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Buzz - News Briefs April 2005

Cougar Mountain Ranks High
Seattle's regional park makes 2004 top Trails list
 
    Old habits die hard.

   While the Northwest is teeming with welcoming trails, it’s easy to keep going back to the ones we know and love. That’s why, when Seattleites want to hike, run a trail or go horseback riding, they head east to Cougar Mountain. With 36 miles of trails including caves, mountain views and gushing waterfalls – and it’s proximity to Seattle, Bellevue, Newcastle and Issaquah – Cougar Mountain makes an easyafter-work or weekend destination.

   These are some of the reasons why Cougar Mountain Regional Wildlands Park was the only Northwest outdoor area mentioned in the Trails.com annual Top Trails of 2004 list. Featured in the February edition of Outdoors NW magazine, (“Running in the Rain”), Cougar Mountain ranked number 13, behind such notable trails as the Chester Gap to Harper’s Ferry Trail (Virginia, 11th), Half Dome (California, 4th) and Breakneck Ridge Trail (New York, 1st).

   Trails.com, a Seattle-based online planning resource for self-guided outdoor adventure trips, selected these Top Trails by analyzing more than 10 million “votes” cast by visitors to the Trails.com Web site. Out of 30 researchable activities, hiking was the most popular (57 percent). Mountain biking came in second (23 percent), although only one of the 20 Top Trails was a mountain biking-specific trail.

   California was the leading state of interest (17.2 percent), followed consecutively by New York, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington and North Carolina.
 

   Visit www.Trails.com to learn more about the country’s hiking and mountain biking trails.

Celebrate Earth Day 2005
Join one of many 35th anniversary festivals

Courtesy of the Earthday Network
 

   In 1970, Americans were slurping leaded gas through massive V8 sedans. Industry belched out smoke and sludge with little fear of legal consequences or bad press. Air pollution was commonly accepted as the smell of prosperity. Environment was a word that appeared more often in spelling bees than on the evening news.  

   But Earth Day 1970, turned all that around.

   Earth Day founder Gaylord Nelson, then a U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, proposed the first nationwide environmental protest “to shake up the political establishment and force this issue onto the national agenda.” “It was a gamble,” he recalls, “but it worked.”

   On April 22, 20 million Americans took to the streets, parks and auditoriums to demonstrate for a healthy, sustainable environment. Denis Hayes, the national coordinator, and his youthful staff organized massive coast-to-coast rallies.

   Earth Day 1970 achieved a rare political alignment, enlisting support from Republicans and Democrats, rich and poor, city slickers and farmers, tycoons and labor leaders. The first Earth Day led to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of the Clean Air, Clean Water and Endangered Species acts.

   Sen. Nelson was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom – the highest honor given to ivilians in the United States – for his role as Earth Day founder.

   Today, Earth Day is celebrated by more than half a billion people each year, making it the largest secular holiday in the world.


Courtesy of the Earth Day Network: (202) 518-0044, www.earthday.net

Improve Your Cycling IQ
Seattle school helps area cyclists shape up

   Did you go through college wishing you could major in rock climbing, Ultimate Frisbee or mountain biking? Did you fantasize about trail runs and bike rides while you were slaving over chemistry labs? Well, your dream has come true.

   Whether you are a competitive racer or just getting back on the saddle, Seattle-based Cycle U has skilled “professors” who can help you improve your marks.

   Enroll in a variety of road, mountain and cyclocross classes – or take a private class on just about any biking related topic. In the past, private lessons have included everything from learning to ride a two-wheeled bicycle (for kids and adults) to the basics of bike buying.

   Cycle U is also the only official Washington host of CompuTrainer indoor time trials (see February issue of Outdoors NW, “Riding On Time”), a 10k indoor course with rolling, moderate hills. Craig Undem, the Dean of Cycle U, says the indoor time trials offer riders of all abilities a non-competitive arena in which they can test their fitness and improve their performance.

   “But they still turn into a race,” he says. “and some have been viciously competitive.”

   The time trials are a free service to local riders, however, all donations benefit the Cascade Bicycle Club.

  The CompuTrainer indoor time trials, along with Cycle U’s other classes, are offered, in part, through a grant from the Washington State Bicycle Association to tap into local talent. The University of Washington cycling team is one of many teams that utilize the Cycle U training space.

   “The Northwest is full of great cyclists who have never tried racing,” says Undem. “The time trials give people a taste of racing without the risk of crashing.”

   To learn more about Cycle U and its cycling classes and training programs,
see www.CycleU.com.

 

2005 Alice B. Toeclips Award Winners

   On March 5, the Bicycle Transportation Alliance (BTA) of Portlandhonored the region’s hardest working bicycle advocates through their annual Alice. B. Toeclips Awards. In its 10th year, the awards party celebrated the individuals, businesses and organizations in Oregon and Southwest Washington whose work has promoted the use of bicycles and increased the livability of these communities.

   To learn the accomplishments of these bicycle advocates,  see www.bta4bikes.org

 
 
Copyright @ Price Media, Inc. 2005