Cycling in the Rain

Here is a little inspiration for your weekday bike commute from Utrecht in the Netherlands, which is also famous for bicycle rush hour! Hopefully your bike commute isn’t quite so rainy, but if it happens to be, I hope this serves as inspiration!The video is by Mark Wagenbuur, and I saw it posted over at A View from the Cycle Path. Here is what Mark Wagenbuur has to say about utility cycling in the rain:

The Dutch say: ‘You are not made of sugar, you won’t melt in the rain!’. When you cycle for utility reasons the weather is of lesser importance. If you go to work by bike, you go there when the sun shines but of course also when it rains.Weather conditions do not really change the number of cyclists in the Netherlands. The Dutch simply put on a rain coat, a “rain suit”, or they get out their umbrellas. Riding a bike while holding up an umbrella is perfectly normal in the Netherlands. And a lot of people feel they will simply dry up quickly enough again.These pictures were taken on a cold and rainy April morning in Utrecht. The intersection is undergoing major reconstructions and building is taking place all around it. That is why it is not up to modern Dutch standards with its bad temporary road surface and ugly temporary concrete divisions. Ugly but safe enough. What makes the intersection really safe are the separate cycle traffic lights with separate green phases for cyclists.Utrecht is the 4th largest city in the Netherlands with a population 300,000 and 33% of all trips in the city are made on a bicycle.

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