CUA Professors are Pumped about Pedaling
Pumped Up and RockingPeter Shoemaker begins his 12-mile commute in Greenbelt and passes through other Maryland locations on his way to work at Catholic University. Along the way, it's not a sea of brake lights that gets his attention. It's the scenery and wildlife.
One of a growing number of CUA faculty who bike to work, Shoemaker passes Lake Artemesia and travels along the northeast and northwest branch bicycle trails on an old mountain bike during a 50-minute ride into Northeast Washington, D.C.
"There's some nice scenery along the trails and a good deal of wildlife," says the director of the University Honors Program and associate professor of French. "I've seen fox, bald eagles, blue herons and hawks. Lake Artemesia has wintering waterfowl - ducks and mergansers."
Shoemaker isn't alone on the trails and bike lanes. Colleagues from the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures and other CUA departments choose two wheels over four for their work commute as a way to stay physically and mentally fit and save money. Some of them will mark Bike to Work Day on Friday, May 21, just as they do many days - by biking to CUA.
"Bicycling" magazine has named Washington, with more than 60 miles of bike lanes on it streets, the most improved city for biking.
Enhanced bike trails have made it easier to choose a bike over a car. CUA's campus is now connected to Union Station by four miles of pavement on the Metropolitan Branch Trail. Eventually, the trail will extend to Silver Spring, following Metrorail's Red Line, and connect with the Capital Crescent Trail and Anacostia Tributary Trail System. A bicycle and pedestrian bridge at the Rhode Island Avenue-Brentwood Metrorail station, which will improve access to the trail, will be completed in the fall.
Spanish Lecturer Jennifer Maxwell is a semiprofessional cyclist who competes in the short-course bike racing called cyclocross. The director of CUA's Spanish for Health Care Certificate Program rides every day to stay in competitive form and, when the weather and her schedule cooperate, she bikes three miles from her home to campus. She pedals about 15 miles an hour, making the trip along Fourth Street Northeast in 12 minutes.
"I love to ride my bike, and, at times, it is faster to get to your destination than by car," Maxwell says.
Terry Walsh, assistant professor of nursing and director of CUA's undergraduate nursing program, has been biking to campus from Maryland since she was studying for her bachelor's degree in the early 1980s. In the decades since, she has seen a change in attitude on biking. "The roads are more friendly toward bikers," she says.