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.
rain
Plant Climbing a House in the Treme
Oh, it was sunny today. Cool and sunny. My final grades were due today, so I hopped on the Surly, put on a song, and headed to campus. I’ve been feeling a little off lately; I think I just needed a fast pedal in the sunshine and a little bike dancing. After cleaning up after the semester, I headed down to the Quarter, mostly just so I could ride my bike around. Continue reading
Hubcap at Magazine and Second
I couldn’t really take it anymore. Way too many days off the bike, except for short, short task rides. So I suited up for the rain and headed down to the Treme to meet up with friends for a little mayoral debate viewing party. It was still raining lightly and I rode ever so slowly, not exactly thrilled, especially when I hit some potholes disguised by water. Continue reading
Rainy Street at Magazine and 8th
This will be a short post, because I didn’t see much while riding my bike today because it has been raining for what seems like forever, and I’ve been in end-of-the-semester work mode, and I don’t love riding in the rain, especially since my glasses get fogged almost immediately so that I can’t see anything, and I haven’t gotten to ride my bicycle all day in over a week, and it’s driving me crazy. But I saw this–a shiny, rainy street while I vainly tried to wait out the thunderstorm. Here’s the picture. I felt pretty frustrated when I took it, but looking at it now, it’s kind of pretty. Good vibes for dry air, people.
Foggy Park at Annunciation and Upperline
It has been raining. A lot. I have managed, by some miracle, to just miss the big downpours this week, but it has also meant no nice long rides without fear of deadly wet gravel, and no blogs. I went to pick up my bike from N.’s house, left when the skies opened up yesterday. It wasn’t raining tonight, but it was incredibly foggy. Continue reading
Lights at the Walgreens at Dauphine and Canal
The last week or so of rides have been largely task rides. Even when I was riding for pleasure, I was usually looking for a places to put posters or flyers for the Bicycle Film Festival. Today was stormy, but I was excited to get to ride for pleasure to meet friends at a fancy bar on North Rampart for fancy drinks. Continue reading
Rainy Uptown Street
The skies were ominous as I headed down to the CBD to pick up paper for our programs for the E. Patrick Johnson event on Monday, and then up to campus for a faculty meeting. But I wasn’t about to drive, so I got my raincoat and a plastic bag and headed out. It was the ride home that really caught me in a downpour. Continue reading
Frog on an Uptown Window
I’m back from a bike-less trip to California. It was a bit odd, going five days without riding a bicycle, but I think my knees appreciated the rest, and though I didn’t need it, Los Angeles traffic reminded me that I prefer riding a bicycle around to sitting in a car any day. Continue reading
Decaying House in Hollygrove at Monroe and Pine
It has been a rainy mess around here lately, and it has definitely been putting the kibosh on my long rides. I really don’t like to start a ride in the rain. I mean, I’ll continue in the rain, but I prefer not to ask for the slippery roads and streetcar tracks and drivers even less apt to see bicycles. Continue reading
Rain at St. Louis and Burgundy
I rode my bike down to the Marigny to meet S. for coffee and then back up to work for a meeting early this afternoon. The sun was out and the sky was blue. Not so when I headed down to the Treme tonight. The sky was gray, but i though I might be able to outrace the storm. And I almost did. Continue reading