
"But with only two weeks notice and four volunteers, Spiritridge has joined the ranks of the biking schools! In two days, we've gone from a school with one or two kids biking, to a community of cyclists. We've collected 69 permission slips so far (12% of our school), and our 5th graders on Patrol this morning counted 40 bikers!" -Angela M.
Traveling South...
ORLA Montessori school is located in Olympia, our great capital. Bike Month is a nationwide event so schools all over the state are participating. Not all are participating in Cascade's, however. ORLA's first time in the game and they ordered 40 Bike to School Day stickers from me. To give you a bit of perspective: their Elementary has 80 kids. That's half of their school, riding bikes, taking to the streets and making their neighborhoods safer and healthier.
'Round West...
Ballard is a great place for bikes. Living in Fremont, it's easy for me to scoot over on my bike and enjoy the Locks, any number of parks or The Field House (because cyclists need ridiculously good smelling candles, too). There must be something in the water, too. As of May 1, Loyal Heights Elementary had 105 out of 419 students registered to ride: their final count was 78 riders on the first day of their first ever Bike to School campaign. A few days later they were up to 95 (almost 25% of their entire student body) -- no doubt a school with a great deal of cowbell. You'll be hearing more from this school in the weeks to come, I'm sure.
The moral of this trip around the compass is this: Bike Month, and specifically Bike to School Month, is off to a flyer. It's amazing to see the passion around the city and around the state for getting kids onto their bikes. Keep it up, everybody!
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