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Reading Material -- Bike Blogs

I'm always looking for new reading material, so in the interest of sharing, here are the bike-related blogs I look at semi-regularly:

Ira Ryan

Tarik Saleh

Kent Peterson

Belgium Knee Warmers (for those go-fast urges)

The Reflector Collector

And for a little local flavor, Steevo
bjanaszek
2007-06-14 14:41:07
I've been digging Vic's blog recently. Rando stuff, touring, recumbents, uprights, and lots of pretty pretty pictures.

Also, if you want some fun reading in the dry British humour vein, check out Pete Marshall's ride reports at Tall Stories (upright) and Low Tales (recumbent trike).
reddan
2007-06-14 15:49:27
this one's been making me crack up recenty
Bike snob NYC

and gotta give props to bike pgh
erok
2007-07-05 23:39:28
HAHAHAHAHA! Check this BikeSnob post.

He's got a picture of some 'bents in his segment on "losing sight of what a bicycle really is"...I'm in it. Guess I'm famous now...
reddan
2007-07-13 09:41:27
This is not a blog, but a forum post

Thanks for the link to Bike Snob!
danbp
2007-07-22 01:17:37
Heh.

There was recently another anti-Riv thread, though not nearly as well written.
bjanaszek
2007-07-22 07:39:29
bikesnobNYC makes me laugh out loud! i love it
justin_time
2007-07-22 20:08:02

any new ones that people have come across?


erok
2009-03-26 19:07:07

Streetsblog.org and .net are always informative.


http://www.howwedrive.com/ is very interesting traffic-psychology type stuff, and makes me want to buy the fellow's book.


alankhg
2009-03-27 02:25:08

yeah, i've been reading the how we drive blog pretty regularly now.


erok
2009-03-27 03:00:13

A little off topic, but to pick up from Alan's post on Vanderbilt's book, Traffic. Excellent read. Lots of notes and references on the subject matter: State, federal and international laws and policy, sociological and psychological studies, traffic engineering analysis and procedures, etc. It's nice because if there's an issue covered in the book, for which you want to learn more about, or that you may have a differing opinion, then you can follow the reference for clarity.


The Carnegie has a hardcopy, two CD's and an audio download of the book.


sloaps
2009-03-27 11:29:41