Chuchote wrote: » Why don't schools have competitive cycling? They play hurling and hockey and football and basketball competitively, but why not cycling?
degsie wrote: » At a guess it would be a nightmare to supervise, given that you would be leaving school grounds and traveling on public roads.
Chuchote wrote: » Do school hurlers dematerialise at home and rematerialise on the field for competitive games?
greenspurs wrote: » The school mine are in, wont allow them wrap their sambos in tin foil FFS !!
I love Sean nos wrote: » Is tinfoil considered hazardous now?
Chuchote wrote: » Don't want them to repurpose it as hats? Back to the cycling clubs - it seems really weird that schools don't do this. Imagine an inner city Dublin school able to bring the kids out to Meath or Wicklow or Kildare on runs, show them how their country is available to them by just turning the pedals. And in terms of competitive sport, is there really no schools league?
greenspurs wrote: » Clubs - Carrick wheelers run a great beginners league , where there is quite a good turnout from kids , on a nice loop circuit. Clonmel also run one , but its around Clonmel Racecourse, with a Brute of a hill !!! I put my little one off cycling for life after she did it..... When i was in secondary school, there used to be a County Championship for school teams, mainly TimeTrials as far as i can remember, but that was it.
Weepsie wrote: » I'm sorry. Parents should buy and encourage kids to cycle to work, but that is all. This doesn't need or shouldn't require any state intervention beyond promotion.
greenspurs wrote: » Route ..... insurance ...... safety ..... The school mine are in, wont allow them wrap their sambos in tin foil FFS !! Or play football with a "leather ball" only plastic ones ...... Bubble wrapped , lining up the next Snowflake generation !!!
magicbastarder wrote: » running school sports at the moment doesn't require the use of public roads, so there are those issues of safety and liability, as well as the sheer manpower required for stewarding, etc. all you need for one game of various types of football involving 30 kids is one teacher. for a cycle race you'd probably need 10 or more.
joey100 wrote: » The best option would be for cycling Ireland to come to schools and run taster sessions, from this the young people who were most interested could join their local club.
Weepsie wrote: » That's not what I said and has been purposely taken out of context. I was specifically talking about racing in schools and having government funded bikes for this reason. We could be really pedantic and list the numerous sports that don't get funding. Now a Bike2School scheme is different but that's not what is being mooted here. There are so many headaches organizing races that it's a non goer and is best left to the clubs.
Weepsie wrote: » There some wonderful sweeping generalisations you're making there.
Thud wrote: » how many/what percentage of kids cycle to school lately? It was well over 50% when I was in primary school down the country years ago but suspect it is much less nowadays.
More males at school or college aged between 13 and 18 years cycled to school than drove themselves (6,588 vs 2,971), but far more females drove themselves than cycled (694 [cycling] vs 2,068).