Cycling having taken such a mighty
grasp upon the land, it has naturally followed that
an etiquette of cycling should be established, and
that it should be well established and rigidly regarded
by society.
There are the details of meeting,
mounting, right of way and various other points which
are carefully observed and give the desired air of
fashionable righteousness, without which, for many
people, the pleasure of meeting in a social way on
one’s wheel would be but legendary.
It is distinctly understood in the
first place that “cycling” is the correct
word; the up-to-date woman dares not speak of bicycling
nor of wheeling.
A Cycler’s Guide.
If in town, the early hours of the
morning are chosen for a ride through the park.
This is on the same principle that it is considered
good form for a young woman to drive only in the morning,
that is, when she herself is the whip. In the
country the rules, both as regards cycling and driving,
are not as rigid. The maiden, however, who is
a stickler for form, does all her cycling in the hours
which come before noon unless there be
a special meet, a bicycle tea, for instance, or a
spin by moonlight.
Neither is it correct for a young
woman to ride unaccompanied. In the matter of
chaperons we are becoming almost as rigid as the
French, who scarcely allow a young girl to cross the
street, to say nothing of shopping or calling, without
being accompanied by an elder woman, her mother, relative,
or a friend, as a chaperon.
During the past few years there has
been a tendency in America toward a closer imitation
of all French etiquette which has brought in its train
a strict construction of the duties of a chaperon.
Maids Do Duty.
The unmarried woman who cycles must
be chaperoned by a married lady as every
one rides nowadays, this is an affair easily managed.
Neither must the married woman ride alone; failing
a male escort, she is followed by a groom or a maid.
A woman is very fortunate if among
her men or women servants, one knows how to ride a
bicycle. Ladies occasionally go to the expense
of having a servant trained in the art.
A Man’s Duty.
If one possesses such a commodity
as a brother or a husband, he can always be made useful
on a cycling excursion. Never is a man better
able to show for what purpose he was made than upon
such occasions.
The man’s duty to the woman
who rides might be made the text for a long sermon;
but long sermons are never popular; therefore, it may
be better to state briefly that he must always be
on the alert to assist his fair companion in every
way in his power he must be clever enough
to repair any slight damage to her machine which may
occur en route, he must assist her in mounting
and dismounting, pick her up if she has a tumble,
and make himself generally useful and incidentally
ornamental and agreeable.
He rides at her left in order to give
her the more guarded place, as the rule of the road
in meeting other cyclers is the same as that for a
carriage, to turn to the right. In England, the
reverse is the case.
Assisting the Lady.
In mounting, the gentleman who is
accompanying a lady holds her wheel; she stands on
the left side of the machine and puts her right foot
across the frame to the right pedal, which at the time
must be up; pushing the right pedal causes the machine
to start and then with the left foot in place, the
rider starts ahead slowly at first, in order
to give her cavalier time to mount his wheel, which
he will do in the briefest time possible.
When the end of the ride is reached,
the man quickly dismounts and is at his companion’s
side to assist her, she, in the meantime, assisting
herself as much as possible. This is done that
is, dismounting in the most approved style by
riding slowly, and when the left pedal is on the rise,
the weight of the body is thrown on it, the right foot
is crossed over the frame of the machine, and, with
an assisting hand, the rider easily steps to the ground.
In meeting a party of cyclists who
are known to each other and desire to stop for a parley,
it is considered the proper thing for the men of the
party to dismount while in conversation with the ladies.
As to the furnishings of the bicycle,
to be really complete, it must be fitted out with
a clock and a bell, luggage carrier and a cyclometer,
the latter being an absolute sine qua non to
the woman who cares for records. From five to
six lessons are always considered necessary before
one can master even the details of riding.
On the Road.
On the road the woman who wishes to
ride a la mode has to know a number of little
things that are overlooked by another woman, just as
the smart set have a code for riding and driving that
is as inexorable as that they should not eat with
their knives or put sugar on oysters. Society
insists on an upright position, with, of course, no
attempt at racing pace. It also frowns upon constant
ringing of the bell that will do for the
vulgar herd who delight in noise. The well-informed
wheelwoman keeps eye and ear alert and touches her
bell rarely. She dresses daintily and inconspicuously effaces
herself, in fact, as much in this exercise as she
does in all public places.
Very gallant escorts use a towrope
when accompanying a lady on a wheeling spin.
These are managed in various ways; one consists of
an India-rubber door-spring just strong enough to
stretch a little with the strain, and about six feet
of shade cord. One end is attached to the lady’s
wheel at the lamp bracket or brake rod by a spring
swivel, and the other end is hooked to the escort’s
handle bar in such a way that he can set it free in
a moment, if necessary. When he has finished
towing he drops back to the lady’s side, hanging
the loose end of the cord over her shoulder, to be
ready for the next hill. A gentle pull that is
a bagatelle to a strong rider is of great assistance
to a weak one up hill or against a strong wind.
For Protection Against Dogs.
Every bicyclist in the land will rise
up and call the inventor of the ammonia gun for dogs
blessed. Nothing is more annoying to the rider
than to have a mongrel dog barking at his pedals and
scurrying across his pathway in such close proximity
to the front wheel as to be a constant reminder of
a possible “header.” The gun is calculated
to make an annoying dog sneeze and sniff away all
future ambitions to investigate the pace of a rider.
It is said to be a perfect instrument in every way.
The advantages enumerated for it are: Positively
will not leak; has no spring to press or caps to remove,
and will shoot from five to twelve times from fifteen
to thirty feet with one loading.
A Few Don’ts for Cyclers.
Don’t try to raise your hat
to the passing “bloomer” until you become
an expert in guiding your wheel.
Don’t buy a bicycle with down-curve
handles. It is impossible to sit erect and hold
that kind of a handle.
Don’t go out on a bicycle wearing
a tail coat unless you enjoy making a ridiculous show
of yourself.
Don’t travel without a jacket
or loose wrap, to be worn while resting. A summer
cold is a stubborn thing.
Don’t allow a taste for a bit
of color in your make-up to tempt you to wearing a
red or other gay-colored cap.
Don’t get off the old gag about
“that tired feeling” every time you stop
by the roadside for a little breathing spell.
Don’t absent yourself from church
to go wheeling, as you and your bicycle are welcome
at most houses of worship.
Don’t leave your bicycle in
the lower hallway of your flat-house for the other
tenants to fall over in the dark.
Don’t believe the farmer boy
who says that it is “two miles to the next town.”
It may be two, four, six or twelve.
Don’t be more than an hour passing
a given point, although wheeling on a dusty road is
honestly conducive to thirst.
Don’t smile at the figure others
cut astride their wheels, as it is not given you to
see yourself as others see you.
Don’t coast down a strange hill
with a curve at its bottom. There is no telling
what you will meet when it is too late.
Don’t ride ten miles at a scorching
pace, then drink cold water and lie around on the
grass, unless you are tired of life.
Don’t try to carry your bike
downstairs under your arm. Put it on your shoulder,
or you will come to distress.
Don’t laugh the watchful copper
to scorn because your lamp is burning brightly.
He can afford to wait his time to laugh.
Don’t dress immodestly or in
the costume of a track sprinter. Sweaters worn
like a Chinaman’s blouse are almost indecent.
Don’t forget that the modern
law of the road requires you to turn out to the right
in passing another bicycle or other vehicle.
Women’s Bicycle Rides.
“Women who ride bicycles should
make it a law with themselves never to ride after
a feeling of weariness comes over them,” said
a well-known physician. “I just came from
visiting a woman who tried to ride around the city
last Sunday. It was the fourth time she had ever
ridden a wheel out of doors. She got half way
around, came home, in street cars and a carriage,
and has been sick in bed ever since. She ought
to be an example to all women who ride. For those
who are beginning, especially, and in a measure for
all women, there is a great danger in overdoing.
Some women ride centuries, it is true, but they are
men in strength. No ordinary woman should start
out before knowing how far she is going. Ordinarily,
though, they ride twice as far as they ought.
They start out and ride away from home until they get
tired.
“Then they have to ride back,
getting more and more exhausted with every turn of
the wheels. No ordinary woman who rides once or
twice a week should go more than ten miles at a trip.
That is perhaps an hour’s ride, that may be
easily extended to an hour and a quarter before that
distance is covered, and if she does not feel fresh
and in a glow when she stops, she may be certain that
she has ridden too long. Naturally there is that
healthy tired feeling which any one recognizes after
athletic exercise, but it is quite different from and
never to be mistaken for the weariness which comes
from too much exertion and straining of the nerves
and muscles. Very few women have ever been injured
on a bicycle who kept to this rule and limited their
riding to nominal distances.”
Length of the Ride.
“This limit of distance, which
is designated by the feeling of weariness, is only
a little more important than the limit of speed which
the female frame is capable of undergoing under healthy
exercising rules. Whether a man can ride at full
speed for a long distance and still retain his good
health is a doubtful question. It is certain,
however, that no woman can keep up a high rate of speed
for even a generous portion of a mile and not create
the beginning of injuries. The added strength
required to increase speed even a little after a certain
amount of power has been expended is out of all proportion
to the results. There is no relaxation of the
muscles between revolutions of the pedals, nor any
let up on the nervous and muscular strain while the
speed lasts. The heart is far more taxed than
one realizes at the moment, and that species of tingling
or numbness in the nerves and muscles which often
results is only a sign that they have both been overtaxed.”
Properly used, a wheel is certainly
a promoter of health. It develops muscles that
are seldom, if ever, otherwise used. It gains
for women that ideal condition of the flesh so prized
by sculptors and artists, namely, a firm, solid tissue
when the muscles are flexed, and a softness of an
infant with muscular relaxation. It develops the
entire torso and limbs, it renders one’s nerves
like steel and is a splendid antidote for headaches.
An exceedingly smart and yet thoroughly
practical cycling costume is known as the “Londonderry,”
and is made in gray-green hopsack, a soft fabric which
lends itself admirably to the full folds of the ample
knickerbockers, which form a most important part of
this costume. The “Londonderry” coat
is made with long and very full basques,
which form a kind of skirt when on the machine, and
which, nevertheless, do not interfere in the least
with the rider’s freedom of action. This
coat is prettily braided with black, and fastened
with big black buttons. It is so arranged in
front that it can be worn either with a shirt or over
a double-breasted vest of cloth or leather.
Skirts are an Abomination.
A renowned lady writer says:
“In the first place let me condemn the skirt not
from prejudice, but from experience. Skirts, no
matter how light, how trim, how heavy, are both a
nuisance and a danger. A nuisance because they
are always subject to entanglement in the wheel; because
they fly up with every breeze and motion; because they
have not the chic appearance of the properly made
bloomer, and because, if they are weighted, like a
riding habit, they make so much more to carry against
the wind. And breeze makes weight.
“They are a danger because with
the constant pumping of the pedals the knee is required
to raise too great a weight; this bears upon the body
just below the back of the hips, giving backache; often
more serious troubles. I wouldn’t wear
a skirt. I had one torn off me by the wheel;
but I rode with them long enough to give a just comparison
of the merits of skirts versus bloomers.
“Riding suits should be of fine,
light weight, navy blue or black material, made with
bloomers, and the blouse with tailor-made jacket.
I wear the sweater myself in preference, because it
is not so apt to leave one subject to changes of temperature.
The Alpine hat of Tam O’Shanter is au fait
for street, with leggings to match the bloomers and
jacket, and low shoes made broad on the ball of the
foot. All bicycle shoes should be broad on the
ball, because the pedaling is done with the ball,
not with the under curve, as so many think. Doeskin
gloves are best for ordinary riding. Bloomers
should be made to fasten at the left side of the back,
which leaves room for a pocket on the right side.
Tinted leggings should always match the hat and gloves.
“Tell the ladies to have their
saddles built high and wide in the back, sloping away
and downwards in front; and that if they pedal properly
there is no reason why bicycling should not be a healthful,
moral, modest and permanent form of exercise.
For, mark it,” she added, as a parting sally,
“the wheel has come to stay.”
A Pace Indicator.
A man who rides for health and pleasure
and not to race or score centuries says that his plan
is never to go so fast that he must breathe through
his mouth. As long as his nostrils can supply
sufficient air he knows that he is not over-exerting
himself. As soon as he feels an inclination to
breathe through his mouth he slackens his pace.
Don’t Dodge a Bicycle.
Before bicycling will ever become
a success a meeting must be called for the purpose
of allowing the wheelmen and the pedestrian to arrive
at some understanding. “I am in favor of
a convention or something of that sort,” said
a prominent wheelman to a reporter.
As it is now, a rider comes down the
street and sees ahead of him at a crossing a man or
woman who is supposed to be endowed with reasonable
intelligence. This person is in the act of crossing
the street. He looks up, sees the rider coming
and stands still right in the middle of the street.
Of course, he is mentally calculating his chances for
getting across safely.
In the meantime, the rider is getting
closer and closer and is in a study equally as profound
as to what the person is going to do. The pedestrian
takes a step forward, takes another glance up the street,
stops, starts back, makes an effort to reach the pavement,
stops again, starts forward, stops.
Of course, by this time the cyclist
is almost at a standstill and is also zigzagging from
one side to the other, waiting and muttering.
The pedestrian seems to give up all possibility of
escape, faces the rider, both arms extended, jumps
from one foot to the other, and the two collide.
The cyclist is thrown to the ground, his wheel twisted,
and he gets the blame.
And how easily all this can be avoided!
Let the pedestrian, instead of performing all these
trying evolutions, merely walk along as though there
was nothing behind him, keep his course, and the cyclist
will know what to do. He will turn his wheel
to one side and slide past with perfect ease and safety.
On the crossings let a man walk along as though there
were not a bicycle in the state, and the wheelman will
judge his course accordingly. He has control of
his wheel and is as anxious not to collide as the
other fellow.