|
Select
from the below topic
Plan
Your Route
Safety
First
Tips
for Families
What
Is Bike to AYSO?
It’s
NOT (Just) About the Bike
It
Won’t Be Perfect, But It’s Much Better
How
It Works
Making
It Work for Teams
How
It Happened
Feedback
& Volunteers Wanted
Plan
Your Route: The
key to a great day of biking! Check out the Davis
Bike Map (Once you have the map up you can make
use of the ZOOM IN tool to
magnify or zoom to view route and field details). For
a more abbreviated view of your area map, click on West,
North/Central,
East
or South.
Especially use the wonderful paths that bypass: I-80
(Putah Creek/downtown under-crossing; Pelz over-crossing between
the Mace Ranch and Walnut/Montgomery fields), Hwy
113 (over-crossing at Willet Elementary), Covell
Boulevard (over-crossing at Community Park; under-crossing
on east side of F), Anderson Boulevard (under-crossing
north of Covell) and the railroad tracks
(under-crossing between J and H south of Covell). Note the
great under-crossings and paths into the Walnut/Montgomery,
Mace Ranch, Putah Creek, Arroyo, Northstar, Nugget and Community
Park fields. Connect up with the right path, then bike right
to your field!
Safety
First:
-
Always wear a properly-fitted bicycle helmet
-
Obey all traffic rules — including stop signs and
red lights
-
Ride on the right — with traffic!
-
Use the Davis Bike Map (link above) to design a course on
dedicated bike paths
-
Lots
more on safety.
Tips
for Families:
Biking with a family can require extra effort at first.
-
Are we there yet? Bike trips of two-three miles in Davis
are often FASTER than in a car. This is especially true
for soccer where parking and walking adds to the travel
time.
-
Night before. Pump up tires, find and adjust helmets, backpacks
needed?
-
Young children Trailers and tandems make travel faster,
safer and easier
-
Security Programmable locks, with one family combo, simplify
life (one combo, no keys)!
-
Advanced storage Non-collapsible baskets on the back of
bikes are often the most durable and stable (front baskets
encourage tipping), and have lots of capacity; add bungee
cords to secure stuff that might pop out on bumps; wrap
the bungees to the outside of the baskets when they aren’t
in use to keep them from tangling in the spokes; check out
an Xtracycle
to add capacity
-
Still want more ideas? Thorn-proof tubes and liners reduce
flats; thick tubes also seem to reduce the frequency of
tire pump-ups; add an odometer to track your progress (there
are clocks on them too!).
What
Is Bike to AYSO? Davis
AYSO launched Bike to AYSO for its fall season in 2006. By
carefully scheduling games and placing games on fields around
town, Davis AYSO believes that at least 4,000 miles of driving
can be saved every Saturday if a majority of the 2,300 players
and 1,700 Davis AYSO families bike to their Saturday games.
Many players already bike to practice, but before the fall
2006 season, game-day fields weren’t always within a
bikeable distance (and they still won’t be in some instances).
In 2005, Davis AYSO conducted games at three venues, using
19 fields at those locations. For the fall 2006 season, the
new dispersed locations include nine venues and 24 fields.
AYSO considered 33 city park and school district field options,
demonstrating the Davis park system’s many opportunities.
It’s
NOT (Just) About the Bike: Many
factors make local, bikeable fields the perfect next step
for the largest AYSO fall program in Northern California.
-
Families should enjoy biking together, learning the bike
routes in their neighborhoods, and with more “local”
games families shouldn’t be pulled in as many directions.
In many instances, one or both parents may not have to leave
the house so long before a game to drive their player to
a field. Siblings should be playing closer to each other
and be able to see each other’s games more often --
and ditto for school friends in neighborhoods.
-
Drives will be shorter, too! Those who do need to drive
will be driving fewer miles on average.
-
Neighborhood play Do you recall playing on a neighborhood
team as a child – and at your neighborhood park? We
can’t get all the way there, but this will help.
-
AYSO: Steward of our city’s fields Some fields in
Davis are overused, particularly the community park fields
west of the bike path that host four high school sports
and a field hockey tournament. In very important instances,
AYSO’s distribution of games will help prevent excessive
wear on city fields and ensure that other Davis sports have
better fields and less competition for space.
-
Environment and gas prices We all seek to “Spare the
Air!” to improve public health and wonder how much
more gas prices will rise. The major greenhouse gas reduction
measure within control of almost every citizen is reducing
car travel. So how can we make a small dent in the problem?
Bike to AYSO!
-
Biking
in Davis Davis IS the bike capital of the United States.
We have over 100 miles of separated bike paths and on-street
bike lanes, and 27 different grade separations (bike bridges
and tunnels). There is no soccer field in town that one
can’t get to safely on a bicycle. In 2005, the League
of American Bicyclists awarded Davis a “Bicycle Friendly
Community” designation at the Platinum level –
the highest level possible. Davis is the first and only
city in the U.S. to receive this designation. Let’s
keep walking (err biking) the talk.
How
It Works: To implement Bike to AYSO, the city
has been divided into four regions: North/Central, South,
East, and West. Each area will have fields for play from the
Under-6 through Under-19 age groups. In scheduling, the first
priority (but not necessarily the first game) is to have teams
play other teams from their region, then neighboring region’s
teams will play each other, like North/Central v. West and
East v. South, and then if there are still games to be played,
a central location like Community Park will be the preferred
venue.
It
Won’t Be Perfect, But It’s Much Better:
This won’t
work out perfectly for everyone but we have a great plan that
will aid the vast majority of families. In some cases, families
with Under-6 through Under-10 children that live close to
Community Park will be disadvantaged for those few games they
play on fields elsewhere, but the other areas of town are
finally getting local games. West, East, and South families
with young players will have significantly more bikeable games
and games with shorter drives – no fewer than five and
perhaps as many as eight or nine, instead of zero. Immediately,
or over time, everyone will benefit.
AYSO’s
tenet of Balanced Teams adds complications too. Especially
at the higher divisions (U-14+), it’s difficult to balance
team skill levels when drawing from just one area of town.
Therefore, U-14+ teams aren’t as “local.”
Availability of coaches can also affect our ability to create
teams in a distinct area. When team membership is spread out,
the local fields can’t be local for all players.
Making
it Work for Teams: Beyond
local fields, Davis AYSO has taken still more steps to promote
biking, including:
-
Purchasing new ball/equipment bags for coaches that may
be worn as backpacks so the coaches can set a great example
by biking to practices and games.
-
Creating this web page to help families find the best bike
routes and to understand the program.
-
Coaches and parents, please organize players to bike in
groups!
How
It Happened: Davis AYSO started making plans
early in 2006 for moving off of some over-used fields at Community
Park west of the bike path. More localized games were a possibility
with the addition of goals at Mace Ranch Park last January.
Then with the gas prices hitting the mark of $3.00 per gallon,
the concept of regional games all over town was discussed.
Commissioner Steve Brown estimated that his region’s
1,700-plus families drive over 9,000 miles each Saturday to
support 2,300 players’ soccer games. The bikeable games
hold the promise of reducing that mileage by over 4,000 miles.
That’s like saving a trip driving to Venezuela every
weekend! So in the early summer of 2006, Brown challenged
the Davis AYSO board to find a way to reduce family driving.
Davis
AYSO fields coordinator Kevin Klein took on Brown’s
challenge and designed a way to keep families, especially
those families with younger children, playing in their own
back yards. Klein surveyed 33 potential city and school district
field options and drew up a plan with neighborhood fields
that was hailed at the Davis AYSO board’s July 2006
meeting. Klein’s plan was simple: divide and conquer!
By dividing the city into four regions, and locating at least
one field for each younger age level (U6 – U12) within
each area, and adding additional U-14 and U-19 fields, families
would not have to travel as far.
Davis
AYSO worked hard with the City of Davis’s Parks and
Community Services department and, especially, fields manager
Jerry Lee to help provide access to dispersed field equipment
for AYSO and to make that equipment available for reserved
field usage by other groups. The Davis school district (DJUSD)
also supported the goal disbursement concept. Athletic directors
at the local junior high schools welcome the use of added
soccer goals and equipment as a mutual benefit of Davis AYSO’s
additional weekend use.
Davis’s
local State Farm agents also stepped in
to make Bike to AYSO a reality. As Davis AYSO’s lead
sponsor for 2006 [http://www.davisayso.org/statefarm.htm]
, State Farm Insurance immediately bought into the program.
Agents Heather Copeland, Raul Herrera, Doug Pritchard and
Dave Scheiber picked up the cost of the new PLAYSOCCER stickers
especially designed for bikes.
Volunteers
also stepped up over the summer to make the plan happen. Leslie
Buhlman and Austin Perez have been solving the equipment and
field logistics challenges. In part, they organized groups
to construct four new goal sets for Community Park (2), Mace
Ranch, and Emerson JHS fields. Joe Krovoza volunteered to
be the Bike to AYSO coordinator to publicize the campaign,
e.g., getting three of the new PLAYSOCCER
bike stickers to each player and designing the web page. Other
AYSO parents then stepped up fast to “adopt-a-field”
whereby families near the neighborhood fields take charge
of making sure soccer equipment is ready for use Saturday
morning and locked up after the games. Additional field, equipment
and scheduling volunteers stepped up to make bikeable fields
a reality, including Diane Peterson, Bill Pacuilla, Charlie
Russell, Wayne Raymond, Mike Griffith, Leo Rainer and Sergio
Espinoza.
Feedback
& Volunteers Wanted: Please
write us. Constructive criticism is welcome. Volunteers who
can make Bike to AYSO more successful are especially wanted.
The fall 2006 season is our first effort with this! Just keep
in mind that many, many factors had to be balanced. Yet we
want to make this better every year. Write to our bike coordinator
at .
|