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Levi Leipheimer: "Sonoma County is No. 1 for Cycling"

About 100 hear pro cyclist speak at Healdsburg Chamber of Commerce luncheon.

 
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Birthday gift
Pro cyclist Levi Leipheimer holds his birthday gift from Dutcher Crossing Winery after speaking at a Healdsburg Chamber of Commerce luncheon on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011.
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Bicycle believer Levi Leipheimer preached Tuesday to the adoring choir of Healdsburg bike enthusiasts.

"I really believe in Sonoma County," pro cyclist Leipheimer told about 100 attendees at Tuesday's Healdsburg Chamber of Commerce "News at Noon" luncheon at Villa Chanticleer. "I think it's the best place on Earth to ride a bike."

Not surprisingly, everyone agreed with the message.

"Our weather here is a perfect cycling climate -- not too hot, not too icy," said Chamber member Jay Stone, a Century 21 Realtor who also teaches cycling 'spin' classes at Parkpoint Health Club. "This is one of the few places in the country that allows cyclists to ride all year long."

Stone said he supports a plan to have Healdsburg officially certified as a bike-friendly town, an idea proposed last week to Healdsburg City Council by Chamber CEO Mo McElroy. Council members said they were in favor of applying to the League of American Bicyclists for their Bicycle Friendly Community award.

(For a list of cities that already have the designation, click on the PDF above).

"I think it's one of the best things Healdsburg could do to leverage the tourism and also take us to a new level," Stone said. "We're already a destination for food and wine; let's make it a destination for cycling."

He said the economic and social benefits would be vast.

"It's not just about creating something for the avid cyclist," he said. "It's about engaging the whole community in the development of a healthy, fit, outdoors-oriented active lifestyle."

Healdsburg shop owner Steve Kirkish of Dovetail Collection said an increase in cycling tourism would be good for his business, which is a few blocks off Healdsburg Plaza on Healdsburg Avenue.

"Cycling is very family-oriented," he said. "So we might have people riding through the whole town and not just concentrating at the Plaza for a wine tasting event."

McElroy, who came to the Healdsburg chamber in January after being CEO at the Santa Rosa Chamber of Commerce, said Tuesday that she is already planning for an uptick in cycling activity in Healdsburg next year.

"The cycling portion of next year's Wine Country Senior Games will be hosted by Healdsburg," she announced. Also, McElroy, an avid cyclist, said Healdsburg hotels and restaurants will get spillover from next year's Amgen Tour of California, which begins and ends in Santa Rosa.

McElroy was instrumental in bringing the Tour of California to Sonoma County.

Stone and others say while they love cycling around Healdsburg, the community needs to look at improving the condition of the rural roads, which are Sonoma County's jurisdiction.

County supervisors this week are looking at allocating $4.5 million a year to upgrade the county's rural roads, but it was not immediately clear if Healdsburg area byways are included.

"I think we should use Levi's Grand Fondo model, where he donates money to help repair roads along the route of the race," Stone said. "We could create events in Healdsburg to raise money to fix the roads.

Leipheimer, a pro cyclist, founder of 7,500-riders-strong Levi's Gran Fondo, Tour de France Stage winner, Olympic medalist and three-time winner of the Tour of California, accepted a birthday gift Tuesday from Dry Creek Valley's Dutcher Crossing Winery; a bottle of 2006 Proprietor's Reserve cabernet sauvignon.

Leipheimer, a Santa Rosa resident, turned 38 on Monday.

Mona Behan

9:53 am on Wednesday, October 26, 2011

I agree that Healdsburg's scenic roads and great climate make it seem like the perfect place for cycling, but the way things are now, there is a lot of tension between bicyclists and drivers. Without dedicated bike lanes on narrow, winding routes like Westside and Eastside Roads, they are extremely dangerous for bicyclists--especially when you build in the wine-tasting factor and impatient drivers--and frustrating for drivers confronted by packs of sometimes arrogant bicyclists. I know that it would be very difficult and expensive to build bike lines on many of our roads, but perhaps certain, wider roads, such as Dry Creek Road, could be developed as bike-friendly routes while bicyclists could be discouraged from using the more dangerous ones.

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Keri Brenner

1:59 pm on Wednesday, October 26, 2011

@Mona Behan: Agreed. Hopefully the more people want to enhance the "bike-friendly" status, the more they will organize events to raise money for road repairs, bike lanes and such. Or perhaps some benefactors will step forward to help improve the roads...

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Ron Simons

12:20 pm on Friday, October 28, 2011

My name is Ron. I lead bicycle tours in Healdsburg for three years and I often tell people that they were the best three years of my life. I believe people can come together to work out solutions for motorists, cyclists and local residents. So much of what we see in politics and other areas of our lives is negative and "what's in it for me". I moved out of Sonoma County to the midwest and reflect on those beautiful rides. Don't take where you live for granted, walk in the other persons shoes before you spout off about their position and get out a get moving to improve your health. I agree with Levi and look forward to reading about solutions rather than division. Fall was my favorite time of year to get out and enjoy the beauty of GODs creation.

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