blue XL22 Diamondback XL22 2010

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Year: 2010
Brand: XL22 Diamondback
Model: XL22
Color:blue
Size:22
Serial:U84K28656
Stolen in Portland, OR 97209
Stolen:2013-07-29
Stolen From: 24 Hour Fitness at 1210 NW Johnson, Portland,OR
Neighborhood: Pearl Dstrict
Owner: Jeff Propp
OwnerEmail: janet.propp@gmail.com
Reward: $100.00
Description: Black and blue mountain bike. Diamond back hooded strongbox, front shock Edge 1.
Top peak fenders "defender". SRAM shifters X4, Tektro disc brakes.
Police record with: Portland Police
Police reference#: T13006953
This registrant has documented proof of ownership of this bike

BikePortland is eight years old today

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

Eight years ago today I posted to BikePortland.org for the first time. Since then it’s been an amazing journey to where we are today.

When I made that first post, I had written about 150 short posts under the “Bike Fun” banner at OregonLive.com. Since then, we’ve published 9,273 stories here on the Front Page. In total — when you figure in job and stolen bike listings, Page Two stories, and everything else that doesn’t get posted to the Front Page — there have been 16,335 posts.

That’s nothing when you consider how many comments have been left: 219,688. That’s a lot of opinion, facts, debates, clarifications, and so on.

Today we’re as strong as ever and I’m trying to push the site into a new era. The addition of Michael Andersen as our news editor is part of that effort (which reminds me, he still needs a formal introduction here on the Front Page doesn’t he?). I think Michael and I are working very well together and his presence has allowed us to start working on some cool new stuff. Some of it isn’t ready to announce; but it’s mostly simply doing what we already do — provide informational and inspiring content every day — even better.

I have my eyes set on the 10-year mark. By July of 2015, I want BikePortland.org to be a much stronger business and resource. I’m very proud of this site; but for it to reach its potential (and for me to keep my sanity), some things have to change. I’ll also turn 40 that same year, so that milestone is causing even greater personal reflection about what all this means and what I want to do with it.

Thank you to everyone who contributes to BikePortland, either as a reader, newsmaker, commenter, fan, supporter, or all of the above. And a special thank you to our advertisers whose support makes this site possible.

Here’s to eight more years!

New leadership, membership for ODOT’s bicycle advisory committee

Bike Summit Lobby Day-13

Jenna Stanke is now
chair of the committee.
(Photos © J. Maus/BikePortland)

The Oregon Department of Transportation’s eight member, governor-appointed Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee (OBPAC) has four new members and a new leader at its helm. ODOT put out the call for new members back in January and announced their selections today.

The four new members are: Susan Peithman, formerly an advocate for the Bicycle Transportation Alliance (BTA) who now works as research and program administrator for the Oregon Transportation Research and Education Consortium (OTREC) at Portland State University; Evan MacKenzie, a city planner from Pendleton who is also an avid bike racer; Jeff Monson the executive director of Commute Options, an organization that promotes biking, walking and transit in Bend; and Salem resident Kenji Sugahara, executive director of the Oregon Bicycle Racing Association (OBRA).

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Dark red Univega old touring model? mid/late 1980s

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Year: mid/late 1980s
Brand: Univega
Model: old touring model?
Color:Dark red
Size:54 cm (?)
Serial: 40608259
Photo: http://imgur.com/CiUroPb
Stolen in Portland, OR 97214
Stolen:2013-07-28
Stolen From: Stolen from the sidewalk in front of BIKEASAURUS (while spending 5 minutes taking merchandise inside). On SE Hawthorne between 17th and 18th.
Neighborhood: Buckman
Owner: Paul Glahn
OwnerEmail: paulglahn(replace with at sign)gmail.com
Reward: ice cold PBR
Description: The frame was bought used/bare. I assembled it from mostly used components; and it’s obvious an amateur put it together. The 26″ wheels are fairly new (but not that nice either). Cantilever brakes, drop bars, 5 speed (no front derailleur)
Police record with: Portland Police
Police reference#: T13006931
This registrant has documented proof of ownership of this bike

White Fuji Roubaix 2007

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Year: 2007
Brand: Fuji
Model: Roubaix
Color:White
Size:60cm
Stolen in Portland, OR 97201
Stolen:2013-07-27
Stolen From: Stolen from my porch in my apartment. Porch overlooks the Clay Street Commons condo courtyard.
Neighborhood: GooseHallow
Owner: James Wagoner
OwnerEmail: james.wagoner3(AT)gmail.com
Reward: $300
Description: White Fuji Roubaix with white Look pedals. Had a Cateye cadence and speed trip computer with the sensor on the back tire.
Police record with: Portland PD
Police reference#: 13-62985
This registrant does not have proof of ownership of this bike

Raw Steel/Grey Raleigh Tripper ’13

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Year: ’13
Brand: Raleigh
Model: Tripper
Color:Raw Steel/Grey
Size:57cm
Serial: U124U34929
Photo: http://bikeportland.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/metro-raleighTripper.jpg
Stolen in Portland, OR 97227
Stolen:2013-07-26
Stolen From: Stolen from Metropolis Cycle Repair in a burglary.
Neighborhood: Eliot/N Williams
Owner: Nathan Roll
OwnerEmail: info(at sign)metropoliscycles.com
Reward: $100
Description: Brand New
Police record with: PPD
Police reference#: 13-61978
This registrant has documented proof of ownership of this bike

Chris King’s Gourmet Century brings it all together

Chris King Gourmet Century-14

Riders dove into freshly prepared Mexican
food from Verde Cocina during the lunch
stop at Banks Elementary School.
(Photos © J. Maus/BikePortland)

Chris King, the man who founded one of the world’s leading bike companies back in 1976, has always been a gourmet. I can recall, as an employee of Chris King Precision Components back in the late 1990s, prepping food for one of King’s “Trail Daze” events in Santa Barbara. On the menu for the mountain bike trail volunteers that day were roasted red pepper sandwiches. As King blackened the peppers in his personal, professional-grade range, myself and several other volunteers were tasked with peeling away the blackened parts and artfully laying the peppers onto artisan rolls as King peered over our shoulders doing quality control.

All the prep was done with an attention to detail and eye for quality that seemed over-the-top for some trailside grub. But to Chris King, food is deserving of the same respect and exacting treatment he gives his eponymous bicycle components.

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Packed with bikes, Amtrak Cascades adds more hooks to its trains

Bikes on Amtrak

Now with more room.
(Photo: Will Vanlue)

Bikes have become a big part of train travel here in the Pacific Northwest, and train travel has become a big part of bike tourism. The latest sign: Amtrak Cascades just boosted its bike hauling capacity by 67 percent.

Every run on the state-subsidized regional train line that connects Eugene, Vancouver BC and various cities in between now offers 10 bike hooks per train, up from 6. Adding your bike to an Amtrak Cascades trip, an easy step during online checkout, costs $5 for each direction hauled.

The most popular city pair on Amtrak Cascades, between Portland and Seattle, is also one of the most crowded with bikes, Cascades Operations Supervisor Kirk Fredrickson said Wednesday. Seattle-Vancouver and Portland-Vancouver regularly fill up, too.

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The Monday Roundup: Safer kids, Critical Mass, vibrating seats and more

SF Weekly cover story goes in-depth on Critical Mass.

Here’s the bike news that caught our eyes this week…

Cities are safest: “Want to keep your family safe? Then raise your kids in the city.” Rural areas are statistically more dangerous, and we’ll give you one guess as to the type of injury to blame.

History of jay walking: Before auto companies could successfully appropriate rural technology for urban transportation, we had to “socially reconstruct” the city street as a place where only country rubes (“jays”) would cross without looking both ways … and maybe get sued for it.

Vibrating bike seat: Hey, whatever gets more people in the saddle.

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White Cannondale T1 2011

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Year: 2011
Brand: Cannondale
Model: T1
Color:White
Serial: U 090609
Photo: http://imgur.com/Tc2fBMc
Stolen in St Johns Portland, OR 97203
Stolen:2013-07-19
Stolen From: Downtown St Johns Portland Oregon
Neighborhood: Downtown St Johns
Owner: Paul Nelson
OwnerEmail: Paulzer.nelson123(A T)gmail.com
Reward: 100.00
Description: Its a white 2011 T1 Cannondale with black grips
Police record with: Portland PD
Police reference#: 13-155027
This registrant has documented proof of ownership of this bike

Black Raleigh Sport 2010

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Year: 2010
Brand: Raleigh
Model: Sport
Color:Black
Size:50
Serial: u03y03498
Stolen in Portland, OR 97213
Stolen:2012-04-13
Stolen From: Grant High School
Neighborhood: Grant park
Owner: Keegan Kahl
OwnerEmail: Keego123(replace with at sign)gmail.com
Description: Black with some orange with curved handle bars
This registrant has documented proof of ownership of this bike

YELLOW NA NA OLD

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Year: OLD
Brand: NA
Model: NA
Color:YELLOW
Stolen in PORTLAND, OR 97203
Stolen:2013-07-27
Stolen From: ST JOHNS MCMENAMINS, IVANHOE AND RICHMOND
Neighborhood: ST JOHNS
Owner: FLETCHER TRIPPE
OwnerEmail: FTRIPPE(A T)hotmail.com
Reward: $30
Description: AN OLD YELLOW BIKE. NONDISCRIPT EXCEPT FOR A BLACK AND SILVER STICKER THAT SAYS RODDY WITH A DROP HANDLEBAR AND SHIFTERS ON THE DOWNTUBE.
Police record with: PDX
Police reference#: T13006841
This registrant does not have proof of ownership of this bike