Scotland has appointed former professional mountain bike rider and co-founder of the Adventure Syndicate, Lee Craigie, as the new Active Nation Commissioner.
She will serve as a national advocate for walking and cycling across the country, raising the profile of sustainable travel.
Craigie said: “A large part of my mountain bike racing career has been about taking risks. My present work with The Adventure Syndicate is all about encouraging and enabling young people, and particularly young women, to take their own risks – to step out of their comfort zone and do something different to make them feel healthier, happier and more in control of their lives. Adventure is everywhere. It doesn’t take much to help people realise that.”
“The ambitious vision of the Scottish Government is what attracted me to this role, but it’s clear to everyone in the active travel community that there is a need to take a few more risks in order to achieve greater outcomes, faster than ever, so that even more people can connect and engage with lifelong walking and cycling – benefitting both their personal health and health of the planet.
“I feel excited and privileged to be the new Active Nation Commissioner for Scotland and I’m looking forward to building new relationships right across the country so that we can collectively push the current boundaries of thinking in how we travel. I’m committed to promoting the idea that by placing our own health needs, the needs of our communities and our environment ahead of single-occupancy car journeys, we can all live more sustainable and fulfilled lives.”
Add new comment
26 comments
Cyclists shave their legs because it makes them look more impressive and intimidating, especially with a sheen of embrocation on them. There is no other reason. It isn't any more aero (to any realistic level) and it doesn't allow road rash to heal any faster.
Apparently 6 months cycling helps with cognitive problems.
Doesn’t seem to have worked for Wiggins.
Making fun of Sir Bradders and depression wasn't funny on the other thread either, you and the others would do well to grow up a bit.
All those cyclist fly tippers are giving us all a bad name. Especially seeing how many trips some of them must be making to get such large piles of rubbish.
Why doesn't Chanel aka @yourroyalthighness just simply ask her other half why men cyclers (sic) shave their legs?
After all, he's a certain Mr Alex Dowsett.
We live in a pro car culture.
The vast majority of drivers rate themselves as better than or far better than average.
Driving around slower road users exposes their poor abilities of observation, planning and overconfidence in their abilities.
This leads to stress and the need to find someone else to be at fault.
A lot of people are surprisingly unpleasant and irrational when under stress, especially when they find themselves in conflict with another person.
We're car people; we enjoy our M series BMWs. However, we're also cycling people. (I've been riding for fitness, etc. since 1982, when I also bought my first car BTW...)
Close passing vehicles, even here in the colonies, are probably the result of 1) drivers thinking cyclists should be elsewhere, 2) drivers being careless, 3) drivers being ignorant, or 4) drivers being aggressive. I have disdain for all of them, because what the world needs is more cyclists and less driving.
However, cyclists, as is sometimes the case out here, riding 2 or 3 or 4 abreast at < 15 mph in a paved road lane that is posted at 45 mph for cars, are hurting the cause.
More common courtesy and mutual respect can only help. Empathy too. Lastly, cyclists who toss litter (including banana peels) while riding are no different than motorists who do the same. I don't care if your banana peel is biodegradable. So is a poo-filled nappy. Keep it off my road. What you bring on your ride needs to go home with you.
Welcome to the discussion, BOhio. Have a look at this (mirror the images in your head for countries such as yours where everyone drives on the "wrong" side of the road, as opposed to driving on the left - which is the "right" side).
safe_pass_2_abreast.jpg
That's utter bollocks.
Does every tractor or combine driver moving at 15mph "hurt their cause"? Horse riders? Amish folk in their pony-and-trap? No.
A 45mph limit is the maximum speed you should use, providing the road conditions are favourable, not what you set your cruise control to.
You're just another stereotype BMW owner thinking that because they've bought an overpriced car that they own the road as well. Let me tell you sonny: you don't. Never have, never will. So quit cryin' into your overpriced frothy coffee about it.
YOU need to start respecting other road users regardless of their speed. When you show a little respect then you and the rest of us might just have something in common.
Until then, YOU are the problem.
Regarding litter, you obviously haven't seen the rubbish alongside the country lanes where I ride to work. It's entirely thrown from cars: beer and energy drink cans, Lucozade and other fizzy drink bottle, McD packaging and other convenience foods - chip wrappers, crisp packets, choc bar wrappers etc etc. Not a gel or SiS wrapper to be seen. Not even an occasional banana skin!
All this.
BOhio, when I'm sitting behind a queue of traffic because there's no room to get safely past either nearside or offside, every single one of those motorists are in effect doing what you are saying some people on bikes do. Except motorists and their vehicles hold up everyone far more often and at far slower speeds than even a toddler can cycle at, or are you ignorant of the extreme traffic jams that MOTORISTS cause, in every country in the world?
The sad fact is that too many people who ride bikes are basically brught up to think from a young age that cyclists should get out the way, they're basically motorists with a motorists attitude that happen to ride bikes. the US is one of the worst in the world for cycle safety, not to mention unlawful police action against people riding bikes as they are allowed. The car/motor centric culture is massive in the US, worse than anywhere else.
Have a long hard think as to why your way of thinking is utterly wrong.
Professional-level whataboutery.
Try harder. No - sorry, I meant go and fuck yourself with something enormous.
Be nice. 'Tis the season, after all.
He's incapable. Davel is quite an unpleasant character, like quite a few on this site I might add.
Better?
Poor response, Davel.
You're right about individual responsibility with litter. If you use it, then you should dispose of it safely.
I just wish motorists did the same with their fuel - instead they just blow it out of their exhaust. Keep it out of my air! At least it doesn't kill too many people.
Very much agree. I’ve often thought perhaps the occupants of motor vehicles should breath the product of there exhaust first, pumped into the cabin of the vehicle, it would focus the mind as to where or not they really need to drive.
318d. About as boring and slow a BMW that you can buy.
Watching on a small screen and just saw white car, jeez that's gone from crazy to fucking crazy, should not be on the road. As suggested, seemed to pass 2 or 3 on the bend and wrong side of island...
Why does the car drop back so much? On the phone or to build up speed to ensure any accident is terminal?
It wasn't the original car, no idea why that one dropped back, but the idiot doing the close pass is clearly seen overtaking cars beforehand.
It’s a 20mph road, I think the Volvo that dropped back slowed for the pinch point then was simply doing the speed limit and angry BMW driver couldn’t cope with it. Must have been doing well over 40mph by the time he close passed James. Isn’t being caught doing double the limit an automatic 12 month ban?
BMW also wrong sided the traffic island.
But where is the evidence is what the police will say. Funny how video evidence is solid grounding when it suits them.
So I make that 4 serious driving offences in about 20 seconds. Has to be taken off the road - perhaps crush the car in front of him.
Yet another close pass. Nothing will change until these morons get the message that they will be found, charged and properly punished.
Like drink driving, close passes will then become unacceptable to the vast majority.
That psychology study is pretty interesting - though the study was done in Australia, so may or may not apply to the UK. Basically, it shows:
-People who subscribe to a car-centric culture and values tend to have more negative attitudes towards cyclists
-there is no statistically significant relationship between broader environmental values and attitudes towards cyclists (i.e. being environmentally minded does not make you more positive about cyclists, or vice versa)
-whether or not a cyclist wears lycra makes no statistically signficant difference to how people think about them
-people who have negative attitudes to cyclists are more likely to be aggressive towards them