With gasoline increasingly hard to find in New York and many subway lines still down, biking has surged in popularity in the aftermath of Sandy. Bikes are selling briskly and new adherents are jumping in the saddle.
Natalie Erlich reports on the boom in bicycle sales as New York begins to look more like Amsterdam in the aftermath of superstorm Sandy. "'Yesterday we outsold our busiest summer
Saturday,' said Emily Samstag, manager of Bicycle Habitat in Brooklyn,
speaking to a surge in bike-related sales just one day after Hurricane
Sandy ravaged the East Coast. 'Our first customer walked in and said:
'The subways are down so I have to buy a bike'. That was standard all
morning.'"
"All told the shop sold 15 bikes Wednesday," notes Erlich. "In October it usually sells a bike every two weeks."
Bike enthusiasts are hoping the increased interest in bicycle commuting will endure once the transportation crisis subsides. ""Maybe this can be the window into the life of a cyclist," mused Jake
Fleischmann, a salesman at Ride Brooklyn. "Maybe all these people who
had a bike for leisure will see that riding a bike can be your mode of
transportation, especially a city like New York. We are pretty level
ground, you can ride anywhere within a few minutes."
That seems to be the case with Thomas Jarrels, who was a bike messenger in the 1980s but hadn't ridden to work since. "Though it took slightly longer than the train, he said, he
thought he would keep biking even after the subway started running
again," writes Kate Taylor in The New York Times.
"It saves money, and it's less of a headache," he said. "It gives you time to think, meditate and get your exercise on."
FULL STORY: Commuters Snatch Up Bicycles in Storm's Wake

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Analysis: Cybertruck Fatality Rate Far Exceeds That of Ford Pinto
The Tesla Cybertruck was recalled seven times last year.

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