new year’s eve

2010 Retrospective: Bicycles, Helmets & More

By Bell Sports on December 29th, 2010 / Add a Comment
Filed in: Bell Sports, Bicycle News, Excercise, Festival, Festivals, bicycle events, bike safety, biking, event, general biking, holiday, random facts

As 2010 comes to a close and everyone starts mentally preparing for their New Year’s resolutions, we’d like to take a look back at a year that was quite momentous for the greater cycling community. Cities found a renewed focus on alternative transportation, inventors unveiled new bicycle innovations, and people, companies and organizations across the country displayed unparalleled philanthropy. Let’s take a look back at some of the best stories, covered on this blog and elsewhere, that shaped our tight-knit community (and the World!) over the last year.

  • A good place to start is with Bicycles for Humanity (B4H), the grassroots organization that empowers people to improve their quality of life through donated bicycles, who recently announced they shipped a total of 5,215 bikes (along with spare parts and tools) to impoverished African communities in 2010. Check out some of the other accomplishments B4H reported this year at PR.com.
  • Along those same lines, an 8-year-old girl in Washington recently made a generous donation. Tori Wollard was one of two winners of the Washington Daily News’ Christmas coloring contest. Her prize: a brand new bike from Wal-Mart. The first thing Tori did when she got the bike: donated it to The Salvation Army so it could be given to a needy girl! When asked what motivated her to donate her prize, Tori said, “I thought maybe a little girl who’s probably the same age as me probably couldn’t afford one.” Now that’s the true Christmas spirit. Read the entire article Washington winner shares the spirit of Christmas (Mike Voss, Washington Daily News)
  • There were  four particular bike and helmet related inventions that piqued our interest this year: the Bamboo bike, the Bendy Bike, the TuneBug Shake, and the innagural Bicycle City.
    • Bamboo bikes are manufactured by several companies across the county, but the folks at Bamboo Bike Studio offer something completely different. With firms in San Francisco and Brooklyn, they host weekend classes where people can build a bike made from bamboo themselves! Some say bamboo bikes actually have an advantage over metal-framed ones – they give a smoother ride, thanks to bamboo’s natural ability to absorb vibration (plus you’ll get points for going green). For more information read Bamboo Bicycles Grow in Popularity at Brooklyn Studio (Bradley Blackburn, ABC News)
    • Back in July a designer in Britain invented a revolutionary folding bicycle: The Bendy Bike. Using a ratchet system built into the frame of the bike to allow it to wrap around a pole, the lock can be wrapped through both wheels and the frame. Check out the pictures at DailyMail.co.uk
    • The TuneBug Shake is a portable speaker, with “SurfaceSound” technology. What is that, you ask? It uses a specially designed speaker that turns anything it lays on into a louder, larger-sounding speaker. Tunebug’s Shake is specifically designed to attach to a bike helmet, turning it into a booming speaker! Plus, this will save your ears later pains from those ear buds and relieve you for the dangers of listening to headphones while riding. Read Five fresh gadgets for the tech-minded for more info on the TuneBug Shake (Quibian Salazar-Moreno, Boulder Weekly.com)
    • Bicycle City, South Carolina: We covered this back in November, but wanted to provide an update: According to a report in Columbia’s weekly newspaper freetimes, on Dec. 11, 2010 Bicycle City (located in Lexington, SC) showcased its plans to the public with an all day event including biking, hiking, kayaking, live music, tree planting and organic gardening and much more. We’re happy to see that this is taking off, and we’re looking forward to watching this community develop in 2011.
  • In St. Louis, MO the Federal Transit Administration recently said it would award $1 million to the Metro transit agency for bicycle pathway connections along the Mississippi River and the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, or Gateway Arch. FTA awards $1M for Arch bike pathway (St. Louis Business Journal)
  • The above example is just one of many, many similar stories from across the country where cities and municipalities made moves to expand the use of bicycles in their communities. Read our June 2010 blog post Bikes & Goverment for a look at some of the things that governments are doing to promote cycling.
  • If your New Year’s resolution is to get in shape, consider starting 2011 with a bike ride. Spoke-N-Sport Bikes in Sioux Falls, SD is set to host their 24th New Year’s Day Bike Ride. New this year is an added indoor competition that is separate from the regular ride. Competitors will race each other on stationary trainers, and the winner goes home with one of the single speed bikes used for the race. Visit http://spoke-n-sport.com/ for more information.
  • There are events like this taking place across the country, but if you can’t find something in your town, don’t let that discourage you. Go out and forge a new path for yourself! Take a new route that you haven’t gone on before. Or maybe add a few miles onto your traditional ride. Whatever you decide to do, be safe and don’t forget to wear your Bell helmet! Enjoy!
  • For a look at some of the top cycling-related news out of Britain,  be sure to read the Environmental Transport Association’s Most popular cycling stories in 2010. The Guiness World Record-shattering eight-mile bicycle wheelie is pretty astounding, as is the idea of using the TamTam Flash GPS … expect to see that in 2011.

We hope you all had a great 2010 and have an even better 2011. Happy New Year!

+ Read More

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Did you know? Bell’s Fast Facts Fridays

By pdoherty on January 1st, 2010 / 1 Comment
Filed in: Bell Sports, helmets, holiday, random facts

Today is New Year’s Day, and while that means it is the first day of 2010, there are many other firsts taking place today as well. At Bell, for instance, this is our very first post of the New Year! In order to celebrate this special day, we’ve pulled together some New Year’s Day facts and firsts for your reading pleasure.

1. On New Year’s Day, people in certain countries gather on beaches and run into the water to celebrate the New Year (sometimes known as polar bear plunges). Canada, Ireland, United Kingdom, United States and Australia are the most popular countries for this. (Wikipedia)

2. On January 1, 1968, Evel Knievel crashed his bike while attempting to jump the fountains at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas for the first time. When he awakens from a 28-day coma, he credits his Bell helmet with helping to save his life. (Bell Sports)

3. In 1908, for the first time, a ball was dropped in New York City‘s Times Square to signify the start of the New Year at midnight. (AllExperts)

4. The Bicycle Transportation Alliance (BTA) based in Portland, Oregon, hosts an annual New Year’s Day bike ride that has been going on for more than 50 years!

5. The song typically heard streaming through television sets as soon as the ball drops at the stroke of midnight on January 1 is called Auld Lang Syne and originated as a Scottish poem. The title of the song translates into English as “old long since” (Wikipedia)

Another mainstream notion synonymous with New Years is making a resolution. What’s your resolution this New Years? Perhaps it’s getting out on your bicycle more often? Whatever promise it is that you’ve made for yourself in 2010, let us know below! Oh, by the way….Happy New Year!!
evil
newyears2010

+ Read More

Tags: , , , , , , ,