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Putting the pedals to work



Ron Carlson, an Attleboro resident and service manager at Union Cycle on Pleasant Street in Attleboro, makes adjustments on his bike that he rides to work every day. (Staff photo by Mike George)




Bicycles keep rolling out of shops as many are leaving gas-guzzling cars at home
ATTLEBORO - Not everyone is hurting from the high price of gas.

With gas prices hovering around $4 a gallon - a little less expensive some days, and little more expensive on others - plenty of motorists are switching from gas guzzlers to two-wheel transportation and old-fashioned pedal power.

"We're actually running out of bikes because we've been selling so many of them," said Rick Desmarais, founder and owner of Union Cycle in Attleboro.

In the past six months, Desmarais says he has seen a huge increase in sales - and not from his usual clientele.

"There's been a change when people come in. Instead of asking for fitness bicycles, they ask for what we call 'commuting bikes' - something they can go back and forth to work with, so they don't have to get their car out on the road," he said.
Rick Desmarias, owner of Union Cycle on Pleasant Street, checks out the bicycles for sale in his Attleboro store. Desmarias reports that many customers want their older bikes from the 1970s revamped, so they can use them as an alternative to driving in the time of high gasoline prices. (Staff photo by Mike George)
Men and women of all ages have been coming into Union Cycle, looking for a variety of accessories for their bikes to prepare themselves for a commute between home and work.

"It's definitely different than your average fitness person coming in. Now we have commuters, and they want fenders, bags, security locks and lights for their bikes," Desmarais said. "They want to get ready for all types of riding ranges - at night and in the morning.

"People are using racks on the back of their bikes, which is a little unusual because they normally would get them stripped down for fitness."

Union Cycle also does repairs and, and is seeing a parade of relics from the last big bike boom in the 1970s when gas prices spiked dramatically.

"We're starting to see these old bikes coming back and getting repaired," Desmarais said. "People are trying to revamp them."

And it's not just an older crowd coming in to browse bikes. Teens and college students are looking into cycling whenever possible to save money.

"It's really everyone that's getting affected - even 16- and 17-year-olds. Rather than getting their first car, they're thinking about getting a bike," Desmarais said.

With so many newcomers to cycling or even oldsters who haven't been on a bike in 30 years, education programs on bike safety and rules of the road are becoming accessible through the Internet and at local bike shops.

Union Cycle has run seminars to educate beginning or returning cyclists on commuting and to make riders feel more comfortable.

The lessons include bike essentials they may need for the long haul, including padded bags for laptops.
Nonetheless, the East has some catching up to do with the West Coast, where already 5 percent to 10 percent of students and workers commute by bike.

"It's going to be an educational process," Desmarais said.

 


Jessica Kosowski wrote on Jul 23, 2008 8:49 AM:

" It does require a separate log in, but several of our users have chosen to use user names rather than their real name. Also, you can include as little or as much information as you'd like in your profile, thus retaining a sense of anonymity. "

realist wrote on Jul 22, 2008 11:07 PM:

" To JK -- I would, but it requires a separate log in. What ever happened to anonymity? "

Jessica Kosowski wrote on Jul 22, 2008 4:44 PM:

" Hi, I'm Jessica Kosowski, the Sun Chronicle's Living Well editor. While you can continue to comment on this story here, check out our forums site where we've set up a permanent special discussion on this topic. You can find it at http://thesunchronicle.ning.com/forum Then click on Attleboro. "

spookey wrote on Jul 22, 2008 4:35 PM:

" for those who are unsteady on a bicycle, try a trike. it is a 3 wheel bicycle, and they also have baskets on them. good for the grocery store also. just be sure to chain it up! wear a helmet when bikeing, "

realist wrote on Jul 22, 2008 4:01 PM:

" I urge everyone who has not cycled in a while to see a pro when buying a new bike. Union Cycle is good. I also like Sirois on Landry Street in North Attleborough I bought two bike there.

Something to remember - bikes are vehicles. Stay off sidewalks, ride with the traffic, stop at stop lights and cross walks etc.

If you are commuting to work and its more than two miles one way or up hill -- make sure there's a shower handy. You can be smug about being healthy and saving the environment if you like, but no one likes a smug stinky person.

To motorists -- don't be jerks. Refrain from getting behind a bike and blasting your horn. Don't "playfully" swerve toward a bicyclist and keep your idiot passengers from yelling obscenities. You may not like it when the 6' 250lb guy on the bike catches up with you at the traffic light. "


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