Cycling in the US from a Dutch perspective [266]

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BicycleDutch

BicycleDutch

Күн бұрын

Looking at cycling in some places in the US in June 2013, from a Dutch perspective.
Much more info in the blog post with this video: bicycledutch.wo...
Filmed in Chicago, San Francisco, Davis (CA) and the Lake Tahoe (NV) area.

Пікірлер: 2 900
@MitchDowling
@MitchDowling 10 жыл бұрын
I love that he showed some guys riding BMX bikes with the statement 'or those who haven't really grown up'. I'm an avid BMX rider so I had to laugh at the truth behind this.
@icebergslim8926
@icebergslim8926 6 жыл бұрын
Mitchell Dowling facts lol
@axMf3qTI
@axMf3qTI 6 жыл бұрын
That's because a BMX is not a great bike for traveling distance, they're good fun tho.
@MrJerm200
@MrJerm200 6 жыл бұрын
Mitchell Dowling they were using the sidewalk that’s why and that’s completely unsafe and illegal
@r.v.b.4153
@r.v.b.4153 5 жыл бұрын
My father once sold my old BMX for ten bucks at the door :'(
@Coolsomeone234
@Coolsomeone234 5 жыл бұрын
@@r.v.b.4153 WTF that's cheap
@kkjood100
@kkjood100 10 жыл бұрын
From a dutch perspective. I would be really freaked out if i needed to drive through a city like Chicago.
@babas990
@babas990 4 жыл бұрын
Lol such pussy 0 balls. I learned how to city ride in Chicago. Scary is South America, India or any third world country where there’s no cycling culture and people actively try and take you out
@blanco7726
@blanco7726 4 жыл бұрын
Mario I learned to drive in the netherlands, its the same in the us just drivers pay less attention
@henkoosterink8744
@henkoosterink8744 4 жыл бұрын
@@babas990 Would you let your little children ride a bicycle in Chicago? No? Pussy! What could happen?
@ClarksonsinUSA
@ClarksonsinUSA 4 жыл бұрын
The US is a really big place, city's make up a small percentage of where people live!
@ytwos1
@ytwos1 4 жыл бұрын
Mario oh Dear, if it only smells at critique the little pussy man with zero balls is already Butt hurt. Such big words for a man with a very small hart. Grow up.
@joelchils
@joelchils 4 жыл бұрын
Same in Canada.... I rode my bike in the summer to work... everyone kept asking me if I lost my license.
@SonsOfSevenless
@SonsOfSevenless 4 жыл бұрын
lol what shithole do you live in? calgary? i know a lawyer that makes $300k a year that rides his bicycle to work every day in montreal
@sander2723
@sander2723 4 жыл бұрын
Arkroyale wow so cool u know a guy! Lmfao fucking loser tryna flex
@2009heyhow
@2009heyhow 4 жыл бұрын
Is that why you wear that fake mustache and glasses so nobody would recognize you?
@jeffk464
@jeffk464 4 жыл бұрын
DUI huh buddy?
@SonsOfSevenless
@SonsOfSevenless 4 жыл бұрын
@@sander2723 point is, in places that aren't shitholes, people of all walks of life ride bicycles, not just drunk drivers
@FunkSoulBrother7
@FunkSoulBrother7 7 жыл бұрын
My nephew was once in his homecountry (Armenia) having a walk in the middle of nowhere between mountains. There was nobody as far as the eye could see except a middle aged couple on their bicycles. He talked to them and wasn't surprised at all when he learned they were Dutch tourists haha
@tibne2412
@tibne2412 7 жыл бұрын
>Learns they have cylcled all the way across Europe to the caucasus. >Dont feel any sense of surprise.
@mchouseboat3405
@mchouseboat3405 4 жыл бұрын
@@tibne2412 that actually is done quite often, they probably rented bikes, since bikes are mostly used for relatively short distances up to 15-20km or around (8-10) miles i believe. But we (dutch people) do sometimes go on a holiday where we just cycle the full day, stop at some beautifull spots, relax in a cafe etc, often you reach distances of hundreds of kilometers/miles, depending on how long your journey is, myself (and im only 15) have done a 400 km tour once, witch took around a week i believe
@luismanuel2612
@luismanuel2612 4 жыл бұрын
Cycling in the US from a Dutch perspective: suicidal ... :-))
@evaskjerd
@evaskjerd 4 жыл бұрын
Right😂😂👍👍
@garcjr
@garcjr 4 жыл бұрын
Only riding in traffic. Some cities are putting bike paths along rivers away from traffic. However most riding here is done in traffic which is why I ride on the sidewalk.
@obi-wankenobi9871
@obi-wankenobi9871 4 жыл бұрын
From a normal perspective, everything is suicidal in the US.
@iustinr3221
@iustinr3221 4 жыл бұрын
You havent seen Romania yet
@iustinr3221
@iustinr3221 4 жыл бұрын
@Matthew Tymczyszyn Romania has the highest number of traffic accidents with someone dying
@Therawpy
@Therawpy 10 жыл бұрын
Hey, to be honest, you in the Netherlands live in the cyclist-paradise...(Writes your neighbour from Germany.)
@evaskjerd
@evaskjerd 4 жыл бұрын
ekim andersom No,you’re right!! I live in Norway but every summer vacation we go to NEDERLAND!!! Ohhhh !!!! what a wonderful place!! PEOPLE are so friendly !We use the bike all the time and the bodo and mind are thankful !!
@xanderbuil0073
@xanderbuil0073 3 жыл бұрын
I'd stay out of amsterdam then
@mikesmith2057
@mikesmith2057 3 жыл бұрын
It’s flat and The climate is mild. That's a great starting point (and something no US cities have) . To that, they’ve added great infrastructure.
@Alpenmagier
@Alpenmagier 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikesmith2057 its fucking booring to ride if its mostly flat... greeting from switzerland btw if theres no mountain its kinda lame for me
@melodytenberge1791
@melodytenberge1791 6 жыл бұрын
I'm from Michigan USA but moved to The Netherlands when I married a Dutch man. I cannot believe the difference of cycling . And how the dutch use it as a daily way of life. I love it here.
@Pidalin
@Pidalin 5 жыл бұрын
I think driving in NL is vice versa extreme. There are bike traffic jams like hell and that people have to ride walk speed because of that. I think I would chose public transport or just walk instead of bike traffic jam and looking for free "parking" exactly as people with cars. That from one extreme to another extreme. :-)
@xSCHEF
@xSCHEF 4 жыл бұрын
Ondřej Matějka lol wtf bike traffic lanes? Not in my 30 years living in Amsterdam, Nijmegen and Groningen.
@janpiet-klaas2982
@janpiet-klaas2982 4 жыл бұрын
Ondřej Matějka that is not true.
@noahkeuper7537
@noahkeuper7537 4 жыл бұрын
@@Pidalin the bike traffic jams happened as a protest at certain points where you had to wait for a long time before a traffic light turned green. Besides that I've only been in a "bike traffic jam" whenever we would go do something with the a very big group e.g. whenever we would go on a field trip with school (50-100 people). Parking your bike cam be tough from time to time but you're always able to find an available spot within 30-50m of where you want to go.
@Dark__Thoughts
@Dark__Thoughts 4 жыл бұрын
@@Pidalin It's not one extreme to another extreme. If you think the amount of bikes in the Netherlands are excessive, then think about how much cars those could be instead. A bike is about 8 times more space efficient compared to a car, which is very much needed in cities, where everyone having their own car is downright impossible. And that is just one positive aspect out of many that bikes bring to your city. You get less road maintenance, less pollution in terms of the approaching climate disaster, less pollution in terms of general air quality - both through less traffic and through more space for greenery, less noise pollution, generally a safer environment to live in, a fitter and healthier populace, and more relaxed people since riding bikes is actually lots of fun. Look at cities like Utrecht or Copenhagen, they are absolutely amazing examples for a good and healthy bike infrastructure.
@therailfanner7523
@therailfanner7523 8 жыл бұрын
No separated cycle paths? Not even on the side of the road? No bicycle traffic lights? No signs for cyclists? Those are very common things in the Netherlands that you'll barely find in the US.
@marcusnl66
@marcusnl66 8 жыл бұрын
You don't need to go that far to experience the lack of infrastructure for cyclists, Paris for instance is a good example how far advanced Holland is compared to a big city like Paris. In most US cities it's the lack of money and using taxpayers money to improve life for those wanting to hop on a bike and paddle around the city.
@death299
@death299 8 жыл бұрын
+Marcus NL not "lack of money" lack of desire to really change from car biased to balanced or bike balanced the more people bitch about it though the more cities are jumping onboard the idea of making a viable system for cyclists besides..you don't really reduce income that much by switching to cycle based systems (and you have to spend less to keep the roads repaired for bikes than cars) most people don't cycle purely because of the safety issues...so it's turned into a never ending cycle don't bike because it's dangerous don't invest in a bike network because few are willing to bike don't bike because there's no investment to make it safer...
@landzeezeeland
@landzeezeeland 8 жыл бұрын
In paris you can even cycle better than in the USA
@marcusnl66
@marcusnl66 8 жыл бұрын
Paris has still a long way to go before it's safe for cyclists.
@benben071
@benben071 7 жыл бұрын
+Rozy Chan Are you asking if you have them in Minnneaaapolish?
@OP-1000
@OP-1000 4 жыл бұрын
As a Dutch person, my face was like this 😱 while watching this video.
@appleslover
@appleslover 4 жыл бұрын
G E K O L O N I Z E E R D
@seraby7151
@seraby7151 4 жыл бұрын
Come on now, you live in bike paradise. You cant compare lola
@evaskjerd
@evaskjerd 4 жыл бұрын
As a norwegian person that go to Nederland every summer vacation my face was like yours too😱😳😱😳😱
@samowen8433
@samowen8433 4 жыл бұрын
Frankly, the footage in this video shows disproportionately far better infrastructure than most cities in the US. In my hometown of Phoenix AZ, I’ve been nearly run over three times just from trying to bike roads with a) no shoulder, b) no bike lane, and c) no sidewalk. Drivers are frankly shocked that a cyclist is even attempting to use the roads.
@Tykeonabike
@Tykeonabike 3 жыл бұрын
Not surprised. In the UK it is worse in my opinion just take a look at @cyclegaz videos. In north England it's even worse.
@AgentSmith16
@AgentSmith16 6 жыл бұрын
As a Canadian living in Europe, I have experienced the "good side" of cycling... Drivers are respectful, cities give us tons of space, and most workplaces have showers/lockers for those who have long commutes. If north america could get halfway to this level, we would be on the right track.
@snarkishly
@snarkishly 10 жыл бұрын
An interesting take on cycling in the US from an outsider, but it would be nice to have included some scenes from the Netherlands for contrast. They're easy enough to find on KZbin but a direct, inline contrast could have created a better understanding of his analysis.
@Tore_Lund
@Tore_Lund 6 жыл бұрын
What worries me is that the clips chosen to show the conditions for cyclists in the US almost exclusively show cyclists indifferent to traffic rules: Driving side by side in a shared lane, overtaking / changing lane in an intersection, doing left turns without indicating ( where I live, Europe, they are completely illegal and have to be divided into two straight crossings waiting for green). This does not worry a Dutchman?
@zacharycaswell8583
@zacharycaswell8583 6 жыл бұрын
The American cyclists do this because it is the safest way for them to bike because cars don't give two shits about them, so they have to try and protect themselves.
@JustMeADutchGuy
@JustMeADutchGuy 6 жыл бұрын
You can put "fietspaden in Nederland" in the search bar of yt and get a pretty good idea.We are decades ahead on the USA on this. And it all started because we didn't want more dead kids in the 70ties when more cars came on our roads.
@HackmannT
@HackmannT 4 жыл бұрын
@@Tore_Lund Dutch cyclists are also incredibly indifferent to many traffic rules. While in the US the car is the 'king of the road', cyclists are in the Netherlands. Because of laws, unless drivers can prove that they really couldn't help it, they are responsible for any accidents, even if a cyclist runs a red light for example. (Unless they can prove they had no time to brake in time).
@Tore_Lund
@Tore_Lund 4 жыл бұрын
@@HackmannT I presume the road code is the same for cyclists and motorists alike in Holland too? It is an offence to run a red light, change lane or overtake in an intersection, do a left turn without indicating, crossing a double line? I think what is needed is that cyclists who owns a drivers licence are punished as if the drove their car, as they are required by law to know better before getting their license. That would have an effect on other cyclists, which might be excused, because they are children or otherwise not expected to have studied traffic laws? I live in Denmark and we are in a similar situation. I think the problem is that cyclists, are feeling too confident, by speciality road design, making them less adept in normal traffic? There is an urban city in Denmark "Albertslund" which in the 70-80' designed a complete pathway system, with under and over passes, where cyclists could get around without getting near any cars. However this has resulted in children growing up there learn some bad habits, and at the interstate 3 lane road surrounding the city, cyclist fatalities are 6 times higher than average.
@greggross8856
@greggross8856 10 жыл бұрын
We're in this condition because a relative handful of people and businesses that had a vested interest in creating a car culture were given a free hand to do so. Transportation networks, whole communities were designed to cater to the automobile, at the expense of the people driving them. From family budgets drained by the expense of car ownership to traffic congestion and air pollution, we've been paying the price ever since.
@boxhawk5070
@boxhawk5070 10 жыл бұрын
The US is 3,794,101 square miles, the Netherlands 16,000. You could bike around the country in a week. If you want to live in an apartment the size of your college dorm, pay 70% of your income in taxes and not be able to afford a car, then go live there.
@CuteBoyHorse
@CuteBoyHorse 10 жыл бұрын
Boxhawk er None of that addresses Greg's point, even slightly. Seriously, look up the idea of "jaywalking", who came up with it, and why.
@greggross8856
@greggross8856 10 жыл бұрын
Boxhawk er The whole national size comparison as an argument against cycling is specious. Nobody cycles over 3.8 million square miles, or even 16,000, unless they're on an extended vacation. Nobody drives that much on a daily basis, either. They go from Point A to B and back in the city or town where they live, which means that cycling is a perfectly valid way of getting around, provided the local infra allows for bikes and cars to share the road. And yes, that can be done. It wasn't that long ago in our history that people were saying cars would never catch on because it would cost too much to pave all those roads.
@Kevin15047
@Kevin15047 10 жыл бұрын
Greg Gross Actually roads started to be paved for bicycles. The road is for everyone but if any mode of transport had more right to it, it would be the bicycle.
@CuteBoyHorse
@CuteBoyHorse 10 жыл бұрын
M Jurewicz If by "almost a hundred" you mean about 85.
@captainandthelady
@captainandthelady 8 жыл бұрын
One thing you can say about cycling here in the states is that it sharpens your reflexes. (^L^)
@Zoza15
@Zoza15 8 жыл бұрын
+captainandthelady That's definitely true..
@UTubeRangerBob
@UTubeRangerBob 6 жыл бұрын
The 'Quick and the Dead'!
@RobMacKendrick
@RobMacKendrick 6 жыл бұрын
Until it kills you.
@dukeco3390
@dukeco3390 5 жыл бұрын
Lol it sharpens The Grim Reaper's death scythe.
@zachmutter4060
@zachmutter4060 5 жыл бұрын
yea 32000 deaths a year.... from bike accidents. i ment car accidents
@davidmiracle398
@davidmiracle398 5 жыл бұрын
I was in Mannheim, Germany for two years in the mid1950's and bought a bicycle there to travel around Mannheim. It was a wonderful experience! Now I'm an old guy in my 80's and recently bought an electric bicycle to travel around my area in Southern California about 60 miles NE of Palm Springs on the Mojave Desert. The bike trails and safe passage on the paved roads is a rare commodity in my area. Most of the paved roads don't even have any shoulders on them. Well, at least there are a lot of horse trails on the sand around my home where I can bike. Riding on soft sand takes practice, and I'm still learning that skill. I don't really have the bravery to travel the paved roads where I'm totally at the mercy of anyone driving a 2 or 3 thousand pound speeding vehicle while texting on his/her IPhone.
@electricboi9319
@electricboi9319 4 жыл бұрын
David Miracle I live near Mannheim and i honestly have no idea how it was in the 50s but as it is now I really don't like the bicycle infrastructure there. Bike lanes are narrow with bad surfaces and are built as if they were pedestrian space (you need to slow down quite often, take sharp turns, use pedestrian lights etc) I think they did a much better job in Darmstadt and especially in Frankfurt, though they have changed alot in the recent years
@VieleGuteFahrer
@VieleGuteFahrer 4 жыл бұрын
Cycling in Germany sucks since the 60s. Traffic is heavily dominated by cars, and bike lanes are abused by both cars and pedestrians. Cyclists always look up to Copenhagen or the Netherlands. Even some bike lanes in the video look better than those in most German cities. I live in Frankfurt and they have improved some streets, but there is still a lot to do.
@Dark__Thoughts
@Dark__Thoughts 4 жыл бұрын
@@electricboi9319 At least since corona things seem to start to change. The last couple years were lots of talks about improving our bike infrastructure, but nobody dared to take away space from the cars like parking spaces or even entire lanes. My city is an absolute nightmare at the moment, barely any bike lanes, very hilly, big ass crossings with 2-4 lanes in both directions. If we wanted we could do significant changes within the next couple years and I hope politics finally realizes this too.
@LuisMan123
@LuisMan123 4 жыл бұрын
Cycling ain't even good in Germany but that just shows how bad it is in the US
@TheJan1101
@TheJan1101 4 жыл бұрын
@@LuisMan123 Cycling in Germany is decent, but it depends where you are. Here in Münster it is really good, in my home town there are many extra bike lanes (seperated from the street).
@superfly2449
@superfly2449 2 жыл бұрын
After learning about Dutch cycling, I stopped wearing a helmet. I’m in Houston, Texas though, so I had to face reality. I now wear a helmet, with flashing lights(!!!) at all times. Incredibly, we’re starting to get protected bike lanes here, but they’re limited to short routes.
@Zzzannie
@Zzzannie 9 жыл бұрын
please for all the Americans don't say to the dutch cyclers to wear helmets. do your homework first and think why me may not need them at all ...
@sushigaming101
@sushigaming101 7 жыл бұрын
Zzzannie Even without dangerous drivers, helmets are still necessary for personal protection, like if you hit something and flip.
@Zzzannie
@Zzzannie 7 жыл бұрын
i dont know how you cycle but we dont '''flip'' here.
@sushigaming101
@sushigaming101 7 жыл бұрын
Zzzannie If you're going down a very steep incline and hit an obstacle this can happen.
@Zzzannie
@Zzzannie 7 жыл бұрын
we dont have that in the netherlands
@derfurz8618
@derfurz8618 7 жыл бұрын
Just hurt wounded myself at the head by riding over a little stone (I ride a sth like racing bike) wile driving round a corner with the tight tires i just sliped off the stone and fell. And i know its very unlucky and it doesnt happen very often but since then i always wear a helmet. And there are situation even in the netherlands somebody died because he hadnt weared a helmet so why not btw im living in Germany which also has a good cycling infra.
@thelinthicums3295
@thelinthicums3295 6 жыл бұрын
"There could be a good future for cycling in the U.S." If only it were true.
@Zoza15
@Zoza15 6 жыл бұрын
I think the US could make an amazing cycling infrastructure if your American road planners can manage to make cycling infra safe enough for cycling without interfering cars, then that would be amazing.. But the thing is, its really up to you..
@squig808
@squig808 4 жыл бұрын
Don't be too negative. I was really surprised when I visited Phoenix of all places to have a decent cycling infra. There's a 30 year plan to increase bike lanes by more than 1,000 miles there. It's really something great for human health & safety overall. Also take the chance to look back at American history and Dutch history. The bicycle in US was super popular in the late 1800's, helped to liberate women, change their dress, give them freedom of movement, and arguably the right to vote! Netherlands was also overtaken by cars in the 70's and the people protested and fought so the gov't was forced to listen.
@Tathagatchat
@Tathagatchat 4 жыл бұрын
It is possible.. only need to pressurise your local governments
@noah22261
@noah22261 4 жыл бұрын
Denver has awesome bike lanes and bike lights, I commuted downtown on my bike everyday with them.
@jeffk464
@jeffk464 4 жыл бұрын
In the US cycling is like going to the gym, it's for fitness.
@2011blueman
@2011blueman 9 жыл бұрын
That's a pretty accurate impression of cycling in the US.
@Newy2
@Newy2 9 жыл бұрын
I would love a city designed for bikes here in the U.S.
@aubreykue
@aubreykue 7 жыл бұрын
Newy Oudone Portland is close
@MarcKloos
@MarcKloos 7 жыл бұрын
I drove the PDX WNBR a few years ago. That's the Portland World Naked Bike Ride! About 8000 cyclists that year, I think the number of participants has increased even more lately. Portland has a rather good infra for riding a bike.
@holdencraig3010
@holdencraig3010 7 жыл бұрын
America has an endless amount of cycle infrastructure and more is being built constantly. The Netherlands is a nation the size of a large US city. If we concentrated everything we had into the cycle infrastructure of NYC it would be world class, but we have a bigger show to run. No city is going to be "designed for bikes", you need to advocate for cycling infrastructure to be included in future projects. Noob.
@JaxTheCartographer
@JaxTheCartographer 7 жыл бұрын
Newy Oudone Davis california is the closest thing in my opinion. there are bike lanes everywhere and people use bikes to get everywhere. but it's still probably nothing compared to every city in the Netherlands it's the closest thing the u.s. has got.
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 7 жыл бұрын
No, they really don't. Maybe in designated parts of like Long Beach, and in UC Davis, but otherwise the #'s of bicycle commuters is quite low. Lots of sprawl, not much promotion for cycling or advocacy, and a lot of CA lack seven remotely decent bicycle facilities they just END.. like in San Jose CA, a flat mostly city, I would be riding along a good 4-5 ft bike lane for a stretch and it would just "poof" disappear and you would be stuck with traffic on your butt. They are not nearly as bad as most areas. Many people just view cycling differently in CA. Maybe it is the wealth, the elitist way of some trying to prove their wealth? Show off a car? I just cannot say a lot of good things about cycling in CA. In places where it "should" be much more the case.
@braydenb.7816
@braydenb.7816 7 жыл бұрын
I've lived in the US my entire life and I so wish there was a system like that in the Netherlands
@rickvandam3238
@rickvandam3238 3 жыл бұрын
I know it's been 4 year but still -_- rly?
@IamChrisL712
@IamChrisL712 4 жыл бұрын
I went to the Netherlands last year and I loved cycling there. I spent a week in Leiden as well as two near Amsterdam. We rode our rental bikes to the North sea and it was great. The had a trail the whole way. It's tough in America except for a few cities. Of course, rural biking is pretty good here.
@Amghannam
@Amghannam 4 жыл бұрын
I was just debating cycling rules with an American guy, and he kept on insisting that I don't know cycling rules and that cyclists should not drive on bicycle lanes but in the middle of the street. Not sure if he was trolling, was just dumb, or if this actually is the rule on the USA.
@parisgermain523
@parisgermain523 Жыл бұрын
Yep, many non-Dutch don't know it, but every single beach in the Netherlands can be reached by bike.
@robinmiller173
@robinmiller173 10 жыл бұрын
I live in Manatee County, Florida, where our few bike lanes are narrow and often disappear after a few blocks. But we have bike racks on the buses, and some nice scenic bike trails you can drive to. I try not to ride on our major streets at all - we have one of the highest bicycle death rates in the U.S. because our average driver is a moron.
@robinmiller173
@robinmiller173 10 жыл бұрын
Spandex. Heh. Not for me. I'm old and have a potbelly. A helmet when I leave my low-speed neighborhood. One of the super-dorky ones. Good thing I have flip-up sunglasses to complete the dork effect.
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 7 жыл бұрын
FL just seems like one of the worst places in the USA for cycling. There needs to be more investment on complete streets with bike lanes at the very least. Keep seeing statements being made about the danger to get around on a bike there.
@LinusScrubTips
@LinusScrubTips 7 жыл бұрын
Robin Miller this is not an attack on you or bikers in general, but I live in pinellas and bikers are the bane of my existence. They are always in the way and don't obey traffic laws (ie running stop signs etc.). I drive a pickup and pull trailers (cars and boats) and very frequently I run into bikers going 15-25 under the limit and I can't pass because I'm wide and would likely hit them or come close to it. I really wish they would change the law to allow them to ride on the side walks or create true "bike lanes."
@MBandC103
@MBandC103 7 жыл бұрын
totally agree with the true bike lanes idea; or something like a dedicated lane with a barrier. From experience though putting bikes on sidewalks is a terrible idea; cars aren't going to look at sidewalks for cyclists and bikes would pose a risk to walking pedestrians on sidewalks. When I was a kid I got hit by a car because I was on a sidewalk and the person driving wasn't expecting someone to be riding down it.
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 7 жыл бұрын
Sidewalks are the only option in many areas that have done nothing for livability, or on highways, main thoroughfares. In many cases, they provide a sense of false security, since the assumption is it is safer than being seen on the shoulder or in the middle of the lane. More people are hit at blind turns coming down a curb cut than any other way just about. So sad that so many parts of the USA are poorly planned and not inclusive with active transport. So many older people would benefit in FL. But, Politics, and assuming they cannot ride, when in reality.. they cannot, if they have "been". Bodies need to move. Things start to give up on you. Instead it is fast food with a coupon and driving a Buick to the mall. I live in a city that does better than most, but I still wish to live somewhere over seas with much better planning.
@theroel2212
@theroel2212 8 жыл бұрын
This makes me happy that i am from the Netherlands...
@Nielsly
@Nielsly 8 жыл бұрын
+Daniel Marinkovich (Moravac) what do you mean? We have sturdy, comfortable bikes, which is something the rest of the world doesn't seem to have...
@keokiracerhalsteren
@keokiracerhalsteren 8 жыл бұрын
We don't race to where we want to be so we don't need racing bikes, we also don't need to off-road so no need for mountainbikes. Remember that this is people's commute, a 'Dutch-style' bike gives us everything we need. Also, bikes can sometimes look a bit crappy because if you have a new bike there's a bigger chance it might get stolen. Bike-theft is a serious problem in big cities, so people ride a shitty (but still comfortable) bike in the hope the thiefs won't find it worth stealing.
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 7 жыл бұрын
Outdated? They are actual bikes. Not road bikes. These are made a heck of a lot better than the Chinese crap and carbon road bikes here in the USA. Sensibility. Not racing or cheap crap.
@kevindt100
@kevindt100 7 жыл бұрын
I would first learn a bit basic geography. Because Copenhagon is not in the netherlands. Copenhagen is denmark
@kevindt100
@kevindt100 7 жыл бұрын
***** Wat Denmak is not in the benelux
@VitalityMassage
@VitalityMassage 7 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Anything that makes the U.S. slow down and THINK is a great thing!
@moonlightdrown9366
@moonlightdrown9366 6 жыл бұрын
Vitality Massage you wanna think? Okay you U.S. are ignorant for not allowing other humans the same rights as some others. You are lame for allowing trump to have won. You are complete morons. Your stupid for thinking your the master race. Your idiots for exterminating all those innocent Americans . Should I go on?
@moo3654
@moo3654 6 жыл бұрын
Moonlight Drown What are you yaliking about? Many people were sad about Trump winning, about half of the country. And his personality isnt great but his plans are good. Hillarys plans werent that much better and neither is her personality. They have equal rights in America people just talk and spew lies about it wich makes it seem like they don’t.
@moonlightdrown9366
@moonlightdrown9366 6 жыл бұрын
Moo his plans are not good he is wasting money and resources with that dumb wall of his, also, you have nothing to debunk the other point? Wow
@gtraqs_
@gtraqs_ 6 жыл бұрын
I agree trump has nothing good to bring for the country and it's a disgrace that he was even considered for the position. Don't forget that the majority voted against him. Also, almost everyone in the US agrees that racism is a big problem, and that the genocide genocide committed against Native Americans was an atrocity. However, you are the idiot here. Vitality Massage reacted positively to this video and expressed his opinion. You responded by generalizing him to a minor part of the US population and then insulting him, providing no factual basis for your arguments. This is a logical fallacy and is common among people who lack basic argumentative skills. (yourlogicalfallacyis.com/ad-hominem). Also, it's "you're" when contracting "you are", not "your".
@user-os8sq3uh4n
@user-os8sq3uh4n 6 жыл бұрын
25% of the adult population went to a polling booth and voted for Trump. Half of those voting for Trump said they were not so much voting for Trump, but against Hillary. So less than 13% went down and voted for Trump because they thought Trump would make a good President. Get out of here with that half the country BS. The group to blame for this mess is much smaller.
@kenbob1071
@kenbob1071 2 жыл бұрын
I find that having a task like grocery shopping or running errands gets me more motivated to bike than going on a joy ride. It's fun to know that I accomplished a necessary task and got exercise without having to use a polluting car.
@mycosys
@mycosys 10 жыл бұрын
Those bike lanes next to parked cars are actually WORSE than nothing - as they make motorists expect cyclists to risk their lives with an opening door. If you want to see a different cycling culture try Canberra, Australia. We have inter-center cycle paths totally separated from the road thoroughfares in many places, and where they are together there are wide lanes. It is legal to ride on footpaths in most places unless a cycle path is provided as well. We still go a hell of a lot faster than the dutch, but that is because we have hills, so we can :P (i am half dutch myself - they couldnt believe how fast i was used to going when i was in rotterdam or my strength on the static bike in fitness test when i was young, but i was used to riding 40-70kph)
@thelinthicums3295
@thelinthicums3295 6 жыл бұрын
Australia is the worst place on earth for cycling. Four hundred AUD fine for not wearing a plastic hat while cycling? Have fun with that.
@RDJ2
@RDJ2 4 жыл бұрын
70 km/h. Yeah right.
@katydid5088
@katydid5088 Жыл бұрын
@@RDJ2 IF you get going down a hill with a good wind at your back that speed is entirely possible.
@matthewhall1597
@matthewhall1597 7 жыл бұрын
Now do "Driving in the Netherlands from an American Perspective"
@zivkovicable
@zivkovicable 7 жыл бұрын
Driving in Dutch cities is a pleasure. No cyclists getting in the way of car drivers, no drivers in the way of cyclists. The Dutch have very high car ownership levels, it's just that they tend to use bikes for shorter journeys, because they are quicker & more convenient in cities.
@Joesolo13
@Joesolo13 4 жыл бұрын
It's just an angelic choir playing over the American not getting run down at every intersection. I Almost entirely bike within 2-3 miles of my home, I've almost been run over by people ignoring stop signs several times.
@ndmz903
@ndmz903 3 жыл бұрын
Netherlands has waaay better road than the US lmao
@rememberseptember44
@rememberseptember44 3 жыл бұрын
There you go ;) kzbin.info/www/bejne/nnjZhaVsbL5_ock
@brickman409
@brickman409 7 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video! I live in the US and I recently bought a bicycle to start riding to school everyday. I live close to school, less than 2 miles away, but I still feel like I'm about to get killed every time I try to ride my bike! So I'm mostly just driving, which feels like such a waste considering how close I am. I want to show this video to politicians in my area to start making some real changes!
@Pelpina
@Pelpina 10 жыл бұрын
Respect for bikes :) They're so much more fun, healthy, and environmentally friendly. It's time the US catches up.
@moonlightdrown9366
@moonlightdrown9366 6 жыл бұрын
Pelpina HAHAHAHAHHHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAH the D-d-day that hahaha the U.- U . S. Catches u-up hahahahah is the day I'll stop being mad at the Spanish
@moonlightdrown9366
@moonlightdrown9366 6 жыл бұрын
Biggus Dickus I'm Dutch and have. Grutch againts a people that oppressed us and forced us to go to war
@MrTheelvisfan
@MrTheelvisfan 6 жыл бұрын
Je bent een zakkenwasser Moonlight Drown.
@MrTheelvisfan
@MrTheelvisfan 6 жыл бұрын
Biggus Dickus there`s nothing wrong with Spanish people, I am also a Dutchman.
@23chrisbomb
@23chrisbomb 6 жыл бұрын
Moonlight Drown why don’t you piss off. Where here to talk about bikes not some stupid history that you’re apparently butt hurt about. Go cry a river somewhere else sad pig.
@Sblatus
@Sblatus 4 жыл бұрын
The “only children do this” mentality is damaging
@juntoringo
@juntoringo 6 жыл бұрын
i live in the netherlands! in highschool i always cycled a good 45 minutes from and to school. now im a college student, and i cycle to the busstop and 30 minutes to work. if i ever hang out with friends, i just head over on my bike! for a large part of my life i had undiagnosed add and my eating schedule was a mess . this definitely played a small part in keeping me fit and from being overweight! very blessed and happy, i couldnt imagine having to take pt or a car everywhere.
@coastaku1954
@coastaku1954 3 жыл бұрын
Dafuq is an Eating Schedule? I just eat when I'm hungry. Also cars are awesome
@BNTmodels
@BNTmodels 8 жыл бұрын
Yet its ironic that most buses in the US have bicycle racks in the front, something I never seen in the Netherlands
@PGraveDigger1
@PGraveDigger1 8 жыл бұрын
In the netherlands, there's no need to take a bike on a bus. You can just bike to where you want to go. If you have to take the bus to another city, you can use the public transportation bikes, or do what a lot of students do, store a bike in every city where you regularly come.
@Maurazio
@Maurazio 6 жыл бұрын
For example in switzerland 80% of bus riders don't go farther than 5 km, that's only 15 minutes of bicycling. Also new buses probably don't allow this kind of bike rack, you can see them on older ones. Also buses are on strict schedule they cannot wait for people to put and remove their bikes. In Switzerland the rare bike/bus user can take his bike on the bus (on the urban ones at least).
@Jan_Iedema
@Jan_Iedema 6 жыл бұрын
BNT yes because why would you take your bike on the bus when you can just you know cycle.
@moo3654
@moo3654 6 жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands we take our bike In the bus not on front
@bomthanhha
@bomthanhha 6 жыл бұрын
It is because the US is too large. Sometimes, you only want to bike to the bus stop because biking home takes 2 hours ;)
@IndianBhaijaan
@IndianBhaijaan 4 жыл бұрын
Experience it in India, US will seem like a novice !
@evaskjerd
@evaskjerd 4 жыл бұрын
😳
@alexcostetti9369
@alexcostetti9369 4 жыл бұрын
same in Italy...
@mr.g812
@mr.g812 4 жыл бұрын
@@alexcostetti9369 I live in Italy and I use my bike to go everywhere, we are not like the Netherlands but I feel pretty safe to cycle from point A to B
@alexcostetti9369
@alexcostetti9369 4 жыл бұрын
Mr. G where about ? I live in Rome and I can tell you that is very dangerous
@mr.g812
@mr.g812 4 жыл бұрын
@@alexcostetti9369 Milan
@ItzTheFrost_
@ItzTheFrost_ 9 жыл бұрын
I'm American and I wish we implemented the Dutch bicycle way of life. Honestly I'd rather be from Netherlands than USA.
@autro21
@autro21 9 жыл бұрын
***** Every other country is inferior to the United States. Why would you want to be from the Netherlands?
@autro21
@autro21 9 жыл бұрын
***** Just speaking the truth.
@autro21
@autro21 9 жыл бұрын
***** Can you name a country that is superior to the United States?
@autro21
@autro21 9 жыл бұрын
***** I don't think modern day Germany beats us in any statistics. It is insulting to even try to compare a country as low as Germany to the United States.
@autro21
@autro21 9 жыл бұрын
***** Our GDP is better than any other country. Germany is usually ranked 4th behind China and Japan. U.S. is the greatest.
@namenamename390
@namenamename390 3 жыл бұрын
I find American road signs to be very amusing. Half of them seem to be just text explaining stuff that should be obvious, like the "left turn signal" sign in this video. The funniest one is probably the equivalent to the falling rocks sign, which is just text saying "ROCKS"
@vijf
@vijf 3 жыл бұрын
xd
@dustintaylor2083
@dustintaylor2083 4 жыл бұрын
Rules of cycling in the US. 1) Assume ALL motorists are actively trying to kill you. 2) Traffic laws are optional. I'd rather break a law than be dead. Traffic laws and infrastructure are just poorly designed for cyclists. Even in great US bike cities. Paint does not keep you safe! People will complain that bikers don't follow the rules, but it is often times safer to run a red light when traffic is clear rather than wait for a green light and a pile of cars to dominate the intersection. Also, I'd rather hop on the sidewalk for a moment at an intersection to avoid getting run over by a right turning vehicle. (FYI to the uninformed, for the most part it IS LEGAL for a bike to be on the sidewalk in the US. Each city is different but most allow it at lower speeds while yeilding to pedestrians. Restrictions are stricter in city centers where shops are right at the sidewalk.
@SonsOfSevenless
@SonsOfSevenless 4 жыл бұрын
if you bring your bicycle unto the sidewalk, dismount and walk it. don't be an asshole
@Spitfireseven
@Spitfireseven 10 жыл бұрын
This narrator was a pretty relaxed informational type of guy. In reality The United States of America has no real daily cycling culture. People wear a load of safety gear because they fear being run down and killed. This is the right attitude for the moment in a country that has no cycle culture compared to an amazing land like Scandinavia or the Orient. In America you are a big deal with a car. It will be a while before that changes.
@davidderuiter6025
@davidderuiter6025 10 жыл бұрын
We do not belong to Scandinavia which is in fact made up by 6 different countries. The Netherlands belong to the Benelux.
@Twiggy163
@Twiggy163 10 жыл бұрын
It's not that you're a "big deal" with a car, it's because the car is much more part of society than in a lot of other countries. It's part of the American "culture" (I've denied for years that they have one, but they do).
@Judge_Magister
@Judge_Magister 10 жыл бұрын
David de Ruiter where do you got your facts from?, Scandinavia is a geographical region, the peninsula containing only 2 countrys, Norway and Sweden. the Benelux is no region its a Union, the precursor of the EU, today its called "Benelux Economic Union", the geographical region we are part of are the lowlands, containing largely the kingdom of the Netherlands, parts of Belgium and Germany, here we got the language term "high German and low German" from (accents). anyway i think he ment cycling is pretty big in other parts of the world to, like i know it is in Danmark/Kopenhagen.
@AnthonyRizzo2
@AnthonyRizzo2 10 жыл бұрын
It's not that we don't have a cycle culture because we do. Even in remote little towns that have no bicycle lanes or trails you will still see people riding their bicycles to commute or recreate. What it is is that our car culture is consistently being reinforced by industry and government. When roads need renovation the only consideration given is the automobile. Lobby groups for motorists have a lot more pull than community groups that don't have the funding of the other.
@davidderuiter6025
@davidderuiter6025 10 жыл бұрын
Berend van der Valk You are talking about the geographical and i am talking about the cultural. But you are right in questioning me cause the right term is Nordic countries. Still al these countries are also called Scandinavia while the peninsula only consists of Sweden Norway and Sapmi.
@Itravelbackintime
@Itravelbackintime 8 жыл бұрын
Update: The only place in the country that resembles closest to the designated paved cycling lanes (non lane paint marking) is the Cultural Trail in Indianapolis,Indiana. No city comes close to Indy...not even Portland. The designated bike lanes are paved separated from the road way and sidewalk. It's the closest I've seen when I was in the Netherlands. It's relatively new but suspect someone who designed this was inspired by the Dutch system. I'm really happy to have this in my city. KZbin "cultural trail" to see what I mean.
@LisetteLowe
@LisetteLowe 4 жыл бұрын
I used to live in Seattle and use the Burke Gilman Trail to get to university. It's limited, but one of my favorite cycling infrastructures ever. If only it wasn't shared with pedestrians...
@Itravelbackintime
@Itravelbackintime 4 жыл бұрын
@@LisetteLowe It might be limited but it is a start to getting people accustomed to the awareness of cycling.
@AssBlasster
@AssBlasster Жыл бұрын
I would put the coastal greenways of lower Manhattan (south of Midtown) on the list too. The best urban cycleway that I've rode so far, especially in Battery Park. But definitely want to check the Cultural Trail some day too
@cazgerald9471
@cazgerald9471 7 жыл бұрын
I bicycle commuted in L.A. for almost a decade. Never hit by a car but certainly some close calls. I tried to ride through neighborhoods whenever possible, but I rode on Sepulveda, La Cienega, PCH, La Brea and other nightmare inducing streets during work traffic.
@TheBlarggle
@TheBlarggle 9 жыл бұрын
It's almost as if the Netherlands and the United States are two separately run countries with their own laws, cultures and practices. Go fuckin' figure.
@MrDfgdsfsdg
@MrDfgdsfsdg 9 жыл бұрын
It's almost like you did not understand the purpose of the video.
@fredguy2
@fredguy2 9 жыл бұрын
Yunocchi It's almost like he didn't want to in the first place.
@Kevin15047
@Kevin15047 9 жыл бұрын
Yes and the Netherlands is better. I'm American btw.
@supersabrosinho
@supersabrosinho 4 жыл бұрын
This documentary: cycling in the US is dangerous 3rd world countries: that's cute. Hold my cerveza
@moviezaftermidnight6348
@moviezaftermidnight6348 3 жыл бұрын
Bike lanes amplify congestion while providing little safety or convenience by taking up a lot of lane space for traffic. Cars still park, stop & turn in them, blocking the bike lanes as well... I have ridden over 20 years after stopping myself from driving in the 90's due to not only climate change but the risk I put everyone else at for my own laziness... This is why I refer to cars as 3 ton wheelchairs.. with this being said it is clear I do not desire to side with cars in ridding the streets of bike lanes, however experience as a rider has taught me that we should actually indeed do that. We should be designating curb lanes as "shared lanes" because bicycles are entitled a full lane and legally cars are bound to change lanes when passing.. When a vehicle has to stop, since it is a shared lane then they are able to pull over without "blocking" a bike lane. As long as they signal and use caution it would be much more effective than them currently cutting cyclists off as they talk on their phone pulling into the bike lane to stop.... When a car signals and turns right they should not have cyclists approaching from behind and passing on their right as they are behind a car turning ahead of them which means the car has the right of way.. cyclists should be empowered to go around the car on the left with the space that is left in the "shared" curb lane, without nearly being run over by other vehicles behind the turning vehicle I have people yelling at me while I leave a bike lane to make a left turn.... as though I am supposed to turn left from the right hand side of the road.... at the last second...
@ghjerrr
@ghjerrr 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a Dutch man who cycled through NYC last year. I’ve got to say it’s quite nice to have a shared bike system over there where you can easily pick and mount bikes al over the city. The lanes though. There are some colored lanes at the roads at the outer side of manhattan, but most of the bike lanes are filled with buses. Buses and bikes share the same spaces on the street which in my opinion are crazy. I did not where any helmet and I think thats fine because traffic is not riding that fast in downtown Manhattan, but some better lanes could seriously reduce the amount of motorized traffic, because the island is flat and very much accessible by bike. Love the channel! Groetjes
@DugganCanning
@DugganCanning 10 жыл бұрын
Why do I get the feeling he is implying people shouldn't wear helmets?
@DugganCanning
@DugganCanning 10 жыл бұрын
*****
@meiray
@meiray 10 жыл бұрын
***** Cycling IS dangerous, especially in US cities. That's not going to change no matter how many dismayed suggestions a soothing Dutch narrator makes get implemented. I don't care how big it is, the little difference in safety given by a helmet is better than nothing. As for drivers, I can only speak for myself but I am never more inclined to do a risky maneuver next to a helmeted biker than a non-protected rider, that's absurd. Both are obviously vulnerable and both should be given the appropriate amount of mindfulness by cars they share the road with.
@meiray
@meiray 10 жыл бұрын
***** My statement was that I am not personally inclined to treat a biker worse if he's wearing a helmet and I'm driving a car. And it's just silly to say the added protection of a helmet to an individual is outweighed by the overall harm it does to the perception of the activity. You're basically saying I shouldn't wear a helmet for the benefit of biking as a whole. Biking can be made safer, but US cities are not going to be inclined to make enough of these changes any time soon, so the reality is that it's still fraught with danger here and it's sensible to wear a helmet. You can't possibly say it's not riskier to ride alongside metropolitan traffic and avoid pedestrians than it is to be a normal pedestrian similarly obeying traffic rules. No one will be much of a martyr for the cause of embracing biking with a preventable brain injury.
@jonathannellis5199
@jonathannellis5199 10 жыл бұрын
I think a lot of the difference between helmet use by the Dutch and Americans revolves around two factors - style of bicycle and speed. High speed increases the risk dramatically if you fall, which makes helmets more important. Dutch style city bikes have a much more relaxed fit. Handlebars are higher than the saddle and weight further rearward and lower to the ground. You are a lot more likely to go over the bars on a racing bicycle than a Dutch city bicycle if you crash at lower speeds. Not only that but you are a lot less likely to crash in the first place on such a bicycle just due to the lower saddle position, slightly wider wheels, more stable braking, etc... If I road a city bike at speeds not much above 10 mph I would probably not wear a helmet too, but I think it is crazy not to wear one on a racing bicycle.
@Kevin15047
@Kevin15047 9 жыл бұрын
I'll wear a helmet when pedestrians do.
@B.A.512
@B.A.512 3 жыл бұрын
The helmet part got me: When I cycle in the Netherlands with an helmet on, people ask me: why do you wear a helmet? Are you from Germany? Or: Your hair gets messed up. When I commute 25km/hr or faster than I will wear a helmet. Ive seen people on speed pedelecs: License plate off the bike and no helmet.......
@Bertuzz84
@Bertuzz84 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah i don't get the taboo about wearing a helmet. Especially the people on 25kmh blue lisence plate mopeds riding 50kmh without helmets seem nuts to me. I always wear my helmet on my speed pedelec. But guys pass me at a faster speeds without helmets because of their blue license place. In my opinion it should be mandatory if you ride 25+kmh no matter what you are riding. The hair excuse is just retarded for risking head injuries.
@jenniferlee4561
@jenniferlee4561 10 жыл бұрын
Yes Davis is a college town so naturally practically every student has a bike but I also see a lot of adults riding with their kids and tons of children riding home by themselves afterschool so the city of Davis itself is very bike oriented
@kayjones1252
@kayjones1252 10 жыл бұрын
it is sadly true that most people see cycling as a leisure or child like activity only.
@silbakker3770
@silbakker3770 4 жыл бұрын
People are animals. Humans are animals.
@nameless674
@nameless674 6 жыл бұрын
You are happiness! We are figth for our bicycle rights in Russia. Humiliation on the road.
@LeafHuntress
@LeafHuntress 10 жыл бұрын
@Gee Bee I cycled when i was pregnant, i cylce with children, i cycled with my grans, i cycled next to a friend in a wheelchair. Why wouldn't i want to cycle in those circumstances? I am not the only one, here are some links where you can watch some other people do the same; bicycledutch.wordpress.com/2013/07/04/cycling-with-a-baby/ bicycledutch.wordpress.com/2011/10/13/safe-cycling-for-8-to-80-year-olds/ Who else benefits from the Dutch cycling infrastructure The thing about cycling & children always cracks me up, because we Dutchies got our great infrastructure as a result of people campaigning for safety for children; How the Dutch got their cycle paths It worked, The Netherlands has the lowest deaths in traffic & the happiest children in the world. How can anyone be against safe streets for kids? Oh, and the shouting part? EVERYBODY pays taxes for roadmaintance. USA Cyclists pay, but get bloody few things in return. Bloody indeed with all those deaths. Other shouty bit? US driverslicences are a joke compaired to what you have to do, are have to be able to do & have to pay around here. It shows in number of idiots on the road & dead people. Please read up before commenting again.
@JustClaude13
@JustClaude13 5 жыл бұрын
"...It is surprising that that explanation for motor traffic is also needed." Differences in regulations frequently need clarification. In many places a left turn is legal outside of the green arrow in certain circumstances. The arrow only shows when the intersection is protected for left turns. Other times when the straight lanes are green the turning car might be permitted but has to yield to through traffic. The sign would then be required for those intersections where the maneuver is deemed unsafe.
@LikaPyramid
@LikaPyramid 10 жыл бұрын
lol, those who havent really grown up..
@Pidalin
@Pidalin 5 жыл бұрын
I have to listenint exactly this shit from my family because I am 27 years old and I still don't have driver licence which is really strange in czech republic, everyone have to have car immediately in 18 years old, but I don't want car and I don't want to feed that and paying nonsese service every few months as other people.
@PerfectAlibi1
@PerfectAlibi1 5 жыл бұрын
@@Pidalin If you don't need a car because your job and stores are close to where you live, yeah you don't need a car at all ^^
@Bitrey
@Bitrey 4 жыл бұрын
@@Pidalin Same here in Italy, cyclists are seen as poor people, and everyone here will think you're totally crazy if you don't get a driving license as soon as you turn 18. The bad thing is that, even though there is ZERO cycling infrastructure, there is some decent public transport (especially trains, they're very good and very cheap), but unfortunately Italians don't even think about using anything but their precious cars for transportation.
@KrazyKrzysztof
@KrazyKrzysztof 4 жыл бұрын
@@Bitrey lol what? road bikes for cycling can cost thousands of dollars. only the wealthiest will possess them.
@robinenbernhard
@robinenbernhard 4 жыл бұрын
@@Pidalin i was 33 when i got driver licence. And am now 37 and stil dont got car Because i dont need it. I live 2min from shopmall 10min train station
@Bunny1900
@Bunny1900 10 жыл бұрын
Resharing Boxhawk er comments. The US is 3,794,101 square miles, the Netherlands 16,000. You could bike around the country in a week. If you want to live in an apartment the size of your college dorm, pay 70% of your income in taxes and not be able to afford a car, then go live there.
@tetrabee
@tetrabee 10 жыл бұрын
Wow, talk about pulling numbers out of your a**. 70% in taxes? Scandinavia doesn't even have such high income taxes. Car ownership in the Netherlands is slightly higher than the UK. Both are more than 500 per 1,000 people. Are you suggesting the Brits are also too "poor" to afford the car. And what does the size of a country have to do with a city's internal infrastructure? So US cities collectively cover 3,794,101 square miles?
@driewiel
@driewiel 10 жыл бұрын
But we do own cars. We just have to steal them in Poland. That's all. Preferably a station wagon so grandparents have a place to live in.
@tetrabee
@tetrabee 10 жыл бұрын
William Russell Too poor huh? I'll let you debate that with any average Brit or Dutch. If the size is too large, then that's where public transit comes in. They have plenty of that all throughout Europe, including the Netherlands. You could also do a combination of the different modes. Nothing says it has to be an all-or-nothing with any single mode of transport. BUt size doesn't mean that there can't be good infrastructure within our cities.
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 7 жыл бұрын
They do not pay 70% Taxes. You would need to be really really well off to pay that.
@TurinStark5
@TurinStark5 7 жыл бұрын
What does it have to do with anything? A city is a city. Austin is the 11th most populated American city and it somewhat appears to be embracing a higher bike culture. Why all American cities at least lower in population that Austin can't do the same or start trying to embrace it? the USA is not just New York, Los Angeles and Chicago
@idahomurphys
@idahomurphys 10 жыл бұрын
Infra? I guess that's short for infrastructure lol
@icemachine79
@icemachine79 10 жыл бұрын
Yeah that was annoying me too.
@bramvanduijn8086
@bramvanduijn8086 4 жыл бұрын
@@icemachine79 I like it.
@RinTohsaka64
@RinTohsaka64 10 жыл бұрын
The criticism of helmets misses one big thing - riding a bike on somewhere other than pavement. Maybe it's because I live in the boondocks, but riding a bike off-road is arguably much more common and, rather than being associated with racing or leisure, is associated with the likes of other outdoor exercises like jogging, hiking, rock climbing, etc. One thing also, you wouldn't want to ride a bike for something like commuting in these cases due to raw distance. Even driving in a car your commute would likely be at least 30 minutes at 35-50 mph even with little to no stoplights. Also the summer weather around here (Great Lakes region) is possibly too inconsistant to rely on a bike as your primary transportation when combined with the extended distances required for travel - you don't exactly want to get stranded in the middle of nowhere when a severe thunderstorm randomly generates and spawns in their typical unpredictable fashion. And then this thing called winter and lake effect snow that likes to last as long as 6 months at times.
@bartvandewalle4253
@bartvandewalle4253 10 жыл бұрын
It's true, Dutch (and Europeans in general) generally live closer to work then Americans. When I told my granny, some 13 years ago, I would go to college an hour and a half away from home, and only come back for the weekends, she hugged me as if I was going overseas. Since, I've chosen to live close to work, so I can easily bike there, with no need to buy a car. Yes, my appartment is a bit more expensive than somewhere in the suburbs, but with no car, I can afford it easily... And yes, if I'd go mountain biking, I's wear a helmet, too. Just not for the 2 miles from home to work and back, with cycle paths on most of the way.
@tonyk8368
@tonyk8368 4 жыл бұрын
You can now easily find ebikes that go 28 mph for a range of 40 miles or more, which solves the distance problem. Biking in the rain can be solved by wearing a rain jacket and rain pants and keeping a change of clothes at work in case of surprises. And biking during the winter can be solved by putting on studded snow tires in December and taking them off in March, and possibly also by using a fat bike.
@shannontrainer5857
@shannontrainer5857 4 жыл бұрын
Tony K Keep in mind that Dutch-style upright e-bikes are usually pegged at 15 mph and provide just enough power to get over bridges and slight incline of no more than 5-6%.
@coastaku1954
@coastaku1954 3 жыл бұрын
@@tonyk8368 Yeah... that's a lot of work, I'll just take my car then
@tonyk8368
@tonyk8368 3 жыл бұрын
@@shannontrainer5857 Yeah, my solution here is country-dependent, so laws would need to change in some countries for it to work.
@gillenzfluff8380
@gillenzfluff8380 8 жыл бұрын
Riding fast means less time spent on the road with dangerous traffic!
@OriginalPuro
@OriginalPuro 8 жыл бұрын
In murrica a bike is seen as a poor mans thing, someone who can't afford a car. A car is seen as a status symbol, meaning you have money, like how gas guzzlers like big GM cars are promoted and valued highly as a symbol of wealth.
@driewiel
@driewiel 8 жыл бұрын
Ha ha that is stupid. We Dutch don't measure one's wealth by the number of cars. For example I know someone who has 80 cows but owns only one car.
@goldstriker1236
@goldstriker1236 8 жыл бұрын
@drie wiel Does he also have a windmill?
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 7 жыл бұрын
It makes me sick. I am proud to say that I have a 92 VW that I never drive anymore. I bike. I own a Bakfiets to get my kid around town as well. I dream of moving to a better place, though. Next year.
@bvlampe6801
@bvlampe6801 7 жыл бұрын
Honestly I would be much prouder being able to say I don't have and need a car than saying I have 2 or 3 cars
@davez5418
@davez5418 7 жыл бұрын
PuroYO I think a car in the us is a must have If you want to get around. Even in the Netherlands outside the big citys you need a car to get around. We dutch people love cars just like americans, sadly driving a car here costs a fortune. High taxes and high gas prices are one of the reasons people here drive modest cars. We simply cant afford to drive a big GM here.
@Endrushmi
@Endrushmi 6 жыл бұрын
This makes me want to move to Copenhagen :(. Here, if you are cycling in lycra on a racing bike, you are seen as crazy. If you are in regular clothes on a normal bike, you are seen as poor or someone with a D.U.I. It's really sad.
@michel7339
@michel7339 4 жыл бұрын
I hope not that you gonna think that Copenhagen is in Holland.
@cyprel
@cyprel 4 жыл бұрын
@@michel7339 Or that Holland = the Netherlands?
@jd-uz1ln
@jd-uz1ln 4 жыл бұрын
@@cyprel doesn't change the fact that Copenhagen isn't in either north or south Holland.
@shannontrainer5857
@shannontrainer5857 4 жыл бұрын
j d Copenhagen is in Denmark.
@PikkaBird
@PikkaBird 10 жыл бұрын
I really have no clue what you mean when talking about "racing" in this video. Are you trying to tell us that everyone should ride slowly as if without any purpose or goal?
@BicycleDutch
@BicycleDutch 10 жыл бұрын
The contrast becomes very clear when you look at a Dutch rush hour: kzbin.info/www/bejne/iHXcpauEe5aAp5Y
@shechshire
@shechshire 8 жыл бұрын
+PikkaBird I think what he means is that rider try to keep up with cars so that they dont get ran over.
@TunaTheMiner
@TunaTheMiner 8 жыл бұрын
+PikkaBird What he is saying is that in America, we ride road bikes casually on the road. In the Netherlands, those are considered "racing bicycles." They are a motorist equivalent of driving a formula race car to work.
@PikkaBird
@PikkaBird 8 жыл бұрын
The example he gives seems slow to me. Like he's annoyed by people who wanna get where they're going and get there fast. And I know what bike paths are, I'm from Denmark, and what's more - I'm from a town that takes pride in being the #1 bicycle town in the country. And I HAAATE getting caught behind slow cyclists who do that "going with the flow" thing whilst insisting on taking up the entire width of whatever surface they're occupying. Please, pretty please, leave just enough space on the left to allow people to pass, just in case someone might not have set aside their entire day for their commute. That should just be common decency. "Keep right" is actually the second section in our traffic laws, but gets ignored across the board, and I'd like "no constant erratic swerving like a drunkard so nobody can safely pass you" to be added somwehere by the way.
@MeatNinja
@MeatNinja 8 жыл бұрын
+PikkaBird You said it yourself. Different people cycle at different speeds, but you don't have an option if you're forced to cycle in front of cars like in most countries, so they have to ''race'' to avoid getting run over. I also like cycling fast but many people don't, no problem on a seperated cycle lane.
@r3vmixman
@r3vmixman 10 жыл бұрын
As I watched the video I started shaking my head, disagreeing with what you were saying, being that I live in Davis, the most bike friendly town in America. And then you mentioned us! Hah. However, you should leave the downtown area next time you visit. There's plenty of infrastructure for bikes including dedicated bike paths, green lights for just bicycles, roundabouts, complimentary bike repair stations, and we don't really wear helmets in abundance like you said. Here's what a typical day looks like. bikeleague.org/sites/default/files/node_gallery/UC-Davis.jpg
@eggaweb9127
@eggaweb9127 9 жыл бұрын
I would love to visit your town just to bike around!
@seand.g423
@seand.g423 6 жыл бұрын
Dude, I'm in Spokane, WA, and we got this one, like half-block (okay, _maybe_ more like 3/4) bridge over I-90, where the bike lane is suddenly in the middle of the fucking road, and then it transitions across a 4-way back to the shoulder... I swear, the real problem is that the planners want to get these oil-skulled fucks pissed off at the cyclists for riding like they've been basically forced to, and then blame us for wanting bike lanes at all! Don't believe me? 3 words: driving-bike-parking-curb.
@pumfeethermodynamics3286
@pumfeethermodynamics3286 2 жыл бұрын
in minneapolis minnesota when rebuilding roads we put curbs for the bikes, and regular painted protected bike baths are becoming the standard minimum
@shiroineko13
@shiroineko13 10 жыл бұрын
Use red asphalt (use a red pigment like iron oxide) to mark cycling lanes. It lasts way longer than paint and you can do it if you're going to pave it over older asphalt.
@youjib
@youjib 9 жыл бұрын
i'am commuting on roads and yes IT'S A RACE FOR YOUR LIFE, you must stay within the flow. Some drivers are angry, others look at their phones etc ... A car passing by you is ALWAYS a risk, so i use a race bike with city gears. Heavy E-bikes cynically capped at 25km/h are not making it either, i'am telling you. That's a political choice : no proper bike lanes. We are selling cars here in France, a cash cow milking a broken model. We have good cheese, but with plenty of radars and even drones now our speeding tickets are very tasty too.
@JellyFlavoredGerman
@JellyFlavoredGerman 4 жыл бұрын
Since I moved here two years ago I've been finding cycling through Paris an absolute pleasure compared to the death traps that are UK roads.
@HladniSjeverniVjetar
@HladniSjeverniVjetar 2 жыл бұрын
Why would you drive a bike in US.....it's just suicidal... but on the other hand, why would live in US sounds suicidal.
@Thomass7586
@Thomass7586 5 жыл бұрын
Spend a small fortune on your bike. Then a helmet. I don't wear helmets and never will. All kinds of bike accessories. Then share the roads with the nuts in there cars. Now that's insane !
@tobiaswilde557
@tobiaswilde557 9 жыл бұрын
People are gonna flip out on this, but over here, in the Netherlands, we even have moped's without helmets. they are allowed to go around 25km/h but most of them go around 40 km/h and nobody is really scared to drive them. Damn i'm glad i live here, we got everything here really if only we didnt have to pay so much fucking taxes
@marcusnl66
@marcusnl66 8 жыл бұрын
Guess why the infrastructure for bikes in Holland is so much more advanced than in the US? Exactly, bc of the high taxes ppl pay. It has to come from somewhere, no?
@djkenny1202
@djkenny1202 8 жыл бұрын
+Marcus NL You do, but you also get so much more value for what taxes you pay. Education, child care, health care... ALL subsidized. When a family has children you receive a civilized amount of time for maternity leave. We get 2 weeks. The extra like 10-20% depending on income you pay.. I would say you get more for your dollar. We pay more, but straight out of pocket.
@marcusnl66
@marcusnl66 7 жыл бұрын
djkenny The Dutch welfare state is slowly disappearing. Right wing politics, privatizing state subsidies will have its effect on the average income in the Netherlands.
@billybobjoe198
@billybobjoe198 7 жыл бұрын
Here in the US kids ride their bikes at 20mph. (32km/h) So I'm not sure why you think not wearing a helmet on a scooter at 25mph is some sort of scary thing. American scooters typically go 40mph and old frail women, their main market, rarely wear helmets on them.
@jakobholgersson4400
@jakobholgersson4400 7 жыл бұрын
While I do understand the value of good infrastructure, I still think that bikers should wear helmets.
@SIG442
@SIG442 10 жыл бұрын
There is a good possibility that the Americans can enjoy save cycling roads and not being chased by drivers all the time or see it as a entertainment form. With a touch of Dutch infrastructure, or rather a huge deal of it, it will be come saver for everyone. Even the drivers.
@joshjustice2638
@joshjustice2638 10 жыл бұрын
or maybe we could make the country 200 times smaller
@Kevin15047
@Kevin15047 10 жыл бұрын
Joshua Justice Country size has NOTHING to do with it. Most trips in the U.S. are less than 10 miles from the home. Do you think the Dutch cycle from one end of their country to another? They don't. They bike short distances and drive or take public transportation for long distances. I have a neighbor who drives to the end of the driveway to get his mail! That's so American, it's sickening.
@SIG442
@SIG442 10 жыл бұрын
M Jurewicz indeed, do note that the Dutch do NOT drivefrom city to city, that would be insane. It is just a transport system for inside cities and just outside them. Some occasionally do use it to do huge distances, but those are either amature or proffesional cyclists that train for competitions, such as the most famous in the world which plays in France. It's a excellent way to keep in shape as well, fresh air (in the US perhaps not so fresh with all the cars), getting your body working (instead of sitting in a car being lazy) and you at least can look around, you can actually see something other then the bumper infront of you :)
@Kevin15047
@Kevin15047 10 жыл бұрын
M Jurewicz Half of all trips made it the U.S. are 3 miles and under.
@bramvanduijn8086
@bramvanduijn8086 4 жыл бұрын
@@SIG442 It is quite nice to go for a long sunny sunday cycle to another city or town. I can hearthily recommend it.
@jocelynkroetz-jones4793
@jocelynkroetz-jones4793 10 жыл бұрын
I live in milwaukee and I've seen a lot of buses driving in bike lanes, which is even worse than cars IMO.
@machinerin151
@machinerin151 3 жыл бұрын
Don't shorten infrastructure to "infra". It's weird, nobody does that
@Janaale
@Janaale 2 жыл бұрын
I'm very glad I live in the Netherlands. The most bike friendly country in the world.
@NicholasGreenwood
@NicholasGreenwood 10 жыл бұрын
I'm a commuter in Seattle. Been here two and a half years, and it's good to see that more and better bike infrastructure has been added over time. I'm still HATED by passive aggressive motorists though... *especially* when I'm behaving entirely legally? What's up with that?
@Kevin15047
@Kevin15047 10 жыл бұрын
In America bicycles are not taken seriously. Also the most grievous sin you can commit in America is to slow someone down. So impatient American motorists never appreciate being behind a bicycle. Two huge problems are that motorist don't know how the law pertains to bikes and cyclists don't know how to properly ride a bike. I can't tell you how many idiots I see riding a bike at night with no lights of any kind. A reflector is not sufficient! I never ride at night without at least a headlight and taillight. I put 80% of the blame on motorist and 20% on cyclists. Then again I live in a town that's wall to wall suburbs so maybe cyclists in the city actually have a clue. It's so bad cars don't know what to doo with cyclists that fallow the rules. I signal a left turn and I swear cars wonder why the hell I stuck my arm out.
@bramvanduijn8086
@bramvanduijn8086 4 жыл бұрын
@Phil M That is just another reason for seperate bike infra.
@GNU_Linux_for_good
@GNU_Linux_for_good 3 жыл бұрын
I think we can all agree, cycling in the Netherlands is *heaven* .
@captainhaddock4727
@captainhaddock4727 9 жыл бұрын
America has an ingrained car culture. Not surprising considering the great size of America.
@inepthabit
@inepthabit 9 жыл бұрын
Captain Haddock Doesn't explain why there aren't more cyclists in more densely populated areas however. Can't compare Netherlands to the US as a whole, as the US is as diverse as Europe when it comes to geography and weather. But there are areas and cities in the US that could have a cycling culture with the right infrastructure.
@RobotShlomo
@RobotShlomo 9 жыл бұрын
Captain Haddock In the 1950's after the Second World War, many migrated OUTSIDE the city centers. If you go to a city like New York many don't own a car because there's so much public transit, and you have to pay to park it.
@captainhaddock4727
@captainhaddock4727 9 жыл бұрын
RobotShlomo Yup, that's what sucks about cars! Not only do you pay to park it, but you also pay a big price for fuel, repairs etc... Yet a bicycle is an amazing principle of simplicity and mechanical purity.. inexpensive, fun and useful...
@RobotShlomo
@RobotShlomo 9 жыл бұрын
Captain Haddock Yes, it can be "fun", but in many places also DANGEROUS, and impractical because of the commuting distances. My previous job I had to commute 17 miles each way every day. There was no way to do that on a bicycle since it was all highway miles. That's where we're at now as a nation. Unless you live in a big population center like New York, Boston or Chicago, you need car. There's no way to get around L.A. on a bike, at least easily. Many cities like the idea of a "freelance graphic designer" in a scarf and skinny jeans riding a penny farthing to an office from his overpriced "market rate apartment", but the reality is that many places in the U.S. are not conducive to commuting by bicycle.
@captainhaddock4727
@captainhaddock4727 9 жыл бұрын
RobotShlomo True. The roads have been designed to suit the car, and rarely the bike!
@danutatokarska7428
@danutatokarska7428 4 жыл бұрын
Przepiękne nagranie,piękna Holandia cudowna,a kultura ludzi wszystko super,pozdrawiam bardzo gorąco właściciela tego filmu.
@SideWalkAstronomyNetherlands
@SideWalkAstronomyNetherlands Жыл бұрын
The USA got stuck in the 1950s...How sad.
@toxicosmosis
@toxicosmosis 10 жыл бұрын
Great video! Please come and make one about bicycling in London, it's pretty much as bad as the U.S. : (
@BicycleDutch
@BicycleDutch 10 жыл бұрын
Already done: London cycling impressions
@bramvanduijn8086
@bramvanduijn8086 4 жыл бұрын
@Ginger To survive the cars you have to be aggressive, I guess that selects for a certain personality.
@matthewmitchell68
@matthewmitchell68 4 жыл бұрын
Finally discussion on improving the cycling in the USA! The good news is that many cities are finally adopting bike lanes with curb protection, and bike signals!
@cynthiamolenaar770
@cynthiamolenaar770 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the update! In was wondering how the situation is now since this video is from a few years ago..
@realnapster1522
@realnapster1522 2 жыл бұрын
Drivers are extremely illiterate and have no road sense or respect for others in US. It’s extremely dangerous to ride bicycle or even motorcycle.
@MrFaasje
@MrFaasje 7 жыл бұрын
The US is one of the least developed 1st world countries...
@squiddi1393
@squiddi1393 7 жыл бұрын
Cycling has nothing to do with a country being developed lmao... It's even ironic you say that because looking at the video you can clearly see it is well developed. You do realize cars on the roads is technically more developed than bikes, right? It is easily one of the most developed nations on earth. If you want to see what an underdeveloped 1st world nation looks like, take a look at Russia, anything think that isn't St. Petersburg or Moscow. I rest my case...
@MrFaasje
@MrFaasje 7 жыл бұрын
Squiddi I didn't base my opinion just on this video about cycling. Also, ofcourse it's developed, I didn't say it isn't. I just said from all the first world countries (US, Canada, Western-Europe and Australia) It's one of the least developed, if not the least developed. I keep room for doubt because I've never been to Canada and Australia.
@squiddi1393
@squiddi1393 7 жыл бұрын
MrFaasje You still haven't explained anything. I know you're talking about Western (all 1st world basically) nations... My point still stands; it is one of the most developed.
@MrFaasje
@MrFaasje 7 жыл бұрын
I think it depends on how you define a developed country. If you measure it by the amount of military power and the abbility to put people on the moon, it's obviously the most developed. However in my opinion a developed country has good education, public transport and healthcare for everyone. I'm not a socialist, this is just the minimum requirements for being developed. Also the amount of violence per capita in the US is on the level of 3rd world countries. When you look at rankings measuring the quality of life you will allways see scandinavian countries on top, followed closely by Western-European countries, Canada, Japan and Australia, with even some 2nd world countries sneaking in before the US. Be sure however to check for objective rankings based on facts, because when people can vote on the best countries, the US will allways be on top. People (and especially Americans) tend to really keep hanging on to the believe the US is the best country in the world, but no it is the MOST POWERFUL and the MOST INFLUENTIAL, but NOT the most developed, NOT the best country to live in.
@squiddi1393
@squiddi1393 7 жыл бұрын
MrFaasje It has poor education, so it's underdeveloped? First of all, the rankings aren't that bad, it's a completely exaggerated stereotype. There are regions in the US that easily surpass European countries for example, in education (the largest being New England). The universities are also the best in the world, which can't really be disputed. It is a country of opportunity after all, you do what you're good at, and don't give two and half shits about what you're not. Perhaps a lot of people aren't as well-rounded as they ought to be, but it isn't that important. I urge you to see videos online about "Americans can't answer simple questions," and then watch the same from other countries, it's just as embarrassing (unless you happen to come across a parody). I've seen one asking Australians about simple math and science questions, pretty disheartening to say the least.
@CaptainJacksIsland
@CaptainJacksIsland 7 жыл бұрын
I liked the super wide sidewalks in Korea, which often had biking lanes on them. As a cyclist, you could ride in the road or on sidewalk, whichever was safest/most convenient. Problem in America though is everything's too spread out, so it's mostly only practical to use bicycles in big cities. Perhaps if there were laws to curb urban sprawl and reclaim our mainstreets of old....
@DirectorMChannel
@DirectorMChannel 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah .. none of yall have seen us riding in Mumbai... if cars can go without hitting each other it would be good.. bicycles are still a far off case..
@jaydevchhagan
@jaydevchhagan 3 жыл бұрын
it's drive or die.
@EmulatorGamingNL
@EmulatorGamingNL 10 жыл бұрын
Here in Holland, I cycle to school everyday, like everyone at my school. My parents also cycle to their work. That might be a reason why Dutch people are less fat :p
@thecrow3875
@thecrow3875 6 жыл бұрын
EmulatorGamingNL I don’t think so. It’s few people that actually commute on bicycle.
@laura198816
@laura198816 6 жыл бұрын
Absolutely.
@wolfumz
@wolfumz 10 жыл бұрын
I'm happy to treat cyclists as though they were other vehicles on the road, give them plenty of space when I pass and whatnot. I'm sympathetic, it's not the easiest way to get around and the roads are hostile. What drives me crazy though is (at least where I live- San Diego, California), cyclists sometimes don't give a shit about the rules of the road. It seems like half the time I encounter a cyclist on the road, he's running traffic lights, stop signs, and has no reflectors or lights. Happens every weekend on the 101. Bikers, please, meet me halfway on this, I can't treat you with the same respect I would treat a car if your refuse to treat yourself with that same respect.
@driewiel
@driewiel 10 жыл бұрын
Halfway. Okay I'll stop every 2 lights and use a front reflector.
@wolfumz
@wolfumz 10 жыл бұрын
I can live with that
@r3vmixman
@r3vmixman 10 жыл бұрын
I agree and disagree since I'm from San Diego too. Sometimes it's "worth" breaking a law to keep the momentum. It's so energy consuming to have to stop at every stop sign. However, not stopping at lights is just idiotic. Who does that?
@driewiel
@driewiel 10 жыл бұрын
Anthony Mayberry It can be safer. All Dutch bike lights are green before cars start driving. If they weren't there, we would all be criminals and not just our royal family. Not stopping isn't about wasting energy. But to get across a street faster. See it as a lion cage. Sometimes you go very slow and quiet. And sometimes you run to get the hell out of there. Bicycles are not cars. I know. I tried to fill up my bicycle at a gas station. It was a mess. Same rules don't apply. So understandably many cyclists start ignoring rules as a whole. Cars kill. I've yet to see a red light slaughter a cyclist. Well apart from scifi movies.
@drumphil00
@drumphil00 7 жыл бұрын
The real issue is the pissweak infrastructure and bad behavior of motorists who get angry at anyone who can't go as fast as they feel they have the right to go.
@PlayinThegameIn503
@PlayinThegameIn503 10 жыл бұрын
There is nothing wrong with cycle fast, some people just don't like to ride slow.
@Peter1986C
@Peter1986C 9 жыл бұрын
Tshering Sherpa Aggressive driving brings yourself and others in unnecessary danger.
@ninjagirl5446
@ninjagirl5446 9 ай бұрын
As someone who bikes daily in Davis CA, I can tell you that there is lots of biking infrastructure. It is separated from the streets and you can only access it on a bike. So in Davis people DO bike because of the infrastructure, but it is not dutch quality.
@msguion
@msguion 10 жыл бұрын
Come to Portland, OR. We like our helmets.
@thelinthicums3295
@thelinthicums3295 6 жыл бұрын
No we don't.
@locomovego4997
@locomovego4997 9 жыл бұрын
3:10 This always happen to me
@rutchris
@rutchris 6 жыл бұрын
I see many Americans commenting here, saying the USA is much bigger than the Netherlands. Of course that is true, but many Dutch people cycle about 16 kilometers (10 miles) a day (mostly in the more rural area), so don't see this video and pretend everyone wants to cycling from San Francisco to Seattle now, it's just meant for cities. If you'd have a little more cycling options in the cities, most of you could probably handle it and it's much better for the environment, your health and your mood. Ofcourse there are many types of terrain in the USA. I know. That doesn't mean you can't cycle in the cities. Some cities do have some hills in them (San Francisco), but most cities are mostly flat. It is possible in the USA. The question is not whether it is possible, but whether it fits in a lifestyle. In the USA there are more fastfood restaurants than anywhere else, and there is more obesity per million people. Cycling might sound too healthy for some of those, but many Americans are healthier than that and I do think cycling might fit in their lifestyle.
@BeautifulGoodbye13
@BeautifulGoodbye13 5 жыл бұрын
@Klaa2 I don't know about that, my route is in that range and I cycle. My route is: 5 miles to the train station (cycling), 32 miles by train, 3.5 miles to work (cycling). I'm not the exception in the Netherlands, many people do this. It takes an hour and a half, but I'd rather do this than take the car and stand in traffic. Of course, this is possible because of good infra and public transport... But if it's there people will use it.
@fam.vanveen3026
@fam.vanveen3026 7 жыл бұрын
So in the greatest country on the planet the US can only come up with a couple of cities with 'decent' cycling infrastructure: Venice LA, Portland, Minneapolis, Davis and a few more AND they BOAST about them...! In the Netherlands you will find more than decent cycling infrastructure EVERYWHERE (even to Dutch standards!). Moreover, you will find more than decent car infrastructure (compared to low maintenanced roads in North America) EVERYWHERE...! When I drive back from Malmö to Rotterdam (sorry, that's a bit too far for taking the bike) I hate that German bit with its so called 'superior' Autobahn. Always glad to be back on well-maintenanced Dutch highways. What I don't understand from a society that boasts around to being the greatest in just about anything is the lack of desire to have the greatest infrastructure for CYCLING in the world AS WELL (besides the already greatest car-infrastructure the world has ever known)...! Instead that society is 'creatively' coming up with dozens of excuses NOT to be the greatest in something... weird!
@samrusoff
@samrusoff 7 жыл бұрын
I lived in Davis for four years before visiting the Netherlands and was so surprised by the effective biking infrastructure. cool video
@Skzzlemister
@Skzzlemister 2 жыл бұрын
It’s lovely to see this video 9 years on. The bike infrastructure in most American cities is getting better year after year. I’m in Rochester, MN and there is a concerted effort by the city to get more protected lanes away from parked cars. Where car is king, it takes a long time to change.
@realnapster1522
@realnapster1522 2 жыл бұрын
Biking is very very dangerous in US. It was not built for biking. It’s a country constructed for drivers in big cars with big engines. So it makes it extremely dangerous and most people are on phones while driving.
@jarjar7609
@jarjar7609 Жыл бұрын
They've added bicycle infra where I live, but it's not very good..... 😢
@PeaceNPassion50
@PeaceNPassion50 2 ай бұрын
While a good analysis, it’s not that the U.S. wasn’t built for biking. It was built on walkable cities that were overtime connected via commuter rail. But as the automobile came to be, many blocks of cities were demolished for highways, parking lots, and street widenings. We have to undo decades of bad city planning to make cycling safe, but that doesn’t mean it’s not possible.
@aikidragonpiper71
@aikidragonpiper71 8 жыл бұрын
Cycling is really becoming popular in America. I live in Arkansas and its even becoming popular here. Not just mtb but road cycling too. .
@roy_hks
@roy_hks 8 жыл бұрын
Wel thats supee diffrent than the Dutch. We only cycle on seperate lanes, not on the roads
@coletrain546
@coletrain546 7 жыл бұрын
aikidragonpiper71: where in arkansas lad
@aikidragonpiper71
@aikidragonpiper71 7 жыл бұрын
I'm in western Arkansas south of Fort Smith. Near the border of Oklahoma.
@coletrain546
@coletrain546 7 жыл бұрын
aikidragonpiper71 nice, im up here in bella vista right next to the missouri border and just north of bentonville. Road cycling here is very popular, but just as a sporty thing
@sigrunsigrun7759
@sigrunsigrun7759 10 жыл бұрын
This is hilarious! The Dutch bike culture is so fascinating :D
@pj9609
@pj9609 4 жыл бұрын
Same goes for Germany - they are improving but not in the same consistent way as the Dutchies build their infrastructure. I hope, they hire some experts from NL for a brighter future!
@MikeBaxterABC
@MikeBaxterABC 6 жыл бұрын
In Toronto, Canada a couple weeks ago three people died from injuries sustained during cycling in ONE DAY .. .just in that one city
@nobodyspecial313
@nobodyspecial313 9 жыл бұрын
Bicycles occupy such a strange space between pedestrian traffic and road vehicle in America. There is no unified way a cyclist is expected (or legally required for that matter) to behave. Everywhere is different. On one street you might be a pedestrian on the side walk, the next street weaving between cars, and the third could have a bike lane which you'd be ticketed for leaving. None of these are wrong, but none of them are right for every situation. In some places it might even be impossible to travel by bicycle. When I was a teen riding my bike to drivers ed. I used to spend a lot of time slogging through the grass (no sidewalks) next to a 45 mph road because it was the only way to get there, and the place was only across town. The city next store was on the other side of a river connected to us by a bridge, and although most of my city had sidewalks, the neighboring city had bike paths, and the bridge had side walks, none of them were connected and you had to ride on the side of the road and cross through busy intersections never meant for pedestrian or bicycle traffic. I don't think it was possible to even leave my home town without a car unless you wanted to get run over or hauled into the police station. There is a reason almost everyone in America owns a car, I guess.
@MrJerm200
@MrJerm200 6 жыл бұрын
Sir Mutton Chops by law cyclists have to obey traffic laws as motor vehicles
@laura198816
@laura198816 6 жыл бұрын
Yes!! For this reason, biking in the US is a stress fest in so many places. Even when you obey the law you have near-death experiences or drivers angry at you
@vilislacis3337
@vilislacis3337 6 жыл бұрын
I like the word "infra" :)
@benejeneb
@benejeneb 4 жыл бұрын
If he had explained what the hell he was meaning, it would have been a lot better
@georgekell2344
@georgekell2344 4 жыл бұрын
This almost seems like a hate video, but I understand with the tiny bike lanes and horrible drivers
@PrototypeThinker
@PrototypeThinker 4 жыл бұрын
drivers will do what the regulations and infrastructure tell them to do
@DougGrinbergs
@DougGrinbergs 5 жыл бұрын
Maybe useless ephemeral feel-good sharrows paint better than nothing? Indeed, striped bike lane not a very serious commitment; painted colored bike lanes a little more so, bollard separation a notch better, but still no Dutch cycle track. As others have commented, A/B comparison with similar Dutch city would have been quite helpful. BTW, Streetfilms has various interesting cycling videos: kzbin.info
@philsarkol6443
@philsarkol6443 2 жыл бұрын
To all car drivers in the US..Change yes you can bike!! But please..buy a everyday dutch bike or dutch electric bike. Better posture on the bike, is safer, and yes with helmet on is a must!!
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