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Free Forest Park Protest Ride 2015

Apr 7, 2015
by The Ümabomber  
Protest riders take Forest Park en masse.

I've been a cyclist for over 25 years and a dedicated mountain biker for the past 8 years. I have ridden trails all over the Western US. And I have never poached a trail that was closed to riding. Ever. Until today - Today I popped my poaching cherry.

People who know me can't believe I've never poached. I've been an outspoken advocate for bike access on trails since I started riding dirt. I'm a noisy upstart, an outspoken firebrand, and I rail against the machine. I'm good at rallying the troops and making noise, and with a name like The Ümabomber, it's easy to see why people would expect me to ride rogue. But I'm also possessed of some weird conscience that feels horribly guilty if I go against the law. Partly, it's that I didn't want my actions to negatively impact the work others are doing to create positive change. I want to be part of the solution, not part of the problem. But there's a problem with that problem.

The problem is 'the problem' is manufactured. The problem is a matter of perception. Mountain bikers (and cyclists in general) are perceived as threats to most non-bike riding humans in the United States. People—especially conservative people—love to hate what they don't understand; gays, people of other nationalities, other belief systems, other social classes. When we ride bikes, we are perceived as less human. We are perceived as earth-raping, road-sucking monsters whose only purpose is to create havoc and ruin other people's lives. We are in the way. We are obstacles to other people's enjoyment of reality—or their escape from it. After the recent Portland Parks & Recreation decision to ban bikes from a trail system where bikes had not been identified as threats to the preservation of a large city park, it was clear that railing against the machine would no longer be enough. It was time to ride against the machine.

So, today I rode my bike on singletrack trail in one of the largest public parks in the country, on trails that are closed to anyone except Nature Conservancy hikers, their (illegally) off-lease dogs, and uber-fit long distance runners in safety orange day-glo running shoes. I took about 55 friends with me. My deflowering was public: the loss of my poaching virginity made the evening news. Even more poignant, the trail is named Wild Cherry.

We were courteous. We made way for people to pass. We said hello. We didn't descend upon them—wheeled hellions from the sky—screaming blood curdling death cries, snatching up their soft, furry canines in our talons to rip to shreds and feed to your young. We didn't hate. I can't say we met the same courtesy in everyone we encountered. And don't look now, but according to the comments left on the news channels who covered our ride, there are many people who feel they can and should run us over with their cars and trucks. You'd think we were pedophiles or rapists instead of people who ride bikes, that's how much hatred mainstream America has in their hearts for us.

Protest riders walking up single track which is off limits to bikers.

Protest riders walking up single track which is off limits to bikers.

As rides go, it was anti-climatic. Short and sweet-ish. The purpose was to show our numbers and to take the trails with the same unapologetic ownership other user groups take for granted. As we headed out for the trail, I climbed up on a garbage can and delivered our message:

Dear Portland: We're here. Our numbers are growing. We are not terrorists. We are people who ride bikes. We live here. We work, and pay taxes, and volunteer in our communities. We vote. We probably do more trail work than you do. And we build better, more sustainable and environmentally beneficial trails than you do. You need to stop treating us like we are some kind of criminal class. We are going to ride. Get used to it.

As Vernon Felton mentioned in his recent article, Portland does not deserve to be awarded any kudos for being "bike-friendly". The truth is, Portland is "bike-friendly" if you are a commuter, sort of. Certainly, Portland does not deserve the League of American Bicyclist's "Platinum Status" for Bike-Friendly Cities when she systematically and repeatedly refuse to accommodate or include an entire user group. I propose a new designation: Prohibition Status.

In the 20s, prohibition supporters were referred to as "Drys" and anti-prohibition adherents were "Wets". Here in Portland, as mountain bikers, we are under siege by a new breed of "dry crusaders"; conservative NIMBYs who reject reason and logic and refuse to share what isn't even theirs to give. So while I applaud my local trail advocacy groups for their letter writing campaigns and ongoing conversations with city policy makers (and especially for filing suit against the city) I think my days of playing nicey-nice with the Drys are over. I simply refuse to be part of 'the problem' any longer. I refuse to play into the expectations forced upon me by other, more entitled user groups, these new prohibitionists. See, I've had my trail poaching cherry popped, now. Amanda Fritz made me do it. And now there's no going back. I'm going to ride more…wet and dirty.

About the Umabomber: Freelance writer. Mountain bike rider. Brand ignitor. Metaphor abuser. Autocorrect baffler. For hire. I make the good noise. I bring the awesome.


MENTIONS: @umabomber




Author Info:
umabomber avatar

Member since Mar 25, 2014
6 articles

5 Comments
  • 3 0
 Awesome! To be honest this is the only true answer. Bureaucracy and civility didn't work. Time to go rogue and anarchistic. Why? They've made it apparent that's the only way we'll get access. Next up is them refusing to fund Gateway Green. Just wait for it...
  • 2 0
 It just blows my mind the hate towards MBRs. I've been riding for the last 8 years and I just don't understand the backlash. Was there gangs of riders terrorizing the forest prior?

Props for the cause! Don't know what will change minds? Appears science and humaity isn't appealing enough.

Guess it will take one of there one kids to come out and say I ride and I like to do it in the forest. I can hear the gasps now.

Great hook line for the title!
  • 1 0
 When is the next ride? I want to come "destroy" the forest with you guys. I've lived in Portland many years now, and it seems like more and more trails are being closed off the bikes. It's kind of a joke, living in the Pacific northwest and being able to ride your bike in the woods that are right here. And by the way, I think you should have ridden your bikes the whole way. Because not only did you leave tire marks, but also footprints. By doing so, you doubled the amount of wear on the soil. Just saying.
  • 1 0
 I too have been against poaching, but with the recent issue of two 'do nothings' in Portland Parks and Rec making decisions outside of the public process, I will now poach all inner-city trails, all of them.

Poach Portland!

When the ground dries up, who is down for a 2am WW ride from GT road?
  • 1 0
 Glad to see you had a big group for the ride, bummed I was not able to make it. What are the next steps in ending this prohibition???







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