Wednesday evening 6 pm
Strays will head out from the home of
Velvet and Rob on a
23 mile ride to Worthington Springs and
back.
This ride is entirely on an excellent bike lane,
except for the half mile from the house to the bike lane. Anyone who
is uncomfortable on the half mile that goes from our house to 121 is
welcome to park at Cellon Oak Park (on 121) and meet us on 121 as we
head up to Worthington Springs. This will knock about 2 miles off your
round trip.
http://www.alachuacounty.us/depts/pw/parksandrecreation/pages/parkslist.aspx?activity=11
Requirements:
1) A white
light of at least 150 lumens is required on the front of the
bike and
2) Red blinky on the rear, with
3) Passive reflectors front and rear. A
passive reflector on the front is not required if you have a
secondary (backup) light (preferably with a flash mode).
Note: Additional
reflectors and lights; and clothing, light colored and or
reflective, recommended and
encouraged.
Strays night rides
exceed legal* lighting requirements.
If you have other questions or need
directions:
Rob Wilt
386-418-3794
*
Legal minimums mean MINIMUM safety. Keep in mind that just because
lights meet the minimum requirement of the current laws does not mean they
are actually suitable or safe for riding in the dark at night. The
intention of the minimum is to allow you to be seen by cars in town, under
street lights. So lights intended only to meet the requirements of the law
will not be suitable for riding with the Strays. We ride in the countryside
where it can be pitch black if we have overcast. With overcast, you won't
even be able to see the stars, much less the road. Buy the brightest lights
you can afford.
LED light development has left our
states ancient laws of transportation in the dust, there is no good
economic reason not to have safe ride lights today. If you don't know what
the lumen output of your light
is, then you can bet it is less than 150 lumens. No manufacturer will fail
to mention this output if their product exceeds it. Don't buy a light that
doesn't tell you how many lumens it outputs. If you can't afford safe
lights, then you shouldn't risk riding your bike at
night.