I’m continuing to cycle to work despite daily 10-15
centimeter forecasts of snow in the B.C. Peace.
It’s not pleasant, enjoyable, pleasurable or any other synonym of the aforementioned
three kilometer commute. Chilly;
slippery; scary-mask wearing; uphill; dodging pickups spinning out and confused
motorists; winter cycling is turning into an extreme sport.
Would I love to remote start a vehicle and hop into its
waiting warmth instead of layering up and taking to two wheels? A loud YES! But I choose to be car free this
summer and am unwilling to pay for the convenience, ahem silliness, of owning a
car in a small town. Pedestrian and bike
friendly it is not – there’s an overwhelming lack of sidewalks, never mind bike
lanes in Chetwynd – but I maintain it’s better, or at least less bad, than
owning a vehicle.
As the handful of trails paralleling creeks that link schools
and subdivisions are better suited for dog walking, nature strolls and midnight
meanders than commuting I’m relegated to the road. A road which, throughout much of the province
is a bustling highway that briefly slows to 50 km/h, carries transports, log
and coal trucks and motorists baffled at sharing a lane with cyclists. Add in some concealed-by-the-snow ice and equally
hidden holes and it truly is a recipe for a deadly spill.
Sure, I’ve been offered rides but some lingering sense of
pride, stubbornness, or a desire not to be an inconvenience prevents me from
accepting. No longer employed in the
vicious, demanding and ultimately unforgiving forest industry, I still feel
there’s something to prove and a toughness that can only be cultivated in the
boreal to maintain. I recognize it’s
absolutely ridiculous to jump onto an exposed bicycle and slip around alongside
one-ton pickups yet I continue to do it – at least twice a day.