Some months ago, I was asked by a community member
just how long I was planning to keep this fairly mundane blog about utility cycling going. My interlocutor
was trying to get me to take a more purposeful approach, advocating for some
causes in town and perhaps making more of a "statement."
I appreciated his interest and his sense that we
all have a rĂ´le to play in improving the community, and I've written a bit here
and there about some of the transportation issues around town as I see them.
But, at heart, my purpose in Upright Cycling runs in other directions.
Writing a cycling blog is an open invitation to
self-importance, I suppose. After all, who would (or should) be interested in reading about
the ramblings of a middle-aged cleric in a mid-sized Oregon city on a
three-speed bike?
So, the temptation is to try and pack this blog with all sorts of serious-minded, "breaking-news" frippery. I'll admit...this impulse sometimes gets the better of me. But I just can't stay there. It isn't my style.
So, the temptation is to try and pack this blog with all sorts of serious-minded, "breaking-news" frippery. I'll admit...this impulse sometimes gets the better of me. But I just can't stay there. It isn't my style.
The real purpose of these writings is a sort of
personal chronicle of what it means to view transportation as an interactive
experience--connecting with one's own body, nature, physical space, other
people, the spiritual life, and the meaning of movement from place-to-place itself.
The "statement" I am making is really
more about the potential significance, beauty, and (yikes!) even holiness of
the world we encounter every day. Think of it as a sort of spiritualized
"small-is-beautiful" journal, with slow upright bikes--if this makes any sense.
In writing these posts, I am inviting readers wherever they are to find their own environment and surroundings anew via "active transportation."
The person asking me about my blog wondered how
long I could keep such a humble and rather dull project going. Well, I don't
know for sure. But there seems to be an endless stream of discoveries and
delights for those open to it. So, here are some of these moments in my travels
during recent weeks:
Architecture:
The civic dimension of architecture has long
fascinated me. I enjoy cycling in part because of how it puts me in much more direct
contact with architecture...good, bad, and (yes) indifferent. I am fascinated
by experiencing how buildings connect with the space around them, the people
using them, and our civic memory itself.
Some buildings, like the old portion of the Oregon
State Hospital, proclaim an enormous amount about the confidence of their era,
the belief those who built them had in their project, and the degree to which
their purpose was understood to be connected with other ages or places. This
example points up the often complex stories involved with not only a building,
but a movement or an institution.
Then, there are the effects of lighting and weather
on familiar structures, suddenly revealed to have new dimensions.
I pass by this brick structure, called The Dome
Building, quite regularly. One day I was peddling along towards the crossing on
Center Street (tellingly, once called "Asylum Street") when I was
struck by the amazing shadows caste by the September afternoon sun. The pattern
of surface and void made a sudden impression.
That is an example of the best of such moments.
There are others, of course...
Cycling does reveal the hidden places between architecture...alleys
like this one downtown, looking like a close-up of the space between a
sugar-junkie's unflossed teeth. These are reminders that everything, and
everyone, has a hidden aspect that may belie all the effort put into making the
frontage sparkle with up-to-date swank.
Accommodation:
When I am out biking I occasionally come upon neat
projects that allow people access or service, really improving things. Some of these are recent, others old and perhaps a bit forgotten. Sometimes, it is just an interestingly-themed bike rack, like this one at the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife:
Another time it might be a public works project
like this new pedestrian/cycle access point for the River Road trail to
Minto-Brown Park:
Things like this can restore a bit of confidence in
our society, where we are pummeled with bad news, grudges, and endless rehashes
of failure.
Sorrow:
When I am in my car, I simply don't have the time
or opportunity to take in the needs of the environment around me. I am mostly
busy with arriving, not the getting there part. When cycling,
that changes. I notice things...sometimes really seeing what is reduced to a
blur when motoring about. An example would be the concrete wasteland downtown by the old Boise Cascade property between
the Willamette River and Commercial street:
This wasteland is likely to stay here, in much the
current shape, until Salem decides to do something about it. It is a kind of
mute testimony to all that has been wrong with the Euro-American treatment of
nature and the footprint we leave behind when done extracting what we can from
it.
Encased in concrete, hampered by creosoted pilings, celebrated as a treasure few blocks East with parks and shoreside paths yet treated as a dump at its mouth, Pringle Creek still arrives at the Willamette here; but what a sorrowful last few yards!
Encased in concrete, hampered by creosoted pilings, celebrated as a treasure few blocks East with parks and shoreside paths yet treated as a dump at its mouth, Pringle Creek still arrives at the Willamette here; but what a sorrowful last few yards!
Joy:
I count on October each year to deliver one of the
most delightful sounds I know: the crunch of dry leaves under my bicycle tires.
The crisp air, low sun, foggy mornings, extraordinary scents, and carpet of
colorful leaves provides a sensory experience second to none in Upright
Cycling. When was the last time you took the kid inside you out for a ride?
This is the time for it.
Amusement/Wonder/Curiosity:
I haven't yet figured out what these
two-dimensional wolves on the State Hospital grounds are about, but they make
an interesting stopping point on my way home. They manage to be whimsical and unsettling, all at once:
The metal flamingos are quite interesting and
attractive, as well:
All of this on the grounds of the State Hospital and the Corrections Department's Parole Division: a place many find
very painful. With such different associations, I enjoy it. This, too, is an ambivalent fact we must live with.
Cycle of Nature:
The bicycle is really a "cycle of nature"
itself, as it puts one in such direct contact with the elements. This time of
year, that means when I return from an evening Bible study that I am in the
dark. Having a great set of lights really does help; but the slightly surreal atmosphere of
overhanging branches festooned with bunches of golden and red leaves backlit by the glare of street lamps is utterly
different from the daytime scene:
The quiet and peacefulness on a street like this is something I
treasure after a long day. Why do we deny ourselves this sort of experience by creating cities, suburbs, and
"lifestyles" isolating us in our cars? It is a pity.
The Steel Steed, Itself:
Upright Cycling isn't about the "bling"
of bikes; it's about the experience of active transport and what it allows for.
In the process utility cycling turns a bicycle from a toy or a sporting good
into something akin to an appliance. This is not to say that one is completely
unsentimental about one's bike. No, indeed:
Hugo has been kitted out pretty carefully over the
last two years, and is now in fine fettle, though soon to be spattered with the effects of Oregon's rainy season. For now, though, he looks grand against Autumn's fallen leaves.
The relative simplicity of a
bicycle, combined with the "sweat equity" of actually making it go, has a great attractiveness to it. The miles I put on my bike feel
much more like an investment in transportation and the community through which
I pedal than an escape from these things.
Finally, I think one of the effects of utility
cycling is an ever-greater appreciation for simple things, such as direct
contact with people and the environment in which I live. All of that makes a
bike a strangely beautiful utilitarian object to me.
What similar moments have you encountered out there
this season?
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