Why we need better bike ways leading into Levin

This a blog on two levels. On one level it’s a bitter personal lamentation about how I can no longer ride my bike into work. On another level, it’s a broader complaint about the way in which Levin is being shut out of the regional growth that is happening in Kapiti as a result of being too disconnected.

Kapiti showed 9.9% economic growth last year – greater than Auckland and Wellington combined. The region is growing more rapidly than any other region in the country. This is a result of a massive transfer of wealth happening as people head up the line, many of whom were originally drawn by low property prices, but who now have settled into functional employment and started new businesses to cater to the slowly changing demographic.

Next step on the Lower North Island growth spurt is Levin, and with plans for the new expressway now confirmed, although still a few years away, my view is that a lot of smart capital will head that way in the next few years and the town will profit and become gentrified. At the present moment, however, a lot of growth and traffic headed into Levin is being stymied by the choke points along the way. 

One of the great points of disconnection is the total absence of a bike track leading into the town from the south. While bike tracks do exist along the Otaki to Levin route, the bridges leading into Levin are simply too much of a hazard to cross, being tight two-lane State Highway 1 lanes with vehicles inclined to travel close to 100 kph despite the changed terrain. 

I’ve tried many times to get across these bridges. I’ve succeeded once, but at great peril to myself, and in a matter that does not bear being repeated. Sadly this means that a daily commute into Levin from Otaki each day for work, which would be easily achievable on an ebike, is not a possibility. 

This is a problem not just for me, but for Levin’s changing demographic. I am already seeing an increased number of people biking in to work from Otaki to south Kapiti each day. It makes sense for the same amount of traffic to head in the other direction. But where the way is not safe, this cannot happen. The question for me is, with the lack of a serious bike lane to provide a safe way for cyclists, what will this mean for people’s change in habits, and in the end for unnecessary carbon emissions?

We need a better bridge between Kapiti and Horowhenua. Hopefully this will come with the new expressway. But that is years away. 

Did CRC improve my ebike battery efficiency by 35%?

I noticed this on my way in to work this morning. December was a very busy month for me, and with the ebike having heavy use, I nonetheless had very little time to give it the TLC it deserved. In particular, I fed it no CRC across about 7 weeks and at the end of it the ebike was squeaking like a baby mouse.

My standard trip into work during this period consumed around 35% of the battery charge. This would leave me enough charge to get home and enough to pop down to the shops if I needed to.

Last night I applied CRC for the first time in a while. The result this morning was that the bike rode incredibly freely, with far less squeak, and in addition to that, only took me a 26% charge to get to work!

That is an improvement in battery efficiency (for the same ride, on the same settings) of just under 35%.

While this won’t make much practical difference in how I use the bike, the implications are massive.

It means I could go an extra 10 kms to and from with a well maintained bike for each recharge.

It also means that problems I attribute to the battery may in fact just be not enough oil on the chains.

I’ve always applied CRC in the past more as a chore, rather than something that could actually help me. I didn’t realise that by failing to apply CRC I was making my bike ride a third harder!

But now with ebike batteries, these sorts of minor things are much easier to quantify.

Pros and cons of ebikes for seniors

The other day while I stopping by at a local cafe a gentleman buttonholed me before I got on my bike and asked whether I thought the ebike I was riding would be suitable for a senior. He clarified that a lady he knew had recently suffered dementia and as a result had lost her license. She was 69 years old with no form of transportation.

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How ebikes improve accessibility for regional NZ

I live in Otaki – not quite regional enough to be regional, in my view, but certainly no less a town with a distinctive presence and a local culture. Traditionally Otaki has struggled with transportation issues, with many local town roamers unable to manage competing commitments of study and work so far outside of Wellington. In part, this has been remedied by more regular bus routes travelling through the town; but transport is still a major issue, and if it affects Otaki, it will no doubt affect regional areas of New Zealand.
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Ebikes versus electric cars – pros and cons

You’re thinking about buying an electric car and toting up all the various cost savings and lifestyle change pros and cons. But wait – before you make such a large financial commitment, have you stopped to consider whether a car is even necessary?

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Is the coast clear? Ebiking from Otaki to Paraparaumu Beach for work

As part of my preparation for travelling to work each day, I hired a mountain bike to test out the voyage from Paraparaumu (where my new office is) to Otaki and back again. This was stage one in committing to an ebike to travel into work – I needed to check that the coast was clear and that there were no major obstacles on the route. I also wanted to get a sense of what it would be like to go there and back if my bike battery ran out, so I would know how it would be under the worst circumstances. And this is what I learnt…

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What’s the ROI for an ebike?

I got in the habit of riding my bike to work every day while visiting my mum up in the Coromandel and I’m finding it a rather hard habit to shake. The problem is, now my work is 25 km away instead of 5 km away. Could an ebike help with this situation?

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