register |  login
Loading Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Tower

Ride of Silence honors killed, injured cyclists
Contributed by: Brendan Leonard/YourHub.com on 5/17/2007

I thought it was fitting that on my bike ride home on May 16, the day of the Ride of Silence,aguy in a Jeep thought it would be cool to pass me about a foot away from my left elbow at 30 mph on 12th Avenue, so he could hurry up and stop at the next stoplight 60 feet ahead.

Had the guy hit me, I'd be one of the dead or injured cyclists the Ride of Silence honors, not a participant.
The 2007 Ride of Silence, held in Washington Park, was only the second for Denver. The ride honors cyclists who have been injured or killed while riding on public roadways -- the first-ever Ride of Silence, held in Dallas in 2003, was organized by Chris Phelan after his friend Larry Schwartz was hit by the mirror of a school bus and killed while cycling. The first ride drew 1,000 participants to White Rock Park in Dallas.

782 bicyclists were killed in crashes with motor vehicles in the United States in 2005.
Source: InsuranceInstitute for Highway Safety ( www.iihs.org)


The event, now held in every U.S. state and on every continent (participants at Palmer Station, Antarctica, rode stationary bikes in the gym there), starts at 7 p.m., and cyclists ride 12 mph or less for a short distance. Rides were planned in Colorado Springs, Glenwood Springs, Golden and Highlands Ranch. The Highlands Ranch ride honored Jim Price, who was killed in November 2005 when a teen driver who was text messaging swerved his vehicle into the bike lane on Wildcat Reserve Parkway and struck Price.

We rode six laps around Washington Park's 2.2-mile loop, not making a sound, save the buzz of the freewheels of 30-some bikes when we coasted down the inclines. Everyone who was there at the start, whetherin lycra or Levi's, wore a black ribbon on their leg or arm. Other cyclists, whether they were late for the start or just happened to be riding around the park, joined later for a couple laps. No one said a word.

Steve Cantar, 51, of Denver, who co-organizes the Denver Ride of Silence along with Doris Rigoni, says he discovered the ride after a student in the spin class he teaches was deliberately struck by a vehicle while biking and spent months in the hospital. A few days after he heard about the accident, he found the Ride of Silence Web site ( www.rideofsilence.org)and saw that Denver wasn't represented.

"I knew that we had to have one in Denver," he says. Since there wasn't much time to plan ahead and apply for permits to ride together on Denver streets, the group rode the loop in Washington Park, a road where cars aren't allowed for long stretches. Thirty-four cyclists participated the first year.

Cantar, who's never been hit by a car, has had many close calls, and says he thinks most cyclists have as well, whether it's their own fault or that of an inattentive, or even malicious, driver.

"I don't think there's anybody who's thrown their leg over a bike and taken it out on the road who hasn't witnessed a close call, been part of a close call, or worse," he says.

Although both rides have taken place in Washington Park, where the audience is mostly walkers, joggers, rollerbladers and other non-driving park patrons, Cantar says they're revisiting the plan, to see if next year's ride can have a police escort through city streets where participants can be more visible to motorists. And with more promotion and word-of-mouth advertising next year, hewould likethe rideto grow to involve more and more people.

"I'm hoping we'll be forced to take it out of the park because there'll be too many people," he says.

From the Ride of Silence Web site:
"The Ride Of Silence is a free ride that asks its cyclists to ride no faster than 12 mph and remain silent during the ride. There is no brochure, no sponsors, no registration fees and no t-shirt. The ride, which is held during Bike Safety month, aims to raise the awareness of motorists, police and city officials that cyclists have a legal right to the public roadways. The ride is also a chance to show respect for those who have been killed or injured."
www.rideofsilence.org




SUBMIT COMMENT

Rate the above story



Talk Back : submit comments to the story

*Note: you need to log-in to add a comment or rating.

SAVE AND SHARE THIS STORY
STORY RSS FEEDS
WANT TO WRITE FOR YOURHUB.COM?
Want to see the stories you write and the photos you shoot featured in the YourHub.com Thursday print section available all over the Front Range and with home subscriptions of the Rocky Mountain News and The Denver Post? All you have to do is register, then post a story or column, start a blog or tell everyone what events are happening in town. We will print the best stories, columns, event listings, photos and blog entries in our print sections.

ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Ad

Loading Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Ad