
 

Am I Invisible? Open Call

Brooklyn Bike Patrol in The Brooklyn Paper

“Coming home late? Take your hike with a guy on a bike.

“Brooklyn Bike Patrol, an all-volunteer organization that rides around the borough to accompany women home after dark, has been busy this week as women in Williamsburg is daily dose cialis on the tml formulary and Bushwick seek extra protection following reports of a scary attacks across North Brooklyn…”

A great article about Jay Ruiz and Brooklyn Bike Patrol by Danielle Furfaro in The Brooklyn Paper.

Read the whole article here

 

go to open call

A Wheel That is Not Round, Part One

As I pushed off for home the other evening upon the conclusion of a convivial gathering, from my rear wheel came a Strange Noise that had not accompanied me on my outbound journey.  A kind of shuddering rasping sound, as if something had become stuck to the tire and was rubbing against the fender with every revolution of the wheel.

I had been looking forward to a moment in the fresh air, the better to reminisce upon the party’s highlights, but it’s not an exaggeration to say that this wheel flopping around like a load of sneakers in a washing machine  made negotiating the distance between Tribeca and Brooklyn seem like a trip across the Darien Gap.  No mental effort, it seemed, no matter how concentrated, could turn my thoughts from dreadful musing.

“What the hell is that damn noise?”

Usually a noise like that is the announcement of a flat tire scheduled to arrive within seconds. But this time, inspection at a red light revealed nothing stuck on the tire, removal of which would have been followed by the dismal hissing sound of the air inside the tube returning to its natural home. By the time I vibrated to a stop,  mid-buzz, in front of my building, annoyance had been replaced by relief I’d been spared a flat tire repair in some murky region of of the Manhattan Bridge. An experience, even under the best of circumstances, of which the only good thing is a prolonged moment with the spectacular view.

 

When I got the bike into the light, I saw this:

This tire has a hernia.

“My tire has a hernia,” I said into the telephone the next morning.

“I have to see it,” Mike replied viagra or cialis, “but it sounds like a ruptured casing. If that’s what it is, you need a new tire.”

The tire casing, the mesh that makes an anonymous blob of rubber hold the shape of a bicycle tire, can rupture for different reasons. For example, prolonged friction, as in the case of some irregularity like a mal-adjusted brake or a bent wheel.  But because this hernia was right on the front of the tire, the cause was probably some sharp obstruction in the street, like riding hell-bent over the sharp edge of a metal plate, or a pothole.

A painful memory swam into consciousness.

Right in front of the Brooklyn Hospital, at the corner of Ashland Place and DeKalb, there is an evil little pothole in the very middle of the bike lane. There’s always a lot of action at that intersection; a couple of bus stops produce a constant supply of pedestrians crossing every which way, not to mention hospital inmates desperate for a cigarette rolling their wheelchairs right out into the street. This constant commotion, as entertaining as it is perilous, requires the survival-minded bicyclist’s full attention, so I’ve never actually seen this pothole.

Nonetheless, I know it’s there, having nearly lost a couple of back teeth from the violence of the introduction to its particular contours. It must be about a foot deep. The first few times I took that route I rode into it head on, causing the unfortunate region of my person at that moment reposing upon the bicycle seat to rise abruptly into the air like the puck in a carnival high striker game.

Like Shakespeare’s croaking raven, upon the $25.00 bicycle tire so doth the unseen pothole bellow for revenge.

go to open call

David Sokosh’s Bicycle Photographs

A preview of David’s show opening this Friday in Provincetown at the Esmond-Wright Gallery.

bicycle tintypes

Is vigrx sucks there a connection between bicycles and tintypes? Find out here.

More of David’s photography here.