Thursday, September 2 2010 | Vancouver smart city living magazine: events, lifestyle, restaurants, shopping, fashion, arts and more
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Why do YOU bike to work?

By Lesa Dee Tree | Image: Flickr / Garry Knight | Published: May 05, 2009

<<< Back to Bike to Work Week 2009
 

In anticipation of Bike to Work Week, Granville Online asked these savvy Vancouverites why they bike to work.

“‘Cause it just feels so damn good in the morning. I started to bike to work 13 years ago when they invented polyester—you couldn’t bring cloths in your backpack that would wrinkle in an office environment.” —Tania Marshall    

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Gear up for Bike to Work Week

By Lesa Dee Tree | Image: Lesa Dee Tree | Published: May 05, 2009
Pictured: Helen Camisa and
Genny Krikorian plan on
commuting by bike to work
at the Vancouver Museum
during Bike to Work Week,

May 11–17, 2009.


Did you know that cars and trucks are responsible for 75 percent of the pollution that is created in the Metro Vancouver? Good reason to leave that car at home, pull out your bike and gear up for Bike to Work Week, May 11–17, 2009. Communities all over the province will be joining in for this third annual event.

“I have a car and live close enough that I did not want to drive, so I got a bike as exercise and guilt-free travel,” says first-time Bike to Work participant and new cyclist Helen Camisa, development coordinator for the Vancouver Museum.

Where one in every three commuter cars is only carrying one person, Bike to Work Week is an opportunity to raise awareness of the benefits of bike commuting to work year-round. “My main reason to bike to work is to get transportation and exercise at the same time,” says Genny Krikorian, marketing assistant for the Vancouver Museum. “It takes the same amount of time for me to cycle or take transit.”


Organizing the bike-trazavanza is the Vancouver Area Cycling Coalition (VACC), which will be offering incentives throughout the week, with bike-a-day giveaways at city commuter stations through donations from Fab bikes, Different Bikes, Raincity Bikes, Caps Cycle, Bike Doctor and Reckless Bikes.

“I think a lot of [Bike to Work Week], for me, is the celebration part” says Erin O’Melinn, organizer for VACC. “I mean, you can cycle anytime, but you don’t always have these opportunities to enjoy it with other people. People come together and say, ‘Hey, we’re doing something great for ourselves,’ and that comes out in the parties and at the commuter stations, and hopefully, in the workplaces.”

To participate in Bike to Work Week, you can register and log your commute to work through the VACC website, where prizes will be awarded based on categories such as the size of the rider, trips logged and the number of kilometers; there are prizes for all participant levels.

Commuter stations all over the region will provide food, coffee, maps, cycling routes, advocacy, bike mechanics and draw prizes. Giveaways—fenders, helmets, lights and gift certificates—will be found at the stations during peak commuter times, 6:30–9:00 a.m. and 4:00–6:00 p.m.

For more information about Bike to Work Week, contact Erin O’Melinn or visit Vancouver Area Cycling Coalition (VACC).    

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AUDIO SLIDESHOW: Why save the UBC Farm?

By Lesa Dee Tree | Image: Courtesy UBC Farm and by Jeannette Ordas | Published: April 06, 2009
Friends of the UBC Farm’s Andrew Rushmere speaks

Lesa Dee Tree talks with the Friends of the UBC Farm’s Andrew Rushmere about the plight of the UBC Farm and how they plan to save it.

Learn about food security and organic gardening programs on the UBC farm, and understand the implications of the Official Community Plan on the farm. Plus, find out who’ll be speaking and performing at the Great Farm Trek of 2009.

Photos are by Jeannette Ordas and courtesy the UBC Farm.    

Farm Trek aims to save UBC Farm

By Lesa Dee Tree | Image: Courtesy UBC Farm and by Jeannette Ordas | Published: April 06, 2009
Save UBC farm

On April 7, the Friends of UBC Farm are organizing the Great Farm Trek of 2009. While this is an opportunity to celebrate the farm and its community of supporters, organizers of the event also hope to encourage the UBC Board of Governors to support the proposed preservation of the 24-hectare farm in its current location.

     

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