May 2006 - Posts

Seattle Ride of Silence

The Ride of Silence is a nationwide bicycle ride to mourn those that we know who have been injured or have died in bicycle accidents on the public roads.  I joined about 500 (my guess) other cyclists for this ride in Seattle.

The ride had a lot of publicity here.  There was a great article about it in the Seattle Times which highlighted a serious accident that Gypsie Goss (one of the owners of Aaron's Bike Repair) had at the start of 2006. 

As I rode down to the start of the ride at Gas Works park I came across dozens of other cyclists who were going to the Ride of Silence.  Once there I found a lot of my normal cycling buddies from the BOB list and SIR.  We formed a small group near the front of the ride.

I don't have a good estimate of how many people were there, but the crowd was huge.  We filled much of the Gasworks parking lot and the group spread down into the park itself.  There were interesting bikes everywhere, from the Chair Bike that Aaron, Gypsie, and Braxton rode, lots of XtraCycles and tandems, some interesting homebuilt recumbents, dozens of fixed gear bikes, and lots of road bikes.  It was probably the most inclusive bike ride that I've been to in Seattle just judging by the crowd who showed up.

The planned route went over the Fremont Bridge, skirted the side of Queen Anne, down 15th Ave to downtown, looped through downtown, up Eastlake, through the U District, and finally went back to Gas Works park.

A few minutes past 7pm we headed out on the ride.  At the first traffic light one of my major concerns was relieved.  I was worried that cyclists on the ride would place more importance in staying together as a group then in traffic signals, but they didn't.  At Stone Way the light turned red and our group was divided.  We kept going and caught up.  This pattern was repeated throughout the ride, at times I was riding in a group with 20 people and at other times I was with a group of hundreds of cyclists.  I loved looking backwards after one red light and seeing this view: 

How often do you get to see a traffic lane jam packed with cyclists as far as the eye can see?

Having the group break up probably made a much larger time impact for observers.  There was apparently a 30 minute steady stream of cyclists passing through a single point downtown.  If we had held together this might have only been a 10 minute long group and less people might have seen us.

The cyclists on the ride did stick to the "silence" part of the name more than I expected.  There was a little whispering here and there, but for the most part everyone was silent.  The problem with this is that observers were always asking what we were doing, where we came from, and where we were going.  No one would answer and I think this probably confused bystanders instead of forwarding our cause.  Next year I hope to print up some business card sized flyers that I can hand out, and maybe others will do the same.

After the ride a few of us went over to Hale's Ales for dinner and a beer and had a nice time hanging out. 

Overall I think the ride was a moderate success.  The biggest issue is informing the public on why we are doing the ride.

More photos

alex

Kitchen update after two weeks

It's been two full weeks since the contractors first started on our kitchen.  They've made a lot of progress:

I've been taking photos as every major part is done.  Each of the links above links to the photos for that portion.

On Wednesday we stopped construction due to a problem with the cabinets. The cabinet boxes that arrived are made of particle board instead of the plywood that we ordered.  It is going to take the cabinet company about two weeks to make the new cabinet boxes.  Luckily the doors, drawers and hardware are identical, so they can be moved from our old boxes to the new ones.  In the meantime we'll have a lot of time to repaint the kitchen.

alex

Kitchen remodel starts

I've had a super busy weekend taking the old kitchen apart.  Our contractors are showing up tomorrow to start on a new one.

Why are we remodelling our kitchen?  A lot of our friends ask us this because the old kitchen looked quite nice.  Here is a photo:

The old kitchen looked great, but had a lot of shortcomings.  The biggest one is that most of the useful storage is up high and hard to reach (even for me at 5'11", even harder for Christine at 5'1").  There is a dead chimney running up one corner of it which wastes a lot of space and by removing it we can fit a large cabinet for the microwave and dishes.  The cabinets in our kitchen were built by the previous homeowner and were well made, but not always well thought out.  The silverware drawers were only about 2.5" high and we couldn't fit a full stack of forks.  The tops of the cabinets were all at different heights which looked kind of strange.  The area for the refrigerator was smaller than normal and limited our choices.

Here is what our kitchen looks like right now:

Removing the cabinets wasn't too bad.  I was happy to find someone (a member of my homebrew club) who was interested in all of the cabinets and he helped me remove them.  I'm glad to see that they didn't end up in a landfill. 

I spent the rest of yesterday and most of today redoing the kitchen electrical.  The original electrical had some serious code violations (the worst was a 50A 240V circuit breaker being split and feeding the outlets and lights over 15A wires).  I used the 50A breaker to run a new subpanel and moved all of the kitchen related electrical to the subpanel.  It is much cleaner and will allow the contractors to turn off the subpanel for wiring in new circuits without having to turn off the rest of the house power.  This is a photo of the subpanel:

There are tons of other photos at http://blogs.phred.org/photos/house/category1023.aspx.  The kitchen will probably be the biggest thing going on in my life over the next month, so I'm sure that I'll have more blog entries about it and will be updating the photos page too.

alex

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