
If you are a committed cyclist or actively promoting safer streets and want to sport the Green Rider, shoot us an email. Explain who you are, what you’d like, and we’ll make it happen.
If you are a committed cyclist or actively promoting safer streets and want to sport the Green Rider, shoot us an email. Explain who you are, what you’d like, and we’ll make it happen.
True, she’s yellow. And black. But the silhouetted rider, on a field of what has been come to be known in traffic engineering circles as Kermit green, is very much green indeed. She grabs a bike instead of getting into a car. She evangelizes the throughput potential of protected bike lanes over road expansion. And she fights for cyclist safety. And she does it with smile, because she has the best commute in the world – a commute on two wheels.
The versatility of a cycling cap cannot be overstated. Bill forward and down, it deflects rain and oncoming light glare from the eyes. The fabric under a helmet lessens bug and sting impact at speed. Flipped back, it shades the neck. And remember: it is always a cap (never a hat).
Also known as the everyday cap for our fog-laden Bay Area contingent, this wool cap from the fine folks at Walz keeps the head cozy. It also comes in kids’ sizes for those cooler morning family-biking commutes.
What’s better than one Green Rider? A swarm of them in an angled descent down a Purist bottle. Plus it holds water.
Thick. The kind of mug that benefits from a touch of hot water to warm it before pouring the coffee in. Wrap those cold riding hands around it and the feeling comes back into those fingers…
The Dark Rider, the grayscale sibling to the Green Rider, is rare indeed. A limited-run rondel from Fall Creek Outfitters, it is a symbol of something more. If you see a Dark Rider patch, you’re seeing someone who stood tall on the podium or made a huge community bicycling impact.