If you're still looking for holiday-shopping inspiration...this may be the year to consider bicycles.I can personally attest to the transformative power of a gift bicycle. As I describe on my Bike Commuting Tips site, my own recovery of bicycling--the gap being teenage drivers license acquisition until mid-30s--came as a result of a very thoughtful Winter Solstice gift. This columnist's commentary uses the holiday gifting season as a launching point for an endorsement of the community's efforts to become more bicycling friendly.
In the days before video game systems, a new bike was probably at the top of most lists that Santa Claus received from American kids. A new bike has long symbolized freedom and independence to kids, the way a new car symbolizes it to teens and adults. Bicycles today can also symbolize environmentalism, health and clean living. It is this newer view of bicycles that has inspired the Village of Homewood to create a bicycle plan.
In 2006, the village commissioned the Chicagoland Bicycle Federation to create the plan, which proposes a bicycle network and defines a 10-year program to improve key components of the network that will make bicycling safer, more convenient and more fun in Homewood. The village's goal is to use the plan to develop a bicycle-friendly environment that encourages residents to bike for transportation, recreation and good health. The program is organized by short-term, mid-term and long-term recommendations.
And if you are still looking for a present, consider a childhood favorite: a red bow on a new bike under the tree. (Read more.)
Image: Web capture.
Visit: Paul Dorn's Bike Commuting Tips
You are absolutely right on the power of a bike as a gift. I'm in the same boat as you regarding getting back into cycling and therefore into advocacy as a result of a bicycle as a gift. Mine was a gift for my 3xth birthday, and it led to commuting, my blog, and now to my activity in Columbus bike advocacy.
ReplyDeleteIt's truly an empowering and heartfelt gift!