Tomato Plant at the 7th Ward Neighborhood Center

Like most folks who ride bikes all the time, sometimes I’m riding for transportation–I’m just trying to get somewhere. Like last night, when I was just trying to get home and it was late and I was tired and I needed a snack. I still stopped and snapped a picture of a weird stripe of blue paint on a building, but mostly I was just riding home. Today, though, I spent in my very favorite way, just riding slowly around the city, getting myself lost and found again. Continue reading

Pink Azaleas on Louisiana Avenue

Yep, another beautiful spring-y day in New Orleans! School is back in session after spring break, and I was feeling remarkably chipper to be back on the commute. Thing is, folks, I love my job. I decided to take Rhoda up to school, slowly pedaling with a little music in my ears, trying to prepare myself for a rough class session. Continue reading

Miniature Ponies, a Pig, and Two Bunnies in the Chris Owens Easter Parade

It’s Easter Sunday in New Orleans, so you know what that means–parades! I was positively exhausted today, in that way that burning the candle at all ends tends to leave a girl. But once I was out of bed, I put on a pretty dress and some make up and hopped on the Surly to meet friends for yet another celebration in the French Quarter. Continue reading

Rebuilding at Clara and General Taylor

Today started out cold but ended up sunny and even a tiny bit warm, which meant a much better mood for my commute home than to campus. I pedaled slowly, still working on catching my breath from this stupid cold. As I rode, I thought about the past week and a half or so of the Patois Film Fest. Continue reading

Wet Handlebars on a Dark and Rainy Night

I watched this movie the other night, featuring famous contemporary thinkers taking walks, sitting in airports, riding in cabs, and rowing on lakes while talking about stuff. In one of the segments Sunaura Taylor is talking to Judith Butler about the question, what can a body do? They talk about how bodies move, how they move through social space, how space enables certain kinds of movement but not others, and how impairment is socially organized to become disability. It’s a fantastic ten minutes of film set amongst seventy others that all take place at this slow pace in public places through which others are moving or playing or resting. I was thinking about this movie when I rode down to the Treme tonight to watch it again with R. and J.. The streets are built for cars, or at least that’s what cars think. Sometimes they’ll honk at me, I think because they want me to move further to the right to aid their passing on my left. What they don’t see, because they are in their cars and their experience of the road largely ignores the shoulders, is the gap that’s opened up where the asphalt is splitting or the car doors that I’m trying to avoid should they suddenly fling open. For drivers, the road is theirs; they cannot imagine the experience of moving through space on two wheels, no protection, streets always trying to grab your tire and throw you off. After the movie I hopped back on the Surly and rode home in the rain. I wear glasses, and once they get wet and fogged, I can’t see anything. I moved slowly, staring at the road, glad to know my potholes. But they are filling them over there on Magazine between Girod and Julia. I wasn’t expecting to run into the mounds of clay and stone that has replaced my trusty (because I know them) potholes. I had to get off the bike and walk around. Cars were zipping around me, but hey, I can only do what I can do. These roads are hazardous. I snapped this picture as I got near home, because this is pretty much what I saw while riding my bike around tonight. Sometimes you’ve just got to keep your eyes on the street, remembering that it’s not expecting you, not at all.

Food Truck for Sale at Simon Bolivar and Felicity

Nope, not quite summertime, but I’m still happy to be on my bike. I managed to miss the thunderstorms on my ride up to campus today, and we all managed to talk loudly enough to hear each other over the thunderstorms and the car alarms set off by said thunderstorms. Continue reading

Learning to Ride a Bike on Rousseau Street

There’s a little spot in the distance in this picture. You might not be able to tell, but that’s B., learning to ride a bicycle on a most beautiful sunny Sunday in New Orleans. You see, B. has long meant to learn to ride a bike, but it just hasn’t happened. Continue reading

Williams & Williams Lawnmower and Bicycle Shop at St. Bernard & N. Rocheblave

Oh, it was a most beautiful day. The sky was all robin’s egg blue and it was warm in the sun, so warm I went riding in my fluffy summer skirt and the softest t-shirt I could find and some leggings. I took the Surly over to the Freret Street Market, over to Gris Gris Lab for pancakes and fellowship, and then down to the Juiceteria for a bagel and some grading. Continue reading

Magnolia Tree in Bloom at Magazine and First

I remember springtime in New York City when I was in college. There was this giant magnolia tree on the main lawn, and as the temperatures warmed up, it would start to bud, and we would all watch, waiting impatiently for its large pink flowers to open. Continue reading

Claiborne Tire and Auto at Claiborne and Esplanade

Oh, it’s cold out. And windy. And this particular New Orleans bicycler is more than ready for spring and summer to get here. But in the meantime I’ll just bundle up, remember my mittens, and pedal hard against the headwind. Tonight’s ride took my downtown to join the gym (water aerobics, here I come!) and then to the coffee shoppe in Mid-City for a meeting with the Metro Bike Coalition (join!). Continue reading