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Archive for the ‘Cycling News’ Category

Major Taylor Education Program update

Friday, March 4th, 2011 by Mick Allan

For anyone interested in knowing more about the inspirational Major Taylor Education Program – Roger mallette of Retro sent me a link to a interview he did recently for  KBOO radio Bike Show.

The target was to recruit between six and ten African American kids to the program which aims to introduce kids into competitive cycling. In the event they recruited twenty two! They may not all stay the course but it says something about the previously untapped potential for getting youngsters in to cycling.

The city of Portland Oregon is something of an inspiration for cyclists and cycling advocates throughout the world. The KBOO Bike Show, part of Portland Transport, is a monthly radio show all about cycling in Portland, Oregon and beyond. The Bike Show is broadcast first wednesday of every month between 11am and noon. Covering subjects as diverse as city planning, mountain biking, cycling for families and for people with disabilities – gosh it sounds like a radio version of Cyclorama’s Bike Culture!

It is well worth a listen.

And here’s another picture of the great man himself for your enjoyment.

Marshall 'Major' Taylor Gotta love that bike too!

Major Taylor Education Program Launched

Monday, February 28th, 2011 by Mick Allan

Major "Marshall" TaylorThe Major Taylor Education Program was launched recently at the Trail Blazers Boys and Girls Club in Portland Oregon by a group of individuals and organizations headed by Roger Mallette of Retro.

”Retro and its partners recognize that cycle racing is not highly accessible to Black American youth and holds a vision to create connections to coaching and competitive racing in Portland.”

The program will seek to identify 6-10 kids showing interest in competitive cycling. Participating boys and girls will be ushered into the coaching camps of B.I.K.E. and Kirk Whiteman Coaching.

In addition the program aims to generate more awareness of not only Taylor’s luminous career but also his ideals and values concerning hard work and perseverance.

The Major Taylor Education Program will focus on the uncanny career in cycle racing that Taylor triumphed in:

In 1896 at age 18, Marshall “Major” Taylor emerged as “the most formidable racer in America,” earning up to $15,000 per race.

At age 20, he set seven world records. At 21, he was the first black World Champion in Montreal, and the American Sprint Champion that year and the next.

Taylor was only the second African American World Champion of any universal sport.

After one of the most successful athletic careers the world had ever seen, Taylor’s last days were spent living in a YMCA in Chicago where he died a pauper in 1932.  Taylor was reburied in Glenview Cemetery, Chicago in 1948 with funds provided by Frank Schwinn of the Schwinn Bicycle Company.

These words mark his grave:

“World champion bicycle racer who came up the hard way without hatred in his heart, an honest, courageous, and god-fearing, clean-living, gentlemanly athlete. A credit to his race who always gave out his best.  Gone but not forgotten.”

marshall-major-taylor-1908-paris

Retro’s Major Taylor Education Program was first launched in Chicago in 2007/2008 in Chicago Public Schools after a friendship was formed with Courtney Bishop of Team Major Taylor and the Team Major Taylor Scholarship Fund.  Retro’s primary partners were Mayor Richard M. Daley, Simon Schuster, and Courtney Bishop and Team Major Taylor of Indianapolis, Indiana.

Roger Mallette, Retro’s Founder, recently approached Tim Sicocan, Director of the ‘Trail Blazers’ Boys and Girls Club , John Bennenate, Director of B.I.K.E ., Kirk Whiteman of Kirk Whiteman Coaching and River City Bicycles. Kirk Whiteman is one of the United States’ greatest cycling sprint champions. John Benenate founded (B.I.K.E.) Bicycles and Ideas for Kids Empowerment.  B.I.K.E. is an inner city cycling team supported by a dedicated group of volunteers that nurture up to speed, faces missing from the sport and has been serving the Portland Community for over 16 years raising 74 Oregon State Cycling Champions. B.I.K.E. coached the first all black women’s cycling team to race in the little 500 at IU in Bloomington Indiana. Oprah Winfrey presented Mr. Benenate a $100,000 award from her Angel Network for his work with B.I.K.E.

Major Taylor program poster

Read more about Roger and Retro here,

and a Bike Culture review of a Taylor biography by Andrew Ritchie here.


Sprint Design in the UK

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011 by Mick Allan

womens australian pursuit team

We’re delighted to welcome SprintDesign to the Exhibitor Pages of Cyclorama.

And to the UK.

Hailing from Perth Australia, SprintDesign have been in Business for a mere six years but are already expanding into new territories – including the USA – and now they’re here.

In a great leap of faith Jon Hunter and his partner Alexandra Scott decided to give up their safe, secure (and boring) jobs to launch their own company.

When, in 1992, Jon was tasked with the job of designing and organising a club strip he was immediately struck by the enormous complexity of such a job using the limited technology of the day. Also clubs usually ordered their kit in 50s or 100s at a time. Sprint Design’s innovation was the use of ‘cumulative costing’ as a way of allowing small clubs and even individuals to access fully custom designed cycling garments.

They must be doing something right; “When we first started designing kit for friends we thought it would just be a hobby on the side”, Laughs Alxandra. “We never imagined we would be doing it full time, let alone employing people!”

SprintDesign is now available to buy in the UK from Push Bike Wear in Bristol.

Read more about Sprint Design here.

sprintdesigngallerycustojerseys

RIP RJ

Monday, February 14th, 2011 by Mick Allan

BikeBiz the UK’s cycle trade magazine announced the passing of industry legend Bob Chicken Snr.

Bob Chicken was 90 when he died a few days ago at a hotel in Madeira where he had been living for some years. He died peacfully in his sleep.

In 2008, he was awarded an MBE for services to the bicycle industry, an industry he had served since 1947.

His life is chronicled in Graeme Fife’s ‘Bob Chicken – A Passion for the Bike’. This is a biography of Bob interspersed with a history of the post-1945 British bicycle industry.

Bob was a past president of the Pedal Club and the Pickwick Bicycle Club. He joined the Pickwick – the world’s oldest bicycle club – in 1954.

He was the former owner of RJ Chicken & Sons. The company is now run by his sons, Robert and Cedric.
RJ Chicken & Sons introduced many European road bike accessory brands into the UK from the 1950s onwards.
Bob will be cremated in Madeira, his home for the last few years.

Art.

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011 by Mick Allan

Modern Art is one hundred and fifty years old years old. Abstraction is nothing new. This piece appeared in the front window of our favourite local bike shop recently, a collaboration between Cycle Heaven and Susanne Davies of Bar Lane Studios in York.

Even in this modern age there will be folk who stop and stare and utter ‘What’s it supposed to be’? Well they’re missing out. Art doesn’t have to look like something, nor even carry meaning to be valid. Marcel Duchamp showed us. A hundred years ago. With a bicycle wheel as it happens.

I have enough of an art college background to know what I like. And I like this, a lot. It’s well worth a detour if you’re within pedaling distance of York’s Bishopthorpe Road.

Radial An installation at Cycle Heaven

This is just the first of many such collaborative installations, I look forward to future works of window art with eager anticipation.

If you can’t make it in person you can see more images at:

Cycle Heaven’s Facebook page.


New Research: Children’s Perception and Traffic Danger

Thursday, January 6th, 2011 by Mick Allan

twenty's_plenty

Cyclorama wholeheartedly supports the 20’s Plenty for Us campaign whose aim is to persuade local authorities accross the UK to reduce speed limits where people live. Recent research on vision has found that primary age children cannot accurately see, or judge the speed of, vehicles travelling above 20 mph. This is strong evidence that 20 mph limits where people live are needed to protect children from road danger caused by age-related inability to correctly register faster traffic.

A new study by vision scientists at Royal Holloway, University of London has measured children’s ability to detect approaching cars in a road crossing scenario. At vehicle speeds faster than 20 mph, primary school age children (6-11 years) may not be able to tell that a car is approaching. This strongly supports arguments for implementing and enforcing 20 mph speed restrictions in areas with child pedestrians such as residential streets.

The study, which is in press for the international journal Psychological Science, outlines how a speed illusion can mean that all pedestrians, and/or drivers at junctions, can under-estimate the speed of faster vehicles and may, in some cases, fail to see them at all. Researchers measured the perceptual acuity of over 100 children in primary schools and calculated the approach speed that they could reliably detect. Adult pedestrians can make accurate judgments for vehicles travelling up to 50 mph, but primary school age children become unreliable once the approach speed goes above 20 mph.

Professor John Wann who led the research suggests “This is not a matter of children not paying attention, but a problem related to low-level visual detection mechanisms, so even when children are paying very close attention they may fail to detect a fast approaching vehicle.”

Professor Wann stresses that the simplest solution lies in traffic regulation “These findings provide strong evidence that children may make risky crossing judgements when vehicles are travelling at 30 or 40 mph. In addition, the vehicles that they are more likely to step in front of are the faster vehicles that are more likely to result in a fatality. Travelling 1 mile though a residential area at 20 mph vs. 30 mph will only add 60 seconds to journey time. We encourage drivers to take a minute and save a child’s life”.

Anna Semlyen, Campaign Manager for 20’s Plenty for Us said “We cannot address child road safety by simply teaching them to pay more attention. Child pedestrians can’t judge approach speeds as well as adults. It’s simplistic to blame children and suggest they “run out”, without checking. But this study suggests it’s drivers going too fast that create errors, as it is then impossible for children to make correct judgments. It’s up to adult society to protect families through 20 mph limits where people live and for drivers to obey the signs.”

This study was part of a larger project sponsored by the ESRC, one of the UK research councils, in order to understand the perceptual factors than can lead to pedestrian accidents. The research group has recently published brain imaging research in the Proceedings of the Royal Society to that show some of the key components for detecting collision events lie at the brain-stem level, which is a low-level early detection system.

20’s Plenty for Us welcomes comment and feedback, so please contact them if you would like any further information. www.20splentyforus.org.uk