Sports: Cycling
[ Background |Equipment |Where ] Background
The bicycle was invented in the 1600s, originally a wood vehicle to be powered by people instead of horses. By the early 1800s, bicycles were consistently being built of metal, with two wheels, and were being driven by one person. The sport of cycling, and more recently mountain biking, has gained in popularity. Many us it as an environmentally-friendly form of transportation.
Equipment
There are thousands of brands and types of bicycles, from touring to mountain bikes, even tandems and unicycles. Costs range in price from under $100 to thousands of dollars. It is important to maintain the bike so it is at peak running condition. Check for thinning tire treads, squeaky brakes, sticky cables or a bent frame. Before each ride, squeeze the tires to make sure there is enough air pressure (the tires shouldn't squeeze much).
WhereBarrie-Muskoka's summer weather and terrain provide good conditions for blading. Just be cautious of traffic or pedestrians (they have right of way on paths). Caution: in wet weather, your wheels and brakes can become very slippery and dangerous. The best spot for this in Barrie is Waterfront Trail Along Kempenfelt Bay which has 6.7 km of generally flat paved trail, which you can access anywhere along Barrie's Lakefront parks. In Orillia, take the 12-foot wide ribbon of pavement called the Millenium Trail for 9.5 kilometres from one end of the City to the other! Joggers, walkers, bikers and wheelchairs can travel safely from the North Ward to Tudhope Park. In Huntsville, enjoy the 3.4 km paved Fairy Vista Trail, which you can access near the corner of Hwy 60 and Fairy view Drive, or by using the temporary entrance across from Muskoka Rd. #23. This paved 3.4 km all season trail traveling through fields, forests, and wetlands, suitable for all types of non-motroized recreational activity. The paths are shared with other exercise seekers (walkers, joggers, cyclists and in-line skaters) who have right-of-way over cyclists. Barrie cyclists must have a bell or horn with which to warn other path users of their approach. Cyclists should also use traditional hand signals when riding on the street. When crossing a road, cyclists should dismount and walk their bikes (this forces cars to treat you like pedestrians!).
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