![]() |
The Hungry March Band (Photo: Tara Sansone; courtesy of Socrates Sculpture Park)
|
Wrangling small children and their bicycles out to Queens is no easy feat, but Long Island City’s first bike parade is worth the super-parent effort and logistics. On May 10, arrive early at the Socrates Sculpture Park to register (it’s free) and take part in bike-safety and repair workshops. Parade partners include Bike New York, Recycle-a-Bicycle, and Transportation Alternatives. Although riding in the parade is an obvious choice to be the highlight of the day, the pre-ride bike decorating might steal its thunder. Sculpture Park artists will help kids create tassels, flags, mock baskets, and spoke decorations. “We’re working with all repurposed recycled materials—fabric, paper, straws, beautiful fake flowers, ribbons, and streamers,” says Katherine Novick, the Sculpture Park’s education-program manager. All decorations—including a “stop-motion thing on the wheels”—have been considered for safety. “They can still ride.” The festooned two- (or three- or four-with-training-) wheelers will take a route just about a mile, up Vernon Boulevard from the Sculpture Park to Queensbridge Park. The Hungry March Band and performers from Circus Amok will help set the mood for an anticipated 1,200 riders. The Sculpture Park has even negotiated to have its neighbor Costco close its driveway for a while so the bikes can pass. “It’s otherwise kind of a crazy street,” says Novick. Volunteers will dot the route offering water and comfort. No kids are too young or old—wee ones can go on the backs of their parents’ rides. The wheels on the bikes will go round and round, rain or shine.


Email
Print
Can You Teach Your Kid to Have Taste?

David Edelstein on Pineapple Express
Ben Kingsley: No More Masks
How James Wood’s How Fiction Works Works
The General Greene’s Stellar Brooklyn Cuisine
The Party-Fueled Growth of a Brooklyn Art Empire
The Lure of Over-the-top Apartment Pricing
Where to Buy Vintage Costume Jewelry
Analyzing the New $30,000 Face

David Carr’s Life of Crack and Journalism
How Some Farmers Have Gained Cult Followings
How 9/11 Changed One Young Arab’s Life