Never wait in the school car line again. Here’s how. For the first time in decades, a small but critical mass of children are riding their bikes safely to school again in the US.
The whole car line to pick up and drop off is so weird to me. I grew up taking the bus or walking or riding a bike. The only time my mom ever drove me to school was when I had a doctor/dentist appointment in the morning or if I happened to be awake early and wanted to be dropped off across the street at the grocery store to buy some candy before school. The only time I was ever picked up from school was when I was in sports after school and didn't have a bus option.
Now I drive by schools that have a mile long train of cars waiting to pick up one person, all wasting gas and time. Why aren't kids walking down the line of cars to get to their parents car earlier? Why don't they take a bus?
Because these days we must coddle and shield the little shits from any and all adversity, danger, self-reliance, mild discomfort, or being unsupervised for any span of time. Even a single nanosecond. If we don't, someone might get sued.
Before we took my daughter out of school entirely and put her in online school due to excessive bullying, we did drop-off and pick-up so she wouldn't be bullied on the bus.
A "bike bus," or rolling mass of happy kids and parents on bikes that builds as they travel a parent derived route to school. Basically a mini peleton of kids and parents, with parents acting as "captains, sheepdogs and cabooses."
Pretty rad, spinning up a "critical mass" though community organizing instead of each sitting in a car, waiting hours to drop kids off or pick them up.
That's the automobile term and is quite offensive in this context. A "chain of bicycles" would be more appropriate. Stragglers would be called "spokes". You should probably edit your post and then go apologize to the bicycle sub post haste before this gets out of hand. --> /s
Sure. The movement calls itself a "bike bus," but it strikes me as a tiny "critical mass," where riders get together and ride enmass to express solidarity and take back the streets to some degree from cars.
If it wasn't for the major road with no safe crossings between my kids and the school, I would gladly let them ride in. I loved that part of elementary school.
I remember in middle school there being a rule that you couldn't ride your bike on school grounds (which is like, half a mile radius around the school). There was a principle who bragged about how many bikes and skateboards he took from kids.
Agreed, teachers there were assholes. I lost some souvenirs from my childhood i can't get back, to a shithead math teacher who enjoyed making you use perfect grammer/phrasing to ask for things back (may i vs can i); if you didn't he'd hold onto it longer or indefinitely. All because I was "being distracting" by using them as a fidget toy.
We live on a school route (Grade school on one side, High Scool on the other) and are always seeing kids walking and biking, to the degree we set up a little free library for them.
I don't think they ever stopped biking to school...
There has been a really big drop in walking and biking to school over several decades. Kids never stopped completely, but it's a lot less common in the US than it used to be
I'm on the border of two neighborhoods and my house is the most convenient cut through point that shaves about two miles off a typical ride to school.
Sucks for them though. I'm putting in a fence next month.
(honestly, I could live with the bikes but now they're riding electric scooters, dirt bikes, and one asshole keeps riding his golf cart through my lawn)
Mine has insisted on being a car rider. Okay then, well I figured out that leaving late minimizes my time in line. I am not looking to get there 30 minutes early only to pick her up five minutes faster.
She's an only child anyway, being in the last ten percent of kids picked up (never last... that feels... excessive) just means a little longer actually interacting with peers.