Wednesday, October 1, 2008

About the name of this blog

Although I've been doing this Scranton Sunday Times route (designated by the Times as Route 62226) since early 2007, it took me until today to get around to figuring out all of the necessary mouse potatoing involved in starting the blog.

The main reason for the delay had to do with the fact that I wanted the blog's name to be Northeastern Pennsylvania Bicycle Messengering. I didn't feel that I had a right to start it - or do anything else resembling calling myself a bicycle messenger - until after doing at least some part of the actual delivery by bike at least once.

I'm happy to report that a few weeks ago, I finally got around to doing that. I'm still waiting until I get around to fixing up a devoted-to-the-purpose bike (with the right kind of homemade newspaper pails, etc.) before I can begin to _regularly_ bring it along on Sunday mornings and use it to more _significantly_ replace my walking, running and motoring through the route. But, when I brought it along a few weeks ago and used it to do the few streets that I'd been gradually figuring out how to do by foot (the mode that I'm still generally using on those streets for the time being), I _technically_ crossed the line into having partially fulfilled my pipe dream of being a bicycle messenger.

I've said from the start that this route might not ever be more than "partially" a bicycle-messengering route. The combination of the Sunday papers being so fat, the still-cheap gas and especially, the short time window, makes it most practical to use a motor vehicle as a "mother ship", with a goal of motoring as few of the segments as possible and parking in several places throughout the route to do as many of the segments as possible by foot or by bike.

The other carriers that I've happened to see on their Sunday deliveries in Clarks Summit, apparently motor to virtually every house (which _still_ requires _running_ perhaps 3 miles, my guestimate of the total of all of a 180-house Clarks Summit carrier's - Clarks Summit being an excellent-tipping town - trips from his or her car door to each tipper's doorstep on which to place the paper). Motoring to virtually every house like that is a method that I did too for a long time at first, and I still do it on about half of the segments of the route, because figuring out how to minimize the motoring and still finish within the time window - even for a forceful spewer, such as myself, of propaganda about how cycling is often faster than motoring - takes a long time (although I'm making progress on it fairly steadily) and is not as simple as the more-carfree-than-you-or-me faction of the cycling community would have us believe.

In particular, I predict that due to my above-mentioned use of motoring, this blog will get attacked by the red-light-running, sidewalk-trespassing (like in the photo accompanying a Sunday Times article a few months ago about an outfit in Scranton that beat me to to the punch, by a few months, of introducing bicycle messengering to Northeastern Pennsylvania - but if that's what they call cycling, they can _have_ the distinction), experience-largely-limited-to-city-centers, greenybaby-archleftist faction of the cycling community.

They'll claim that I'm not a "real" bicycle messenger. They'll deem me ineligible for the messengers-only free beer at The Handlebar out in DZBLtown. One of them has even already said that he'd like to spike the Frost Farm's trees.

But the pedestal of ignorance that this never-loaded-a-honey-wagon-in-their-life faction of the cycling community is on, overlooks the fact that their beloved city-center bicycle-messengering outfits, too, depend on motoring. The deliveries that those outfits do by bike are - just as much as yours or mine - but one cog in an overall-logistics wheel that would not function without its motoring cogs.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Somehow I just knew you'd create a blog sooner or later; you just have too much to say to keep it to yourself (and that's a good thing ;)).

Well, I'm off to go promote your blog on mine... ;)

Welcome to the Blogosphere! :)

Tom Frost Jr. said...

Thank you! Now all I have to do is be careful not to be like some bloggers and waste too much time on it. I was _very_ hesitant to start one, for that reason.

Our valued readers should know that Mr. Ardelli isn't one of those cyclists of the _supercilious_ variety that I bashed in "About the name of this blog". He's the moderator of the BicyclingAdvocacy yahoo group, the main place that I gave the url of this blog to. He proudly doesn't own a car and cycles for 100% of his daily transportation, but knows enough about how the world works (despite being politically different from me on certain non-transportation-related issues) to not be bigoted against motoring.

The reason that sticks in my mind as to why I did so much peeking at his blog that he finally became talkative with me a couple of years ago, was that I'd cycled through his neck of the woods, Nova Scotia, on the return leg of one of my start-and-end-in-Pennsylvania rides in the 1980s.

Bob Thomas said...

Your stories about doing newspapers by bike bring back memories. When I was 10 (too young by 2 years according to company policy) I had a morning Philadelphia Inquirer route. I had about 68 customers that I would serve by bicycle Monday - Saturday. Somedays I could hold all the papers in one paperbag - but on Thursdays with the big ad sections I had to split the route in two. I started delivering in the dark around 5 AM and would finish before 7 AM.

On Sundays my grandfather would bring his Chevrolet station wagon down and I would deliver papers from the tailgate on the run from the curb to the door.

Delivering the papers was good - sometimes even fun and I saw many many more sunrises that most boys my age.

I kept the route until I was 14.

Your CPA newspaper connection also brought something to mind. My stepson got an Oneonta Daily Star morning route that he would walk. He got a pretty bad cold one winter and I was pressed into service. I actually did the route for a few months and my physical condition improved considerably over my normal winter fitness.

He was interested in accounting and went on to become a CPA - now he is an officer for an insurance company.

Delivering the papers was OK as I said- the part I didn't like was trying to get the money for the papers from the people - the modern "pay via mail" system is a pretty big improvement.

Thanks for an interesting blog.