innsertnamehere
Superstar
Trust me, we don't forget. I went on a nice long bike ride that day. Doesn't mean a more typical temperature for that date isn't -16.Toronto hit 16°C (on the PLUS side) in February, 2016. See link. How soon we forget.
Trust me, we don't forget. I went on a nice long bike ride that day. Doesn't mean a more typical temperature for that date isn't -16.Toronto hit 16°C (on the PLUS side) in February, 2016. See link. How soon we forget.
Wow! He managed to capture them all, from Milton to Durham, including the express bus brands used in the GTA: Viva, Zum, MiExpres, and Pulse (and the 192 Airport Rocket)
Yeah, but he also didn't include 40' MiExpress, Viva, or Zum buses, Mississauga Transit buses in the old scheme, or Wheel-Trans, Transhelp, etc. Also left out HSR, which operates in Burlington. Can't put everything in.
Here's an interesting project explained at this link. Wonder if someone or group could do the same here in Toronto.
In a city that is about half made up of people not born in Canada some have been here only about that long. I'm thinking of a starting an office pool on when a recently arrived person from somewhere it never snows gives up smoking.
I think the record of straight days under 0, is closer to 30-45 - let alone the average. Not sure most Canadians consider +5 weather spring.Toronto has about 3 months of consistently below 0 temperatures. about 5 months with the "shoulder period" of -2 - +5 degree weather.
We should be planning transportation to maximise the number of choices and options, not naysaying one or the other because of weather. then people can take their pick.
Which is why you will never see people like me riding a bicycle in a blizzard (and yes Toronto gets blizzards, and it sometimes even kills streetcars), but you will see me gleefully trudging around on foot in foul weather getting pictures of it all.
I am avid rider, do serious long-distance too, and wouldn't ride most days in the winter. It's hell on a machine, let alone yourself. I've argued this with a number of die-hards, who insist that salt and grit doesn't take a toll on a good machine, but I've been building, riding and repairing bikes for generations, and have seen what it does. Plus it's incredibly dangerous when it's icy and slippery, let alone when the curb is buried and there's no shoulder.But you have to recognize that the number of people who ride bikes in blizzards, or in the winter in general, is extremely low. I would estimate winter ridership to be 10% at most of summer ridership, on days with severe snowfall probably <5%. That has to be taken into consideration. It doesn't mean we shouldn't build bike lanes, just we have to remember that.