Bikes and Sport-for-development (S4D)

Bikes and Sport-for-development. Bicycles Create Change.com. 9th April 2021.

My PhD looks at how bicycles feature in West African girls’ access to secondary education.

This means I read widely about gender, geography, aid and development, education, mobility and innovative research methods.

I’ve been reviewing what has been done so far to help girls get to and from schools on bikes – and this has to lead me to Sport-for-development literature. Which I love!

The field of sport-for-development (S4D) has received significant attention in the last 10 years, legitimizing it as a recognized and critical new genre of scholarship and praxis. The focus of S4D is to engage disadvantaged people and communities in physical activity projects with an overarching aim of achieving various social, cultural, physical, economic, or health outcomes.

Where at the beginning of the 21st century it was difficult to find projects that use sport or physical activity as a specific vehicle for positive change, the number of S4D initiatives that aim to make a difference has grown substantially. One explanation for this escalation is the strong political support for a movement that combines sports associations, aid agencies, development bodies, sponsoring organisations, and non-governmental organisations (NGOs)under a single umbrella.

An example of this is my project, which showcases how for the last decade, the collaboration of NGO Village Bicycle Project (my research partner organization) with Stylish Karim Kamara has helped progress local individuals, schools, community groups and education/health organisations by supplying bicycles and bike riding services.

Bikes and Sport-for-development. Bicycles Create Change.com. 9th April 2021.

A lovely moment of (research) providence

Often in research, what is being worked on is removed and abstracted from the goings-on in ‘the real-world’.

But not for me this week! This week I had a lovely moment of research providence!

I am currently reading a book on S4D (see image above) which details programs like Football for Peace in the Middle East, Ganar and Deportes para la Vida in the Caribbean, Soldados Nunca Mais which rehabilitates and retrains Brasilian child soldiers using sport, Pacifica Wokabot Jalens (team-based step challenges) programs and other EduSport initiatives.

And it just so happened that my reading of this book coincided with the UN International Day of Sport for Development and Peace (IDSDP 2021) which was on the 6th of April.

So this made what I am working on even more real and meaningful.

Bikes and Sport-for-development. Bicycles Create Change.com. 9th April 2021.

What is the International Day of Sport for Development and Peace?

Here are some great IDSDP resources and information.

Here’s some background from the UN explaining IDSDP 2021.

In recognition of the positive contribution that sport can have on the realization of sustainable development and on the advancement of human rights, 6 April was proclaimed the International Day of Sport for Development and Peace (IDSDP) by the UN General Assembly in its resolution 67/296 in 2013.

Theme: International Day of Sport for Development and Peace (IDSDP) 2021

The International Day of Sport for Development and Peace 2021 there is an opportunity to recognize the role that sport plays in communities, in individuals’ lives, in building resilience and in the recovery from the pandemic through online and social media activity in the lead up to and on the Day.

The Department of Global Communications, in collaboration with DESA, WHO and the co-chairs of the Group of Friends of Sport for Sustainable Development in New York – Qatar and Monaco – have developed social media and online messaging around the theme of recovery from the pandemic, the importance of equity in that recovery, and what is necessary to build back better for a more resilient and equitable world.

Sport can cross boundaries, defy stereotypes, improve our physical and emotional health, and inspire hope across nations, but we will only be able to get back to this, if we recover better and help end the pandemic by helping ensure everyone is protected from COVID-19 Using the hashtags #SportDay and #OnlyTogether, interested UN entities and external organizations will be able to tailor the theme to closely fit their own specific mandates and activities to demonstrate how sport and physical activity can help build back better and stronger as society begins to reopen and recover, once the pandemic ends.

Sporting analogies, such as “achieving success through teamwork,” and “using a level playing field” can also be incorporated to deliver the important equity and resilience messaging, and sports personalities and organizations can help promote. Teamwork is essential to building back better.

So, let’s help end the pandemic by ensuring everyone is protected from COVID-19. Let’s level the playing field and recover better. #OnlyTogether will we play again.

Bikes and Sport-for-development. Bicycles Create Change.com. 9th April 2021.

Objectives

The 2021 International Day of Sport for Development and Peace aims to:

– Reaffirm the place of sport in the recovery from the pandemic and beyond
– Foster equity, solidarity, community and team spirit in response to the pandemic
– Encourage healthy habits through physical activity and building emotional wellbeing
– and inspire hope through sporting analogies.

These are the hashtags for the International Day of Sport this year: #SportDay #OnlyTogether

Bikes and Sport-for-development. Bicycles Create Change.com. 9th April 2021.
Image: UN

Women’s Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests

Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
Celebrating Women’s Month and Day of the Forests at our local ‘Tree of Light’.

March is a busy month!

Around the world, March is known as ‘Women’s Month’.

The last few posts have shared some events that celebrate female achievements and raise awareness for women, gender and social justice issues, such as Women’s History Month (Royal Australia Historical Society, Dr Katie Phillips (USA) and Dr Kat Jungnickel (UK) as well the Brisbane chapter of one of the Australian Women’s March4Justice protests – which I attended in appropriate bike-based attire, replete with a dual-sided (inclusive-confrontational) homemade sign.

But not many people know that March 21st was the UN International Day of Forests.

So to commemorate both Women’s Month and Day of the Forests, I put the call out to three inspiring female friends (Nix, Alex and Wendy) who work to improve gender and environmental imperatives – and invited them to come for a night-time ride along our bayside foreshore to visit the ‘Tree of Light’ to honour the ‘every tree counts’ key theme for this year’s Day of Forests.

And so we did – and we had a great time!

It was low-key, colourful and super fun.

I let them know I was dressing up and they were welcome to join me if they wanted to. I know dressing up is not everyone’s jam – but they all arrived at my place dressed up as well! Not only was this a way to have fun, but it was also a subversive ‘up-yours’ to social expectations of what is ‘appropriate’ for a woman to wear in public and traditional views of women dressing ‘properly’ and ‘conservatively’.

My idea was to go for a night ride ‘reclaim the night/bike path’ style. I deliberately arranged our departure for 7.30 pm – when it was ‘darkly’ – and after dinner – a time most women are socially trained to stay in as it is ‘not safe’ to be out at night.

There were four of us for this ride. On the ride were myself and the formidable Nix (who you might remember from the New Materialists Garden – PhD Retreat), as well as Wendy and Alex, who are two of ‘Green Aunties’ from my community garden. Both Wendy and Alex are in their legacy years and rode pedal-assist bikes.

  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
  • Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.

As if the aunties weren’t brave enough doing this ride, I also found out just before we left that Wendy and Alex had never been for a night ride before. This was a big win for women-them-us-community claiming public space – at night – in a super positive and direct way!

It was a stunning evening – clear, warm and inviting. The moon was out and our community was safe and welcoming.

We saw a few people as we started out, but the more we rode, the less people there were about until we saw no one on our return trip at all. We had the whole place to ourselves! While we rode we discussed what it felt like to be ‘out alone’ and ‘roaming the streets.

It was brilliant!

We rode 6kms along the foreshore, then stopped at the ‘The Tree of Lights’ to have a break where we joked, enjoyed, paid homage to women’s month – and trees and forests. Then I rode my guests happily home.

Our ride was a small, but wonderfully personal way to honour and celebrate sisterhood, forests, and being free to ride our bikes wherever and whenever we want to.

If you have not been out for night ride recently – I highly recommend it.

Grab a mate and your bikes and go visit a tree in your area!

Happy riding!

Key messages of the UN International Day of Forests

The UN are promoting 8 key messages for the 2021 International Day of Forests:

Healthy forests mean healthy people.

Forests provide health benefits for everyone, such as fresh air, nutritious foods, clean water, and space for recreation. In developed countries, up to 25 percent of all medicinal drugs are plant-based; in developing countries, the contribution is as high as 80 percent.

Forest food provides healthy diets.

Indigenous communities typically consume more than 100 types of wild food, many harvested in forests. A study in Africa found that the dietary diversity of children exposed to forests is at least 25 percent higher than that of children who are not. Forest destruction, on the other hand, is unhealthy – nearly one in three outbreaks of emerging infectious disease are linked to land-use change such as deforestation.

Restoring forests will improve our environment.

The world is losing 10 million hectares of forest – about the size of Iceland – each year, and land degradation affects almost 2 billion hectares, an area larger than South America. Forest loss and degradation emit large quantities of climate-warming gases, and at least 8 percent of forest plants and 5 percent of forest animals are at extremely high risk of extinction. The restoration and sustainable management of forests, on the other hand, will address the climate-change and biodiversity crises simultaneously while producing goods and services needed for sustainable development.

Sustainable forestry can create millions of green jobs.

Forests provide more than 86 million green jobs and support the livelihoods of many more people. Wood from well-managed forests supports diverse industries, from paper to the construction of tall buildings. Investment in forest restoration will help economies recover from the pandemic by creating even more employment. 

It is possible to restore degraded lands at a huge scale.

The Great Green Wall for the Sahara and the Sahel Initiative, launched by the African Union in 2007, is the most ambitious climate-change adaptation and mitigation response under implementation worldwide. It seeks to restore 100 million hectares of degraded land, sequester 250 million tonnes of carbon and create 10 million green jobs by 2030, while greening landscapes in an 8 000 km belt across Africa’s drylands. Vast areas of degraded land elsewhere would also become highly productive again if restored with local tree species and other vegetation.

Every tree counts.

Small-scale planting and restoration projects can have big impacts. City greening creates cleaner air and more beautiful spaces and has huge benefits for the mental and physical health of urban dwellers. It is estimated that trees provide megacities with benefits worth USD 0.5 billion or more every year by reducing air pollution, cooling buildings and providing other services.

Engaging and empowering people to sustainably use forests is a key step towards positive change.

A healthy environment requires stakeholder engagement, especially at the local level so that communities can better govern and manage the land on which they depend. Community empowerment helps advance local solutions and promotes participation in ecosystem restoration. There is an opportunity to “rebuild” forest landscapes that are equitable and productive, and that avert the risks to ecosystems and people posed by forest destruction.

We can recover from our planetary, health and economic crisis. Let’s restore the planet this decade.

Investing in ecosystem restoration will help in healing individuals, communities and the environment. The aim of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, which starts this year, is to prevent, halt and reverse the degradation of ecosystems worldwide. It offers the prospect of putting trees and forests back into degraded forest landscapes at a massive scale, thereby increasing ecological resilience and productivity. Done right, forest restoration is a key nature-based solution for building back better and achieving the future we want.

Women's Ride4Justice: Reclaiming darkly bike paths on UN International Day of Forests. Bicycles Create Change.com. 27th March 2021.
Source: UN

Terry Barentsen’s Hotline Series- Street Riding Videos

This post is about Terry Barentsen’s Hotline videos.

Terry Barentsen is an NYC-based bike rider-creative who makes incredible mobile videos about urban biking and the associated lifestyle – and much more his YouTube channel is very popular and rightfully so. Terry’s content is crisp, inspiring, professional and highly engaging.

My favorite videos are the Hotline series, where Terry rides behind a local rider (who is miked up) and then follows them as they ride around their local area – which is usually a densely populated city.

These clips are incredible to watch. It is exciting watching highly skilled (mostly fixie) riders zooming dangerously around New York, Mexico City, Moscow, San Francisco, Rome, Tokyo or where ever.

Below is a 100-word worlding I wrote about the Hotline videos:

Worlding: Lessons from Hotlining

Research lessons from Terry Barentsen’s hyper-urban street bike riding Hotline videos. Fear and excitement comingle. Bodies, bikes, cities, noises, skills, congestions, objects, demands and decisions. Moving intuitively. Operating on feel and precognition. Bravery shoves perilousness into oncoming traffic. Constant(ly) urgent flow(s). Giving red lights, erratic vehicles and law-abiding pedestrians the finger. Always pushing and scanning just ahead(s). Whistles, shouts and drag-hitches on cab doors. Scaring yourself and others.  (con)Sensual (re)Activity. Instances of recovery and realisation. Extreme moments of confluence. Getting to where you need to be, faster. One long, unedited, continuous journey of think-ride-living in the middle.

Getting into Hotlining

Although mostly located in the US, Terry travels widely and I really appreciate the broad range of diverse people, places and bike styles he showcases – he genuinely includes everyone – and they are all equally exciting to watch for different reasons.

The sometimes included daggy 1970s Hotline intro is hilarious.

You don’t need to be a bike rider to appreciate a Hotline.

Zipping down streets, over embankments, skidding between cars, dodging walkers, jumping barriers, crossing lines and managing fasts speeds, traffic, built environs and themselves the whole time. Unreal!

Watching fixie riders is exhilarating: their skill, grace and bravery is incredible – and definitely not always legal. I find myself mesmerized as I watch how they hold speed, what lines they chose to take, the snap decisions they need to make and how the city lives, breathes and orientates around everything that moves – it is literally poetry in motion.

I’m a Hotline fan for many reasons, least of all because it is highly original content, beautifully produced videography, celebrates ALL kids of bikers and bike riding, takes in all the sensory surrounds, is inclusive, positive, exciting and creative, and is exclusively focused on the embodied, moving POV of the riders in situ.

I also really appreciate that most of these videos are one-shot non-edited footage – raw as!

And I love that the whole series is about celebrating all different types of riders (and not just focused on Terry himself) – how refreshing!

Some of the Hotlines, have cool Jazz or World Music tunes overlayed, other times there is no music, sometimes both. I dig being able to hear the rider breathing and talking as they whip and whizz and ride. The quality ASMR immersion of the ride helps better appreciate the dynamicism and noise of the riding activity and surrounding vibrancy: honking, braking, music blaring, road crossing beeps, pedestrians talking, snippets of conversations, natural sounds of wheels on surfaces, bus engines ….and all the while being able to ride-with a rider-bike-environs assemblage.

As well as the Hotline videos, Terry’s channel also has HEAPS of other associated bikey-interest content, like video diaries, tech info and explanations, bike checks, special bike styles/models (fixies, road, track, singlespeeds, MTB), ‘How to’s, night rides, ride-alongs, meet the rider/interviews, event, rides and site visitations, a series called ‘chasing strangers’. There’s also a few tech-specific video playlists like the 4K series, stills, 360s and a few unspecified off-cuts, rough-cuts and ‘shorts’ that always have something a little left of center.

So if you haven’t already seen the Hotlines, series, I highly recommend on your next tea break to go and check out a few different Hotline rides – I guarantee… you will not be disappointed!

Below are a few to get you started…

Happy Hotlining!

Meet @blackmuslimwomenbike

Meet @blackmuslimwomenbike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 11th January 2021.

An ongoing question I have posed on this blog is: How is your bike riding contributing to making the world a better place for all?

In western countries, we think little of getting up, getting on our bikes and going for a bike ride – this is because we feel confident, safe and secure riding in our communities.

It’s easy to take for granted the inclusive access, rights and conditions we enjoy – not all cyclists are privy to the same recognition, value and acceptance that mainstream white MAMILs, (middle-aged men in lyrca) for example, experience.

This blog works to bring a range of other-than-the-dominant-norm ‘cycling’ perspectives.

Some examples which are well worth a look if you missed them include:

Since their Instagram inception in May last year, I’ve been following @blackmuslimwomenbike.

This group of riders proudly and publicly working to fray dominant views about cycling and of what cycling bodies ‘do’, what cycling bodies should look like, and who gets recognised and valued in cycling…and to raise the profile of black, Muslim, female riders.

Meet @blackmuslimwomenbike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 11th January 2021.

Meet @blackmuslimwomenbike

This group is an Instagram collective celebrating black, Muslim women who ride bikes. 

Their profile shares photos, stories and quotes and bring together bike riders from around the world. 

Each week, the organisers introduce a new rider by sharing a photo, a short bio and the rider’s responses to these 4 questions:

  • What inspired you to cycle?
  • How would you sum up your (biking) experience so far?
  • How important is it to have platform that represents you?
  • What advice would you give to other black, Muslim women cyclists?

Despite being relatively new, this group has a growing network and support base.

They are actively involved in a number of big ticket social riding events and have instigated their own fundraiser to support a hospital in Senegal.

I find this group exciting as they are actively building community and supporting each other to hold space and be recognised as riders, they are a formidable group of women working to make change, and are telling their own biking stories in their own words.

So if you haven’t done so already, check this group out, follow them and tell others.

Meet @blackmuslimwomenbike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 11th January 2021.

Background to @blackmuslimwomenbike

Friends Muneera and Sabah were both living in Bristol, UK. During COVID they were looking for a way to keep fit and stay happy. Sabah has a triathlon background and was keen to stay active. Unbeknownst to each other, the two friends started cycling independently. 

Soon after, Sabah left the UK to live in UAE and Muneera started sharing her journey in a more formal way to centre focus on diversity and inclusion and draw attention to black Muslim women specifically – hence @blackmuslimwomenbike.

Sabah joined her so they could share their biking experiences and adventures with each other (now they lived apart) and more broadly.

Soon after they were joined by Mona and Rashida and together these four women are the driving force behind the group.

Read more of their story and the origins of @blackmuslimwomenbike here.

Their first post is an image of Muneera wearing her helmet with the description: 

“We are doing it all, the hijab, the biking cap and the helmet. As we embark on this beautiful journey  that we have found, You have to be the representation that we want to see,  the star we want to see,  the black girls on bikes in our dreams.”

Meet @blackmuslimwomenbike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 11th January 2021.

All images: IG @blackmuslimwomenbike

HNY: This blog continues to celebrate diversity and inclusion

HNY: This blog continues to celebrate diversity and inclusion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 3rd January 2021.
Alfred (L), Kadi, Deborah, Isata (middle R), Nina and Stylish (R). Isata’s bike shop Makeni, Sierra Leone. Feb 2020.

Happy New Year all!

I hope you have been enjoying your time on and off the bike – and gearing up for another productive year!

Regular readers know that BCC is not your average mainstream cycling blog ….. it is anything but!

For my first post of 2021, I am revisiting this blog’s manifesto and ongoing guiding commitment to support a range of bike experiences that celebrating inclusion and diversity.

This blog promotes positive and inclusive bike experiences

This blog’s key focus is to share stories where bicycles create positive community and environmental change.

The content you find here covers my bicycle Ph.D. (readings, research, ideas) as well as awesome bike-focused people, places, groups, and events from Australia and around the world.

This blog’s motto is: Have fun, rides bikes, do good.

Here at Bicycles Create Change (BCC), I talk a lot about gender, sustainability, dogs/animals, community, inclusion, social justice, access for all, recycling, supporting outliers, education, families, kids, modified bikes for diff-abilities, people over 60, people under 15, art bikes, bicycle community groups, returned war veterans, gardening, school/education, mobility, creativity and art, making your own trails and riding around your local community. Type keywords into the blog search to see full posts.

Bike Works at Kunnanurra WA. Bicycles Create Change.com 7th Jan 2020
BCC Post (7th Jan 2020) Bike Works at Kunnanurra (WA). Image: Bikes 4 Life.

This blog brings you stories from around the world

Over the years we have travelled far and wide: Afghanistan, South Korea, India, Tibet, Ireland, Norway, Iceland, South Africa, China, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, Uganda, Isreal, Belize, Japan, Gambia, the Philippines, Sierra Leone, The Cook Islands, Laos, Brazil, Sri Lanka, the Netherlands, Iraq, Mexico, Colombia, Pakistan, New Zealand, Argentina, the Himalayas, Finland, Sudan, Ghana, Vietnam, Uruguay, Darfur, Nepal, Ethiopia, Peru, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Cambodia, Tanzania, and internally displaced people (IDP – ‘refugee’) camps around the world….to name a few… type keywords into the blog search to see full posts for these places.

…yes there is an incredibly rich bicycling world outside Europe and North America!

2019 Fancy Women Bike Ride. Bicycles Create Change.com 1st Nov 2019.
BCC Post (21st Nov 2016) :Turkey’s Fancy women on bikes. Image: Bikeitalia.

And from around Australia

In Australia, we have visited all the major cities – Brisbane (where I am now based) Melbourne (my home town), Sydney, Adelaide, Perth, Darwin, Hobart, Canberra, Alice Springs) and their awesome bicycling adventures.

We have also traveled more widely in Australia to showcase rural locations and places outside big urban cities like: Kunnanurra (WA), Ballarat (VIC), Adelaide Hills (SA), Lismore (QLD), Dubbo (NSW), Bendigo (VIC), Woodfordia (QLD), North & South Spit Area (Sunshine Coast, QLD), Chewton, (regional VIC), Woodend (VIC), Goldfields district (regional VIC), and bike rides spanning the full East Coast of Australia. (*Epic!*).

Giving it all up to cycle the world with your dog. Bicycles Create Change.com 5th August 2018.
BCC Post (5th Aug, 2018): Giving it all up top cycle the world with your dog.

This blog is not ‘mainstream’

I have written previously on this blog about the prevailing misogynist ‘unbearable whiteness of cycling‘.

As an alternative to the oversaturation of hegemonic, mainstream, consumer-based, profit-driven, western-English speaking-heterosexual-male-white-wealthy-middle aged-fit-able bodied-road riding-elitist-centric news and blog sites you can get any(every)where, this blog’s purview has always delighted a range of different biking experiences that shows a greater diversity of bicycling experiences.

So on this blog, I talk about ‘biking’ – not ‘cycling’.

At BCC, I’ve covered a huge range of awesome community bike-themed events you won’t find collated elsewhere, like: The Kurilpa Derby, The Yarn Ride, The Brisbane Big Push, Bike Hack, Climate Action Rallies, Bike Art Exhibitions, ANZAC Day Commemorations, 6-Day Brisbane (track sprint competition), Halloween Rides, National Sustainability Festivals, Brisbane Bike Film Festival, 3Plus3 MTB, NAIDOC Week bike events, Ride the Night events, Chicks Who Ride Bikes (CWRB) events, Melburn Roubaix, Bike Rave Melburn: Pink Flamingo Edition, Witches Rides, Alley Cat Races, Animals on Bikes Art Trails, Bayview Blast, the annual, all-female Chicks in the Sticks MTB event, Bike Palooza, Full Moon Rides, National Bike Week, Ride to Work events, Holi Festival, Commonwealth Games MTB, Sustainable Living Festivals, Woodford Folk Festival, Style over Speed rides, Slow Rolls, Zombie Bike Rides … and heaps more (*phew*!). Type any of these keywords into the blog search to see full posts for these events.

Mart Aire
BCC Post (17th Sept 2016): Bicycles Murals – by Mart Aires. Image: Artist Mart Aries (Buenos Aires, Argentina).

This blog goes to the best conferences

And I’ve had lots of abstracts accepted, attended, followed up on, and presented at LOTS of conferences to share our story and learn more from others, like: Australian Walking and Cycling Conference (AWCC) (Adelaide, SA), Reconciling research paradoxes: Justice in a post-truth world (Brisbane, QLD), Bike Hack (Brisbane, QLD), English Australia National Conferences (Sydney, NSW) Bike Week (Brisbane, QLD), Australia Association for Research in Education (AARE) (Brisbane, QLD), Bicycle Network: Bike Futures (Melbourne, VIC), 8th International Cycling Saftey Conference (Brisbane, QLD), Bike Palooza (Bendigo, VIC), Re-Imaging Education for Democracy Summit (Brisbane, QLD), Freshlines Symposia (Brisbane, QLD), University English Centers Australia (UECA) Assessment Symposium (Brisbane, QLD), Pedagogies in the Wild Conference (Cape Town, South Africa), 10th Annual New Materialisms Conference of Reconfiguring Higher Education (Cape Town, South Africa), Asia Pacific Cyle Congress (Christchurch, NZ), International Cycling Conference (Germany), International Exhibition and Conference in Higher Education (IECHE) (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia)…. and more (*double phew*!!). Type keywords into the blog search to see full posts for these conferences.

BCC Post (1st July 2016): Bike Tourism in Peru. Image: Sacred Rides

Promoting diverse perspectives and bikey lifeworlds

For over 6 years, I’ve worked hard to share a range of stories from around the world that centre on everyday people, community groups and places (not Aust, UK or USA) that are often underrepresented, unknown or unrecognized for the positive impact they are making with bicycles.

And this year, I will continue to share stories that are community-based, diverse, relatable and inspirational.

To kick off 2021 – I have dug into the archives to bring you a showcase of some of the remarkably diverse people and projects I have shared in the past.

Here’s are a few diversity posts you should check out if you missed them:

As I was preparing this post and going back over these older stories (and so many more from the blog), it filled me with immense satisfaction. I love that this blog continues to provide a platform for incredible bike stories to be shared and celebrated that would otherwise remain relatively unknown – and I’m looking forward to continuing this mission in 2021!

‘Thought control’ bicycle for spinal injury rehab. Bicycles Create Change.com 16th July, 2019.
BCC Post (16th July 2019): ‘Thought control’ bicycle for spinal injury rehab. Image: Griffith University.

#Festive500

#Festive500. Bicycles Create Change.com. 25th December 2020.

It’s the festive season! Woohoo!

This year, I‘ve signed up to ride the #Festive500.

The #Festive500 is an international annual bike riding challenge that takes place over the Christmas-New Year period.

The premise is simple: registrants ride 500 kilometers over the eight days from Christmas Eve to New Year’s Eve. 

Where I live and ride (Brisbane, AUST) it is summertime – with endless warm days that are perfect for long early morning/late afternoon (and night) rides. But, elsewhere in the world, (like the US and UK) it is peak Winter – freezing cold and snowing. I spare a thought for these riders and the extra seasonal challenges they face.

This event is the brainchild of former cycling clothing company Rapha designer Graeme Raeburn, who in 2010 rode 1,000kms on his own.

Considering the festive time is often one of excess, overeating and recreation, this event is a genuine challenge for those who want to try something a little different.

#Festive500. Bicycles Create Change.com. 25th December 2020.

It’s the first time I’ve done this event. Each year, I  have a different festive focus: one year we indulged, another we retreated like hermits to a bush hideaway, another we used bikes to visit family and friends in another city. Given its still COVID-ish, this year we are staying close to home and minimising social contact. Instead, we are spending our time together riding bikes around our local area – so the Festive500 fits perfectly with our plans.

It also conveniently overlaps with our riding a century (100kms) each full moon for a year (13). We started riding full moon centuries in November 2020. On Tuesday, Dec 29th there will be a Gemini Wolf full moon (which we would be doing anyway), so that will count towards our Festive500. That, plus riding every day and cycling to-and-from the one and only Christmas dinner party we are going to (the long way round) will definitely clock up the kilometers needed. No worries here!

Each rider needs to consider how they want to achieve the 500. Some, (like Beloved) will go all out and smash themselves and do a few super long days in the saddle, others will pace themselves and work on an average of 63kms per day, and others will mix up days and distances depending on time, energy, weather and family commitments.

The Rapha website has heaps of content, stories and inspiration for those interested in finding out more about the #Festive500.

So whatever you do this holiday period, I hope it serves you well.

Have fun, ride bikes, do good!

Happy holidays all!

#Festive500. Bicycles Create Change.com. 25th December 2020.

All images sourced from Rapha.

Bikes, Maps & Emotions

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Image: Greenwhich Emotion Map by Christian Nold.

Recently I’ve been preoccupied with maps.

Maps are ubiquitous and we’ve all used them at some stage:  schematic maps of bus routes,  locating ‘you are here’ to explore a city, finding the nearest train station, driving to a new destination or going on holiday. As a bike rider, I use maps to check and navigate direction, connection, location or distance, and points of interest.

Maps are used to communicate information about places.

Historically, under the guise of ‘exploration’, maps enabled geo-political or economic motives such as colonial expansion, mercantile ambitions and violent extractivism. Such utility speaks to the epitome of rationality: objective, cold and calculated. 

But maps are more than just geospatial wayfaring tools.

Maps are also gendered. Mapping the physical world has been, until more recently, the domain of masculine perceptions and control of resources, governance, power and administration. Maps of yore were solely created by male cartographers for male users. In doing so, they showed a very selective promotion of what was considered ‘significant’ and detailed interpretations as to ‘what is on the ground’ or located in environments – both physical and socio-cultural. Female and non-binary ways of moving, traveling, experiencing and journeying have been largely ignored or overlooked in cartography.

Thankfully, things have changed since then – and so have maps and maps users.

As part of my bicycle research, I read a lot about bike riding in different spaces, places, terrains and environments. As a New Materialisms researcher, I’m especially interested in embodiment, relationality, movement and the affective intensities of bike riding.

This means I’m look at maps differently and I’m interested in considering how gender and emotionality feature in mapping.

Maps elicit emotions: 

  • I feel anger knowing modern maps negate the abuse of indigenous peoples
  • I feel frustration when the place I want to get to is not shown on the map
  • I feel satisfaction when I finally get to the location I want
  • I feel connected when I recognise a familiar route
  • I feel nostalgia when I trace trails of past beloved adventures

Today, I am thinking of the absences in physical cartographies and considering:

How can maps/mapping better attend to the intersectionality of gendered journeys, bike riding and emotionality?

I thought I’d share a few of the initial considerations I’ve come across so far.

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Image: Stockport Emotion Map – a collective public-consultation-art project Stockport Local Council (2007)

Cyclists’ participation in Emotional Mapping

Emotional mapping is an approach to capture how users of a space ‘feel’ or emotionally relate to spaces. This approach is used by those interested in engaging with how end uses feel as a way to enhance functionality, design and process, people like educators, policymakers and city planners.

As many cities work to encourage more bike riding, cyclists are a central target user group who have significant value to add by expressing their emotional reactions to routes and places. Cyclists experience spaces definitely to other users and have very clear reactions to lines, paths and points that are shown statically on a map of the city, but yet manifest emotionally, such as ‘good’ or ‘bad’ places, or places to avoid because of anxiety, safety fears, or desire lines for the familiar and ‘fun’ routes. Such emotionally-charged choices and behaviours are not adequately represented on static maps – hence the addition of emotional mapping.

Emotional mapping is volunteered geographical information and/or crowdsourcing as a way to boost citizen participation in urban planning and it provides a platform for alternative voices and experiences to be better accounted for.

Emotional mapping foregrounds the importance of natural and built environments for cyclists, as well as the range of feelings engendered by cycling close to car traffic or in the street with cars, or traversing natural environments and obstacles.

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Cyclists’ participation in Emotional Mapping. Image: Cartographic Perspectives

Emotional Cartographies: Technologies of the Self

This entry comes direct from the ever-inspiring Brainpickings by Maria Popva. Say no more.

Emotional Cartography is an excellent, free book on emotion mapping, featuring a collection of essays by artists, designers, psychologists, cultural researchers, futurists and neuroscientists. Together, they explore the political, social and cultural implications of dissecting the private world of human emotion with bleeding-edge technology.

From art projects to hi-tech gadgets, the collection looks at emotion in its social context. It’s an experiment in cultural hacking — a way to bridge the individual with the collective through experiential interconnectedness.

Download the book in PDF here, for 53 glorious pages of technology, art and cultural insight.

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Image: Emotional Cartography

Bike T-shirt with Map Icons 

I found this innovative bike T-shirt design by StorySpark on Etsy.  Although not technically a map in the true sense of the word,  I found this generative for a number of reasons.  I like the provocation that instead of mapping spaces, it was using map icons to trace experiences with the bike as opposed to on the bike. I like that it’s described as a ‘Pathfinder Cyclist Graphic’  and that it’s gender-neutral. 

When I first saw it, I saw it I thought it was using cosmology and celestial constellations which I thought that was cool, but when I looked closer and realised it was using familiar map icons, it worked just as well.

It also speaks to my ethical compunctions to support artists (an innovative and unique creative output) and the environment (this eco-friendly T-shirt is made From organic cotton and recycled polyester). I see this as a wonderful example to think more divergently about ‘mapping’ and is a creative reframing of mapping bicycle experiences anew.

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Bike T-shirt with Map Icons. Image: StorySpark (Etsy)

Heat maps for cycling flows

Cycling heat maps show the intensity of movement in spaces. Usually, a cycling heat map is city-based and created by cyclists who download an app which tracks ride data. This is then collated into a visualisation to enable new perspective and insights to emerge that might not have been considered before.

This is useful to represent changes in movement and places over time. So things that are not shown on traditional static maps, like traffic jams, peak hours, changes in routes, most used routes (and when) are documented. There are also a few women’s only heat maps underway so as to compare ‘general’ users to ascertain differences.

What I like about these heat maps is that changes in flow is foregrounded and temporality (time) can more directly be folded into the map/ped/ing experience. I also like that the ‘heat’ terminology hints at the heat of bodies (riders), warm climate (environmental temperature or humidity) and ‘hot spots’ (such as avoidances, blockages or issues). Some pretty cool future potentialities here.

Also the use of ‘heat’ body 

Here is an example of a cycling heat map project for Berlin, Vienna and Graz.

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Heat Maps for Cycling Flows. Image: Bicycle Citizens

Using Strava GPS to be a bike ride map artist

This idea has been around for a while and many bike riders would have seen these before. I’m not sure how well-known they are outside of cycling communities. These are fun, dynamic, creative and wholly bike-focused, movement-based moment-in-time expressions of user (re)mapping. These approaches reinvent modern mapping with the user reinterpreting the map using technology which could not have been achieved previously. These are also freely available and shared. 

Here, bike rides transcend exercise, competition and transportation to press into more unfamiliar (and exciting) territories such as public art and performance. Kudos to the bike rider-creative-(re)mapper whose interpretation and commitment in order to produce these pieces: I  appreciate the careful planning and organisation needed to make these pieces happen. There is also a telescoping aspect of the riders understanding their trip as being (literally) larger and more significant than just the route in front of them…I love the idea of riding for a purpose that can be seen from outer space! Here, a known map which is a social product embodying a range of histories and ideologies in and of itself is iteratively reimagined by each individual rider into a (re)newed vision, commentary or reality. 

Biking, Maps & Emotion. Bicycles Create Change.com. 15th December 2020.
Google search: bike strava art map

These are a few entry points so far and each have their own usefulness, limitations and possibilities. 

I’ll be exploring other ways to think differently about how mapping might better attend to gendered bike riding and emotionality and let you know what I find.

I hope you enjoyed this thought-experiment.

Enjoy mapping your next ride!

#Bikes_CISTA #50: John, Diesel, Roxy & Bike

#Bikes_CISTA #50: John, Diesel, Roxy & Bike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 10th December 2020.
Diesel (L) and Roxy (R)

There are many reasons why I love where I’m currently living and riding. I live on Narlang Quandamooka land which is Morton Bayside 25 km out of Brisbane (AUST). 

In my neighbourhood, we have fantastic bayside foreshore pathways, heritage-listed Mangrove reserves, native bushland and swathes of green parklands. The natural environment was a definitive reason for us choosing to live here.

I’m often out and about on my bike and I love to meet people who are doing the same.

While I’m in the throes of data analysis and working hard on my PhD bicycle research,  it feels even more important to keep connected with the two-wheeled community.

 One of the early projects I started with this blog was my Instagram @bicycles_create_change.

I have a number of ongoing side projects that I like to keep percolating. My Instagram #Bikes_CISTA project is one I have not updated in a while due to COVID and I was delighted to have the opportunity to do so recently.

#Bikes_CISTA #50: John, Diesel, Roxy & Bike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 10th December 2020.
#Bikes_CISTA Instagram: @bicycles_create_change

My Instagram #Bikes_CISTA project

Long-time readers of this blog will be familiar with my Instagram #Bikes_CISTA project.

This is an ongoing project I started in February 2017.

The ‘CISTA’ acronym of #Bikes_CISTA stands for Cycling Interspecies Team of Awesomeness.

The Cycling Interspecies Team of Awesomeness (or Bikes_CISTA) Project is a photographic collection of encounters I’ve had with biking strangers while riding Leki (my flower bike) around my neighbourhood. It features people I spontaneously see, introduce myself to, have a chat with and invite them to join ‘the team’ (completely optional).

The eligibility for a #Bikes_CISTA invite requires:

  • at least one person
  • at least one dog
  • at least one bike
  • all are happy to stop and have a chat with me
  • are happy for me to share their photo and their CISTA story

It is a great way to keep me connected to my community, actively meet new people and celebrate one of the most important (non-religious) ‘holy trinities’ of being a positive and active community member that I hold near and dear: being on bikes, being with dogs and being outside enjoying nature and community….and all this at once.

I’ve previously written about the origins and perks of the #Bikes_CISTA and how instrumental it is in my community-social health practice.

COVID put a serious dent in #Bikes_CISTA activities. The last entry was #Bikes_CISTA #49 on November 2019. Considering at start of 2020 I was in West Africa for fieldwork and then COVID hit – I suppose no updates is actually quite reasonable! Since then, I haven’t given it much thought until this week I was presented with a golden #Bikes_CISTA opportunity I just couldn’t pass up.

So without further ado – meet John, his bike, Diesel and Roxy … who are our #Bikes _CISTA #50!

#Bikes_CISTA are back!

#Bikes_CISTA #50: John, Diesel, Roxy & Bike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 10th December 2020.
John (L), Diesel (centre) and Roxy (R)

Meet John, his bike, Diesel and Roxy – #Bikes_CISTA 

I was out walking Zoe during a PhD study break and I saw this awesome team riding towards me. The trailer caught my eye. Spontaneously I blurted out something to John as he rode toward me about how cool the trailer was and how great it was to see him and the dogs out on two wheels. 

To my delight, John was happy to stop and have a chat – woo-hoo!

Diesel is the larger white bitsa in the front and Roxy is in the back. These two dynamos are rescue dogs and a very happy misfit pair – what a great outcome for all!

John lives in Cleveland and often rides Diesel and Roxy along the Morton Bay Cycleway for a regular cruisey Cleveland-Thornside-Lota-Manly return ride.

John’s dog trailer is simple but effective. He has modified a standard trailer setup to include shade ontop and Roxy’s basket on the end. He has to augment the axel a little to redistribute the weight for the two pooches.

There are rubber insulated mats on the floor plus a little extra cushioning for puppy comfort. 

I was interested to hear he had put some barrier up around the bottom of the tray to make sure wayward tails didn’t get knocked about or accidentally caught in wheels, which was a particularly considerate addition.

We chatted happily in the afternoon sun about bikes, dogs, riding with dogs and riding this local route – all while the puppies watched on.

I love that John was wearing a ‘No bad dogs’ T-shirt as well!

#Bikes_CISTA #50: John, Diesel, Roxy & Bike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 10th December 2020.
Morton Bay Cycleway. Image: Visit Brisbane

Funnily enough the very next day after meeting this crew, I saw them again while riding Leki along the foreshore. I was cruising past a busy tourist area and saw John’s bike parked under a tree.

I stopped and left my business card, but then I saw John walking Diesel and Roxy a little further on. How lucky!

 So we stopped for another chat. Hooray!

This dual interaction made me so happy. I loved the opportunistic randomness of the initial connection which was fun and interesting and genuine –  and then to have it reinforced the very next day was just lovely.

I’ll be keeping my eyes open for this fantastic #Bikes_CISTA team from now on.

It makes me happy to know there are awesome bike-people-dogs like this cruising around my community spreading positivity, good company, and wholeheartedly celebrating the #Bikes_CISTA philosophy in their own engaging way. 

Happy return #Bikes_CISTA teams!

#Bikes_CISTA #50: John, Diesel, Roxy & Bike. Bicycles Create Change.com. 10th December 2020.
Adorable! Diesel (L) and Roxy (R) ready to ‘ride on dad!’

Lunsar Cycling Team – need 8 road bikes for riders

Lunsar Cycling Team - need 8 road bikes for riders. Bicycles Create Change.com 17th November 2020.
Nina with some of the under-21s Men’s Lunsar Cycling Team. Feb 2020.

Earlier this year I was in Lunsar, Sierra Leone undertaking my PhD research. While there, I worked and rode alongside the Lunsar Cycling Team – and I had a great time! What a team! They are an incredible group of highly motivated cyclists.

I have stayed in contact and support them where ever I can.

One way to support the LCT is by supplying them with reliable road bikes so they can compete.

Currently, LCT has a very worthy fundraiser on GoFundMe which is inviting supporters to help them get 8 bikes for the team to use for competitions.

Lunsar Cycling Team - need 8 road bikes for riders. Bicycles Create Change.com 17th November 2020.
Image: Lunsar Cycling Team

What’s the situation?

The Lunsar Cycling Team is based in a town of 30,000 people where there is no electricity and limited resources. Bikes are a popular way to get around, but having your own bike is out of the reach for many locals. The team have a few donated bikes they rotate between riders to get some training in – but there are not enough reliable bikes to take them to the next level.

The riders are strong, keen and motivated and they need reliable, well-performing bikes to match.

The riders have already made a name for themselves in the local, regional and national races – and now they want to take on neighbouring countries in West Africa.

Two LCT riders have already represented Sierra Leone internationally, competing at the Tour de Guinee in 2019. All riders who ride for the national team must compete on their own bikes. LCT would like to change that, so they can achieve a greater consistency at national competitions and give the Sierra Leone Team riders a fighting chance when they next compete abroad.

To do this, the Lunsar Cycling Team need to buy eight carbon fibre road bicycles on which to compete. They have a road bike supplier in Holland who is willing to give them an incredibly generous discount – which means they can get each bike cost around £600 where they would retail at £2,000.

The team need support because although they can get these new bikes at a discounted rate, it is still considerably more than most people in Lunsar earn in six months.

Currently the team has raised £3, 557 of the total £5, 000 needed.

Please support the Lunsar Cycling Team by giving generously.

I can’t wait to see them kick arse internationally!

LYP November Bike Drive – Adelaide AU

To the Aussie readers: Happy National Recycling Week (8th – 14th Nov 2020).

Do you live in Adelaide, have a spare bike and are looking for a way to support the NRW theme of ‘Recovery – A future beyond a bin’?

Then this post is for you!

..And if you live elsewhere.. look for a similar program in your area!

Here’s a sneak peek at Lighthouse Youth Program’s November Bike Drive 2020.

LYP November Bike Drive - Adelaide AU. Bicycles Create Change.com 14th November 2020.

What is Lighthouse Youth Projects (LYP)?

Lighthouse Youth Projects Inc (LYP) was established in Adelaide, South Australia in 2016. This program delivers a range of bike programs – including BMX and MTB mentoring programs to give hope to young Australians in crippling emotional, mental and financial situations.

Lighthouse Youth Projects Inc is a registered charity and volunteer supported not-for-profit organisation sharing a love of riding and living life to the fullest. LYP strives to help young people at risk of not being amazing, empowering them for a successful future.

They work with young people, regardless of circumstance, supporting them into positive pathways through our diverse range of programs.

Their services include a range of community and social events, bike skill coaching and events, and life skills and mentoring.

Click here for more about LYP.

LYP November Bike Drive - Adelaide AU. Bicycles Create Change.com 14th November 2020.

LYP Bike Drive

Do you want to help improve the lives of young people AND support the environment at the same time?

To mark Australia’s National Recycling Week LYP is teaming up with the City of Port Adelaide Enfield and the City of Charles Sturt to take your pre-loved bikes off your hands.

LYP welcomes old (or new!) bikes that need a new home, and we are excited to get them back on the road or recycle them when they are past their used by date!

Rescuing bikes from sheds, backyards, and garages allows LYP to continue to provide their mentoring and help at-risk youth to create positive change in their lives.

Join LYP at the Beverley Recycling and Waste Centre, 2-6 Toogood Ave, Beverley, South Australia this Friday 13 & Saturday 14 November 2020!

LYP can’t wait to see you there!

BIKE DROP OFF TIMES:
Friday 13th between 8am – 4pm
Saturday 14th between 8am – 4pm

So if you are around Adelaide and have a spare bike, why not head down and meet the LYP crew and support their Nov 2020 Bike Drive.

LYP November Bike Drive - Adelaide AU.  Bicycles Create Change.com 14th November 2020.

LYP Mentoring through bikes

Not only do Lighthouse Youth Projects offer a range of community events, BMX and MTB coaching, along with life skills mentoring, but they also have a range of videos online to encourage more people to get on their bikes and ride.

LYP November Bike Drive - Adelaide AU. Bicycles Create Change.com 14th November 2020.

Mentoring through bikes

These videos cover a rage of skills, from how to bunny hop, to ‘pumping’ for when you are on a pump track and some general bike maintenance skills (like the video below).

This is another way LYP help to mentors others and share a love of bikes, riding skills, energy and enthusiasm with the next generation, encouraging everyone around them to get stoked on life.

Impressive!

Keep up the awesome work LYP!

Some content and all images and video sourced from LYP website, Vimeo, FB & IG.