Friday, July 31, 2009

Biking is Thriving Where Mountain Biking Began: Marin County, CA

By David DuPont

Whatever type of bicycling you prefer " BMX, Mountain or Road bicycling, Marin is a great place to do it. The terrain popular with BMXers, as well as established biking trails, and paved bike pathways are all found throughout the County. It is quite well known that Marin County was the birthplace of Mountain biking. BMX and Mountain biking aside, the most popular form of biking nowadays is Road bicycling.

Beginning with some history, its interesting to know that well-known BMX biker Billy Savage lived and biked in Marin from 1976 to 1983, but BMX, as a category, isnt as common in Marin as the other types of biking.

BMX bicycles have to be extremely sturdy machines because they take a beating during some extreme sporting events! Designed for stunts, tricks, and racing on hilly dirt BMX tracks, they have a single gear ratio with a freewheel and are built with smaller frames and wheels with wider, treaded tires.

It was clear that BMX had finally arrived when BMX events were part of the Summer Olympics in China in 2008 in four different venues, which was a first for the sport. U.S. cyclists took half of the first six medals in BMX racing ever awarded in the history of the Olympics.

Mountain biking is rough and tough going and a good day isnt complete without getting at least some mud in your teeth. The Web site www.klunkerz.com provides complete information about each of the individuals who participated in mountain biking in Marin during the 1970s to make it the world-class sport that it is today.

Downhill trails, carved out around Mount Tamalpais, were where Mountain biking pioneers did a lot of their biking in the 1970s. This was when Joe Breeze, Gary Fisher and others converted cruisers and balloon-tire bicycles into machines that could weather any type of road conditions.

The early days of mountain biking in Marin were memorialized by Billy Savage recently in a film he directed called Klunkerz. In the process of making his film, what he found fascinating is that all the pioneers are very committed to the bicycle as transportation, and to the ecological and physical benefits of cycling to this day. They were reducing, reusing, and recycling long before it was hip to be green. They gave those old Klunkerz a new life, rescuing them out of trashcans and junkyards. They all continue to live this way in all aspects of their lives.

As the county establishes more bike paths where serious road cyclists can do some serious biking Road bicycling has become very popular in recent years. The Marin County Bicycling Coalition (www.marinbike.org) promotes safe bicycling for everyday transportation and recreation. With the MCBC goal for 20% of trips in Marin County to be made by walking or bicycling, Marin County is one of only four counties nationwide that are engaged in a federal Non-motorized Transportation Pilot Program that promotes road bicycling, particularly commuting.

The MCBC Web site offers all the latest about this and other initiatives underway under the umbrella of this ambitious organization. One of their Web pages has links to a wonderful array of informative pages, including the following:

* (More than) 50 Good Reasons to Bicycle

* Basic Cycling Essentials

* Cycling for Fun

* The Etiquette of Cycling

* Benefits of Bicycle Commuting

* The Marin Bicycle Map (free upon joining the Marin County Bicycling Coalition)

* Information about riding the North-South Greenway from San Francisco to Petaluma

* Directions for riding over the Golden Gate Bridge via Highway 1

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