Tag: speaker

Cycling Expert Makes Business Case for Bicycling

This article was originally published in the City of Eugene InMotion Newsletter; a great resource for local active transportation information. Subscribe here!

LiveMove and the City of Eugene would like to invite you to join us for a visit by April Economides, a nationally recognized expert on how bicycling can contribute to a thriving local economy as well as a safer and healthier community. April will be in town sharing her knowledge with our community next Thursday, February 7th. Screen Shot 2013-01-31 at 5.25.46 PM

April Economides is principal of Green Octopus Consulting and General Manager of Bike Nation’s Long Beach bike share program, which will launch this year. She created the nation’s first Bike-Friendly Business District program for the City of Long Beach and helped launch similar efforts in San Diego and other cities around North America. She speaks throughout the U.S. and Canada on “The Business Case for Bicycling” and “Bike-Friendly Business Districts.”

A Bicycle-Friendly Business District integrates bicycling into its operations, events and promotions to encourage people to bike to an area to shop and dine. Merchants and employees also ride bicycles to run errands and make deliveries.

Below is April’s schedule for her visit. Feel free to join us for one or both of the activities listed below. Please feel free to share this information with others who might be interested.

Bicycle Ride of Eugene’s Bikeable and Walkable Business Districts
Date: Thursday, February 7th, 2013
Time: 3:30 – 4:30 PM
Location: Meet outside the Wells Fargo Building (99 E. Broadway).
Description: The bike ride will take guests through several retail districts in Eugene and highlight some of the current infrastructure already in place to our guest speaker.

Public Presentation on how Bikes Mean Business
Date: Thursday, February 7th, 2013
Time: 4:30pm Social Hour, 5:30pm Presentation
Location: Downtown Athletic Club, 3rd Floor, Ballroom A
Description: April Economides will give a presentation on how increasing cycling in a community can stimulate the local economy and improve health and safety.

The City of Eugene is excited for April’s visit and thankful for the University of Oregon’s LiveMove student group for sponsoring her trip to Eugene.

Willie Weir Returns to Eugene

Come join us, the Outdoor Program as we host Willie Weir and Any Port in a Storm: Cycling & Wild Camping Through Portugal.

Willie Weir will tell us stories of amazing, scenic, low-trafficked roads and vineyards as far as the eye can see. Wild, dramatic coastline, glacial valleys, as well as ancient cities paved in cobblestone. In crisscrossing the bicycle-friendly country of Portugal, Willie and his wife Kat consumed large quantities of port, wine and cheese, and lived to tell the tale. And they didn’t break the bank either but they were accosted by a herd of sheep, frightened out of their minds by a still unknown beast and almost blown off a dune into the Atlantic! Even if you never plan to set foot (or tire) in Portugal, you’ll want to come out and be entertained and inspired by Willie’s stunning images and storytelling.

https://www.facebook.com/events/376307519075885/

Free for UO Students & OP Coop, $5 general

Co-sponsored by LiveMove

Date: Friday, April 13, 2012, at 7 PM
Cost: Free for UO Students and OP Co-op; $5 General
Location: 180 PLC Hall, UO Campus (1415 Kincaid St.)

General Meeting- Riding Across Southern Utah Yes!!

Tuesday, January 24th
6-8 PM
Countryside Pizza, 645 River Road

It’s mid winter in Oregon, 2011 and Jeff Sprague and his wife MaryAnne were “shopping” for a cycling vacation. They had concerns about the Euro/Dollar exchange rate and decided that the U.S. was a good destination. He scanned the ads in the back of Bicycling Magazine and the Adventure Cyclist also ran a nice article on a number of multi- day supported cycling tours in the U.S.

The ride from Moab to Cedar City is an amazing adventure through 5 national parks and several state parks. The route is fairly simple (go right or left at the national parks and mostly stay on Utah state highway 12). They also cycled in Zion national park as a bonus. The roads were lightly traveled for the most part and the scenery is amazing! Come and share this cycling experience with Jeff as he “rides” us through his trip!

 

Loaded Bike Touring in Zion via Flickr user Velaia

 

Learning and Sharing With the Dutch

Join us for the start of another great LiveMove Speaker Series. They will be kicking off the year with a social hour and presentation on “Creating a Balanced Transportation System” from Ronald Tamse of the Netherlands.

Tamse is an engineer and city planner for the City of Utrecht. He specializes in traffic education and safety and will focus on discussing three forms of a balanced transportation system:

1) Balance between engineering, education and enforcement.
2) Engineering balance between the use of commercial and residential streets within a bike system.
3) Balance between bikes, walking, transit and driving to give people travel options.

The event will be at the UO Knight Library in “The Browsing Room” (Rm 106) on Thursday, Oct. 20th. Social Hour is from 5:30-6:30pm and his presentation is 6:30-7:30pm. Light hors d’oeuvres will be provided. See you there!

 

Tuesday Tasting and Scenic Bikeway Presentation

Samara is a GEARS member and part of a group that rode the Willamette Valley Scenic Bikeway. She did the ride on a Bike Friday and said she “loved every minute of it”.  Join Samara and the rest of her group in celebrating this great adventure in our own backyard. As they say “if we can do it, you can too!” Come enjoy local wine and Ninkasi beer tasting and listen to stories from the road.  Oregon State Parks Bicycle and Water Recreation Coordinator Alex Phillips will discuss the Oregon State Parks Scenic Bikeway program and introduce new routes in the Eugene, Cascades & Coast region. This is a wine and beer tasting cyclists will not want to miss!

Join the tasting and presentation Tuesday, October 11 at the Eugene, Cascades & Coast Adventure Center in Springfield. The tasting is from 4:00 to 6:30 p.m. The presentation starts at 5:30 p.m. The Adventure Center is located at 3312 Gateway St in Springfield near Michael’s and Best Buy.

 

Crew on the Willamette Valley Scenic Bikeway- Day One

General Meeting: Hell on Two Wheels

July General Meeting: Inside the Toughest Race on Earth in Hell on Two Wheels

Wednesday, July 27,  6-7 pm, J. Michaels Books 160 E Broadway, Eugene

This month we have a great opportunity to hear author Amy Snyder talk about the Race Across America, a bicycle race like no other! Amy will be signing books from 5-7 and will speak to us at 6:00. Arrive early and bring a seat cushion so that we can make use of the hallway and stairway at J. Michaels to hear her presentation. Read the information below for a description of her book and topic. If you would like to purchase a copy of the book and have her sign it, contact Jeremy at J. Michaels, phone 541-342-2002. Here’s more information about the author and book:

Three-time Ironman finisher Amy Snyder takes readers inside a harrowing 3,000-mile long cycling race and follows a handful of courageous athletes who test themselves, each other, and the limits of human endurance in her nonfiction narrative, Hell on Two Wheels: An Astonishing Story of Suffering, Triumph, and the Most Extreme Endurance Race in the World. Hell on Two Wheels was published by Triumph Books, a division of Random House, in May, 2011 and rapidly became a best-seller on Amazon.com.

The Race Across America (RAAM) is a bicycle race like no other. Unlike its famous cousin the Tour de France, RAAM is much crazier, more gothic, and even savage. In this nonstop contest that takes up to two weeks to complete, cyclists have died, been maimed, and spiraled in to the nightmarish realm of the mad. Outside Magazine calls this race “the toughest test of endurance in the world.”

Written for a mainstream audience drawn to stories of adventure and survival, Hell on Two Wheels follows a group of athletes before, during, and after the 2009 race, the closest and most controversial in the event’s 30-year history. Hell on Two Wheels offers a thrilling and remarkably detailed account of the competitors’ triumphs and tragedies. As RAAM exacts its vicious toll, with clarity and compassion Snyder tells the story of how the 2009 racers discover their essential humanity and experience profound joy and completeness, demonstrating how such a grueling effort can also be self-revelatory and even magical.

“Thanks to my athletic background, I was able to embed myself in the obscure world of ultra-distance cycling,” Snyder said. “Getting to know these athletes before, during, and after the 2009 race helped me see that RAAM is more than a race — it’s a monster and a crucible. As a result, Hell on Two Wheels became more than a story about a bike race. It’s an allegory about overcoming personal limitations and self-discovery that offers lessons for all of us, cyclists and non-cyclists alike.”

Amy Snyder grew up in New York City and attended Princeton University and Stanford Business School. After a career in management consulting she retired and settled in La Jolla, California. She began competing in Ironman triathlons and eventually discovered events even longer than the Ironman. Knowing she didn’t have it in her to conquer these ultra-distance races, she decided to find out why and how others can by following the RAAM in June, 2009. She spent time with a handful of contestants before and after the race, ending up with a story that changed her own thoughts and feelings about personal limitations and the power of the human spirit For more information on the author or Hell on Two Wheels, visit: www.hellontwowheelsbook.com.