Cruising to Africa
BY KATE JOHNSON Colorado Daily Staff
Monday, November 20, 2006 12:04 AM MST
Today 450 bicycles donated from residents in Boulder and surrounding cities
will
make their way to the African country of Ghana.
Over the last six months, Spokes Community Bicycle Project and Community Cycles
- two Boulder non-profits - have teamed up to collect bikes of all varieties
and conditions as part of their mission to bring aid and education to the
people of Ghana.
"There's some pretty enormous transport difficulties in Ghana, and if
you have a
bicycle you've got freedom, you can travel when you want and it doesn't cost
you
a thing," said Dave Peckham, director of the Village Bicycle Project.
Since the majority of people in Ghana rely on subsistence farming, it is
imperative they are able to commute to the farms where they work.
This can be a difficult and costly endeavor.
The farms lie outside the villages, forcing some to travel several miles or
more
using various forms of transportation.
Some people spend hours walking to work. Others take taxis, but because the
drivers will not leave until their cab is full, it's common for passengers to
wait long periods of time before departing.
"The bicycle is a really good form of intermediate transportation. You
can
travel four times as far on a bicycle than you can on foot," Peckham said.
Providing an effective, alternative method of transportation is just one of
the
many benefits the project offers, volunteers and organizers said.
Colleen Speno, the founder of Spokes, said people with access to a bike save
as
much as half their yearly income - an average of $360 - by not having to pay
for rides.
According to Speno, this will open up the opportunity for more young people
to
attend school.
"It's an amazing expense for them to send a son or a daughter or a grandchild
to
school," Speno said.
But the project will promote learning in more ways than one.
Volunteer Wanda Peledrina Caldas explained that the bicycles are not just handed
out. Part of the project is to educate people on how to fix and maintain
bicycles.
"I think it's important if we want to show people alternative forms of
transportation that we can also give them some strategies," Peledrina Caldas
said.
Some of the bikes will be shipped without being repaired to provide recipients
with adequate hands-on training.
Peledrina Caldas said this will help stimulate the economy in Ghana by creating
more bicycle repair jobs.
Speno added that in addition to improving the economy and boosting education
rates, bikes also play an important role in everyday life - namely by providing
people with vital access to health care.
With the help of continuing donations, volunteers said they hope to send more
creates of bicycles to developing countries in the months and years ahead.
"We are so rich and they are so poor, and we should help them out,"
Peckham
said.
Contact Kate Johnson in regard to this story at (303) 443-6272, ext. 113, or
at
editor@coloradodaily.com.
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