Categories: General

Guest Article: Bikes to Rwanda

Photo: Bikes To Rwanda

Occasionally, we find ourselves removing our proverbial tongue from cheek and getting a little bit serious. Try as we might, a good cause just can’t always be avoided, and here we have Steampunk returning for his second Guest Article to discuss his latest project. Enjoy the read, and if you feel so inclined, jump over to his blog Velonista for more information.

Yours in Cycling,

Frank

Friends: what follows may seem out of character for me on these pages, but I like to think the more serious content below is just as much a part of my real self as the more raucous participation on this great site. When I’m not Steampunk, my name is Michael Egan. I teach history at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. Over the past year, I’ve really enjoyed the irreverent and informative posts, comments, and rants on these pages. That I should even care whether I’m rule compliant is strong indication that Frank, Brett, Marko, and company are onto something special here. And without getting all misty-eyed about it, the friends I’ve made on these pages have been a big part of my cycling enjoyment over the past year. In this context, I’m loath to mess with a good thing and come asking for help with a project I have underway, but Marko seemed to think that cycling, coffee, and changing the world (his words) seemed like a pretty good combination and worth sharing with folks here. So I hope you will forgive the intrusion. Perhaps, indeed, rather than donating yourselves, I can ask you to forward this widely (or even adopt a similar kind of plan yourself). I’d be grateful for the assistance.

With the new pro cycling season swinging into gear and the first hints that winter might be exiting stage left at home, I’m looking forward to getting back on the bike. The guns are locked and loaded; the kit is shining and clean; and the bike is calling to me from the back of the garage (to where it got shunted when my brother-in-law came to visit a couple of weeks ago””why he should get priority in the guest room instead of the garage is still beyond me). On these pages, I don’t have to explain the wonders of cycling and why I’m hooked. On the flat, the pedaling rhythm is fluid, smooth, automatic. Going up, heart, lungs, and legs vie for your inner mind’s attention, begging you to stop. In short, cycling hurts. And I think that’s the point. As an academic, who lives a pretty comfortable life, I’ve decided that the lure of cycling stems from some primitive need to suffer. So in rain, sleet, snow, wind, and throbbing heat, I click my cleats into my pedals and ride. The bike is a tool. And it’s on the bike that I set myself challenges. How far, how hard, how long can I ride? Today, this week, month, or year? I don’t know if it necessarily makes me a better person, but I’m more relaxed if I have been riding more and I like the physical and mental challenge.

But the bicycle’s utility extends well beyond the bike boutiques and “cycling is the new golf” mentality that has permeated much the developed world. The bike is a tool and an important mode of transportation for millions of people the world over. While I ride for pleasure, it’s important to keep in mind that I have the privilege to ride a quality racing bike on paved and””let’s be frank (though not, I pray, Fränk)””safe roads: with traffic controls, lights and crossings, and free of land mines. The worst I have to worry about on the road is the odd pothole or dog. Luxury.

Conscious of this privilege and thinking about cycling goals for 2011, I want to try to put the two together. So, naturally, I started a blog. Recently, I came across Bikes to Rwanda, which builds practical, cargo bikes for cooperative coffee farmers in Rwanda. From their site: “The goal is to improve quality of life in these communities through a bike distribution, workshop construction and maintenance training program that provides transportation resources for basic needs and enhances production of quality coffee.” For an overview of the larger project, see here. I like coffee, too, and am a pretty frequent visitor to Domestique Café Cyclo Sportif. Bikes and coffee: I’ll write more on this, but this is a great fit for me.

So here’s the premise for my blog and fundraising: I’m looking for sponsors who will commit to donating a penny for every kilometer I ride on my road bike in 2011 (races, training, etc.””but not commuting or riding with the kids). Feel free to sponsor more, but I’ll even take half-pennies. Sponsors can contact me at velonista@gmail.com with their full name, e-mail address, and sponsored amount. How far will I likely ride? In 2010, amid injuries and travel, I rode somewhere between 3000 and 4000 kilometers; my goal for 2011 is 5000 kilometers (under the Ontario snow, I’ve only managed 100km so far in 2011), and I hope to roust up 100 sponsors. At a penny a kilometer, that would mean $5000. On January 1, 2012, I will post the final tally and come collecting (I hope to have a PayPal account up and running by then). The proceeds will be sent to the Bikes to Rwanda program.

Steampunk

In never-ending search for la volupté, Steampunk is an unreconstructed Canadian west coaster transplanted to Ontario, where he rides on every opportunity and sometimes shows up to work as a professor of history. He is a careful student of the Rules and la vie Velominatus, but is not beyond (occasionally) distilling them down to a single path: la vie Cognoscentus. The BFGs are always locked and loaded (that sound you just heard was your soul being crushed by their power). On a more serious note, he is a staunch advocate of commuting by bike and he also fundraises for Bikes to Rwanda.

View Comments

  • Nice work steamboat. To give u some inspiration to get out on the treddly, take a look at http://www.ridewestafrica.com (dunno how to post a link using iPhone) - two of my nephews and two mates just finished riding 7800 kms across, you guessed it, west Africa to raise $$ to fight child slavery.

    Good on you - but how about u rule 5 it and get some real ks done?

  • @Marcus
    Thanks, mate. Sadly, life and my inability to keep Rule 11 in check will probably limit my riding somewhat. Sad excuse, I know.

    @sgt
    And thanks! I'll bet your page looks Mah-vellous.

  • @Steampunk
    Wow! This is fantastic. It is amazing how far a person can leap economically when he/she has a bike instead of having to walk. I like this a lot.

    So. I have no money. (Have I told you the story about my new Look?) But I've got an idea. I'll retire my V-meter and replace it with my Cateye. I'll keep track of my kilometers and donate them to you. Nobody needs to know I'm tacking on k's to yours. (VELOMINATI, ssshhhhhh. It's a secret.)

    What do you think? I could easily give you 3000km to spare (barring injury, death, or phenomenal success in my new writing career). Marcus could probably get you 3000km in six weeks, but I think he's rich, so he should stick to giving you money.

    Or... I could pledge $0.01 per km and just Rule 5 on the budget. I'll let you decide.

    Again, this is a great thing you're doing. Chapeau.

  • Hey SP, thanks for sharing this and your thoughts particularly as they apply to relative privilege.
    My career has taken me to live and work in several places in Africa (and elsewhere) over the last 10 years, including Uganda, Nigeria, DRC, Zimbabwe, and Burundi, Rwanda's neighbor.
    I can confirm that bicycles in these parts are personal transport, taxis, and beasts of burden. One of the more remarkable exhibits of bike-related V was seeing Burundians ferry lake water in jerry cans strapped to their bicycles, pushing their 100kg loads in the blazing sun up the steep hills, hinted at in your link's Rwanda photos, from lake to home.
    Bikes carrying 3 passengers, maybe a tied-up goat, and a huge bunch of bananas makes your cargo bikes spot on. A bunch of weight weenies, no?

    I have worked there, in part, because the privilege of my life allows me to do so. As it allows me to ride my bike for pure pleasure (and pain).
    So count me in.

  • @Steampunk
    Wow, this is really beautifully written and beautifully articulated. Thanks a lot, mate. It's really nice to read this and be reminded to take a step back and remember how easy we have it. Hopefully you'll get some sponsors together here who are willing to help out.

    My VMH does a lot of work in communities like the one you're trying to help here, and I can tell you they need it, and the empowerment that comes with not just a bicycle but of working in a successful local business such as coffee farming can't be overestimated.

    Really spectacular project; I hope you find great success.

  • @xyxax
    I haven't been to Africa, but I've spent time in India and to say a bicycle is used as a beast of burden as you suggest is absolutely the case. These photos might seem funny to us, but this is real-life, and the way the bike is use to solve complicated problems elsewhere in the world. Really makes you stop and think.

  • Great involvement with worthy things. We all need something outside of ourselves to give perspective on life and the world. In Senegal, I saw this young boy riding a very adult sized bike. His leg went though the triangle. The bicycle presence was minimal in a country that needed it as best form of transportation.

    On a different note. It has been a while since I've visited "the Velominati" and wonder specifically if Frank, you are still planning a group ride in Seattle for the Saturday and watch the Sunday Tour of Flanders race in April? It was mentioned weeks ago and I'm interested if the plan came to fruition?

  • Nicely articulated Steampunk and a very worthy cause. I'll put the details on my FaceSpace so you may end up with a few more hopefully.
    Best of luck with the fund raising mate, Merckx bless.

    @frank
    I think the bottom photo is Vietnam isn't it frank? Having spent a lot of time over there, that type of thing is a familiar sight. Bikes loaded to capacity, with Merckx knows what hanging off the sides. One really does appreciate how fortunate one is when this type of image trundles past.

  • Nice work. I too was reminded of experiences of seeing heavily laden cargo bikes in the developing world. Also, the small boy leg-thru-main-triangle look. Classic.

    Also having made a previous attempt to introduce the umlaut, I applaud recent efforts on this page and others on that topic.

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