Will Boulder Colorado look like this in the future?

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
In Boulder they revere their bicycles. People there will spend thousands for a bike and they demand that cars surrender the roadway to them.

We have road signs that say "Share The Road" while anti-bikers, who are fed up with the bicyclists, place bumper stickers on their cars that say "Share the road? Share the taxes!"

Amsterdam now has more bicycles than people and this is what it looks like.

amsterdam1-articleLarge.jpg


SOURCE

Amsterdam Journal

The Dutch Prize Their Pedal Power, but a Sea of Bikes Swamps Their Capital

Pavel Prokopchik for The New York Times
By JOHN TAGLIABUE

Published: June 20, 2013 306 Comments

AMSTERDAM — About 6:30 weekday mornings, throngs of bicycles, with a smattering of motor scooters and pedestrians, pour off the ferries that carry bikers and other passengers free of charge across the IJ (pronounced “eye”) harbor, clogging the streets and causing traffic jams down behind Amsterdam’s main train station.

“In the afternoon it’s even more,” moaned Erwin Schoof, a metalworker in his 20s who lives in the canal-laced center of town and battles the chaos daily to cross to his job.
Willem van Heijningen, a railway official responsible for bikes around the station, said, “It’s not a war zone, but it’s the next thing to it.”

This clogged stream of cyclists is just one of many in a city as renowned for bikes as Los Angeles is for automobiles or Venice for gondolas. Cyclists young and old pedal through narrow lanes and along canals. Mothers and fathers balance toddlers in spacious wooden boxes affixed to their bikes, ferrying them to school or day care. Carpenters carry tools and supplies in similar contraptions and electricians their cables. Few wear helmets. Increasingly, some are saying what was simply unthinkable just a few years ago: There are too many bikes.

While cities like New York struggle to get people onto bikes, Amsterdam is trying to keep its hordes of bikes under control. In a city of 800,000, there are 880,000 bicycles, the government estimates, four times the number of cars. In the past two decades, travel by bike has grown by 40 percent so that now about 32 percent of all trips within the city are by bike, compared with 22 percent by car.

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catocom

Well-Known Member
I used to have one of those high dollar bikes.
I rode it several times, but the roads in the immediate area
don't have any shoulders really to speak of, and I have a few close calls.
Then I had my wreck, and can't really even ride a motorcycle long, or
even a 4-wheeler that you have to straddle.
I'd like a w wheel drive cart for riding around the property,
but they start a 6 grand for a decent one, and I have my s10.
 
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