Why Winter Cities Need to Reconsider Car Dependence

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  • Опубликовано: 6 мар 2023
  • We’re used to hearing “bikes aren’t practical here, we have winter” all the time. In this video we flip this on its head and ask whether it’s actually cars that are a dangerous headache in winter.
    References:
    “Snow has a greater effect than rain does on crash occurrence: snow can increase the crash rate by 84% and the injury rate by 75%.” journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3...
    “Even with the changes in rainfall-related risk to approximately 1.5 today, values are similar to the estimated risk of being responsible for a traffic crash as a function of alcohol-impairment with blood alcohol level equal to 0.08 relative to sober condition”: www.sciencedirect.com/science...
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Комментарии • 376

  • @AlexandarHullRichter
    @AlexandarHullRichter Год назад +302

    I like that you talk about the importance of having options. That's what car zealots don't get: it's not hate for cars, it's the want of options, and actually considering what is practical.

    • @AlexandarHullRichter
      @AlexandarHullRichter Год назад +35

      @@tristanridley1601 you might, but most people don't. Almost all the cyclists I know also drive, and many of them are car enthusiasts, or low-key car enthusiasts as well.
      It's like the channel says, that *cars do have their place.* The place for cars simply isn't *everywhere.*

    • @peterwallis4288
      @peterwallis4288 Год назад +3

      ​@@AlexandarHullRichter another car enthusiast cyclist here to back up your point.

    • @adinrichter6034
      @adinrichter6034 Год назад +2

      @@peterwallis4288 I'm an amateur car enthusiast and I absolutely hate car dependancy. I love cars and driving, but having it be the de-facto for literally every facet of life is just absurd. Being forced to drive 15-20 minutes to get to literally anywhere that I need/want to go to makes driving so much less enjoyable. Also, more people on the road makes driving more dangerous and tedious as well as causing an unaffordable level of road damage. The nearest restaurant to me is a 30 minute walk away, or a 10 minute bike ride on roads with no bike infrastructure and aggressive drivers.
      I would love to live somewhere where everything was within a comfortable and safe 5-10 minute walk or 10-15 minute bike ride, and I could occasionally go driving for fun.

    • @peterwallis4288
      @peterwallis4288 Год назад +1

      @@adinrichter6034 yes, I completely agree. It's stupid the amount of time we use our cars. Recently, I've had a period where I had to use a bike because I couldn't pay for petrol. My financial situation is better now, but I hope I never go back to relying on my car for every little trip. It's so silly. It's a waste of fuel and money, it's wearing out the car and it cuts out so much opportunity for excercise. Fortunately, where I live is getting better for cycling. It's currently much better than it was 5 years ago.

    • @indef2def
      @indef2def Год назад

      @@tristanridley1601 As a pedestrian mostly living in Korea, I also hate fast cyclists, a.k.a. "rolling assassins", who don't hesitate to fly by me with a few centimeters to spare.

  • @Amir-jn5mo
    @Amir-jn5mo Год назад +246

    Redundancy that's the key word. In any other line of tech and infrastructure, having redundancies to account for catastrophic failures or shutdowns is a golden standard. A cities transportation system needs to be treated the same way as well. Also f... shoveling snow.

    • @TomPVideo
      @TomPVideo Год назад +18

      Vancouver has had a couple of bad days this year and the road system basically collapsed from the snow. Thing is, the Skytrain was running just fine through it all.
      Grade-separated rail is a secondary transportation network.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад +2

      Redundancies are an mportant part of resiliency.

  • @pjrt_tv
    @pjrt_tv Год назад +110

    Saying that "people only cycle in the summer" is like saying that "people only walk in the summer".

    • @eliandrew2318
      @eliandrew2318 Год назад +10

      I think sadly some people would say this

    • @alex2143
      @alex2143 Год назад +10

      I do all of my skiing in the summer. No way anyone can enjoy themselves with all of that snow around. Give me a nice asphalt road to ski down.

    • @missc4rt3r
      @missc4rt3r Год назад +2

      american culture covers both 👍💔

    • @planepower8523
      @planepower8523 Год назад

      Sadly that is true though. very few people walk outside in the winter unless they have a dog or a car/ bus to get to.

    • @iqbalindaryono8984
      @iqbalindaryono8984 Год назад +3

      @@planepower8523 but why is that? Because no one walks or that there aren't actual pedestrian infrastructure?

  • @YoungThos
    @YoungThos Год назад +243

    This is the first Montreal winter I've spent without a car in a decade, and it's been incredibly relaxing. Turns out that winter driving and managing a car parked on the street during snow clearing operations were a huge source of stress that I didn't even realize was weighing on me until it no longer was. I am blessed to live in one of the last pockets of affordability in a major Canadian city, such that walking, biking and taking the metro covers 99% of my transportation needs.
    White knuckle winter driving in my hometown of Winnipeg over Christmas break was enough to remind me how distasteful the whole thing is. Good riddance 😅

    • @teddymacrae
      @teddymacrae Год назад +12

      I realized how much anxiety I'm missing out on by not having a car here when my aunt was talking about the jolt of stress the tow truck alarm gives her every time it goes by and I realized I've completed tuned it out and never notice.

    • @broccoli7263
      @broccoli7263 Год назад +19

      I loved waking up in the morning, drinking my coffee, and watching everyone else try to dig their cars out of the snow.

    • @APJTA
      @APJTA Год назад +11

      I've always lived car-free, and I've often wondered why people hated winter so much. Part of it personal taste (I don't like being cold, but I like being hot and sweaty way less, I enjoy going to the winter cabin, etc.), but I think being car-free for my whole life has been a big part of it. Switching from sneakers to boots is a relatively minor change, compared to having to dig your car out every winter. I've dug my mom's car out of the snow enough times to know that it's not fun.

    • @agatien
      @agatien Год назад +6

      Agreed. I live in a central neighbourhood and recently purchased a building with garages. My car is in one of those garages. It gets used once a week to reach the uncivilized regions called suburbia to visit family. Rest of the time? It sleeps OFF the public road (my personal car shouldn't be dependant on public land for storage).

  • @IHateStroads
    @IHateStroads Год назад +116

    One thing too is that if cities are planned better you wouldn’t even need to drive somewhere in the winter unnecessarily. There was a day in Ottawa where it was super white and snowy and I still just walked for lunch and was almost as fast as the vehicles.

    • @grantmccoy6739
      @grantmccoy6739 Год назад +3

      That name, are you actually a real person, or a bot?

    • @IHateStroads
      @IHateStroads Год назад +9

      @@grantmccoy6739 Why not both? 😂

  • @_JSN
    @_JSN Год назад +57

    The worst thing I have experienced in riding my bike during winter so far is drivers not giving enough space when snowbanks make the roads narrower.

    • @jasonarthurs3885
      @jasonarthurs3885 Год назад +8

      Drivers routinely do this when no snowbanks are present as well, regardless the season.

    • @Vio45lin
      @Vio45lin Год назад +2

      Unfortunately you just need to take the space for yourself. You stop feeling uncomfortable about it eventually.

  • @MythicalRedFox
    @MythicalRedFox Год назад +20

    Canadians like to posture as tough to the cold and the elements, but the moment you suggest building bike infrastructure, suddenly the winter is an insurmountable force that we have no choice but to hide in fear from lol.

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting Год назад +1

      and then the Finnish guys turn out to be those which are able to tackle the winter ... even on bikes

  • @aquaticko
    @aquaticko Год назад +50

    In the winter storm in metro Portland, Oregon 2 weeks ago, I felt much safer on my 30 min. walk to the grocery store--even on often-icy sidewalks--than I did on my 45 min. drive home from work in the morning. I could've slipped and broken an arm while walking, but I could've been hurt much worse by the giant pickups doing 65mph on the highway like it was any other sunny day. Driving is inherently dangerous, no matter how good the weather; I try to remind people of that whenever it makes sense to. We're all much too used to it in North America.

    • @frafraplanner9277
      @frafraplanner9277 Год назад +3

      That storm also showed how badly Portland needs new MAX lines that are underground and extend across the entire metropolitan area so that we don't have to drive for any reason

    • @aquaticko
      @aquaticko Год назад +2

      @@frafraplanner9277 A major problem is lack of redevelopment around stations outside of Portland. WAY too many here on the west side are surrounded by basically nothing (central Beaverton's two stations have multiple parking garages, surface level lots, car dealers, or are literally empty).

  • @vulduv
    @vulduv Год назад +42

    I'm glad you mentioned winter transit, and didn't _just_ focus on winter biking. Trains are incredibly resilient to cold weather.
    And even a well packed shitbox for a bus can be surprisingly warm! (And most buses aren't shitboxes!)

    • @Moses_VII
      @Moses_VII Год назад +3

      That's why Russians love the trains and hate driving.

    • @MrBirdnose
      @MrBirdnose Год назад

      In Seattle I learned really quick that the last place you wanted to be if it snowed was on a Metro bus. They would lose traction and get stuck, and the articulated buses would jackknife. You'd get stranded every time.

  • @DeathToMockingBirds
    @DeathToMockingBirds Год назад +31

    In the 1 year that I owned a car in Montreal, I accumulated 1085$ of tickets. Not because of speeding, or because of the many accidents I had (old Sunfire, the breaks did not work in the snow, rear-ended a few cars), but because when I went to school early, pulled all-nighters to finish labs, I came back many times to my car having disappeared, towed away for snow removal. Every time it cost 152$ to get it back.
    As soon as I did not needed a car anymore, I sold it. It's a nightmare in Montreal, and in the winter in general. I slid off-road 2 times because the road was icy (a slight turn becomes an increasing wobble until I did a 360 and found myself in the ditch).
    Oh, and one accident was during a storm, my windows completely fogged up, no visibility, ran into the driver's door of someone turning. I was never hurt, nor did I hurt anyone in any accidents, but that's more a miracle than anything.
    One was after a looooong day at work (I was a painting contractor, needed the car for business), I was so tired, and fell asleep at a red light. I was rear-ended, for once it was not 100% my fault.
    Once there was no accidents, but barely. I was trying to find my exit, looking at google maps on my phone, and realized that I was driving past it, so I swerved, too hard, and the car did a 360 in the middle of the highway. Thankfully, I was able to just continue down the exit, no damages, but it was a very close one.
    Ok, since I'm saying all this, here's more.
    I said my brakes did not work when there's snow... I was pinned between a ramp wall and a big truck that did not saw me (the horn did not worked), and I could not brake in time, but thankfully I was just barely able to squeeze away.
    Once I was in the snow, on the Pont Champlain, and the car in front of me braked suddenly, I swerved in the middle lane, thankfully no one was coming in this direction at the time.
    In contrast, I biked often in the winter, and the only times I hurt myself was when the road was right after verglas and I slid on ice.
    Anyway.
    If all that did not convinced you that cars in cities are a stupid idea, consider that young guys with their first car are also on the road in those conditions.

    • @snowinjuly4872
      @snowinjuly4872 Год назад +2

      So much this. I am currently a student and many of the local coffee shops are in areas with time restricted parking, yet too far and uncomfortable to walk or bike. If I want to study there, its laughably short 2 hour increments or risk getting towed.

  • @rosemarymcbride3419
    @rosemarymcbride3419 Год назад +106

    We should start recognizing that our society's insistence that we maintain the same productivity as is possible in summer is the cause of so much of our stress related to winter. The whole of the wintry world around us is resting but we are not afforded that option. And in order to get it we need to take it from elsewhere.

    • @grantmccoy6739
      @grantmccoy6739 Год назад +5

      I agree. It's not only a problem in difficult times, it's stressful when times are good.

    • @machtmann2881
      @machtmann2881 Год назад +11

      I basically just hibernate in the winter compared to the summer. It's much healthier to know when there are low productivity times and high productivity times. I'm more social in the summer too but love just staying in and catching up on books when it's cold out there.

    • @jimmystaples8596
      @jimmystaples8596 Год назад +8

      In traditional agricultural life your year was split into two parts.
      The winter
      The time you spend preparing to not die during the winter.
      Spring summer and fall were spent growing food, harvesting firewood, building/repairing your home, etc. Winter was just spent literally trying to stay warm and not starve. It is very nice that we have come so far that we are able to do so much stuff in the middle of winter but I'm not convinced that it is good for our overall health. Winter is meant to be a time of rest.

    • @maYTeus
      @maYTeus Год назад +1

      as someone who has no winter I will say it's not fair if u get an off season. I want an off season

    • @bcamping1
      @bcamping1 Год назад +2

      ​@@maYTeus you can have summer off

  • @melissahalle8398
    @melissahalle8398 Год назад +60

    I don't own a car and I get around just fine in my neighborhood (villeray). I hear car owners complain about the hassle of snow removal, finding parking when the plows come, etc. Sometimes the process of removing snow in the morning makes people late. It's so much better to take the metro in winter.
    Love your videos fellow montrealers. There isn't enough attention on how great montreal is for urban design. Thank you for shining a light

    • @kb_100
      @kb_100 Год назад +6

      Not all of Montreal unfortunately. My area is very car dependent and we have a mayor who is stuck in the 1970s. Ville St-Laurent...

    • @theepimountainbiker6551
      @theepimountainbiker6551 Год назад +8

      🤣 I think you angered this car owner ☝️

    • @isaacrocksyay
      @isaacrocksyay Год назад +14

      @@WillmobilePlus maybe if you got outside and got some exercise you would clear your head and be less angry. You have no arguments, just insults

    • @hngldr
      @hngldr Год назад +5

      What always drove (heh) me nuts was how if my coworkers ever showed up late due to snow driving, snow clearing, or even just regular summer traffic it was never considered their fault and everyone all the way up management would let them off or maybe complain some themselves as if it was totally unavoidable.
      But if I showed up ON TIME instead of my usual 5-15 minutes early because I got a flat tire, I'd have to hear for hours to days from every person in the company how I need to switch to a more "reliable" form of transport, even though I was on time more often than any other worker in the whole company.
      I no longer work there, but it still irks me how even supposed smart and data-focused people only care about incorrect perceptions and emotions and can't see past their nose

    • @Kizarat
      @Kizarat Год назад +2

      The thing about shoveling snow is that it's something you have to do for free for something that you're constantly paying for (the car) 😂

  • @brokenrecord3095
    @brokenrecord3095 Год назад +35

    I generally prefer riding in February than July... You can always put more clothes on when its cold out, but when it's hot and humid you can only take off so much before the neighbours start to talk

    • @een_schildpad
      @een_schildpad Год назад +2

      Totally agree!!! I'm less fond of the extremely cold or snowy days, but 95% of the winter is awesome and I prefer it to summer riding. It the winter, I can ride in my wool sport coat being all fancy and not get overheated 🙃

    • @jasonarthurs3885
      @jasonarthurs3885 Год назад +1

      Agreed. I prefer winter riding because the multi-use recreational path I use to commute is overrun with families and strollers and dogs and other cyclists during the summer. Come colder months, I have entire rides where I do not come across another soul for 90 minutes; it's bliss.

    • @sysbofh
      @sysbofh Год назад

      Take it from someone that face 40C on the summers... not even getting naked will help You with this. In the cold one can always put another layer of clothes. Above 27C... nothing really helps.
      Except biking. Going slow, on a 40C day, is WAY better than walking - I'm making my own breeze!
      And bike, usually, are point to point! I don't have to walk 5 minutes from the parking lot to the building. On the summer this is enough to get me dripping from sweat.

    • @radriver8521
      @radriver8521 Год назад

      Could it be another reason why so many people bike in colder places like northern Europe?

  • @isaacrocksyay
    @isaacrocksyay Год назад +82

    Riding a bike in the winter is 90% of the time the same experience as riding in the summer, just with extra clothing

    • @Skzzlemister
      @Skzzlemister Год назад +6

      Absolutely! If you gear up for winter, you can use your bike all year and leave the car at home for more trips.

    • @leandrog2785
      @leandrog2785 Год назад +1

      Is that assuming cleared bike paths?

    • @isaacrocksyay
      @isaacrocksyay Год назад +3

      @@leandrog2785 not even. Just clear streets

    • @isaacrocksyay
      @isaacrocksyay Год назад +4

      @@leandrog2785 if the bike paths were clear all the time it would be 100% like riding in the summer

    • @scottjs5207
      @scottjs5207 Год назад

      Except for those days when a heavy gust of wind turns you coat into a kite... that's always so fun... lol. Do you ever use safety glasses or a face mask? I started using safety glasses cause my eyes would dry out or snowfall getting in my face.

  • @kdejvviihd6439
    @kdejvviihd6439 Год назад +8

    E bike with winter tires 😂 I was riding up the hill in Toronto passing cars stuck and people pushing each other and raging. It was the best day of my life.

  • @jfmezei
    @jfmezei Год назад +16

    I live in Pointe Claire, a city that actively blocks bike paths for winter. yet, because streets are cleared efficiently, the amount of time that roads can't be ridden on a bike is likely measuired in hours per year, at least for the destinations I goto (supermarket, pool, post office, patisserie). But it does require skill to ride when street is not clear because potholes or large crachs can be hidden under snow. And some stretches, you lose lateral control so need to ride carefully. But because roads aren,t cleared to full width, it also requires longer trip times because at stop signs or street lights, you need to get on side and let traffic behind you pass and then get back on road and ride. (which is quite different from your video that shows bare bike paths).

  • @aarons3008
    @aarons3008 Год назад +31

    Great video! I'm so sick of hearing the bikes dont make sense in winter argument it's absolutely doable city's just need to have a moticum of forethought and planning as Montreal has demonstrated!

    • @OhTheUrbanity
      @OhTheUrbanity  Год назад

      Thank you!

    • @theepimountainbiker6551
      @theepimountainbiker6551 Год назад +4

      You too angered a car owner 🤣 buttercup cant suck it up

    • @aarons3008
      @aarons3008 Год назад +1

      @@theepimountainbiker6551 😂 100%

    • @grantmccoy6739
      @grantmccoy6739 Год назад

      @@aarons3008 yeah, making people upset is really funny.

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +1

      @@WillmobilePlus True. Typically we know what's best for our specific situation.

  • @stevengoomba6490
    @stevengoomba6490 Год назад +5

    We just had our “once in a lifetime” (now once a year lol) winter storm here in north Texas a few weeks ago, and wow it just emphasizes how people really can’t drive here in just about any weather. I can’t believe so many people were forced to go to work, we’re not built for this and neither are our roads. I almost crashed into another car on the ice and there was nothing I could do about to. Really goes to show how any other option would’ve been way better.

  • @TrickiVicBB71
    @TrickiVicBB71 Год назад +5

    Live in Edmonton, the city may brag it is a winter city. But not very well run one.
    I've seen people argue that since we are a car centric city. It is useless to build bike lanes or make a walkable city.
    That we need more parking in Downtown and better snowplowing efficiency

  • @Benjamin_Bratten
    @Benjamin_Bratten Год назад +9

    used to ride my bike in montreal winter all the time until (get this) I got hit by a car that just sped off

  • @hanstun1
    @hanstun1 Год назад +7

    All the biking capitols of the world have winters. Not sure why this is rarely mentioned.

  • @MisyeDiVre
    @MisyeDiVre Год назад +44

    Shortening the distances between destinations is just obvious when inhabiting a cold environment.

    • @Kizarat
      @Kizarat Год назад +6

      The more low density suburbs that are built, the bigger a city becomes and the farther destinations will be.

    • @alex2143
      @alex2143 Год назад +8

      or really when inhabiting any environment. The key word here isn't "cold", it's "inhabiting". As in: it's a place for people, not for cars.

    • @MisyeDiVre
      @MisyeDiVre Год назад +3

      @@alex2143 Agreed

    • @EnjoyFirefighting
      @EnjoyFirefighting Год назад

      would be difficult in rural areas. Just went onto a North Cape road trip in February last year. That municipality up there has a population density of 9 inhabitants / square mile. However 2500 of the 3000 inhabitants all live in the same 0.41 sq mi large village which is the administrative center; THe next such village is rather far down the road, like all the "larger" places up there

    • @alex2143
      @alex2143 Год назад +1

      @@EnjoyFirefighting that's exactly how you do it. Make it so you can go to the store or visit your neighbors on foot or bike, and kids have a safe neighborhood to play in. Then all you really need is a bike path alongside the road to the next village and you've succesfully made the town bikeable.

  • @kb_100
    @kb_100 Год назад +10

    Car dependency is so internalized that people can't imagine any other reality.
    Also the value placed on personal comfort is extremely high. People are willing to shovel snow for 20 minutes and risk their lives on a snowy highway because it's warm and comfortable inside the car.

    • @kb_100
      @kb_100 Год назад +7

      @@WillmobilePlus I don't hate people that drive. I drive too.
      What I hate is that our cities are built exclusively for cars. Every other mode is given a lower priority. Making them slower and less convenient. This is why most people decide to drive. Many people wish they didn't have to drive but are forced to.
      Also driving is extremely dangerous. Especially in the winter. And all the parking and wide roads make cities soulless and boring.

    • @theepimountainbiker6551
      @theepimountainbiker6551 Год назад +3

      I MUCH prefer the personal comfort a few hundred dollars a month in my pocket and good health biking everywhere brings. Car owners dont know what theyre missing out on

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад

      I think we evolved towards personal comfort on all aspects of life, not just when it comes to cars. It's just a human trait. Some value that more (and on different things) than others but it's always there.

  • @SleinJinn
    @SleinJinn Год назад +8

    Also worth mentioning how much road salt degrades expensive car infrastructure, too, just further reinforcing how cost-inefficient car-centric development is.

  • @wodediannao4577
    @wodediannao4577 Год назад +11

    Great video as always. I do wish you had spent more time on talking about the biggest benefit to riding a bike over a car in the winter, which is that you can pick it up and walk when it's stuck instead of having to get help to push it or call for a tow.

    • @gordonlbelyea4409
      @gordonlbelyea4409 Год назад +1

      I've stopped a few times during winter commutes to park my bike and help push cars stuck in the show.

  • @USMCHolo
    @USMCHolo Год назад +4

    This is pretty timely for me. Just a couple of weeks ago Portland was inundated with a record snowfall, far exceeding our forecast of one or two inches (5 to 10 centimeters for our sane friends across the border). The entire city was effectively shut down unexpectedly, with many people getting stuck for hours in slowly crawling traffic. Meanwhile, I used our light rail system to make my commute into downtown that morning, and was able to get back home in the afternoon with relatively little inconvenience--just some woes about being underdressed and having to trudge through shin-high snow from the station to my house. The whole event really highlighted how fragile automobile networks are when faced with just a bit of inclement weather.

  • @michaelvickers4437
    @michaelvickers4437 Год назад +7

    I moved into a house that's right across the street from a Communauto car-share station. I've sworn that once our current car gives up the ghost, we'll go car-free and just use the car-share when we need a car.
    It'll be a relief not paying for insurance, gas and maintenance. And no more shoveling the driveway either.

  • @s13q
    @s13q Год назад +7

    i'm from outside montreal and i sold my car when i moved to the city. Best decision ever

  • @een_schildpad
    @een_schildpad Год назад +3

    I can always tell the people in my area that have actually tried using their bike in the winter from those that haven't; those that haven't always say something like "it's too cold for me" while those that have know your real problem is being too warm and wearing to many layers :⁠-⁠)
    And that's in addition to the other point you made, which is that most of the weather in winter isn't the extreme weather. In fact, sometimes it can be quite mild!

  • @TheSharkasmCrew
    @TheSharkasmCrew Год назад +10

    I appreciate the note of realism on how car infrastructure is valuable, and that its often over-demonized by urbanists online. We all spend a bit too much time in our internet echo chambers, so if us urbanism-minded folk can relate to and sympathize with our neighbors a bit more we can better get our message across and show them that we all have the same goal in mind: building safer, more enjoyable, and more effective neighborhoods. Some degree of mutual understanding is necessary in order to actually get anything done.

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +2

      Nice comment.
      Echo chambers absolutely. That idiot NJB's bans everyone who show just a little dissent with his opinions. If there's anyone who can be called "bike cultist" with a great degree of accuracy it's him.

    • @FSniffer
      @FSniffer Год назад

      Yeah, but we are running out of time. Cars represent around 60% of greenhouse gases of the ways of transport (not including manufactoring) plus air pollution that are killing people.
      I truly believe that there are good reasons to demonize car infrastructure.

    • @tanneryoung619
      @tanneryoung619 Год назад +1

      You cannot "over-demonize" a mode of transportation that is the single-minded focus of North American city design + municipal management. Motorists are not victims, they are the overwhelming majority and receive EVERY possible accommodation imaginable. For or all intents and purposes, they are the perpetrators of countless societal ills yet they receive every perk and accommodation imaginable from municipal governments while shouldering absolutely none of the responsibility. Ottawa, for instance, has +12,000km of active roadways meanwhile only has ~900km "cycling infrastructure", a vast majority of which being multi-use pathways (not even dedicated cycling infrastructure).
      The pervasiveness of personal car infrastructure/use SHOULD BE DEMONIZED because personal vehicles and the infrastructure required to accommodate them are objectively bad in EVERY quantifiable metric. They cause severe environmental degradation (unquantifiable cost on the healthcare system + quantifiable costs on the local environment), they are a massive source of noise pollution (which has its own widespread health effects), they are a drain on personal finances (US drivers spent roughly $10,000 a year on vehicle ownership + maintenance in 2021), the infrastructure to support them is the largest financial line item on municipal budgets (see Ottawa's 12k km's of roads to maintain), and just to top it all off they consistently kill people on a regular basis.
      I agree that there has to be mutual understanding to accomplish positive urbanist goals. Yet that understanding has to come EXCLUSIVELY from motorists and no one else. Motorists are the group that causes, and has the potential to cause, the most direct/indirect harm and as a result, it is their responsibility to shoulder this "mutual understanding". It is not the responsibility of cyclists or of pedestrians to coddle motorists because of their infantile desire for individualism & "convenience" (quotes as I would argue car ownership in not convenient). It is not up to the vulnerable road/transportation users to accommodate or "come to a mutual understanding' with the people/mode of transportation that are literally maiming and killing them.
      All of this comes from a car owner and a huge enthusiast. But as a piece of the transportation network pie, it MUST come dead last.

    • @TheSharkasmCrew
      @TheSharkasmCrew Год назад

      ​@@tanneryoung619 Dude, nothing you're saying is news to, or would be refuted by, anyone in this comment section (aside from several hyperboles and your excessively idealistic slant).
      That said, good luck encouraging positive policy change if your strategy is simply to demonize the car-loving majority.
      A huge population of North Americans will always hate urbanists and pro-urban initiatives as long as there are enough people online being as haughty, opinionated, and alienating as you are right now.

    • @delftfietser
      @delftfietser Год назад

      ​@Goapy Beleive your little fantasy if you want. The US EPA says that total ghg emissions for transportation is 28%. Industrial and electric emissions are 22% and 25%. Do you demonize them equitably? Or do you think your hatred of carbrains is holy? There are those who hate bicycles the same way.

  • @ericwright8592
    @ericwright8592 Год назад +3

    The most annoying thing is when it snows the municipality will devote massive resources to plowing the streets asap. Piling the snow up in bike lanes and sidewalks. Making everything other than driving infinitely less plausible. Even still the cars still struggle in the snow and the total number of cars is much lower. So we spend massive resources and inhibit walking all for the sake of a few cars that still barely make better time than simply walking.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Год назад +1

      In virtually every municipality, there are more drivers than non-drivers. Even the most transit- friendly ones.

  • @Robin_Goodfellow
    @Robin_Goodfellow Год назад +5

    *Laughs maniacally in Alaskan*
    Okay but seriously, snow clearing is a serious problem for urbanism here. The car heavy infrastructure cripples the budget to the point where roads are never cleared in a timely manner, meaning that icy and snowy roads are just a fact of life here, even in the middle of the city. As a result, sidewalks are often used as snow storage in the winter, and bike lanes are forgotten altogether, further encouraging car travel, especially in larger, more powerful vehicles.

  • @joekerrthejoker
    @joekerrthejoker Год назад +1

    “But it’s windy” Best feedback I got from my neighbour here in Edmonton after biking home in the winter.

  • @abchaplin
    @abchaplin Год назад +7

    It's 6 March and I am getting out on my bicycle today -- in Ottawa, with snow in the forecast. If I can do that at the age of 66, there are lots of other slugs like me in Ottawa who could.

    • @abchaplin
      @abchaplin Год назад +2

      @@WillmobilePlus, "slugs like me" don't have better things to do, we're retired. I still arrive at my destinations warm, dry, and sometimes faster than those who drive, and a lot faster than "No See Transpo."

    • @OhTheUrbanity
      @OhTheUrbanity  Год назад +4

      @@WillmobilePlus In Montreal we absolutely encounter trips where cycling (or taking the metro) is as fast as or faster than driving, especially when you take into account the challenge of finding a parking spot at each end. It's not every trip by any means, but it's pretty common. That's because the city wasn't designed solely around the speed and convenience of cars. (Of course, it does vary by neighbourhood. Newer areas are more car-centric.)

    • @MarioFanGamer659
      @MarioFanGamer659 Год назад +3

      @@WillmobilePlus Because a common argument again cycling is that it's only viable when you're young as that's when you're the fittest. It has got some basis in reality but fitness also depends on whether you're active in general and cycling is an activity where driving a car all the time will make you feel like you can barely lift your arm when you get old (exaggerating with the latter, of course, but still not to be dismissed).

    • @abchaplin
      @abchaplin Год назад +2

      @@WillmobilePlus, I have better coffee at home. No, I am talking about 10km away where my favourite pubs are. (If a destination is a block away, I walk.) Also, if you're not retired, then you're not "a slug like me," you're probably a working stiff, which might explain your antipathy to cycling, but I think you have your priorities bass-ackward. You should cycle to work and be accommodated for your effort. I was at NDHQ and at the House of Commons. For me, my vehicle is my third choice when it comes to transport.

    • @abchaplin
      @abchaplin Год назад +2

      @@WillmobilePlus, I gather you do not know Ottawa.

  • @markfrench9004
    @markfrench9004 Год назад +9

    When I get stuck in snow on my bike, I get off and push my way out of trouble. When I get stuck in the snow in my car, I lock the doors and pray the polar bears aren't too hungry that day.

  • @Optopolis
    @Optopolis Год назад +4

    In my experience of both biking and driving, bikes are worse on an individual level because you are on two wheels instead of three or four. Makes it really easy to have one end of the bike slide out from under you like happened to me last Christmas. That being said, yeah, it is nerve racking to not know where the edge of the road is and whether you'll be able to stop in a car. I drive slower in the icy, snowy weather, but that makes it nerve racking when everyone else tries to drive faster and gets pist when I'm not going fast enough for them.

  • @nicthedoor
    @nicthedoor Год назад +6

    Great video as always. Even here in Vancouver I hear this argument. There is hope though. Public opinion is slowly changing!

    • @jasonarthurs3885
      @jasonarthurs3885 Год назад +2

      I'm in Victoria, and similar murmurs haunt us. No one here has any right to gripe about winter, yet they do.

    • @geoff5623
      @geoff5623 Год назад +1

      Yup, can't possibly bike in the 6 month long constant downpour of Vancouver winters 🙄

  • @ameenwalli-attaei6343
    @ameenwalli-attaei6343 Год назад +1

    Cycling in the suburbs of Toronto this year was so nice. I cycled more than once most weeks in December, January, and February. If there was a snow storm, I just waited 1-2 days for pathways to get cleared. Snow is better than rain, and cold is better than a hot summer day, so cycling in the winter is great when paths are clear!

  • @Zalis116
    @Zalis116 Год назад +4

    There's a reason you see a lot more well-preserved classic cars from decades ago in places like Arizona, and it's not just because of all the old people there -- warm/dry climate + no road salt to combat snow and ice = cars don't rust away after 15-20 years.

  • @acondor
    @acondor Год назад +3

    This year I biked through winter for the first time. Tbh, the hardest thing to get used to is the high winds. But I started using my snowboarding goggles and now I feel toasty 🤩

  • @Chionomania
    @Chionomania Год назад +3

    Your Yellowknife call out is hilarious - I have a classmate who is down here in Edmonton for a couple years from Yellowknife. She uses her bicycle to commute all winter back home in Yellowknife. She claims it's easier there actually, because snow pack on the side roads stay consistent all winter there, and don't turn into rutted ice like they do here in balmy Edmonton.

    • @grahamturner2640
      @grahamturner2640 Год назад +1

      Damn. I wonder what it’s like driving in Yellowknife.

  • @chrisstarlitvagabond1496
    @chrisstarlitvagabond1496 Год назад +3

    I really like your sympathetic manner of communication, it sets you apart from more antagonistic urban channels like NJB. I encourage you to keep it up! Some feedback: Your setup seems to be capturing substantial vocal sibilance & plosives, and in a couple places the non-voice audio gets loud enough to cloud the narration (for example at 4:23). But these are surmountable with experience!

  • @AlexandarHullRichter
    @AlexandarHullRichter Год назад +5

    I live in Portland Oregon (US), and it's typical to get only 4ish days of ice and/or snow. This year, we actually had 2 multi-day snow and ice storms, and I really wanted to ride during the first one (online challenge that happened to coincide with the Christmas Eve Eve storm), so I bought a set of studded winter tires (Schwalbes), and I actually really liked it, during both storms, and there were a bunch of things I noticed.
    The first is that I wasn't the only one riding. In fact, the snow took impressions of a lot of tires really well. There weren't nearly as many people riding as on sunny days or in the rain, but there were still a bunch of people that had ridden over most of the streets I used before I got there. I could even tell what tires there were using, and in some cases, what type of bike and what direction they had been riding, based on the model of their tire and the tread pattern. As a bike nerd, that was exciting to me.
    The second thing I noticed was how quiet it was. This was both because the vast majority of Portlanders don't drive in the snow, and will stay home from work and school instead. It was also because snow absorbs sound. I found it to be rather peaceful to be riding around in the really quiet environment with not as many people out.
    The last (and most important thing) is that I felt infinitely safer on the bike than I would have in my car. If (/when, because I'm not perfect and it happened a few times) I mess up on my bike, I'm falling on my butt, with many layers of padding because of being dressed up for the cold. If I had taken my car out instead and messed up, it would cost thousands of dollars in damage, and I might not get where I was going at all, and I could have killed someone, or I could have died. My car is one of my hobbies too and I really like it, and the idea of risking damage or destruction of my car doesn't sit well with me either. I feel it's way safer to take neighborhood streets on a bike if there's any question of being able to handle a car safely.

    • @frafraplanner9277
      @frafraplanner9277 Год назад +1

      I rode BIKETOWN during the first storm (because MAX wasn't running) and I experienced all the things you said here too

    • @een_schildpad
      @een_schildpad Год назад +1

      I LOVE the muffled sounds and that distinctive crunch sound of the bike tires on snow and ice ❤️

  • @SagaciousSilence
    @SagaciousSilence Год назад +5

    We hear the same statements in Seattle. We have shit weather where if you choose to walk / bike to work, you might as well take a second shower when you get there since you’ll be soaked with rain. If we had more rail coverage, I think we’d be able to cut down on the heavy car reliance here.

  • @DutchLabrat
    @DutchLabrat Год назад +4

    Look, if you are cold on your bicycle JUST SPEED UP A BIT :D

    • @MrBirdnose
      @MrBirdnose Год назад

      That increases the windchill and my face freezes. ;)

  • @justinroby2474
    @justinroby2474 Год назад +1

    one of the entrances to the gas station i work at is a 12 foot hill thats about a 45 degree angle and its funny to see cars slide down it. especially overconfident truck drivers.
    so much for needing to drive in the winter

  • @travellingcharlatan5375
    @travellingcharlatan5375 Год назад +2

    My wife and I have spent all winter ebike commuting in far northern Vermont. With bar mitts, studded tires, and a balaclava it's quite pleasant -- far better than digging out a car or waiting for it to warm up. The worst thing about it is being judged harshly or dismissed as a lunatic.

    • @knosis
      @knosis Год назад +2

      Waiting for a car to warm up takes forever. I have saved so much time on the bike just from that! And plus I feel so much more comfortable temperature wise on my bike in winter than in the car.

  • @tylerschoenhofen9458
    @tylerschoenhofen9458 Год назад +4

    Good stuff guys!

  • @m0fr001
    @m0fr001 Год назад

    I bike commuted all winter in VT this year and found it way easier than I was expecting! Thanks for making this!

  • @fool117
    @fool117 Год назад +3

    Ive been biking in Montreal winters for 7+ years now and every year it gets easier and more common. The amount of bikers I've seen this year compared to when I started is crazy! All you really need are good face/hand protection and some decent winter tires. For anyone thinking about giving it a try, I highly recommend it!

    • @shakyhandpictures2185
      @shakyhandpictures2185 Год назад +1

      I totally agree, this winter I’ve seen a huge increase on the roads, now, if everyone would just do three things,,,,
      Buy a headlight
      Buy a taillight
      Buy a f@#$Ing bell!
      Cheers from Ontario!

  • @brayxan4741
    @brayxan4741 Год назад +3

    I was just in Montreal a few days ago, and I enjoyed walking around it, even when it was snowing. Driving in Montreal would have sucked, but Montreal has an amazing public transit system, so I didn’t have to drive at all.
    Canadian cities shouldn’t use winter as an excuse for car infrastructure, if anything it should be an excuse for making compact walkable cities.

  • @geoff5623
    @geoff5623 Год назад +1

    I used to deliver the morning paper in my hilly neighborhood by bike year round, and there was only a few times where there was too much snow overnight and I had to walk it instead. By the next day, plows would have cleared the main road, and cars compacting snow on the smaller roads would make it so I could bike again.

  • @donmc1950
    @donmc1950 Год назад +1

    I cycled in Ottawa to work for 30 years from April to November, where occasionally the temperature went to minus 20 C. I stopped in winter not because it was cold but because the sun would set at 4: 30 and I would have to cycle in the dark. Cycling in cold weather is much preferred over waiting at a bus stop for a late crowded bus .

  • @shaunhall960
    @shaunhall960 Год назад

    Thanks for the video!

  • @bumblebeemer
    @bumblebeemer Год назад +2

    I've found most skeptics have never used anything *but* a car to get around. At least where I am, it's that complete lack of knowledge, and a lot of fear mongering about crime.

  • @AndyGnarr
    @AndyGnarr Год назад +2

    My best winter biking memory is going out in the middle of a snow storm. As I placed my bike in the middle of the road my neighbours were trying to shovel put their car which was stuck in their own driveway. They wished me good luck, expecting I wouldn't make it far. However I rode away with ease as I had studded tires on my bike.

  • @hngldr
    @hngldr Год назад +2

    After getting studded tires for my bike (which are illegal for cars because with that much weight they'd tear up the roads too much), I once got stuck in my car after freezing rain iced everything up, got out my bike and kept going with no issues (other than having to go back to get the car later).
    Also if there is just a super short section that's impassable (say a section that didn't get plowed, got a big roof-slide, or some other winter blockage perhaps from other stuck vehicles), you have to wait for a higher power or work yourself for hours to get through a few feet with a car, whereas it is trivial to trudge through it with a bike and keep going once past the issue. This has happened to me in both forms of transport many times with extremely different results.

  • @uomouomouomouomo
    @uomouomouomouomo Год назад +2

    In Toronto we had a snowfall on Friday of about 25cm, it was pretty heavy stuff. It’s now Tuesday, and even by the weekends, most roads were clear and in fact dry. Today, while getting a coffee on a street where the roads have bike lanes (de marked by a painted line), and I saw a completely dry road, with the entirety of the snow pushed onto the bike lanes. At this point, you think that could be cleaned.
    Most people always point to heavy snowfalls as a deterrent to cycle infrastructure in cities with colder climate. This is only a few times in the year at this point, and as you both pointed out… not even cars, buses, even some trucks can do the snow. Car lovers’ argument, such a moot point

    • @uomouomouomouomo
      @uomouomouomouomo Год назад +1

      What I mean to say - part of the reason why we have notions of bikes being redundant in snowy cities is the maintenance performance prioritizing certain modes of transportation in the first place.. in most places, it’s even cars before pedestrians

    • @uomouomouomouomo
      @uomouomouomouomo Год назад

      @@tristanridley1601 but the roads are fine, who cares!

    • @uomouomouomouomo
      @uomouomouomouomo Год назад

      @@tristanridley1601 sounds like you’re a prime candidate for a job at city hall with that attitude shahsh

  • @HistoricalWeapons
    @HistoricalWeapons Год назад +2

    I’m at small city Alberta Canada. Good luck convincing people here to not drive

  • @ulrichspencer
    @ulrichspencer Год назад +1

    I just finished grad school and started a job full-time here in Montreal in January. I got myself an electric scooter, and I've been riding that to and from work most days, even through January and February here. The reason I've been able to do that is because I have a route to work that is ENTIRELY on separated bike lanes, door to door, and those bike lanes are maintained pretty well by the city in the winter. Even on blustery, -14 degree days I've seen a bunch of fellow cycle commuters in the bike lanes heading to and from work.
    Turns out, so long as you have the right infrastructure, winter cycling is completely viable. Even the cold is solved by simply knowing how to layer, something anyone who lives in such a climate already knows how to do. The only difference I had to really make was adding a balaclava and ski goggles for the coldest days, and that makes it just downright enjoyable in even quite cold weather.

  • @thatdudeoh7
    @thatdudeoh7 Год назад +3

    I know this is an urbanism channel but I just gotta talk about it somewhere. Man, do the suburbs suck... every time it snows I have to go and do precipitation maintenance??? I can't stand shoveling the snow lol... where I live, just outside of Toronto, we all have nice big driveways that we all have to maintain... seems so stupid when you consider winter. There has to be a better way.

    • @thatdudeoh7
      @thatdudeoh7 Год назад +1

      @@WillmobilePlus who said I hate cars? I didn't
      I did say that unironically. I currently do not own my home, I live where I can, but I have to take care of the snow. Front yards and driveways are a waste of space. You're telling me we couldn't all have either alleyways and garages out back or have our homes built closer to the road, and have underground parking garages for everyone? Expensive yes but would be preferable in my eyes... would much rather just shovel sidewalk
      A snowblower is a great idea... still gotta go out there and maintain your patch of asphalt

  • @Kodeb8
    @Kodeb8 Год назад +2

    Thank you for talking about this. I recently moved to a cold northern state and am now experiencing living with snow for the first time in my life. Car-dependency on the winter FUCKING SUCKS! I literally had to shovel my driveway just to be able to LEAVE my house! That's when the absurdity of the situation really kicked in. And of course, driving in icy, snow filled roads is terrifying!

    • @MalcolmJameson_1
      @MalcolmJameson_1 Год назад

      U ve gotta buy one of them engine powered snowploughs, my parents are quite old and they live in the suburbs in a cottage so they have to clean their own driveway too, my father had a real hard time doing that on his own, often he called me for a hand. But a couple years ago he got himself a motorised snowplough and now he even enjoys cleaning the snow after heavy snowfalls because its so easy and fun to do

  • @alexanderwest1064
    @alexanderwest1064 Год назад +5

    Had to cycle to work on the past Saturday with the 15cm dump.
    Lots of lights wearing reflective and took my time, added a extra 25 min to my commute and had to get off the bike and push though unplowed roads to get to any major pathway that was plowed but did it and don't really regret it .
    On the topic of Ottawa and it's bike network near the trains I find it a great resource but it does not get the love in the winter it needs most of the time and will some times not be a viable alternate when the LRT goes down, but then again it is Ottawa and the people in power want nothing more than to have everyone in a car

  • @Saucisse_Praxis
    @Saucisse_Praxis Год назад +4

    In France, the bliss of going on a weekend to La Rochelle (a really cool city on the Atlantic coastline) in less than 3 hours by train cannot be beaten. It basically takes double the time by car. the TGV makes France (which is just a bit bigger than Texas apparently) feel like a small country sometimes.

  • @machtmann2881
    @machtmann2881 Год назад +3

    Great call out on this argument. What's your take on people using disabled people as a shield for car centric infrastructure? They always say "but not everyone can walk or bike!!". But to me, a) it's rarely coming from someone with disabilities themselves and b) it's not like disabled people didn't exist before the age of cars or in more walkable urban spaces today

    • @nikolasirovica3250
      @nikolasirovica3250 Год назад

      Cars are the reason disabled people can’t get around. If cars were removed from our streets, there would be no risk of people in wheelchairs getting hit by a car, and they could easily get around on electric wheelchairs throughout the city. They can’t do so now because cars take up all the space on our roads. That’s my argument.

  • @utoobnoob100
    @utoobnoob100 Год назад

    I live in Minneapolis and I love videos like this. I was shocked how nice winter cycling was when I first tried it. Unfortunately only certain parts of the city have adequate infrastructure for it and I don’t feel comfortable doing it from my current location

  • @MissCarreautee
    @MissCarreautee Год назад +2

    "The wrath of an ancient evil : the tow truck siren gods"
    Omg you guys made my day hahhaha these are such a plague!

  • @BenDurham
    @BenDurham Год назад

    I LOVE this! It's so true. Since 2018, I've been frostbiking and since 2020, my fiancée has taken it up, too!
    It's crazy how few days are "actually too hardcore snowy" to bike. We're barely driven except for intercity trips (London to Toronto trains aren't as affordable if you already own a car, unfortunately).
    Common, Canada, subsidize VIA Rail as much as you do highways, please!!

  • @serbansaredwood
    @serbansaredwood Год назад +1

    Yesterday, I rode my bike to school and planned to ride to work on it after. It started snowing in the middle of the day and we got around 15 cm by the time I had to ride to work. The snow was too deep and I couldn't ride my bike through it, so I just put my bike on the bike rack on the bus and took that to work. This only happens a few times a year though, and I'm able to ride my bike all year long. There really isn't an excuse against bike lanes, and coupled with multi-modal transportation makes it perfect for me - even in the car-centric Toronto suburb I live in.

  • @Skzzlemister
    @Skzzlemister Год назад

    1:22 I have the exact same Tern e-bike here in Rochester, MN!! I even have the clubhouse mini accessory to haul my kiddo or groceries. AND, I use the bike year-round, even in wintery Minnesota.

  • @yerbamate86
    @yerbamate86 Год назад

    When I first moved to Montreal 12 years ago, they didn’t even clear the bike lanes in winter. It’s great to see how far this city has come in the last decade.

  • @BaiZhijie
    @BaiZhijie Год назад

    You guys make great videos, you're so fair-minded and reasonable in your approach and your stuff is very informative. Ignore the trolls and keep doing such good work!

  • @fallenshallrise
    @fallenshallrise Год назад +1

    Most of those winter car annoyances, changing to winter tires, shovelling, scraping your window, having to drive more slowly due to the conditions, just don't exist for most people. Look at that footage again. Most cars are still running the rims and summer tires they were sold with and the drivers scrape only a tiny patch on the windshield while they speed along, if anything going faster than normal due to the lower amount of traffic. Accidents doubling doesn't take into account all the drivers that stayed home. Accidents per km driven have to be at least 5 to 10 times as bad during winter storms.

    • @OhTheUrbanity
      @OhTheUrbanity  Год назад +1

      At least in Quebec, winter tires are mandated by law

  • @thommybikes6605
    @thommybikes6605 Год назад +4

    Been biking year round in Edmonton for 2 years now! Very doable, but dedicated infrastructure is the game changer! Bike, clothing, lights, maintenance take a bit of time to trial & error, but after that it's awesome. Only time biking sucks or is almost impossible is also when the cars are struggling in deep "snirt", the brown, soft snow that's like sand. But cars can't handle that either. So let's invest in separated bike lanes & paths, and fast/quality clearing. Simple as that!

  • @Teapot-Dave
    @Teapot-Dave Год назад

    I cycle all year and ride in every type of weather, and admittedly we don't get Canadian levels of snow here in England, but when we do get a significant snowfall, the advantage of riding a bike - as opposed to driving a car - is that when you do encounter snow which is too deep to ride through, you can usually just lift your bike over it and carry-on riding again as soon as you are past the worst part.

  • @cellavb447
    @cellavb447 Год назад +1

    Glad you guys are back in MTL! All hail the screaming truck siren! May they show mercy!

  • @gex6692
    @gex6692 Год назад

    You guys should come to Saskatoon we’re pretty much just cars but the city is starting to put protected bike lanes that get cleared in the winter it’s awesome

  • @russianbear0027
    @russianbear0027 Год назад

    In Texas winter is more like a rainy season, but even so, when there's ice or sleet my workplace coordinates everyone staying home. Its just too dangerous to drive.

  • @GirtonOramsay
    @GirtonOramsay Год назад +2

    For such a northern nation, I would expect Canada to have somewhat of a handle on snow plowing for blizzards but yeah I guess not

  • @APJTA
    @APJTA Год назад

    The tweet at 0:47 is really funny. Love the hyperbole. I love acting like Toronto of all places has this harsh freezing climate for 9 months.

  • @EnjoyFirefighting
    @EnjoyFirefighting Год назад

    Why Canadians Can't Bike in the Winter (but Finnish people can)
    ruclips.net/video/Uhx-26GfCBU/видео.html

  • @thomaslubben8559
    @thomaslubben8559 Год назад

    Fortunately, I live in a northern city that clears bike paths quite well. Madison, WI. Cold can be managed, but it does take good gear and planning.

  • @arabellablancogonzalez3778
    @arabellablancogonzalez3778 Год назад +1

    They can use Quattro velo. It is a four wheel velomobil (bike) and very usefully in winter even when there is snow.

  • @obansrinathan
    @obansrinathan Год назад

    Im from Winnipeg and I rode year round. Below about minus ten, the snow gets hard and as long as there is a bit of sand it has fairly good traction. It can get cold, but if you know how to dress it isn't a problem untill minus twenty five or so, when it does start to be unpleasant.

  • @christopherwaller2798
    @christopherwaller2798 Год назад

    In the UK context, we rarely (in the south of the country, at least) have heavy snowfall. Things often grind to a halt with very little snow, but heightened preparedness above and beyond existing use of gritters would be uneconomical.
    Much more hazardous to cycling in winter weather here is black ice. We often have temperatures fluctuating above and below freezing in winter, and relatively few people have winter tyres for bikes (or any of their vehicles), so I rarely enjoy cycling in freezing conditions as I'm constantly aware of the high risk of falling.

  • @HenryShihPlus
    @HenryShihPlus Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @tannermiller6242
    @tannermiller6242 Год назад

    I live just outside of Minneapolis and it sucks how little options we have especially in a city/state often blanketed in over 6 inches of snow in the winter. Biking is great in the summer but when winter hits everyone clambers onto I-35 and I-94 and subsequently into the ditches. I love the Light Rail & BRT but, it is not nearly enough for the TCs

  • @martin2289
    @martin2289 Год назад +2

    Even here in Victoria where winter is fairly mild for the most part, hardly a day goes by that letter writers to the local newspaper (usually from disgruntled drivers in the nearby suburbs) don't bitterly complain about the growing number of bike lanes. Seems there's a perpetually angry constituency of automobile fans here that simply hate anything to do with bikes and those who ride them.

  • @EnjoyFirefighting
    @EnjoyFirefighting Год назад

    I definetly don't agree with many aspects you mentioned. I'm from southern Germany and our winters are typically very mild by now, so I'm definetly not a well experienced driver concerning winter conditions. But still I went onto a winter roadtrip to the North Cape at the very top of Europe in February last year. It was rather easy to drive even in the worst of conditions with snow drifts, heavy snowfalls, low temperatures and ice covering the entire road.
    What I think might be different: they don't spread salt to clear the ice and snow on the road, all they do is to plow the snow. At some point you'll get a solid layer of ice, no problem for good winter tires or even studded winter tires. They might make some scratches into the ice that the studded tires have more grip. But I basically was able to get close to or actually drive the posted speed limit (the speed you drive in perfect nice summer conditions) in the winter as well. Just to get this straight: the North Cape in Norway is as far north as Barrow and the very northern tip of Alaska, which is further up north than Tuktoyaktuk in Canada
    ruclips.net/video/-ppLY-mGniI/видео.html

  • @steemlenn8797
    @steemlenn8797 Год назад +2

    The funny thing is that (at least in Germany but I guess everywhere) driving a car in such conditions would technically illegal. I mean, you are only allowed to drive if your car is safe and you drive a speed according to conditions. If the conditions are that bad, the only safe speed is 0.

  • @nicholascampbell2824
    @nicholascampbell2824 Год назад

    In London Ontario where I live the bike infrastructure which for the most part is just painted bike gutters that become dumping ground for snow and they take too long to clear the sidewalks and mixed used pathways in our parks

  • @Player-hx1gs
    @Player-hx1gs Год назад +6

    Skiing honestly doesn't sound like the worst idea for getting around. It's pretty much like cycling, only problem being that you have to cross salted roads on foot.
    Sadly the winters aren't harsh enough where I live to make that a viable option, but weather in Canada should be good enough.

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 Год назад

      It's very bad if you have knee problems, also if you are not used to skiing, it's very easy to break some bone. Ski holiday accidents are the most likely cause for a broken hip in under 30 year olds - in Germany, which does not have a lot of winter!

    • @stuartwithers8755
      @stuartwithers8755 Год назад +2

      @@steemlenn8797 Skiing for transportation (cross country skiing) is probably safer than a ski holiday (mostly downhill skiing). I believe the higher speeds of downhill skiing result in more frequent and more serious injuries than cross country skiing.

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 Год назад

      @@stuartwithers8755 good point. But on the other side you don't have guys trying to manouver their 2 ton city tank around you.

  • @cy_torrent
    @cy_torrent Год назад

    This video is also great for desert cities as both cars and bikes have arguments against the harsh summer heat.
    The options bikes have are greatly expanded. Yes cars have air conditioning, but driving in the extreme heat increases carbon emissions which makes the heat worse for everyone. The road infrastructure is wider and increases heat island effects and also degrade very quick in the heat. Storage is naturally very large as well, and the only time you can get any form of shade for your vehicle is a parking garage or the lot with such an abysmal amount of trees it’s insane we think that’s even acceptable, especially considering we have native desert trees literally evolved by nature to use less water yet still provide tons of shade.
    Bikes on the other hand can be stored in easy to make shade shacks or under desert trees, paths and bike lanes are also very good at supporting trees along roads, and greatly decrease the urban heat and provide shade for them, and the cars and pedestrians they may be sharing the street with.
    All in all, biking in the heat, even with how extreme it may seem. Is something that happens here with some people, especially those closer to the urban cores where I live. And this added option not only gives people more accessibility to where they live. It also helps the city have easier maintenance with less wide roads that degrade quickly after a month of triple digit weather, and a better overall climate for residents, regardless of their choice of transportation under the sun.

  • @QazwerDave
    @QazwerDave 11 месяцев назад +1

    Finland makes it work. There are no excuses !!

  • @3of11
    @3of11 Год назад

    Here in florida they say we need more cars because it’s too hot to bike here for 6 months of summer.
    Turns out it’s no big deal. Bring lots of hydration and a wide brim hat/helmet

  • @Alex-od7nl
    @Alex-od7nl Год назад

    I live in a Northern city (on par with Montreal and Ottawa) and I bike during the winter. On blizzard or snow days, it takes me less time to get home from work by bike than it does by car. The problem with biking in winter is dealing with motorists who do not change their driving behavior on narrower lanes or icy or snowy roads. As usual, it comes back the same problem: bad drivers.

  • @uis246
    @uis246 Год назад +1

    Meanwhile in Moscow I don't feel much difference between winter and summer. I use PT: subway/tram/bus. Although during winter I don't use scooter as much as during summer.

  • @willtheoct
    @willtheoct Год назад

    i love biking in the winter. its safer because cars slow down and give space. the drifting is fun, slipping isn't a problem(but avoid black ice as if you were walking or driving), and biking on compacted snow is awesome too.
    auto industry has everyone else believing it's an impossible feat for daredevils

  • @liamhodgson
    @liamhodgson Год назад

    Not quite as wintery here in Pittsburgh but it’s still pretty snowy and quite hilly. There is no maintenance of bike paths so it’s actually safer in the winter to bike on busy streets because the car tires remove the snow. The cars make it unsafe though, especially for less confident bicyclists

  • @vaga4239
    @vaga4239 Год назад +3

    I would bike in the winter but I don't want to get killed by a soccer mom in a rwd grand caravan

    • @IHateStroads
      @IHateStroads Год назад +4

      Need better infrastructure!

    • @vaga4239
      @vaga4239 Год назад +1

      @@IHateStroads it's things like this that make me wish I didn't live on the east coast 🙃