PORTLAND BIKETOWN BIKE REVIEWED!
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In this vid, I review the Portland Biketown bike share bike! Is it supple?
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Portland Now Has 100 Street Bike Corrals!
Portland now has the distinction of having 100 bike corrals, most in dense business districts. More than any other city in the United States. It's just great that they are so ubiquitous, they are just expected, not anything special or odd. As our transportation policies continue to evolve this will continue to be more prevalent in more cities.
What to do in Newport Beach - Seaside Bikes - Bike Rentals
| When we moved back to California, we decided to stick with what we love doing. With our new location in Newport Beach, we are part of a great community on the Balboa Peninsula.
Since opening in November 2010, we have met people from around the United States and around the world!
Our greatest pleasure is to see them return to our shop with smiling faces!
Seaside Bike Rentals is 20 yards from the beach, main bike path and are adjacent to the Balboa Pier. In the immediate area you will enjoy not only the beach, but you will find grassy parks, barbecue and fire pits plus many shops and restaurants.
If you like to fish, bring your fishing poles too, and fishing off the pier requires no fishing license.
Seaside Bike Rentals is located one block from the famous Balboa Fun Zone and very close to ample parking.
Seaside Bicycle Company is also the exclusive distributor in Orange County to sell custom made bicycles manufactured by Sick Cycle.
Services:
Surrey bike rental
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Everybody is moving to Oregon
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It has green forests and bike friendly cities, an abundance of craft beer, and -- despite the rain -- it's where everyone wants to be.
Oregon was the top destination for people who moved out of state in 2014, according toa study from United Van Lines that tracked 128,000 moves. The moving company found that 66% of all interstate moves in Oregon were from people moving into the state, rather than leaving it.It's the second year in a row that Oregon tops the list.
It's not for nothing that the Pacific Northwest state is popular. Word is spreading about its thriving food, drink and culture scene and Oregonians' high quality of life. It offers great accessibility to green space, outdoor recreation, arts and entertainment activities, said UCLA economist Michael Stoll.CNNMoney named the state's largest city, Portland, one of the most innovative cities in the U.S. for being ahead of the curve in terms of urban planning. It was one of the first to build a light rail, instead of a highway, in 1986. Other popular destination states were South Carolina, North Carolina, Florida and Vermont.The Northeast, on the other hand, was a region to get out of. New Jersey and New York had the highest percentage of moves out of state. They were followed by Illinois, North Dakota and West Virginia.This reflects a longer-term trend of migration to southern and western states where housing costs are lower, climates are more temperate, and job growth is at or above the national average, said Stoll.Oregon, with its mild temperatures, is certainly more affordable than nearby California. The median home value in Oregon is $239,000, according to Zillow. In California? Prepare to pay closer to $432,000.
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Dockless electric scooters for rent coming to Portland
Dockless electric scooters for rent are coming to Portland for a four month trial.
17 days on the West Coast
Bike trip from Portland to San Francisco
Featuring:
Basia Swierc
Spider's Dogs
Brad McCartney
Henry Gates
Frank Ostertag
Tandem Tour Two
Austin Bike Tours and Rentals Promo
Promo video I made for videocityguide.com
Enjoy!
The Pedalshift Project 091: Your Summer Bicycle Tours 2017
As summer begins its slow wind down, let's take a look back at some of your amazing summer bicycle tours of 2017! From Oregon to Iceland to Scotland to South Korea, Pedalshift listeners have certainly shrunk the world by bike! Plus, a special early preview of what's in store for Pedalshift 100!
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Have some bike touring or overnight stories to share? Send your pics, audio or a quick tweet - all welcome. Email the show at pedalshift@pedalshift.net or call the lightly-used Pedalshift voicemail line at (202) 930-1109.
Pedalshift Tour Journals Vol.8: Western Penn
Available now at Pedalshift Plus!
Hey I'm riding the Pacific Coast again! I'm planning on an October tour from Newport, OR to San Francisco, revisiting a section of the 2014 full coast ride and one I just adore. Looking forward to sharing more details with you in a future pod!
The march to Pedalshift 100
I have something special lined up for episode 100. We'll have friends of the show Brock and Aaron as special guests and we'll chat all about the usual nonsense. But but but... there's more. We're looking to do a joint meet up slash holiday spectacular live and in person the first weekend in December in Portland, Oregon. Details to come... The Journal: Your Summer Bicycle Tours 2017 Greg in Santa Cruz on credit card touring the Oregon Coast Go read Greg's Crazy Guy journal... it's not super detailed, but that's kind of its charm. He took Amtrak up from San Jose to Portland and saw some of the bikey podcast sites... SE Div and 12th... VeloCult... you know, the highlights. He also tackled the Portland to Tillamook ride which even most PDXers eschew in favor of taking the MAX out halfway. Good on ya Greg! He rode a chunk of the coast I did last summer, so check out Pedalshift Tour Journals Vol 7: Oregon Coast for some audio on that ride to supplement your reading. I noticed Greg gave Pedalshift a shout out for naming The Book but I'm not sure I can really take credit for that, other than saying it 73 bajillion times on a pod. Paul Staten on trail angels in Oregon A couple months back, work took me to Portland for a science conference. I was itching to rent a bicycle and go for a longer ride up the Columbia River Gorge, but my conference ended in the evening one day, and I flew out the afternoon of the next, so I didn't have a good, single block of time. But I just so happened to have a sleeping pad and blanket with me, and I’d recently started reading some of Tom Allen’s stuff, and decided to just ride up the canyon in the evening, and try really hard to make it back in time for my flight. (Worst case, I would have to eat a couple hundred bucks. And I decided I'd rather do that than always wonder what the adventure would have been like.) I rented an old bike from the folks at Everybody's Bike Rentals and Tours. It was about $50 overnight. The frame wasn't long enough, the bike lights were cheap, and the saddle was terrible (and I was wearing basketball shorts), but the bike was sound. I didn't know where I was going to sleep, but I took a train to the 99th street mall, and started biking east along the river from there. You sound like you're pretty familiar with Portland and its surroundings, so you probably know all I saw on my way up past Multinomah falls. Beautiful, right? But it was already getting on towards dark by the time I got to the mouth of the Gorge (Troutdale, right?), so I was a little nervous; I kept looking for places I could tuck in and hide for the night. I passed by a pair of cyclists who were shopping and waved hello, wondering if I should have stopped to chat. But, of course, I was nervous about stopping somewhere, and didn't feel like pestering them about it. Later, while checking out some falls, they passed me. I noticed that they were slower than I was (they were packed for a few days), so I decided to try to catch up, ride close to their brighter lights, and ask where to camp. We chatted for a while, and they showed me up the canyon a good ways further than I would have dared to go in the dark on my own, right to a state park with one of Oregon's amazing hiker-biker stops. Portland is great for cyclists; I didn't realize that Oregon as a whole is incredible. I rolled out my mat, kept warm enough to sleep with my blanket, and made my mattress and the grass my bed. I would expect a couple of women cyclists to be wary of a man catching up and being all friendly on the road, but they were totally cool. I had to leave camp early in the...
Excitement at Your Doorstep: Learn and Live in Portland, OR
We invite you to learn and live in Portland, Oregon, one of our nation’s most livable, unique, and environmentally conscious urban economies. Portland’s creative energy has influence well beyond our city and region. Strong civic pride finds expression in city-owned vehicles on whose doors are emblazoned: “The City that Works.” Above all, Portland is young, dynamic, innovative, urban, outdoorsy, green, welcoming, and livable. It’s fun to live here! With our bike paths, coffee houses, food carts, craft brewpubs, bookstores, streetcar, creative culture, and vibrant scene, Portland lives up to its reputation. Seventy-five percent of our graduates remain in Portland to work, so why not start building your connections now? Here, in the heart of downtown Portland, you’ll do more than learn. You’ll gain the knowledge, skills, and hands-on experience you need to thrive—literally right outside your classroom doors. Rub shoulders with leaders from international corporations to local businesses. Think big and make a lasting impact. Learn how PSU School of Business can help you lead fearlessly: pdx.edu/sba
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Portland: A Walkable City
The City of Portland has been referred to as one of the most environmentally conscious or green cities in the United States.
It ranks highly among the most bicycle friendly cities in the world. A 2011 study by Walk Score ranked Portland 12th most walkable of fifty largest U.S. cities.
Learn more about Portland and it's progressive approach to get people out of the car and moving. See how programs like Portland Sunday Parkways connect neighborhoods and people through a series of free events opening the city's streets to walking and biking.
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Oregon City homes
Finding the next hot spot is anybody's guess but if you're being priced out of the market then it's time to think outside the (Portland) box.
EXPLORING the STORMY WEST COAST ???? Day 10
On Day 10, I finally moved on from Seattle and got a lift from Luke all the way to Portland. We took the scenic route along the coast and had a wild time in the gale force winds created by the typhoon which was rolling through. An unforgettable ride!
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Intro music: I'm A Toad by The Toads
Driving music: Everybody's Got Problems That Aren't Mine by Chris Zabriskie
Hiking music: Soldier of Fortune by Scott Buckley
Camera: GoPro 5 @ 1080p 60fps w/ digital image stabilisation
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This Tiny House Community is Located in Portland, Oregon!
Take a quick tour of Simply Home Community, a tiny house community in Portland, Oregon.
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Cost of Living in Portland Oregon vs. California
This is the BEST video discussing the Cost of Living in Portland Oregon vs. California. Is it a huge difference? You will be surprised!
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The Nightmare World of Gang Stalking
More than 10,000 people worldwide claim they're the victims of a vast organized surveillance effort designed to ruin their lives, a phenomenon known as gang stalking. Mental health experts see gang stalking as a symptom of paranoia, but the self-identified victims who insist what they're experiencing is real have come together online and in support groups to share their stories.
VICE met up with a handful of Americans who claim their lives have been derailed by gang stalking to understand what serious consequences the phenomenon presents. Then we hear from Dr. Josh Bazell, one of many physicians who believes the victims of gang stalking are experiencing dangerous delusions that could be treated by mental health professionals.
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Bike Culture at Lewis & Clark College
Portland is one of the most bicycle-friendly cities in the country, and members of the Lewis & Clark community bike to campus year round.
Our campus offers bike registration, bike repair stations, a shuttle that allows bikes, bike maps, bicycle parking, a student-run bike co-op, and Zagster—an on-campus bike sharing program.
For more information, visit: lclark.edu
Top 10 best places to raise a family in the United States.
Top 10 best places to raise a family in the United States. Sorry, California and New York you cost too much.
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Thanks for stopping by The world according to Briggs, I make lists. Not just lists of random stuff, I make them about states, cities, towns and other places in the United States. I post 3 times a week and sometimes live stream. Enjoy.
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RAGBRAI : The great bike ride across Iowa
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Several hundred cyclists and I grind our way up the pitted, steaming asphalt in Springbrook State Park on the steepest incline of the 2013 RAGBRAI ride across Iowa.
The heat, humidity and the 50 miles take a toll, and my front wheel is wobbling. As I struggle to shake the feeling that a horde of strangers is trying to climb into my seat with me, or worse, knock me right off of it, I keep a safety pledge I made before I began this seven-day adventure: I call out, Biker stopping, pull off and walk the final 400 yards up the hill. It is my week's only surrender.
I'm not alone trudging along, bike in tow. In fact, alone is virtually impossible during the 408 official miles of this Iowa odyssey. For the duration, I'm absorbed by an amoebalike group of riders, at times more than 30,000 strong, in what amounts to a traveling state fair.
This collective organism gorges its way through electrolytes and brews, pork chops on a stick, deep-fried tenderloin the size of pingpong paddles and miles of pie, dancing in the street for good measure.
The experience is uniquely RAGBRAI. The world's oldest, largest and longest bicycle-touring event was started as a writing lark by two Des Moines Register staffers in 1973. Hence the alphabet soup name: Register's Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa. Registration is open for this year's ride, in July.
My primary mission each day is to finish, and then prepare to ride again the next morning. The surrounding craziness is just gravy.
I have no love for riding in large groups, but at 56, I am tackling RAGBRAI for the first time because the event has long fascinated me, and because my older brother Jim, in the middle of a Portland, Ore., to Portland, Maine, summer riding binge, offers to join me in Iowa. My Dallas riding buddy, Don, immediately throws in. My wife, Michelle Medley, signs on to drive our support vehicle.
Before we start our 1,000-mile training program, Don and I are casual cyclists, averaging about 14 slow miles a whack, he on a mountain bike and I on a hybrid. We both convert to road bikes by the time we meet Jim for the ride's start in Council Bluffs.
Finishing RAGBRAI, which announces route and host cities each January, cannot be confused with climbing Everest or riding in the Tour de France, but seven days in the saddle in weather that can be in the 100s or wet and rainy do provide a test.
We camp, spend one evening in a hotel (Des Moines) and another in the home of local residents.
The days take on a routine. We generally load the car before 8 a.m., then stop for coffee and breakfast sandwiches after 10 miles. Hydrate, hydrate, hydrate. Meet Michelle at each day's midtown point for a shaded lunch. Ride another 10 to 15 miles. Take another break, then try to punch a hole in the glutted cell traffic to find out where camp is. Set up the tents, rest and shower if we can find one; then eat and crash.
Other riders, mostly younger ones, party to bands performing in the host city well into the night.
The riders and their cycles come in all shapes, sizes and costumes. First-timers riding with groups are identifiable by virgin written in marker on their calves.
Each day, I pass a skeletal woman who appears to be in her 70s. On her saddlebag is a sign: I may be old but I'm slow. A must-be-pushing-450-pounds gentleman strains up each hill daily on his recumbent bike. Tandems. Recumbent bikes. Recumbent tandems. Two unicyclists even finish the 408 miles.
Slogan shirts and jerseys abound. One somewhat stout woman amuses one day with a marker-scrawled, Does this shirt make my butt look fast?
And everybody we meet is just so darn nice — along the highway, where shaded lawn chairs offer riders a sun break, and in the towns, where locals provide spots on their lawns or in their homes for riders to stay overnight.
Although we bypass the official closing baptismal location because of the mash of riders waiting their turn, dipping our tires in the Mississippi River is undeniably sweet. We are now officially RAGBRAI veterans.
John Ostdick is a Dallas freelance writer.
When you go
This year's RAGBRAI is July 20-July 26. Paper applications must be submitted by Feb. 15.
Tradition calls for participants during the seven-day, east-to-west ride (annual average, 468 miles) to dip their back tire in the Missouri River before they begin and kiss the Mississippi River with their front tire when they finish.
Curry Hammock State Park | Florida Keys Camping | Full Time RV
After a fun filled (and super expensive) time at Boyd's Campground in Key West, it was time to head north! Well, east a little bit at least. ???? We drove 50 miles north (which is really east) on US-1 to Curry Hammock State Park in Marathon, Florida!
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Curry Hammock is a real bargain if you can reserve a spot. Curry Hammock has 26 RV sites, 9 of which are right on the water! We were lucky enough to get site 19, which is one of those amazing waterfront sites. $36 a night waterfront in the Florida Keys? Count us IN!
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