A handful of highly developed nations have accepted the bike, a workhorse, fortunately, with open arms. The Netherlands, for instance, now has more than 25,000km of bicycle paths. Japan has been as innovative

Picture this: the world's smallest wheeled rideable bicycle, made some years ago, was replete with wheels of 1.09cm in diameter; the largest was wheelwise 3.5m and 3.35m high.

Now, think of the longest, fastest, foldable, water-friendly, bizarre bikes, including the one with just a single big wheel, having a seat atop - aside from the everyman's simple edition - and, you have them all.

The import? A bicycle is much more than wheels, gears, cranks and pedals. It holds a mirror to our future.

So far, so good. However, for the bicycle culture to gain momentum, the machine has to become safer, and more user-adaptable, for all.

When Kirkpatrick Macmillan 'invented' the bicycle, over 180 years ago, his novel, humble idea was greeted with awe and disdain.

But, when the bicycle evolution really began in earnest, it was destined to become the poor man's Mercedes. Well, Macmillan, for one, may have never dreamt that his simple idea would one day save the world, in spite of the fact that things looked bleak for the pedalled wonder, once

horseless carriages took over the streets, followed by the emergence of powered automobiles.

The bicycle is one of mankind's wondrous inventions - an innovation of sheer genius. It bid fair to great inventions. This is precisely the reason why bicycle activists have now mobilised in the West, also East, and elsewhere, lobbying transport departments for bicycle lanes, besides soliciting support from non-bike riders. Yet, it goes without saying that transport departments and planners in certain climes have reacted lukewarmly to the needs of bikers - a stance, which is not only wrong, but also untenable.

The inference is obvious - the bike is no less a reformer, or pacesetter, and precursor of the two-wheeled revolution. It is fuel-saving and also pollution-free.

Picture this, again: 1) In an age where the sombre implications of pollution threaten the health of the world, it is only imperative that bicycles are allowed to regain their 'lost' respectability; 2) Petrol and diesel fuel emissions are major contributors of acid rain, aside from the depletion of the ozone layer; 3) The worst form of pollution comes from short car trips.

Reason? A cold engine is inefficient, and releases a high percentage of unburned hydrocarbons into the atmosphere. Is the bike not the right choice for short 'jaunts'?; 4) Just think of the reduction, by using bikes, in any country's oil import bill; and, 5) Ponder over the land made available to parking lots and roads. In the US, for example, this comprises of more land than the entire state of Georgia. Think of Mumbai, Bengaluru, or Kathmandu in our context.

A handful of highly developed nations have accepted the bike, a workhorse, fortunately, with open arms. The Netherlands, for instance, now has more than 25,000km of bicycle paths. Japan has been as innovative. Witness, a 12-storey bicycle parking lot, to prevent congestion, just as cranes are being used to lift and park over 2,500 bikes at any given time. The facility does not occupy much space as well. All good news. But, the bad news is - the bike is thought of to be just a pleasure machine in the US.

Pedalling is pure happiness. It is spiritual, too. You've that closeness to nature, and the smell of grass, when you ride a bike. Think of the joy of making it 'work' through a busy intersection, or using it primarily as a health machine. Biking, as research opines, is the only exercise suitable for just about everyone. A bike helps you exercise without taxing your muscles.

It is also contended that individuals bogged down by knee-joint problems, backache, or the more troublesome arthritis, have turned to the bike for relief. Agreed that a bike can never win any super-speed contest, or long-distance travel, but it has a big plus-point. It is user-friendly and environmentally 'sound'.

If Denmark has special bicycle kiosks, where machines can be hired for use, for almost a song, the paradox is, Bedford, UK, and Petersborough have a 'nobikes' policy, the latter from 9:00am to 6:00pm (Monday-Saturday).

Sad, for every soldier's 'mounted jeep' - the indispensable companion during World War I. As Marcia D Lowe put it in an article published by the Worldwatch Institute, "In their enthusiasm for engine power, transit planners have overlooked the value of human power. With congestion, pollution and debt threatening both industrial and developing worlds, the vehicle of the future clearly rides on two wheels." So, is it not illogical that a few developed countries have pursued a 'no-for-the-bike' stance - a decision we may all come to regret? Sure, the future belongs to the good old, faithful bike. However, before this can happen, a great deal of work needs to be done to make bike riding safe and pleasurable, replete with bicycle lanes, technological improvisations, etc. Yes, a host of great new ideas are on the anvil. If one whizbang, superbike is making waves, in the US, a bicycle firm in the UK, has come up trumps with the lightest, strongest and stiffest bike frame - carbon frameset - in the world, among others.

Add to this more than twice as many bicycles - over one billion - as the number of motorcars in the world, and you have a happy feeling. The impetus is also a-changin' slowly, what with countries like India and China having traditionally used bicycles as a means of transport, juxtaposed by the bicycle industry's effort in bringing out sleek, new models.

It is high time that the joy of bike riding and its utility value are inculcated for more and more people to get into the bike habit, because riding a bicycle is tantamount to recycling, or conserving electricity. It is also an endeavour worth pursuing, by all, without fuss, or hassle, attached - even if not all of us would be able to perform 'pyrotechnics' on it.

Nidamboor is a wellness physician, independent researcher and author

A version of this article appears in the print on October 31, 2022 of The Himalayan Times.