- The Oregonian reports that Portland drivers log 20 percent fewer miles a day than most U.S. urban dwellers and spend less on cars and gasoline as a result, the region's economy saves $2.6 billion a year, or about 3 percent of the area's annual economic output.
- A story in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette tells of Tom Walker, a man who kayaks to work.
- I've been keeping tabs on the French Velorution (warning: this site is courtesy of a Google translation of a french website). About 6 weeks after Paris "sprinkled" the city with 10,000 self-service bicycles, the general consensus is: "This works!"
- Commutbybike.com featured a post about Trek Bicycles calling cyclists to a level of activism.

We all can ride and we have only one planet. Trek and Trek dealers challenge you to join us in making the world a more bike friendly place. You can start by riding your bike. It’s the greenest thing you can do to help the earth.
- TheDay.com (New London, CT) ran a piece titled "America's Car Culture is Killing Us." While I think his argument is a little skewed and selective, he makes a good overall point:
The future is not in cars. We'll always need cars to run around town, but not for the daily grind of commuting. Congestion, pollution and geo-politics tell us that traveling in this century will not be like traveling in the 20th century. Why should we invest in out-dated thinking instead of investing in making transit work?
And of course, a Friday would not be complete without a link to No Impact Man!
- Tuesday's post summed up the perspective from which I hope to engage my Velorution project, and life in general:
My point is that a big boost to the environmental cause might come with spending a little less time making people scared of a worse life and a little more time inspiring them towards a better one.