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Mike,
There are reasons we might not want the feel of people communicating via walkie-talkies "running" the ride, but to address the mechanics of your suggestion, who would the people at the front have been?
2 people largely "led" about the first 3 miles or so, and then the cowboys couldn't be held back and the ride sped up with mostly newbies and very infrequent participants (and some guy yelling something about a Pony) racing away at the front.
You would have had nobody communicating to nobody.
At some point I don't think you're going to be able to keep things from getting strung out, unless you can consistently put a team of 6-8 people who are committed to staying at the front and leading in an authoritative manner for the entire ride . . . I was satisfied that we were together until we cleared the loop, at least.
It takes much more than one ambulance to cause the ride to spread out.
Were you at the front at all on this ride? I think you're making some assumptions about what happens up there.
Was there anything good about the ride?
Widespread mellowness due to the beautiful weather worked in our favor last night.
Mike,
There are reasons we might not want the feel of people communicating via walkie-talkies "running" the ride, but to address the mechanics of your suggestion, who would the people at the front have been?
2 people largely "led" about the first 3 miles or so, and then the cowboys couldn't be held back and the ride sped up with mostly newbies and very infrequent participants (and some guy yelling something about a Pony) racing away at the front.
You would have had nobody communicating to nobody.
At some point I don't think you're going to be able to keep things from getting strung out, unless you can consistently put a team of 6-8 people who are committed to staying at the front and leading in an authoritative manner for the entire ride . . . I was satisfied that we were together until we cleared the loop, at least.
It takes much more than one ambulance to cause the ride to spread out.
Were you at the front at all on this ride? I think you're making some assumptions about what happens up there.
We have to walk a fine line between being spontaneous, leaderless, anarchistic (meaning non-heirarchical, not chaotic) and having the mass turn into something that is dangerous for more vulnerable participants and/or becomes something that won't be tolerated by law enforcement (make no mistake, CCM could be shut down any month the CPD decided to do so.).
To me, having leadership is acceptable so long as it doesn't happen in a way that limits anyone who wants to flow into a leadership role for however long. Friday's mass was a good example of leadership shifting to various individuals who were at the front at different times.
Would be interested to hear specifics on when and where the mass seemed to be too spread out.
Also, there have been few reports of what happened on the ride; I was about 1/2 way back, or maybe more, when we came upon the ClarkHalsted intersection and couldn't see where the ride had went-- we stopped and stood there, and soon about maybe 300 others did the same until it became sort of a street party. So the bulk of the mass continued on in some direction from that point before we got here-- anyone know where it went?
Jason W said:I was just thinking... You guys do try and lead the mass (thanks for everyone's effort btw). I don't think anyone expects the mass to be totally controlled. It seems like this could only help the effort. FRS/GMRS radios are cheap and should do the job. I have two. anyway... just saying...
H3N3 said:Mike,
There are reasons we might not want the feel of people communicating via walkie-talkies "running" the ride, but to address the mechanics of your suggestion, who would the people at the front have been?
2 people largely "led" about the first 3 miles or so, and then the cowboys couldn't be held back and the ride sped up with mostly newbies and very infrequent participants (and some guy yelling something about a Pony) racing away at the front. You would have had nobody communicating to nobody. At some point I don't think you're going to be able to keep things from getting strung out, unless you can consistently put a team of 6-8 people who are committed to staying at the front and leading in an authoritative manner for the entire ride . . . I was satisfied that we were together until we cleared the loop, at least.
It takes much more than one ambulance to cause the ride to spread out.
Were you at the front at all on this ride? I think you're making some assumptions about what happens up there.
Thanks for the report!
When the ride got to 6-way at Wrightwood, Sheffield, and Lincoln the leaders just stopped and went into the 7-11.
This is golden :-)
By my estimate there were a good 1000+ riders in front of "my" group (the back of the mass that stopped on Clark just south of Halsted) so I suspect that your group was not the "front" group but another piece of the mass that was separated from the front by or at Clark/Halsted.
The back group eventually got moving with the (remarkably friendly) encouragement of two local bike cops, and seemed to head north up Halsted-- guessing it turned east on Belmont and also ended at the lakefront.
I once did the SF mass, and enjoyed the way it naturally broke into smaller groups as the night went on, likely based on the geography of the riders . . . people were absolutely happy to be in a group of 300, then 100, then 50, and then seemed pretty happy to be wherever they stopped . . . would love to see that become accepted here too (there's kind of a intense desire to always be with the "real" mass on CCM).
At its essence, a CCM ride would be successful if it brought a few thousand cyclists together at Daley Plaza for a little "happening", and then put groups of cyclists all over the city thereafter-- what happens in between can be considered icing on the cake.
"I don't think we impressed the cops in this area at all. They all looked unhappy. (are cops ever happy? -these ones looked extra un-happy to me)."
I saw several very happy cops having their photo taken with the solo woman going topless on the Lakefront Trail during the topless equality demonstration (NSFW).
Break out the pasties for September's Mass, ladies!
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