Biking for Transportation

Dust off your bike and start enjoying the fresh air.

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By Adobestock/Uwe

I first learned about biking for transportation when I visited my grandparents in Germany more than a decade ago now. They lived in the countryside, where you’d often walk past or through small family farms to get where you were going, and at any given point in the summer, you had to watch out for “horse apples” on the smaller roads. My grandmother used to collect this free fertilizer and use it in her garden.

A family friend offered to take me via bike to a town near Lake Constance (also known as the “Bodensee” in German), which borders southern Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. The trip was only 10 kilometers (about 4.5 miles), but involved a route that I was certainly not prepared for.

Reader, it was largely uphill.

In all her enthusiasm about showing me the beautiful German countryside, my friend had wanted to take me along the scenic route — and had drastically overestimated my abilities. I had to walk my bike uphill for the last quarter of the trip, and we decided to take a more level route home. Despite the agonizingly sore muscles the next day and then the next week, I was intrigued by the idea that the bike wasn’t just something you played with in the neighborhood as a kid, but rather it was a tool that could help move you from one place to the next, under your own power.

Now, one of my favorite modes of transportation is biking. I love biking down to the library or to the local parks. My area is slowly becoming more inclusive and mindful of cyclists and the necessary infrastructure to support them. If you’re able to, consider biking down to a place you’d normally drive. Here’s how to get started, whether you have a spare bike in the garage or you’re looking for a new ride.

  • Published on Feb 27, 2024
Tagged with: Biking, green travel
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