Who are WE? Kaelin Proud

WE Bike NYC is organizing ten women from five organizations to ride 262 miles on bicycles from New York City to Washington, DC to represent their communities at the nation’s largest annual bicycle advocacy event, the National Bike Summit on March 3, 2014. WE are so pleased to be supported by WomanToursBicycle Times Magazine and Transportation Alternatives. For more about the ride, check out our fundraising page HERE! photo

Kaelin Proud

Gearing Up

Age? 25 Where are you from? Philadelphia Where do you ride? Philadelphia and the surrounding area…..actually, anywhere I can ride, I’ll ride! When and why did you start riding? I started commuting by bicycle while studying at Temple University and began riding competitively on the Temple University Cycling Team. I ride because I love the way it makes me feel: independent, strong and powerful. How has biking with your org impacted your life? Riding bikes with the clients of Gearing Up gave me the opportunity to witness the change that riding a bike can bring to a person’s life. I appreciate seeing other people using the bike as a coping mechanism and I truly enjoy being a part of that process for women in our program. Why do you want to go on the ride? I wanted to join this ride to be around a healthy, positive group of women looking to better their community by biking! I look forward to learning about all the different ways that women and female-focused organizations have impacted the cycling world and community! Add to the positive by contributing here!

Who are WE? Ayesha Rosena Anna McGowan

WE Bike NYC is organizing ten women from five organizations to ride 262 miles on bicycles from New York City to Washington, DC to represent their communities at the nation’s largest annual bicycle advocacy event, the National Bike Summit on March 3, 2014. WE are so pleased to be supported by WomanToursBicycle Times Magazine and Transportation Alternatives. For more about the ride, check out our fundraising page HERE!

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Ayesha Rosena Anna McGowan

Age? 26

Where are you from? Piscataway, NJ

Where do you ride? Anywhere and Everywhere!

When and why did you start riding? When I moved to Boston for college, it would take me an hour to commute to school. I decided to take my mom’s bike from the basement. When i took it to the shop for a tune-up, it still had the baby carrier she used to tote my sister around attached to it. My sister is 8 years older than me. The bike got an overhaul, and my commute was cut down to twenty minutes!

How has WE Bike NYC impacted your life? It has given me an amazing set of inspiring women to ride with and learn from. I’m not a very social person, but WE Bike NYC has created a social environment where I feel comfortable enough to leave my bubble and be a part of a group!

Why do you want to go on the ride? I think it would be an incredibly challenge and a milestone in my journey as a woman and a cyclist. I love the idea that this band of unusual candidates is going to ride down to DC and break down several barriers that are regularly a part of the National Bike Summit. Women and minorities are depressingly under represented, WE are definitely going to help remedy that this year!

Anything else you’d like to add? Is there a way to textually represent a victory dance? WOOOHOOO!!!!!

Support Ayesha in filling her dance card with advocacy and community building by clicking here!

Who are WE?: Mary Shyne

WE Bike NYC is organizing ten women from five organizations to ride 262 miles on bicycles from New York City to Washington, DC to represent their communities at the nation’s largest annual bicycle advocacy event, the National Bike Summit on March 3, 2014. WE are so pleased to be supported by WomanToursBicycle Times Magazine and Transportation Alternatives. For more about the ride, check out our fundraising page HERE!

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Mary Shyne

WE Bike NYC

Age? 25

Where are you from? Outside of Chicago originally, but have lived in NYC for 7 years.

Where do you ride? My daily commute from Bushwick to Midtown West along the West Side Greenway, as well as various long-distance hauls on the weekend. Most recently I went on solo expeditions from NYC to Philadelphia, and later, NYC to Atlantic. Basically I’ll bike wherever there are roads (and sometimes, when Google Maps messes up, where there are not).

When and why did you start riding? I’ve been riding since I could fit into a bike seat thanks to my parents. When I moved to NYC I took a little hiatus from biking, save for a summer in college when the L train was literally never running. What really got me back on the bike, though, was the subways shutting down for Hurricane Sandy. I decided to take my red, gathering-rust Ross Compact over the bridge to work. Doing so reminded me of what I had loved so much about biking in the city: it frees you from the constraints of public transit while making the city seem so much more compact & accessible.

How has WE Bike NYC impacted your life? Cycling in New York can definitely be a boy’s club — riding through my first winter in 2013, my main cycling contacts were the guys at the bike shop, and while they were super helpful, it did feel like I was the only woman on the road. There were things I wanted to ask that I wasn’t always comfortable asking men about (SADDLE SORES, AMIRITE, LADIES) Similarly, many of my gal friends would go on rides with me, but weren’t as interested in the geeky “OMG salivating over that Colnago crankset” aspect of biking, or had bikes that couldn’t sustain the distances I wanted to go. WE Bike NYC put me in touch with a community of like-minded ladies who are just as into bikes as I am, both from a technical and on-the-road standpoint. (And also give GREAT advice on saddle sore treatment, NAMEAN?)

Why do you want to go on the ride? Long rides are my jam! After riding the NYC Century Bike Tour in September 2013, I knew I needed to get out on the road for longer distances — I’m addicted to the feeling you get fifty miles in where all your inner anxieties are wiped away, and all you can focus on is your body moving forward. It’s a strange but amazing kind of physical meditation. Unfortunately, I’ve had to pursue many of these rides alone; not for lack of willing companions (like I said, WE Bike NYC ladies ain’t afraid of no mileage), but because of conflicting schedules. This is a chance to get on the road with my friends and eat up those miles! Of course, I’m in this for more than selfish reasons, too. Not only is this an opportunity to get out of the road with some of my best cycling gal pals, it’s an opportunity to show the cycling community that women’s cycling groups exist, an opportunity to show women that they don’t need to go into cycling expecting to be the “Smurfette” (i.e., only woman in the wolfpack), and in turn, hopefully motivate other women to get out on their bikes more often and for more miles!

Anything else you’d like to add? D.C. OR BUST!!!

Push Mary forward in keeping us on keeping on this ride: Click here!

WE Bike to DC!

#webiketodc           WE Bike NYC is organizing ten women from five organizations to ride 262 miles on bicycles from New York City to Washington, DC to represent their communities at the nation’s largest annual bicycle advocacy event, the National Bike Summit on March 3, 2014. WE Bike NYC is a group based in New York City open to all women, female identifying, and gender nonconforming people who enjoy biking or think they might. WE Bike NYC aims to break down barriers to cycling by offering social rides, training rides, mechanics workshops and ride scholarships.

            Representatives from Gearing-Up, Black Women Bike DC, Washington Area Bicyclist Association: Women and Bicycles, and Women Bike PHL will join WE Bike NYC on this adventure! While in DC, WE will advocate for women of all backgrounds to have a seat at the table that sets national transportation policy. Despite being woefully under-represented in decision-making, the number of women who commute to work has increased 56% in the last year. Lower income individuals (earning less than $30,000) accounted for 28% of bike trips in 2009 — more than 1.1 billion bike trips overall. Our goal is to support the League of American Bicyclists’ efforts to include underrepresented cyclists at the decision making table through the inclusion of ten voices that would not be able to attend the summit without the financial support generated by this ride.

           This trip will be the kickoff event for continued work in 2014 to create more opportunities for women to have a voice in the national cycling and transportation conversation. On Tuesday, December 17, WE Bike NYC will launch #webiketodc, a multimedia initiative, to highlight the importance of increased inclusivity in the cycling community through rider stories, web videos, cycling tips, and sponsored content. For more information on how you can support us, please click on our IndieGoGo link here.