Tags:
I've been taking Clybourn into work instead of Elston for the reasons Cameron mentioned. Even then there is snow in the parking lane so most cars are parked in the bike lane forcing me to ride just outside of it. Thankfully most traffic has been cool about it and although a few drivers will pass me closer than I like, no one has been particularly aggressive. It's only been the stretch between Halsted and Larrabee that has been a bit hairy since drivers tend to speed on those blocks.
I reported that a bit of Milwaukee Ave.'s protected bike lane was pure ice the other day (south of Ogden). I'm never had a wipeout like that...in 20+ years of biking in the city. It's a new phenomenon for me to deal with these "protected" bike lanes that are not well maintained, plowed, salted, etc. often enough in the winter. I was surprised by the ice, because my entire commute that morning was fantastic and ice-free...until I hit the protected bike lane. It looked clear, but I should have stayed out. I didn't realize it had received zero maintenance/salt, like the rest of the bike lanes in "unprotected" stretches...which benefit from spillover salt and plowing from regular street maintenance/trucks. It's a week later, and I hurt my back so bad, I'm probably another week from being able to get back on my bike. I'm going to be staying clear of protected bike lanes in the winter, riding in (now narrowed) car lanes to stay safe from the under-maintained "protected" lanes. Until the city figures out how to properly maintain the closed off bike lanes in the winter, I think adding more of these are a poor idea and negatively impact winter bike commuters. I wish there was a way to add removable plastic barriers that could be taken out in the winter so the bike lanes could be plowed and salted properly with the trucks that do an adequate job. What they do now in the protected lanes is a joke.
The bike lanes along Harison border on useles; they're filled with snow and on most other days they become convient express lanes for frustrated drivers. I miss the days when there were no bike lanes. Most of these winter bike lane issues didnt exist and you rode with traffic, for better or worse.
Thanks Tom A.K., when I couldn't move/get out of bed the day after my crash, I knew it was time to see a doctor, pronto. Scared the life out of me. No broken bones. But needed some heavy duty pain relief to be able to walk last week. Feeling a lot better after a week...but still a little sore. Hopefully back in the saddle in the next week or two...hard to take the El after biking every day for years. Didn't realize one could wreck their back so badly with one slip on the ice.
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members