The driver of the Pontiac GTO revs his engine and pushes forward a few inches into the mass of bicycles driving toward Virginia Lake. Screeches to a halt.
Vroom. Screech. Vroom.
He launches his silver sports car into the oncoming traffic lane to try to pass. The Pontiac brushes a bit too close to a bicyclist.
I donโt see a bicyclist jab at the carโs tire with his foot as the car brushes up alongside him. I hear about it later. I watch from a half-block ahead as the driver pulls over and gets out of his car. Angry. Red-faced. Pumped up.
Bikes surround him. Like ants on a jelly sandwich.
Ants, by themselves, wield little power. As do small humans pedaling slight, two-wheeled frames down streets created for 3,000-pound cars and 4,500-pound SUVs that could smush โem like, you know, bugs.
But amass about 60 bicycles cruising together down the streets of Reno on a recent Friday night in August. That equates to some power.
Perhaps realizing this, the gray-haired man, well-dressed, gets back in his V-8-powered sports car. The woman in the passenger seat looks sternly forward.
โI bet sheโs embarrassed,โ one bicyclist says.
Bikes swarm the car for a few more minutes. Then the driver lurches out into oncoming traffic, gets honked at by oncoming cars, and doesnโt see the bikers again until they, like him, pull into the parking lot of Benโs Fine Wine and Spirits on Lakeside Drive.
Call this Critical Mass, Renoโs tribute to the national bike protest movement, or refer to it as just an informal gathering of bicycle lovers. Dozens gather at 5:30 p.m. the first Friday of the month. Some are new to the monthly rides. Others have gone out a half-dozen times. A few have been with Critical Mass since its inception here more than a decade ago.
โCritical Mass is a celebration of the bicycle as an alternative to gas-guzzling in traffic,โ announces the text at the Reno Critical Mass Web site, tribes.tribe.net/renocriticalmass.
โItโs not a โf@?j youโ to motorists,โ says the self-censored Web site. โCome and be cool and show them weโre having much more fun than they are!โ
The mix of bicyclists covers a wide swath of ages, gender and bike styles.
Paulo Vandenberg, 29, of Bicycle Bananas, rides a BMX.
โItโs not the bike Iโd normally ride to work,โ he says. โI wanted to be the only person on a 20-inch.โ
Rossitza Todorova, 25, tools along on a 1969 English bicycle, a three-speed Dunelt that she bought at a thrift store in Carson City. Todorova says sheโs excited about Renoโs growing bicycling subculture.
โYou meet one other biker, then you meet more,โ she says. โAnd you hear about events like this.โ
Ruth Flack, a Renown nurse, rides her brother-in-lawโs bike.
โSomeone stole my Gary Fischer out of my garage,โ she says.
She heard about the Critical Mass ride while shopping at the Great Basin Food Co-op. โIโm interested in community work,โ Flack says. โAnd in connecting with local people.โ
Flack has an old Peugeot that she plans to restore, using the resources of the Reno Bike Project, a new community service intended to encourage bike use. (www.renobikeproject.blogspot.com)
The ride doesnโt start, as planned, at 5:30 p.m. Though the event boasts no leader, a few people are waiting for Pete Menchetti, 33, a.k.a. The Sticker Guy, to arrive with his red septocycleโa roundish seven-seat bike on which is mounted a stereo and a drum set.
When heโs riding around with a bandโas heโs done several summer nights in recent weeks, Menchetti calls his human-powered vehicle the โRocktocycle.โ Menchetti has taken the 450-pound, German-made โconference bikeโ to Burning Man for the past two years. Heโll be throwing rocktocycle parties on the playa this year, as well.
While we wait for Menchetti, I chat with Hans Frischeisen of Everlasting Health. He just returned from biking 2,200 miles across Australia and recently gave a presentation to the Reno City Council about how to make Reno streets more bicycle friendly.
Rockette Bob of Reno has decorated his bike with colorful plastic flowers, Barbie parts and a Pee-Wee Herman doll.
The Pee-Wee TV series changed Bobโs life, he tells me. Despite the masturbation controversy.
โHere Pee-Wee was, riding around on his bike,โ Bob says. โSo instead of drinking myself to death, I ride my bike. I still drink.โ
Employees at Benโs Fine Wine are less than pleased to see dozens of bicyclists pulling up to the door, then trickling into the store and heading to the drink coolers. One bicyclist foots the bill for the combined drinks, which include a 12-pack of Tecate, a few large bottles of Newcastle, Jagermeister and assorted juices and waters.
While standing in line, perhaps the youngest bicyclist, a third grader from Ester Bennett Elementary, complains to her grandfather about the Pontiac driver.
โHe was being a big jerk,โ she says. โHe should have just let us go.โ
Back to the bikes. Drinks are packaged up for later after-ride parties. There will be no drinking and biking here. A police car trolls through an adjacent parking lot. Then weโre back on the road, heading toward Virginia Street, where we take up two lanes.
Menchettiโs fellow riders skew young on this ride. Pedaling next to me are Brittany Sterling, 20, and Erica Wirthlin, 17, whoโs been active with the Holland Project.
โI like your goggles,โ Sterling tells Menchetti. Across from us is Mitch Jones, 18, a recent graduate of Reed High, who helped Menchetti ride the septocycle downtown.
We cruise north up Virginia, clapping to the music and shouting joyfully as we approach a sprinkler near Park Lane Mall. Iโm nervous for a minute when a Citifare bus pulls up too near my back. But Menchettiโs a skillful driver.
We turn on Center Street, stereo blasting the Skatellites singing a song that seems to be about a visit to Reno.
Cars drive by, passengers staring. Some honk their support. One guy waves his hat at us, drops it on the street. A bicyclist picks it up and returns it to the slow-driving SUV.
โI love your bike,โ one woman tells Menchetti, as she parks her car along the road.
โDo you wanna ride?โ he offers. โWe have an extra seat.โ
