In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
19 April 2020
18 April 2020
Specialized Donates Bikes To Essential Workers
In the cycling community, Specialized is often seen, along with Trek and possibly Cannndale, as one of the "800 pound gorillas" of the bicycle industry.
While those three companies have gobbled up some smaller bike and parts makers, and often dictate what dealers can and can't sell in their shops, I should point out that the companies that make cheap bike-shaped objects sold in big-box stores are much larger. And, even those companies are dwarfed by corporations in other industries such as automobiles, petroleum and high technology.
Having said all of that, I want to give Specialized a shout-out for their recent announcement: They are giving away 500 bikes to essential workers.
Ian Kenny says Specialized will be distributing half of those bikes in California and the other half in New York. The wheels earmarked for the Big Apple will be distributed via Transportation Alternatives, and arrangements will be made with local shops to ensure that recipients also receive helmets and other safety gear.
He explains that Specialized will give bikes to workers that are deemed essential under Federal guidelines. So, while people in the health-care professions will be among the recipients, so will workers like grocery store employees, bus drivers, farm laborers and others whose usual modes of transportation have been "flipped upside down" by the pandemic.
Most beneificiaries will get the "Cirrus" commuter model, which retails for about $550 new. A few workers with longer commutes, however, will be gifted with one of the company's electric bikes.
As I said in an earlier post, if anything good comes of this pandemic, it might be that policy-makers, planners and the general public will see that the bicycle is not only a viable alternative form of transportation and recreation, but also an integral part of any locality's infrastructure.
While those three companies have gobbled up some smaller bike and parts makers, and often dictate what dealers can and can't sell in their shops, I should point out that the companies that make cheap bike-shaped objects sold in big-box stores are much larger. And, even those companies are dwarfed by corporations in other industries such as automobiles, petroleum and high technology.
Having said all of that, I want to give Specialized a shout-out for their recent announcement: They are giving away 500 bikes to essential workers.
Ian Kenny says Specialized will be distributing half of those bikes in California and the other half in New York. The wheels earmarked for the Big Apple will be distributed via Transportation Alternatives, and arrangements will be made with local shops to ensure that recipients also receive helmets and other safety gear.
![]() |
| Artist's rendering of Specialized's bikes-for-essential-workers program |
He explains that Specialized will give bikes to workers that are deemed essential under Federal guidelines. So, while people in the health-care professions will be among the recipients, so will workers like grocery store employees, bus drivers, farm laborers and others whose usual modes of transportation have been "flipped upside down" by the pandemic.
Most beneificiaries will get the "Cirrus" commuter model, which retails for about $550 new. A few workers with longer commutes, however, will be gifted with one of the company's electric bikes.
As I said in an earlier post, if anything good comes of this pandemic, it might be that policy-makers, planners and the general public will see that the bicycle is not only a viable alternative form of transportation and recreation, but also an integral part of any locality's infrastructure.
17 April 2020
Standing Still
Late yesterday afternoon I rode along the North Shore of Queens and Nassau County. The streets of Malba, Whitestone, Bayside, Little Neck and Great Neck were all but deserted. So were the parks and other public spaces.
On the beach at Francis Lewis Park, I felt as if I were the only one who was moving.
And, judging from the lack of traffic on the Whitestone Bridge, I may have been the only one going anywhere.
Of course, it takes a lot to stop Arielle, my Mercian Audax, or any of my other bikes!
On the beach at Francis Lewis Park, I felt as if I were the only one who was moving.
And, judging from the lack of traffic on the Whitestone Bridge, I may have been the only one going anywhere.
Of course, it takes a lot to stop Arielle, my Mercian Audax, or any of my other bikes!
16 April 2020
Exploiting Animals And Bicycles
I don't have a lot of money. And my apartment, while clean, well-maintained and safe, is hardly what starry-eyed young people in the steppes imagine when they dream of living in New York.
Still, I know I'm privileged. For one thing, I've been able to travel overseas in each of the past five years. (I don't think I will this year because of the COVID-19 epidemic.) I can do that mainly because I don't have to support anyone besides myself and Marlee, and I really don't have expensive hobbies. (For all of the bikes and bike-related equipment and schwag I have, I really haven't spent a lot on them, compared to some with a two-wheeled obsession.) Also, besides working, there really isn't much I have to do. So, I can spend my time riding, writing, reading or doing other things I like, simply because I want to do them.
Another reason I know I'm privileged is that Marlee doesn't have to do a damned thing to "earn her keep" or justify her existence. In most of the world, the animals people keep serve some purpose or another. In fact, some beasts work all day for the privelege of becoming dinner that night. Marlee doesn't have to worry about anything like that. She sleeps 15-17 hours a day, and I wouldn't be upset if she slept a few more. Of course, I benefit because sometimes she dozes off in my lap, or by my side, and I drift off into dreamland, if only for a brief spell.
Now, I can understand keeping animals as beasts of burden. I might have a more difficult time caring for and feeding an animal--and developing a bond with him or her (as I inevitably will: that's how I am)--only to find him or her on my lunch or dinner plate. Still, having been in rural southeast Asia, the Middle East and even parts of this country, I can understand how people can raise animals they know they're going to eat--or that will be eaten by someone else. I understand that I, as a city dweller, have the option--all right, let's call it what it is: privilege--of not having to look at or touch an animal before eating it.
(That said, I don't eat nearly as much animal flesh as I once did. I don't think I'll ever be entirely vegan, though, because I like dairy products--though I don't consume as much of those, either, as I once did. )
On the other hand, there really is no reason for what some people train or force their animals to do. I have long believed that dolphins are the most intelligent animals of all--or, at least, they are more intelligent than we are--because while naval forces around the world have used them to detect mines and protect ships, there are some things those beautiful creatures simply would not do.
As much as I love cycling, and I have sometimes wished Marlee, Max, Charlie and my other kitties could accompany me on rides, there aren't many reasons to make an animal ride a bicycle. It's usually done for yuks, or other kinds of exploitation.
I'm thinking now of the zoo in Thailand that made one of its chimps ride a bike in human clothes, with a mask over its face. Now, if I had to wear those clothes, I might want to wear a mask, too. But it gets worse: the poor primate had to ride with disinfectant tanks strapped to its back--and spray that disinfectant around the zoo.
Oh, as if that weren't humiliating enough, before beginning his "shift", the chimp is chained to a wooden block while pulling on a diaper, shorts and the tacky shirt.
This video is disturbing. But I must say that it achieves something: How often have you seen something in which both an animal and a bicycle are abused?
Still, I know I'm privileged. For one thing, I've been able to travel overseas in each of the past five years. (I don't think I will this year because of the COVID-19 epidemic.) I can do that mainly because I don't have to support anyone besides myself and Marlee, and I really don't have expensive hobbies. (For all of the bikes and bike-related equipment and schwag I have, I really haven't spent a lot on them, compared to some with a two-wheeled obsession.) Also, besides working, there really isn't much I have to do. So, I can spend my time riding, writing, reading or doing other things I like, simply because I want to do them.
![]() |
| Who, me? |
Another reason I know I'm privileged is that Marlee doesn't have to do a damned thing to "earn her keep" or justify her existence. In most of the world, the animals people keep serve some purpose or another. In fact, some beasts work all day for the privelege of becoming dinner that night. Marlee doesn't have to worry about anything like that. She sleeps 15-17 hours a day, and I wouldn't be upset if she slept a few more. Of course, I benefit because sometimes she dozes off in my lap, or by my side, and I drift off into dreamland, if only for a brief spell.
Now, I can understand keeping animals as beasts of burden. I might have a more difficult time caring for and feeding an animal--and developing a bond with him or her (as I inevitably will: that's how I am)--only to find him or her on my lunch or dinner plate. Still, having been in rural southeast Asia, the Middle East and even parts of this country, I can understand how people can raise animals they know they're going to eat--or that will be eaten by someone else. I understand that I, as a city dweller, have the option--all right, let's call it what it is: privilege--of not having to look at or touch an animal before eating it.
(That said, I don't eat nearly as much animal flesh as I once did. I don't think I'll ever be entirely vegan, though, because I like dairy products--though I don't consume as much of those, either, as I once did. )
On the other hand, there really is no reason for what some people train or force their animals to do. I have long believed that dolphins are the most intelligent animals of all--or, at least, they are more intelligent than we are--because while naval forces around the world have used them to detect mines and protect ships, there are some things those beautiful creatures simply would not do.
As much as I love cycling, and I have sometimes wished Marlee, Max, Charlie and my other kitties could accompany me on rides, there aren't many reasons to make an animal ride a bicycle. It's usually done for yuks, or other kinds of exploitation.
I'm thinking now of the zoo in Thailand that made one of its chimps ride a bike in human clothes, with a mask over its face. Now, if I had to wear those clothes, I might want to wear a mask, too. But it gets worse: the poor primate had to ride with disinfectant tanks strapped to its back--and spray that disinfectant around the zoo.
Oh, as if that weren't humiliating enough, before beginning his "shift", the chimp is chained to a wooden block while pulling on a diaper, shorts and the tacky shirt.
This video is disturbing. But I must say that it achieves something: How often have you seen something in which both an animal and a bicycle are abused?
15 April 2020
Do Clothes Make The Bike?
I've seen bicycles used, beautifully and imaginatively, in window displays and art installations.
I've also seen some rather extreme attempts to fit bicycles and people to each other.
I don't, however, know what to make of this:
I've also seen some rather extreme attempts to fit bicycles and people to each other.
I don't, however, know what to make of this:
14 April 2020
Who Can Go Lower?
Stealing someone's bike is one of the lowest things one human being can do to another.
All right, I'll confess: I'm not the first person to say as much. Tom Cuthbertson said it in Anybody's Bike Book, warning that bike locks are only but so effective in deterring theft.
Now, one of the lowest things anybody has said, at least in recent history, was uttered by Donald Trump. (Are you surprised?) He claimed that there wasn't really a shortage of masks. Rather, he claimed, they were going "out the back door."
Although I am not a health-care worker, I took umbrage to that remark because some of my current and former students work in hospitals and nursing homes and a neighbor/friend of mine is a nurse in one of this city's major hospitals. It's hard not to wonder when--or whether--I'll see or hear from them again.
Trump accusing them of theft is a bit like Lance Armstrong accusing another rider of "juicing." Or a Kardashian castigating anybody for a lack of restraint.
How much lower can someone go?
It looks like somebody has plumbed such depths. I am talking about the lowlife who took Dan Harvey's bike.
At 2 am GMT, he had just finished his nine-hour shift at Queen's Medical Centre in Nottingham, England. He'd spent the night as he's spent previous nights: treating COVID-19 patients in the hospital's intensive care unit.
He went to an area of the hospital where a staff ID is required for entry. He expected to unlock his bike and "clear his head" as he pedaled home.
Instead, he had to take a taxi: His bike was gone. And his wasn't the first stolen from that limited-access area.
The ray of light in this darkness came after Harvey shared his loss on social media. Soon, offers to replace his wheels came in.
He's riding to work again. But it doesn't make stealing a bike from someone who rides it to a job where he puts his life on the line for others any less base of an act.
All right, I'll confess: I'm not the first person to say as much. Tom Cuthbertson said it in Anybody's Bike Book, warning that bike locks are only but so effective in deterring theft.
Now, one of the lowest things anybody has said, at least in recent history, was uttered by Donald Trump. (Are you surprised?) He claimed that there wasn't really a shortage of masks. Rather, he claimed, they were going "out the back door."
Although I am not a health-care worker, I took umbrage to that remark because some of my current and former students work in hospitals and nursing homes and a neighbor/friend of mine is a nurse in one of this city's major hospitals. It's hard not to wonder when--or whether--I'll see or hear from them again.
Trump accusing them of theft is a bit like Lance Armstrong accusing another rider of "juicing." Or a Kardashian castigating anybody for a lack of restraint.
How much lower can someone go?
It looks like somebody has plumbed such depths. I am talking about the lowlife who took Dan Harvey's bike.
At 2 am GMT, he had just finished his nine-hour shift at Queen's Medical Centre in Nottingham, England. He'd spent the night as he's spent previous nights: treating COVID-19 patients in the hospital's intensive care unit.
![]() |
| Dan Harvey, medic |
He went to an area of the hospital where a staff ID is required for entry. He expected to unlock his bike and "clear his head" as he pedaled home.
Instead, he had to take a taxi: His bike was gone. And his wasn't the first stolen from that limited-access area.
The ray of light in this darkness came after Harvey shared his loss on social media. Soon, offers to replace his wheels came in.
![]() |
| Dan Harvey, cyclist |
He's riding to work again. But it doesn't make stealing a bike from someone who rides it to a job where he puts his life on the line for others any less base of an act.
13 April 2020
Empty Spaces, Everywhere
Over the weekend, I took two rides. On Saturday, I pedaled up to Greenwich, Connecticut. Yesterday, I took a spin out to Point Lookout, on the South Shore of Long Island.
What did those rides have in common, besides pleasure? Well, both were seasonably cool (high temperatures around 14-15C or 58-60 F) and sunny. Oh, and there was plenty of wind. Fortunately for me, I pedaled into it much of the way to Connecticut and on my way down to Rockaway Beach, where the wind blew at my side on my way to Point Lookout. That meant, of course, I had the wind at my back most of the way from Connecticut, and for a long flat stretch from Rockaway Beach to Woodside.
It also meant that I saw very little motorized traffic. I think that in 252 kilometers (157 miles) of riding, I probably saw fewer cars and trucks than I see in my 8 kilometer (5 mile) commute on weekday mornings.
That might be why the expanse of water, as happy as I was to see it, wasn't as much of a contrast with the road behind me as it usually is.
What did those rides have in common, besides pleasure? Well, both were seasonably cool (high temperatures around 14-15C or 58-60 F) and sunny. Oh, and there was plenty of wind. Fortunately for me, I pedaled into it much of the way to Connecticut and on my way down to Rockaway Beach, where the wind blew at my side on my way to Point Lookout. That meant, of course, I had the wind at my back most of the way from Connecticut, and for a long flat stretch from Rockaway Beach to Woodside.
It also meant that I saw very little motorized traffic. I think that in 252 kilometers (157 miles) of riding, I probably saw fewer cars and trucks than I see in my 8 kilometer (5 mile) commute on weekday mornings.
That might be why the expanse of water, as happy as I was to see it, wasn't as much of a contrast with the road behind me as it usually is.
12 April 2020
Happy--Whatever!
It's kind of odd to say "Happy" during a worldwide epidemic that's killing thousands of people and leading to lockdowns all over the world.
But I'll say it anyway: Happy Easter. Happy Passover. Happy Ramadan. Happy--I don't know--third or fourth or fifth week (depending on where you are) of Spring--or Fall. Since I'm in the Northern Hemisphere, I'm going with Spring.
Happy...Whatever!
But I'll say it anyway: Happy Easter. Happy Passover. Happy Ramadan. Happy--I don't know--third or fourth or fifth week (depending on where you are) of Spring--or Fall. Since I'm in the Northern Hemisphere, I'm going with Spring.
Happy...Whatever!
11 April 2020
The Statute Of Limitations--Or A Limitation On Statutes?
Fernandina Beach, on Amelia Island, is the northernmost city on Florida's Atlantic coast.
That's certainly a distinction of sorts. But until recently, it was unique in another way: Since 1562, it has been ruled by France, Spain, Great Britain, Spain (again), the Republic of Florida, the Green Cross of Florida, Mexico, the Confederate States of America and the United States. It is, therefore, the only municipality in this country to have had eight different national flags flown over it.
Now it may have another distinction.
A Nassau County sheriff's deputy spotted Aaron Seth Thomas and Megan Lynn Mondanaro narrowly escaped being hit by a car while riding their bicycles--without lights.
But what got them arrested was their breathalyzer tests. They'd been drinking at a nearby bar before they got on their saddles. Moreover, seven cans of beer were found in Thomas' backpack.
They were placed in back of the deputy's car for transport to jail. While waiting, they removed their clothes and engage in sex.
(Don't ask!)
The deputy pulled Thomas out of the car but he shoved the deputy to the ground and ran off naked. He was later apprehended by an ice cream store. In the meantime, Mondanaro was moved to a different car and allegedly kicked two officers along the way.
Thomas and Mondanaro are now in custody, facing various charges. Their actions have now added to Fernandina Beach's uniqueness: In addition to being the only municipality to have flown eight national flags, it is (probably) the only, or at least one of the few, places in this country where a couple is in custody for having too much fun.
(I don't judge!)
That's certainly a distinction of sorts. But until recently, it was unique in another way: Since 1562, it has been ruled by France, Spain, Great Britain, Spain (again), the Republic of Florida, the Green Cross of Florida, Mexico, the Confederate States of America and the United States. It is, therefore, the only municipality in this country to have had eight different national flags flown over it.
Now it may have another distinction.
A Nassau County sheriff's deputy spotted Aaron Seth Thomas and Megan Lynn Mondanaro narrowly escaped being hit by a car while riding their bicycles--without lights.
But what got them arrested was their breathalyzer tests. They'd been drinking at a nearby bar before they got on their saddles. Moreover, seven cans of beer were found in Thomas' backpack.
They were placed in back of the deputy's car for transport to jail. While waiting, they removed their clothes and engage in sex.
(Don't ask!)
The deputy pulled Thomas out of the car but he shoved the deputy to the ground and ran off naked. He was later apprehended by an ice cream store. In the meantime, Mondanaro was moved to a different car and allegedly kicked two officers along the way.
Thomas and Mondanaro are now in custody, facing various charges. Their actions have now added to Fernandina Beach's uniqueness: In addition to being the only municipality to have flown eight national flags, it is (probably) the only, or at least one of the few, places in this country where a couple is in custody for having too much fun.
(I don't judge!)
10 April 2020
Around The World--Until COVID-19 Struck
I'd been thinking about two holidays this summer. One would have been a trip to a faraway place, like the ones I've taken to Greece, Southeast Asia, Italy and France during the past few summers. The other would have been a bike tour that would have taken me out of this city but would have kept me, probably in the United States, definitely in North America.
In fact, I was ready to book the "exotic" trip a few weeks ago. But, for whatever reasons, I decided to "sleep on it."
The next day, I read that one of the places I'd thought about visiting was under lockdown, and a cruise boat was quarantined in the area. And then the travel restrictions spread across regions, countries and even oceans.
Even if everything goes back to "normal," I don't think I'll be taking the "exotic" trip this year. For one thing, I can't count on travel restrictions being lifted or flights being restored. Also, I have to admit, I might be a bit leery of having to spend hours in enclosed spaces.
The bike trip may still be possible. At least, that's what I think--or hope. But I'm not counting on taking that trek, either, especially after reading about Marcia van der Meer and Bas Baan.
More than a year ago, Ms. van der Meer embarked on a round-the-world bicycle tour from her native Netherlands. She crossed the Atlantic in a cargo ship, rode the length of South America and hitchiked from island to island in the Caribbean with American sailors before she arrived in Miami. There, she met Mr. Baan and set out across the United States.
Somewhere in the middle of their cross-country ride, they first heard about COVID-19. "We thought, 'Ah, it's some kind of disease over there in China, you know," van der Meer recalls.
But, as they rode across the western US, one part of the world--and the US--locked down. Still, they thought that once they got to Los Angeles, they'd continue their journey to Japan. Then the Land of the Rising Sun closed its borders to nonessential travel from the US and other places, and van der Meer's travel visa was about to expire.
Baan and van der Meer flew back to the Netherlands. For both of them, cutting their trip short was more than a disappointment. "This is the culmination of years-long dreams, savings, banking time off and putting aside money," Baan explained. "I think it's a dream deferred."
For van der Meer, it's not only a "dream deferred" or lost savings: Aborting her trip could also mean cutting her income considerably. "I write books, I do presentations in theatres and everything afterward when I come home," she says. "If I cannot finish my trip, I don't know what will happen to my income."
Still, she says, "I will do it." She plans to "chill for a couple of years and "I will do another attempt to go around the world by bicycle."
In fact, I was ready to book the "exotic" trip a few weeks ago. But, for whatever reasons, I decided to "sleep on it."
The next day, I read that one of the places I'd thought about visiting was under lockdown, and a cruise boat was quarantined in the area. And then the travel restrictions spread across regions, countries and even oceans.
Even if everything goes back to "normal," I don't think I'll be taking the "exotic" trip this year. For one thing, I can't count on travel restrictions being lifted or flights being restored. Also, I have to admit, I might be a bit leery of having to spend hours in enclosed spaces.
![]() |
| Marcia van der Meer in the Los Angeles International Airport |
The bike trip may still be possible. At least, that's what I think--or hope. But I'm not counting on taking that trek, either, especially after reading about Marcia van der Meer and Bas Baan.
More than a year ago, Ms. van der Meer embarked on a round-the-world bicycle tour from her native Netherlands. She crossed the Atlantic in a cargo ship, rode the length of South America and hitchiked from island to island in the Caribbean with American sailors before she arrived in Miami. There, she met Mr. Baan and set out across the United States.
Somewhere in the middle of their cross-country ride, they first heard about COVID-19. "We thought, 'Ah, it's some kind of disease over there in China, you know," van der Meer recalls.
But, as they rode across the western US, one part of the world--and the US--locked down. Still, they thought that once they got to Los Angeles, they'd continue their journey to Japan. Then the Land of the Rising Sun closed its borders to nonessential travel from the US and other places, and van der Meer's travel visa was about to expire.
Baan and van der Meer flew back to the Netherlands. For both of them, cutting their trip short was more than a disappointment. "This is the culmination of years-long dreams, savings, banking time off and putting aside money," Baan explained. "I think it's a dream deferred."
![]() |
| Marcia van der Meer and Bas Baan, on their way back to the Netherlands. |
For van der Meer, it's not only a "dream deferred" or lost savings: Aborting her trip could also mean cutting her income considerably. "I write books, I do presentations in theatres and everything afterward when I come home," she says. "If I cannot finish my trip, I don't know what will happen to my income."
Still, she says, "I will do it." She plans to "chill for a couple of years and "I will do another attempt to go around the world by bicycle."
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