Archive for March, 2010

CORBA Youth Adventures ride report – March 2010

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Ready to roll

  

The children from the STAR (“Students Training as Role Models”) group arrived at Malibu Creek State Park on Saturday morning, March 20th, not really knowing what to expect.  Some were excited, some were nervous and some were probably just happy to be in such a gorgeous park – an environment quite different than the urban neighborhoods they are so accustomed to.  Officer Sue Shine of the City of Glendale Police Department leads this group of fantastic children who are trained and mentored to lead by example and to be role models for the other children (and quite possibly for some adults) in their communities.  As this was the first Youth Adventure Ride with this group, the veteran MBU’ers were also a bit nervous (but always excited to ride with the children) – as it turns out, any nervousness was unwarranted as the youth ride was a huge success for both teams!  The children, many of whom have never ridden a mountain bicycle on the trails, absolutely loved being out in the park and enjoying the trails on their CORBA provided mountain bikes.  In addition, the youths seemed to hang on every word of the MBUer (her nickname is Kat) who provides the instructional mid-morning nature talks on the various animals and wildlife that abounds in the parks of the Santa Monica Mountain Range.  

Kat provides the instructional mid-morning nature talks on the various animals and wildlife that abounds in the parks of the Santa Monica Mountain Range

Our MBU ride leaders commented on how much they enjoyed riding with these children – they were all up for the new challenge and did very well with big smiles and lots of focused energy.  These children were so well behaved and actively listened to instruction – it is obvious that Office Shine, her Team and the STAR Program are having a tremendously positive impact on the lives of these children and no doubt their community too.  We are already looking forward to having the STAR group back on the trails with us!

Notice to users of the Los Robles Trail

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

From Mark Langton, chairperson of the Conejo Open Space Trails Advisory Committee (COSTAC)

 There is a section of the Los Robles Trail in Thousand Oaks (also known as “The Switchbacks” and “Space Mountain”) that crosses over a private dirt road between the Moorpark Road (at Greenmeadow) trailhead and the intersection of Rosewood Trail (picnic table overlook). The private dirt road is an extension of South Ventu Park Road in Newbury Park. Please be aware that the private dirt road–distinguished by a stop sign at one side of the road where the trail crosses, and an information kiosk on the other side–is only to be used by the public to connect to the trail on either side of the private dirt road. Actions by trail users such as stopping vehicular traffic or traveling away from the path of the Los Robles Trail as it crosses the private dirt road are illegal. Failure to respect this private property could affect future public access to the Los Robles Trail.

 

Rwanda Fundraiser Ride is Saturday, April 10th

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

From the Warrior Society Weekly News

Announcing the 4th Annual 50 Mile Ride for Project Rwanda

When: Saturday, April 10, 2010

Where: Staging and post-ride party at Cooks Corner (19152 Santiago Canyon Road Trabuco Canyon, CA 92679).

Register: Online at www.50mileride.com

Entry Fee: $50 (5 Mile Fun Ride – $25). Online registration closes April 8. All entries receive free custom dri-fit t-shirt.

Check-in: Avoid the lines on event day – pick up rider bags on Friday April 9 from 11am to 6pm at Rock n Road Cyclery (on Santa Margarita Pkwy in Mission Viejo).

Purpose: To raise funds and build awareness for Project Rwanda (www.ProjectRwanda.org). Those that have participated before know that the 50 Mile Ride is a “ride”, not a race. Cyclists participate for a lot of reasons: some for the challenge of riding further on a mountain bike than ever before, some because they love the Project Rwanda cause, some for the fun of sharing the day with tons of their mtb buddies. The event has raised almost $100,000 for Project Rwanda in its first three years. These funds are making a huge difference in furthering the economic development of Rwanda through initiatives based on the bicycle as a tool and symbol of hope.

50 mile, 25 mile, and 5 mile fun ride options are available. 50 mile option starts at 7:00am (check-in at 6:15am), 25 mile option starts at 9:00am (check-in at 8:15am), and 5 mile family fun ride starts at 11:00am (check in at 10:30am). Details at www.50mileride.com.

Post-Ride Party: After the ride stick around for a BBQ sponsored by Cook’s Corner, starting at noon. There will be a HUGE raffle (starting at approx 3:00pm) with tons of cool prizes including a Grand Prize raffle of a Trigon full-carbon bike valued at over $9000. Plus, there’ll be massage therapists, booths from local bike shops, and a live auction for a genuine Project Rwanda Coffee Bike. Bring your friends and family to share in the fun!

State Trail Day in the Angeles Forest 4/17/10

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Join the CORBA Trail Crew and other trail user groups for a day of trail maintenance.

Hans, an OTB rider and the CORBA trail maintenance coordinator, sits on the CORBA trailwork trailer, loaded with tools

Meet at 8:00 am at the Wildwood Picnic area.  Bring your own lunch and water.  Sturdy shoes and long pants are required.

Work will be on the Stone Canyon Trail.  This trail goes up to Mount Lukins.

Take Big Tujunga Canyon Road approximately 5 miles north of Ora Vista Street to the Wildwood Picnic area.

For more information contact Hans at trailcrew@corbamtb.com

Santa Monica Mountains Trails Days 4/23-25

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Join CORBA and several other trail user groups for a weekend of camping, riding and trail maintenance or just come out for the day!

The CORBA crew will be riding in to work on the Guadalasca and Wood Canyon Vista section of the Backbone Trail. Driving to the trailhead and hiking in is an option too. We will work on adding drainage to the trail as well as brush work!

There is a lot to do after this winter’s heavy rains so come on out and lend a hand!

See this PDF flier and registration form for more information or contact Hans at trailcrew@corbamtb.com

Snakes ‘scared to death of us’

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

From the Desert Sun  (Palm Springs, CA)

Rattlesnakes are coming out of hibernation in the Coachella Valley about now.

A Western Diamondback Rattlesnake is indigenous to the Coachella Valley

The best way to deal with the slithering reptiles? Leave them alone.

“Rattlesnakes don’t look for trouble,” said Jim Cornett, a desert ecologist who lives in Palm Springs and has written three books about snakes. “They’re scared to death of us.”

At this time of year, valley residents are most likely to come across snakes on hiking trails.

“The best thing to do is give them a wide berth,” he said. “Stay about 10 feet away from them and walk around them.”

Snakes often stop when people approach and attempt to blend in with their surroundings to avoid detection.

If there’s not enough room on a trail to get around a snake, Cornett said hikers could either turn around or throw a handful of sand on the snake to let it know that it has been seen.

When snakes do bite people — usually on the hand, foot or ankle — Cornett said that in about a third of cases, the snake does not actually inject venom. But the only way to know is to get to a hospital.

“Any rattlesnake bite is a medical emergency,” he said. “You must go to the hospital.”

Venom helps rattlesnakes digest their prey.

“As the venom is inside the animal’s body, it starts to digest it even before the rattlesnake swallows it,” he said. “Unfortunately, in a human, it starts digesting your tissues.”

In a small percentage of cases where a snake bite has gone untreated for more than a couple hours, Cornett said the tissue damage has been so extensive that a finger, hand or arm has had to be amputated.

Officials from John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital in Indio said the hospital keeps enough antivenin on hand to treat one snake bite patient. The valley’s three major hospitals share their antivenin supplies with each other as needed.

Cornett said that in March, snakes are most likely to be found near the rocky crevices and burrows where they’ve been hibernating since November.

“You’re more likely to see them in April than in March because they’re out and about, and generally they’re searching for a mate,” he said. “They are going to travel well beyond their little hibernation burrow, and there are records of rattlesnakes traveling several miles.”

The snakes stay out during the day until highs reach 85 or 90 degrees and nighttime temperatures stay above 70 degrees.

“By the end of April, rattlesnakes are primarily nocturnal,” he said. “That can happen a little bit earlier if it warms up rather quickly.”

Cornett said rattlesnakes often turn up in backyards at the edge of development, sometimes looking for rodents that may abound in the area or for cool, watered ground to lie on during warm days.

But he added that any snake found in the valley without a rattle on its tail is a nonvenomous species.

“If it’s a harmless snake and you live on the edge of a suburban area, I say count your blessings,” Cornett said.

That’s because two of the harmless species common to the valley can keep venomous rattlesnakes at bay.

“Whipsnakes (also commonly known as red racers) and kingsnakes will eat small rattlesnakes, and both those harmless snakes are immune to rattlesnake venom,” Cornett said.

Mexico City bicycle program pedals uphill

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Officials in Mexico’s capital have parked bikes in key areas and, for a fee, made them available to commuters in hopes of making a dent in the city’s aggressive car culture and improving the air.

The Ecobici program parks bikes in key spots in the capital for the use of commuters who pay an annual fee.

From the Los Angeles Times

 Take a vast, teeming megalopolis where the car is king, bicycle paths are few and motorists often seem determined to mow down anyone not tucked behind a steering wheel.

Now try talking residents into pedaling to work every day to help the environment.

That’s the task facing Mexico City officials, who have parked hundreds of bikes in busy neighborhoods in hopes of getting people to avoid cars and instead bicycle to the office, class or a lunch date.

The new project, called Ecobici, is modeled on bike-lending programs in such cities as Barcelona, Spain; Paris; and Copenhagen. Planners hope that by saturating certain Mexico City neighborhoods with the three-speed bikes, they can persuade residents to consider making cycling at least part of their daily commute.

Ecobici users pay a $24 yearly registration fee and get a membership card, which they can swipe across an electronic reader at any station to release a bicycle. Riders have free use for up to 30 minutes and are charged up to $3 an hour for longer intervals.

Yet it’s hard to envision a steeper road for bike commuting than chaotic, smoggy Mexico City, where 4 million vehicles joust for position and — this may sound familiar to Angelenos — many residents view riding the bus or subway as about as likely as space travel.

“A lot of people said, ‘You are crazy; bikes in Mexico City?’ But we have visited a lot of cities around the world that did it with success,” said Martha Delgado, environmental secretary for Mexico City’s government. “We have beautiful weather here. We need to recover space. We need to improve air quality.”

 So far, city officials have placed 1,100 bikes at 85 stations in several busy neighborhoods near downtown. The areas were chosen as promising proving grounds because they boast a mix of residences and businesses.

The sturdy-looking red-and-white bikes, outfitted with a headlight and rack for belongings, also are sprinkled along the city’s premier boulevard, Paseo de la Reforma. The bikes and equipment cost $6 million.

About 2,600 people have signed up, far from the eventual target of 24,000. But use is picking up, officials say.

On a recent day, Ivan Lemale, a 21-year-old student, pedaled one of the city-provided bikes along a tree-shaded boulevard in the La Condesa neighborhood as he headed to an appointment.

Lemale, a self-described environmentalist, said he was among the first to join when the program began in February. He said he has used the service regularly for short trips around the urban center.

Moments earlier, an aggressive taxi driver had nearly plowed into him on the busy avenue. But Lemale was looking on the bright side.

“Bicycles and cars can coexist very well. The only thing is respect,” he said. “That is the solution.”

The idea isn’t fun, but function. Mexico City leaders see bike borrowing as a key link in a public transportation chain that includes the 4-decade-old subway and a 5-year-old express bus system, called Metrobus, which operates on 24 miles of dedicated lanes.

The sprawling capital is too big to pedal from one end to the other on a daily basis. But officials hope commuters use the bikes for the first or last leg of their journeys, making it easier to rely on public transportation rather than driving or taking a taxi.

In a city that adds 250,000 vehicles to the streets each year, the goal of Ecobici is to increase the share of trips people take by bicycle to 5%, from 1% now. Residents make about 30 million trips a day.

Some people complain that the annual fee is too high. And a lack of information has many others scratching their heads over the rows of shiny bicycles that have popped up where coveted parking spaces used to be.

The biggest barrier to turning capitalinos into bike commuters is what cyclists say is the lack of a bicycling culture here. Though plenty of brave souls get around by bike, motorists often treat cyclists — and pedestrians — as irritants. Bike paths don’t always connect with one another and, in the most crowded areas, are often occupied by cars anyway.

Mexico City officials are trying to alter that thinking.

The government of Mayor Marcelo Ebrard clears traffic from Paseo de la Reforma and other thoroughfares Sunday mornings to make room for cyclists and joggers. The nearly 3-year-old recreational program is popular and has given residents a tempting taste of what a cycling life here might feel like.

In addition, authorities recently issued a new traffic code spelling out riders’ right to share lanes with cars and requiring motorists to slow down when passing bicycles. They envision a day when Mexico City — huge, tumultuous and car-centered — hops on a bike to get places.

“If we want to have a future,” said Delgado, the environmental secretary, “we have to open the door to bikes in Mexico City.”

MBU volunteers at the Advanced Skills Clinic

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

By Danusia Bennett-Taber

On March 20 CORBA hosted a special session of our Mountain Bike Skills Clinic program. CORBA president and skills clinic instructor Mark Langton offered this session to Mountain Bike Unit volunteers and class of 2010 recruits.

The class was held in the beautiful setting of Malibu Creek State Park. Sixteen MBUers participated. As at CORBA’s regularly scheduled Free Mountain Bike Skills Clinics for the general public, Mark was assisted by Ezra, a member of MBU. 

During the four hour session the MBU volunteers practiced riding over obstacles, climbing and descending steep hills, riding over rocks and ruts, and riding stairs. Finally, they had some fun learning how to do wheelies. Check out the event pictures.

This was the first of two sessions offered by Mark Langton and CORBA to MBU. If you are an MBU member or class of 2010 recruit, mark your calendar:  the next session is on April 21.

The next Free Mountain Bike Skills Clinic open to the general public is this coming Saturday, April 3 at 8:30 AM, also at Malibu Creek State Park. Check the CORBA calendar for more details.

COSCA Spring Trailwork Report

Monday, March 29th, 2010
Clearing out overgrown brush

On Saturday, March 27, about two dozen volunteers took part in the Conejo Open Space Conservation Agency’s (COSCA) Spring Trailwork Day. There were a few CORBA volunteers including Board of Directors member Danusia Bennet-Taber as well as volunteers from COSCA and the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council (SMMTC). The largest contingent were Disney volunteers, who get a free pass to Disneyland for volunteering to help the community for a day. What a great way to encourage and reward volunteerism – our thanks to Disney Corp!     

We worked on the Mountain Creek Trail in Newbury Park. This trail was built last October during the Annual COSCA Trailwork Day by a much larger group of volunteers (see photo gallery). On Saturday, we widened much of the top section, fixed the drainage around a switchback and cleared out a lot of overgrowing brush on the Reino / Potrero Ridge Trail it connects to.     

Mountain bikers are quick to ride the reworked trail

 

On our way back down at the end of the workday, we passed a pair of mountain bikers on their way up. In the few months that this trail has been in existance, it has already become a popular trail to access the multiple singletrack trails in Dos Vientos!     

You can view the photo gallery of Saturday’s work. Many thanks to all the volunteers who came out to help!

Welcome to CORBA’s Blog

Friday, March 26th, 2010

CORBA’s new blog is a tool for us to stay in touch with you. We’ll keep you updated on the latest from our mountains and trails. We’re always working behind the scenes on your behalf, but need a better way to keep you informed.

You’ll be able to use modern tools like RSS readers, smartphones, twitter, and facebook feeds.

Most importantly, you’ll be able to provide us your valuable feedback and points of view by commenting on our news postings, and by active participation in our upcoming forums.

To leave a comment to a blog entry from the blog home page, click on the “Comment” link. From a single-entry page, fill in the “Leave a Reply” section. You do not need to register with the blog to leave a comment, but you will find it more convenient to do so if you want to make more than infrequent comments.

All comments are reviewed before being displayed to make sure they’re not spam or otherwise inappropriate.