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British Cycling’s cycle to work ad “not representative” and only aimed at “athletic people interested in sport”, say commuters; Police stop cyclist at night… and give him hi-vis vest and bag; “The future of cars is: not cars” + more on the live blog

It’s Monday, and Ryan Mallon’s back with more cycling news and views to ease you into the week on the live blog. Please just don’t ask him about the FA Cup final…

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05 June 2023, 08:08
British Cycling’s cycle to work ad “not representative” and only aimed at “athletic people interested in sport”, says commuter

Another week, another social media debate about British Cycling…

Our latest episode of ‘people criticising the national governing body’ (a regular fixture of 2023, it seems) comes courtesy of an Instagram post encouraging cyclists to commute to work by bike – an ad which, one commuter claims, presents cycling as a “niche” pursuit for “athletic people interested in sport”.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by @biking_maz

The ad in question – put together as part of a paid partnership by cycling Instagrammer Biking Maz – lists some of the reasons cyclists might want to ride to work in the summer, including the fresh air and endorphins, the financial and environmental impact of not using a car, and having more time to spend in the evening with your dogs.

The video, because it’s a British Cycling advert after all, also advises commuter cyclists to join BC for the insurance benefits and the bonus of a free rucksack for new members (ah, the old perks for newbies trick, a British Cycling classic).

> "No prizes for loyalty": British Cycling's £99 smart light sign-up offer goes down well with existing members

However, while most cyclists could get behind the ad’s message, it was the way this message was presented – featuring a racing cyclist wearing cycling kit and riding an expensive bike – that attracted the attention of some commuters on Twitter.

“This Instagram ad for cycling to work makes it look like it’s only for athletic people interested in sport,” wrote Jack Fifield, a journo at the Oldham Times.

“Not representative of the people I see cycling casually in Manchester.”

Jack’s criticism of British Cycling’s ad, it’s safe to say, divided the masses on Twitter.

Katy agreed that the video was “unhelpful for active travel” and claimed that it makes cycling “look niche, specialist, hard to identify with… makes it also far easier for any opposition to say exactly that. And it’s not true.”

“I cycle to work every day, no matter what the weather, spring, summer, autumn, winter. I cycle in my regular clothes. I never get dressed up in a special costume,” wrote Citizen Wolf.

“Couldn’t agree more,” said Jamie. “The culture change necessary to cement cycling into commuter thinking needs all parties to have a look at themselves and how they portray what should be the most accessible of all travel options.”

However, not everyone agreed with Jack’s analysis.

“You’re getting angry at an advert,” Connor argued. “People cycle in all types of clothing on all types of bikes. British Cycling are constantly doing comms directed at more casual or beginner cyclists.”

“It’s just some budget Insta ad,” agreed Jacob. “God forbid they use a cyclist who does use cycle specific clothing. At no point does it imply this is the only way you can chose to cycle.”

However, one cyclist, Chris, decided to offer some much-needed balance to the whole debate (balance? What’s that? Never heard of it…).

“They're both right,” he said. “Most commuters aren’t roadies. But more roadies should commute. Selling commuting as an athletic pursuit for a specific audience that doesn't commute enough is good. I commuted like this when I was racing and loved it.”

What do you think? Should a cycle to work ad from British Cycling be more inclusive and representative of all cyclists who commute? Or does it really matter what a cyclist is wearing, either out on the roads or in a social media clip?

05 June 2023, 15:38
British Cycling cycle to work ad (British Cycling,Instagram)
“Two water bottles for the commute?” Readers react to British Cycling’s latest ad

British Cycling’s commuter advert has certainly generated some discussion in today’s comments section. Here’s a selection of your thoughts:

EddyBerckx: “British Cycling is not a utility cycling champion. It exists mainly for the racing side of things and so yes, the ad is fine. I don’t moan about EVERY SINGLE OTHER utility cyclist organisation running ads that don’t represent me because I’m not a d***head and I understand and support  what they are trying to do.

“The ad represents me including the carbon bike with aero wheels and the long-distance commute. I’ve tried every type of bike on my commute and this suits me best.”

Simon E: “Since BC is not a utility cycling champion why run this type of paid advert? Who is the target audience and why? I commute in lycra on a nice road bike but I can't see how this would appeal to someone like me, to my cycling club friends or to other people I know (including family members) who are pure utility cyclists. Just seems pointless to me, a bit of a missed opportunity.

“BC would probably be better off sticking to the sportive/leisure/competitive cycling (and do a better job of supporting clubs, race organisers etc) and leave the campaigning to bodies who know what they're talking about.”

Didnthurt: “People misunderstand what BC is supposed to do. They’re the governing body of cycle sport, not an organisation focused on active travel. If that’s what you’re looking for, Cycling UK or even Sustrans are better options. BC is about bike racing, and their various attempts not to be have fallen pretty flat over the years.”

Rendel Harris: “Then perhaps they shouldn't offer ‘Commute’ and ‘Ride’ (‘for your everyday rides’) memberships alongside the ‘Fan’ and ‘Race’ options? If, as you say, they're just about bike racing they should say so, not try to boost their coffers by trying to attract members by pretending to be something they're not.”

Jetmans Dad: “Not a member of BC any longer, but their advert definitely represents me, and my 21 mile each way commute, that I wouldn't dream of trying to do in my teaching clothes.

“What I would like to see is more of a co-ordinated approach to these campaigns with Cycling UK and BC combining forces to cover as many bases as they can ... I moved my membership from BC to CU precisely because I was moving away from sportive type riding into short triathlons and concentrating most of my riding on utility/leisure.

“And I am with Chris on his comment (in the article). There are plenty of people who just do the training, long ride stuff who don't ride to work who should also be encouraged to do so. That's why all bases need to be covered.”

05 June 2023, 09:33
Police stop cyclist at night during long-distance ride to give him hi-vis vest and bag (Northern Ireland Road Policing and Safety unit)
Police stop cyclist at night during long-distance ride… to give him hi-vis vest and bag (and motorists aren’t happy)

A cyclist who misjudged the time it would take to complete an epic 200-mile-plus ride from Galway to Belfast was stopped by police at the weekend, 30 miles from his destination… and handed a hi-vis vest and bag before being sent on his way.

The cyclist was riding on a main road in Portadown (not quite Northern Ireland’s premier location for bike riding, if I’m honest. Sorry Portadown people) at round 11.30pm on Saturday night when he was stopped by officers from Northern Ireland’s Road Policing and Safety unit.

“This cyclist had no lights or reflective markers on his bike or clothing and could not be seen due to the darkness,” the unit said on its Facebook account.

The rider, the unit said, was attempting to cycle the 320km or so from Galway, on Ireland’s west coast, to Belfast, but “had failed to prepare, not expecting to be cycling so late into the evening”.

The unit continued: “Following a short chat with our team, this cyclist was provided with a high visibility vest and bag cover to improve his visibility on the road to other road users.

“Everyone [has] a role to play in improving the safety of our roads. Be Safe, Be Seen.”

> Pro cyclist-led lights campaign, endorsed by Tadej Pogačar, “feeds into victim-blaming culture”, says road safety expert

While the photo posted by the officers of the cyclist in his newly acquired hi-vis gear doesn’t appear to show the rider in too happy a mood (is that a V sign, anyone? Just joking...), the police’s decision to kit him up for the last 30 miles into Belfast really didn’t go down too well with some motorists on Facebook.

“So, let’s get this clear,” wrote Mark. “You stopped him for no lights whilst riding on a public highway, you then gave him a bag cover and sent him on his way to still ride on a public highway with NO LIGHTS... and you still expect every motorist on the road to have lights or they’ll get a ticket??

“This is exactly why there is a massive hatred for cyclists by drivers. If I were local, I’d be saving this and riding my motorbike with the lights off, hoping I'll get a nice waterproof high viz bag cover.”

Meanwhile, Ian wrote: “A car driver would have been given a fine and points on their licence, not a set of bulbs. Traffic laws are supposed to be for everyone.”

However, Eddie was a lot more forgiving of the cyclist’s planning skills, writing: “Super act guys for helping out a fellow citizen. Loving all the haters commenting on an honest mistake. Fair play lads.”

05 June 2023, 14:58
Now that’s what I call Strava Art! London to Lviv cyclist Tom Hashemi follows up epic trip with 221km homage to Ukraine

It turns out that riding 1,300 miles to Lviv, Ukraine, while raising funds to clear landmines in the war-torn country and overcoming a tramline-induced crash and subsequent hospital stay along the way, wasn’t enough for Tom Hashemi.

Less than three weeks after completing his epic trip, Hashemi was back on his pimped-out Giant Defy, covering over 220km (at a decent speed too) over eight and a half hours… to draw Ukraine on Strava.

I know we see a lot of Strava Art™ on the live blog, but that is very cool. Though I feel tired just thinking about it…

> Check out this restored Giant Defy with Ukraine & Union Jack custom paint that's on a 2,000km journey to Lviv

05 June 2023, 14:33
Don’t panic, I’m back! Julian Alaphilippe roars back into form with stunning sprint win on grippy day at the Dauphiné

We never really doubted him, did we?

After a tough 18 months characterised by bad luck, crashes, and badly-timed bouts of illness, former double world champion Julian Alaphilippe roared back into the imaginations of cycling fans everywhere – and put down a marker for next month’s Tour de France – with a dominant win in a wide-open sprint finish at the Critérium du Dauphiné.

After Jumbo-Visma’s Steven Kruijswijk crashed out of the race early on, along with Steff Cras and Romain Combaud, a draggy, grippy circuit around La Chaise-Dieu once again proved too much for the big-name sprinters at the race, with Sam Bennett fading to 11th while Dylan Groenwegen pulled the pin a few kilometres back down the road.

A flurry of attacks in the final 20km, first by Victor Campenaerts and Kenny Elissonde, before Tobias Bayer and Harry Sweeny each vainly darted off the front, was eventually snuffed out by Jumbo-Visma, as Jonas Vingegaard again worked to tee up yesterday’s winner Christophe Laporte.

However, the leg-sapping nature of the finishing circuit upended the traditional sprinting hierarchy, with Alaphilippe proving the fastest in a motley crew finale which saw Richard Carapaz and Natnael Tesfatsion take second and third ahead of the yellow jersey Laporte.

But all eyes today will be on the rampaging Frenchman who, after an indifferent spring campaign, appears to have put aside the setbacks that have plagued him on the big stage since his last worlds win in Leuven in 2021, and regained some of the sparkle in the legs that made him one of the peloton’s biggest stars.

As Alaphilippe demonstrated in his typically flamboyant – and early – celebration across the finish line, there was never any real need to panic after all…

05 June 2023, 14:00
Shari Bossuyt press conference
“It’s like being wrongly put in prison for murder”: Canyon-SRAM’s Shari Bossuyt protests innocence following doping positive

Shari Bossuyt has protested her innocence and likened herself to someone wrongly convicted of murder, after Canyon-SRAM suspended the Belgian rider following a positive drugs test.

It was revealed yesterday that the 22-year-old tested positive for Letrozole at the Tour de Normandie in March, where she won a stage and finished sixth overall, though she claims she is a victim of contamination.

Letrozole is primarily used to block oestrogen during the treatment of breast cancer, but can be used in a sporting context to help boost the production of testosterone. It is regarded by the UCI as a specified substance, meaning it does not come with an automatic provisional suspension.

However, like cyclocross star Toon Aerts, who tested positive for the drug last year, Bossuyt faces a two-year ban from racing if the UCI upholds an anti-doping rule violation.

> Toon Aerts set to receive two-year ban for positive anti-doping test

Speaking at a press conference this morning, the young Belgian – who signed a contract extension with Canyon-SRAM in April – outlined her determination to clear her name, and explain how Letreozole ended up in her system.

“I’ve ended up in an unreal situation. I have never come into contact with Letrozole and have never consciously used it. This was even the first time I had heard of Letrozole," she said.

“It feels unfair. I compare it to being put in prison for murder when you didn’t commit murder. That’s what it feels like.

“Everything indicates that we are dealing with a contamination. Hopefully we can quickly provide clarity to the necessary authorities. And above all that, we can prove that we are not cheaters.”

Aerts also attended Bossuyt’s press conference in Zwevegem, where the pair’s agent Yannick Prevost claimed that his riders were victims, and not dopers.

“We have been working on this file for a year,” Prevost said today, before providing a Contador-esque ‘tainted beef’ excuse. “It is very difficult to prove that it is a contamination from food.

“We are walking a track, but we cannot yet make it concrete. What we can say is that Shari and Toon both tested positive after competitions in Normandy, in Flamanville to be precise.

“Letrozole is used for the fertilization of cows and sheep. That is a relatively new technique. It is currently a hypothesis that we cannot yet substantiate. Because the food industry does not yet test for Letrozole.

“Shari and Toon are not doping users, but victims.”

05 June 2023, 13:32
Simon MacMichael joins Dom Whiting for a glorious afternoon in the sunshine

I told you earlier today that road.cc’s Simon got on his bike in central London for the second weekend in a row to become part of the massive, sometimes fairly chaotic, bunch of cyclists bopping along to DJ Dom Whiting’s beats, as part of the by-now iconic Drum & Bass on the Bike.

Here’s what Simon had to say about yesterday’s sunny rave on the roads (now that’s a decent title, too), why it was different to the previous week’s RideLondon event, and why a humble DJ set can make you feel part of something big:

> Joining Dom Whiting for a Drum & Bass On The Bike ride – a glorious afternoon in every sense

05 June 2023, 12:41
Oops…

Disaster. But at least it inspired a few witty Twitter exchanges… 

05 June 2023, 11:51
Scenes! Drum & Bass On The Bike takes over London yesterday

Just another weekend in London, packed with people having a great time on their bikes…

A week after RideLondon took over the streets of the capital, yesterday saw the turn of DJ Dom Whiting and his portable decks, transforming central London once again into a joyous two-wheeled rave:

> Drum & Bass On The Bike is coming to London again this weekend — and its creator is still trying to make sense of it all

A well-known music connoisseur, road.cc’s Simon was also there, enjoying the tunes and the group ride (and perhaps too much of the sun as well, judging by the colour of his face today)…

Though I’m sure a certain octogenarian disc jockey felt conflicted by the sight of a pedalling disco on London’s roads yesterday…

05 June 2023, 11:30
Planet X refuses to comment on administration rumours
05 June 2023, 10:59
“The future of cars is: not cars”: Motoring journalist responds to Rowan Atkinson’s claim that he was “duped” by electric vehicles

You’ve probably all read by now Rowan Atkinson’s piece in the Guardian from the weekend, where Edmund Blackadder himself claimed that, despite being an “early adopter” of electric vehicles, he’s increasingly felt “duped” by them, even arguing that it may be better for the environment if people just keep hold of their old petrol cars for longer.

“Increasingly, I’m feeling that our honeymoon with electric cars is coming to an end, and that’s no bad thing: we’re realising that a wider range of options need to be explored if we’re going to properly address the very serious environmental problems that our use of the motor car has created,” Atkinson wrote.

Fair enough, you might think. That paragraph especially could have been written specifically for road.cc’s readership.

However, for those of the bike-riding and active travel persuasion, it’s the actor’s proposed solutions to the environmental problems of the motor car that left many scratching their heads in confusion.

Hydrogen. Synthetic fuels. Keeping your car for longer.

> Retired neurologist says increased weight and acceleration of electric vehicles will lead to rise in cycling-related fatalities unless 20mph speed limits are introduced

Having played a character synonymous with a famous bike riding scene, it may surprise you that cycling, or walking, or wheeling, or any form of active travel was missing from Mr Bean’s electric vehicle article (though, in fairness, he does point out, briefly, that one solution is using a car “as little as possible”).

Unsurprisingly, it’s taken a few cyclists on Twitter to point out where Atkinson may be going wrong in his analysis:

“Electric cars aren’t here to save the planet, they’re here to save the car industry,” wrote Real Gaz on a proper bike. “A lot of trips could be made via other means and that needs to happen as Rowan forgets about the other pollution, congestion, and danger.”

Meanwhile, motoring journo Hazel Southwell put together an interesting thread refuting much of Atkinson’s article, which she claimed had “some straight-up untruths in it”.

“I’m a car journalist but the future of cars is: not cars. Sorry, that's the difficult truth here,” she said.

“By far the most sensible thing for us to develop isn’t BEVs or synthetic fuel, it’s public transport to get vehicles off roads.”

05 June 2023, 10:41
The rain on Haig falls… everywhere, apparently
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Jack Haig (@jack_haig)

Spare a thought for poor Jack Haig. The Australian spent most of May riding through downpour after downpour in Italy, only to turn up at the first stage of the Dauphiné yesterday… and once again get absolutely soaked.

The fella can’t catch a break…

05 June 2023, 10:11
Is golf the new cycling?

I think Bizkaia Durango pro Ana Vitória Magalhães needs to work on her swing before this week’s Tour Féminin des Pyrénées…

Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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52 comments

Avatar
hutchdaddy | 11 months ago
10 likes

Golf is definitely not the new cycling. It's boring, a shit sport and it turns land into a sterile environment. Plus there's no way of getting to a pub on a golf club.

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brooksby | 11 months ago
4 likes

Maybe Jack Haig is a rain god?

Quote:

for the clouds want "to be near him, to love him, to cherish him and to water him". 

https://hitchhikers.fandom.com/wiki/So_Long,_and_Thanks_for_All_the_Fish

 

Avatar
Vo2Maxi | 11 months ago
0 likes

Some (actually, loads these days) just love to whine, don't they?
Cycle To Work Scheme does what it says on the tin: if you ride to work you'll get a tax break. Duh! You can even use it for an electric bike I believe?
When I was a 1st Cat I used to ride to work three days a week, 56 mile roundtrip, and on top of 11hr days. I'm no fit, save the planet cycling snob, but I do know common sense when I see it.
Stop complaining and get up off your lazy behind. Jeez...

Avatar
lllnorrislll | 11 months ago
7 likes

I may be delusional, but I thought that any one who cycled was beautiful with the physique of a greek god!?

When was the last time you saw a car advert featuring a 20 stone, sweaty man driving their products, but yet...

Avatar
stonojnr | 11 months ago
1 like

So do any nice bike rides in the sun at the weekend? catch a bit of the Dauphine? get involved with world bike day? no got huffy about an Instagram ad, well done.

i'm surprised they also didn't complain the bag wasn't hi-viz enough too, or the route didn't reflect urban commuting.

Avatar
Jetmans Dad | 11 months ago
8 likes

Not a member of BC any longer, but their advert definitely represents me, and my 21 mile each way commute, that I wouldn't dream of trying to do in my teaching clothes. 

What I would like to see is more of a co-ordinated approach to these campaigns with Cycling UK and BC combining forces to cover as many bases as they can ... I move my membership from BC to CU precisely because I was moving away from sportive type riding into short triathlons and concentrating most of my riding on utility/leisure.

And I am with Chris on his comment (in the article). There are plenty of people who just do the training, long ride stuff who don't ride to work who should also be encouraged to do so. That's why all bases need to be covered.

Avatar
brooksby | 11 months ago
1 like

http://citizenrider.blogspot.com/2023/05/the-overhead-paradox.html

Quote:

Customers will say that a high repair estimate is more than they paid for their bike. This implies that the bike is not worth fixing. But if you bought a good bike and took good care of it, it should last you fifteen, twenty years or more. If you have been paying someone else to work on it, of course you will end up paying more in service than you paid for the bike originally. But, given the general deterioration in quality and a rate of price inflation that has been romping merrily past the general consumer inflation rate since long before it was fashionable to bitch about it, the bike you buy for the same number of now-inflated dollars will be absolute trash compared to your old bike.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to brooksby | 11 months ago
3 likes

brooksby wrote:

http://citizenrider.blogspot.com/2023/05/the-overhead-paradox.html

Quote:

Customers will say that a high repair estimate is more than they paid for their bike. This implies that the bike is not worth fixing. But if you bought a good bike and took good care of it, it should last you fifteen, twenty years or more. If you have been paying someone else to work on it, of course you will end up paying more in service than you paid for the bike originally. But, given the general deterioration in quality and a rate of price inflation that has been romping merrily past the general consumer inflation rate since long before it was fashionable to bitch about it, the bike you buy for the same number of now-inflated dollars will be absolute trash compared to your old bike.

I think the issue with modern "cheap" bikes is that the market is a race to the bottom. Older bikes didn't come with so many marketing gimmics (e.g. suspension forks), so the build quality acted to differentiate between good and bad bike brands. Nowadays, your average consumer will go for a £150 full suspension MTB from Argos as it certainly looks like a bike shaped object and for the most part, it'll be used a handful of times and then left to rust in a shed. This ends up raising the price for quality bikes as most people won't see the benefit of spending over £500 on a bike and thus there's a much smaller market for the higher quality.

Avatar
Flâneur | 11 months ago
1 like

Regarding the Portadown cyclist, I can't imagine there's a fully street-lit route to Belfast so not sure what he intended to do after leaving Lurgan without a front light?

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EddyBerckx | 11 months ago
8 likes

Britih Cycling is not a utility cycling champion. It exists mainly for the racing side of things and so yes, the ad is fine.

I don't moan about EVERY SINGLE OTHER utility cyclist organisation running ads that don't represent me because I'm not a dickhead and I understand and support  what they are trying to do.

 

The ad represents me including the carbon bike with aero wheels and the long distance commute. I've tried every type of bike on my commute and this suits me best. If I hadn't been gentrified out of the place I was born and brought up in then I'll be in jeans and trainers and a cheap, upright bike. Live with it.

Avatar
EM69 replied to EddyBerckx | 11 months ago
1 like

EddyBerckx - best post on here for this story

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Simon E replied to EddyBerckx | 11 months ago
3 likes

EddyBerckx wrote:

Britih Cycling is not a utility cycling champion. It exists mainly for the racing side of things and so yes, the ad is fine.

Since BC is not a utility cycling champion why run this type of paid advert? Who is the target audience and why?

I commute in lycra on a nice road bike but I can't see how this would appeal to someone like me, to my cycling club friends or to other people I know (including family members) who are pure utility cyclists. Just seems pointless to me, a bit of a missed opportunity.

Avatar
EddyBerckx replied to Simon E | 11 months ago
2 likes

Simon E wrote:

EddyBerckx wrote:

Britih Cycling is not a utility cycling champion. It exists mainly for the racing side of things and so yes, the ad is fine.

Since BC is not a utility cycling champion why run this type of paid advert? Who is the target audience and why?

As others have pointed out, commuting can be a great form of exercise / training / whatever even if you are used to lycra and a road bike on the weekend. In fact, until the recent popularity of ebikes...they were more or less the only way a longer distance commute could be practical / comfortable for many (not all).

A decent proportion of my local cycle club were also commuters at one time (less so now to to WFH and hybrid working)

Avatar
Steve K replied to EddyBerckx | 11 months ago
2 likes

EddyBerckx wrote:

Britih Cycling is not a utility cycling champion. It exists mainly for the racing side of things and so yes, the ad is fine.

Except - as Rendel pointed out - it often does decide it's a utility cycling champion.  But I agree that that is mission creep from its real job - governing and promoting the sport of cycling. 

Avatar
jmcc500 | 11 months ago
8 likes

"Should a cycle to work ad from British Cycling be more inclusive and representative of all cyclists who commute?"

It's not really a zero-sum game though, is it? BC could run this ad, aiming at sporty-roady types, encouraging them to use the commute as a training opportunity, and run other ads targetting other people. Whether they will or not is another matter.

Avatar
Simon E replied to jmcc500 | 11 months ago
4 likes

jmcc500 wrote:

BC could run this ad, aiming at sporty-roady types, encouraging them to use the commute as a training opportunity, and run other ads targetting other people. Whether they will or not is another matter.

It seems to me that BC wants to talk to aspirational keen cyclists but surely a good proportion of that audience are either already members or previous members or have chosen to let their membership lapse.

They push the 3rd party liability carrot but it's only available on the more expensive options. Commute is £40, the claimed benefits include "A vital say in campaigns for cycling in Britain" and "Commute safely with access to Commute Smart videos". Pathetic. BC members don't get any say in their lopsided, erratic campaigns and does anyone actually benefit from watching those videos?

BC would probably be better off sticking to the sportive/leisure/competitive cycling (and do a better job of supporting clubs, race organisers etc) and leave the campaigning to bodies who know what they're talking about.

That's not to say they shouldn't work with instagrammers pedalling through the open countryside (to me it looks more like she's going for a picnic) but that fluffy crap is not going to get them far.

I would be interested to know how many people - women in particular - feel more inclined to ride a bike to work or to the shops after viewing that post.

A Cycling UK tweet yesterday:

Quote:

Will you cycle to work for #BikeWeek100? [💯] From 5-11 June we're marking 100 years of the UK's largest cycling awareness week by highlighting the tremendous benefits of commuting by bike. Get involved: [🚲] http://cyclinguk.org/bikeweek

https://twitter.com/WeAreCyclingUK/status/1665267349203611649

Avatar
brooksby | 11 months ago
6 likes

Meet the Biggest Bike Dork in Congress

Rep. Earl Blumenauer bikes to the Capitol. He wants the feds to pay you to bike to work too.

https://slate.com/technology/2023/06/earl-blumenauer-bicycles-interview-...

Quote:

Since joining the House of Representatives in 1996, Rep. Earl Blumenauer of Oregon has been at the center of cycling’s ups and downs. Relying on two-wheelers to navigate D.C. (and sometimes also his home district surrounding Portland), Blumenauer has pushed the federal government to embrace biking as a healthy, green, and equitable way to travel. Soon after arriving at the Capitol, he founded the bipartisan Congressional Bike Caucus to build support.

Avatar
HoldingOn | 11 months ago
3 likes

I am sure there is an intersection on here of "commutes in not-fitness-gear" and "is on instagram"

Sounds like that intersection could get themselves a British Cycling advert to balance things out.

Avatar
hawkinspeter | 11 months ago
8 likes

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/jun/05/ministers-face-legal-challenge-over-cuts-to-walking-and-cycling-investment-in-england

Quote:

The action comes at a perilous time for Harper and his team, who are expected to face heavy criticism later this week when the National Audit Office publishes a report on the DfT’s wider strategy for walking and cycling.

Although Rishi Sunak’s government remains officially committed to a target established under Boris Johnson that half of all urban journeys should be walked or cycled by 2030, Harper announced a 50% reduction in the money for active travel in England in March.

According to TAN, whose lawyers at Leigh Day, have sent a pre-action legal letter to Harper, outside London the funding dedicated to active travel in England will be only £1 a head per year over the rest of the current parliament, against equivalent figures of £23 for Wales and £58 in Scotland.

Avatar
HarrogateSpa replied to hawkinspeter | 11 months ago
10 likes

Sunak is keen on helicopters as utility transport but not bikes. No surprise that active travel funding was cut when he moved into No. 10.

The good thing is that Active Travel England were already set up. Now we wait for a decent govt that will fund ATE properly.

Avatar
Ride On replied to HarrogateSpa | 11 months ago
4 likes

Maybe he ordered a chopper in the cycle scheme and there was a mixup at his local bike store?

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eburtthebike replied to Ride On | 11 months ago
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Ride On wrote:

Maybe he ordered a chopper in the cycle scheme and there was a mixup at his local bike store?

Mark Harper is my MP and I can say with some confidence that he is a chopper.  Two emails in the last two months: no response.

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