Showing posts with label Biking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biking. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Boulder Creek Path wins visit from Google Trike



From The Daily Camera:

Sometime this spring -- amid the usual bikers, joggers and amblers -- an odd looking tricycle will roll down the Boulder Creek Path snapping 360-degree photos as it goes.

With 21,000 votes, the Boulder Creek Path won a contest Monday to become one of the first off-road locations visited by the new Google Street View Trike, a cross between a mountain bike and trailer with a camera mounted on a pole in the back.

The trike will allow Google to complement its popular Street View function -- which gives users an on-the-ground perspective through their computer screens, including a look at store fronts, street signs and yards -- with a "path view" for places where cars can't go.

"We're very excited," said Marni Ratzel, bicycle and transportation planner for the city's Go Boulder program. "I think it's great for our residents as well as for tourists who come to Boulder to see this great amenity that we have. They can do that virtually prior to coming, and they can show their friends after they've been there.

"It's just a really cool tool."

The Boulder Creek Path beat out four other finalists in Google's parks and trails category -- the Capital Crescent Trail in Maryland and Washington, D.C.; the Centennial Trail in Washington; the Schuylkill River Trail in Pennsylvania; and the Stevens Creek Trail in California -- to win a visit from the trike.

The strong support for Boulder's trail, which amounted to more than one vote for every five city residents, may have had something to do with the staffers in Google's Boulder office.

"I think they did some work to get the vote out," said Elaine Filadelfo, Google spokeswoman. "They did some grassroots campaigning, I would say."

And while Google typically hires contractors to ride the trike, the company is looking at recruiting some of the avid cyclists who already work for Google in Boulder for the job, Filadelfo said.

The city of Boulder hopes that the trike's ride through Boulder marks the beginning of a deeper relationship between the city and Google's mapping programs. The city has applied to share data about its extensive bike path system with Google as a Base Map Partner.

If the city's proposal is accepted, people will be able to get directions for traveling in Boulder from Google Maps that are tailored for bikes, routing cyclists along multi-use paths and roads with bike lanes. The city already has its own mapping software at gobikeboulder.net that does just that, but if Boulder can partner with Google, Go Boulder staffers hope that even more people will take advantage of the 360 miles of local bike routes.

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Bike paths are a great way to enjoy the outdoors. They are an accessible and fun option for families to explore their neighborhood. Keep the Leave No Trace Frontcountry principles in mind as you travel on bike paths like the Boulder Creek Path.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Photo of the Week: 6/19/09



Leave No Trace staff embark on an afternoon bike brigade: proof that we play as hard as we work!

So who works at the Center?
From left:
Finance Director Kurt Achtenhagen and daughter Emily
Executive Director Dana Watts
Information Coordinator Katie Jones
Deputy Director Susy Alkaitis
Education Director Ben Lawhon
Outreach Manager Dave Winter
Outreach Intern Whit Schroder
Education Programs Coordiantor Sarah Folzenlogen
Community + Partnership Intern Lili Bentley
Membership + Development Manager Sara Close

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Dafydd Davies and the DO Lectures

Have you ever heard of the DO Lectures?

I hadn't either until a blog reader commented on a recent post about Dafydd Davies and the DO Lectures in Wales. The DO Lectures event was launched last September and featured 21 speakers, one of which was Dafydd.

Dafydd pioneered the development of Britain's first purpose built mountain bike trails at Coed y Brenin, now considered Wales' mountain biking Mecca.  He later built the world's first publicly funded strategic mountain bike trail development in Wales by developing trails at five forests throughout the country.

He now works as an independent consultant throughout the world, developing all sorts of trails in all sorts of places. His work is underpinned by an ethos of sustainability and minimizing the impact of recreation on the countryside, while still making it accessible for people at many different levels. He is passionate about the outdoors and connecting people to landscape, places and the environment in sustainable ways.

Dafydd was part of the first DO Lecture, held in September of 2008, where he spoke about sustainable trail development, land management, and recreational use in Wales.

Dafydd is a true advocate of the Leave No Trace ethics - check him out!

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Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Dog and Woman Take to the Bike


Two weeks ago, I finally had the opportunity to meet an extraordinary woman and her companion: a Washington-based veterinarian and Leave No Trace advocate and her yellow Labrador Retriever, Mitchell. Towing her dog in a trailer, she will bike across the country in 2009, teaching Leave No Trace along the way. We hope to have great stories and photos to share with you about Fisher’s travels throughout the year. We do not yet have photos of Mitchell and companion thus the photo included is merely in place to whet your appetite.