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Meet the Pedal Posse Divas – black women biking on Philly streets

Pedal Posse

Black Women in Sports

Meet the Pedal Posse Divas – black women biking on Philly streets

Stephanie Ford’s first group bike ride was lonely.

The 47-year-old legal assistant, who’s always looking for ways to stay active,  joined a crew she had found online for a 25-mile circuit along the Schuylkill River Trail. But she quickly fell behind, and soon watched as the other cyclists biked out of view.

“I felt like, ‘Nobody’s here with me! I’m on this trail all alone,’” she recalled.

She still liked the idea of cycling with others. So Ford reached out to a few friends, including some from the running group Black Girls Run, to get together for a bike ride. Eight women showed up for that first trip in 2014. Three years later, the Pedal Posse Divas, as they’ve named themselves, have grown to a Facebook group of 300. Sometimes they draw as many as 30 women for their outings, which range from 11-mile Friday morning rides along Kelly Drive to two-day, 76-mile rides to a farm outside of Phoenixville as part of an annual camping trip called Bikeout.

While the 4,000-plus Facebook group Women Bike PHL has helped build community for women cyclists in the city, the Pedal Posse Divas’ demographics are still something of a rarity: black women older than 30. (One member is 63.) It wasn’t an intentional choice, and all women are welcome, Ford said, but this is how the group happened to develop over the years, likely because its early members were black. This collective identity has led group members to rally around a shared goal: getting more black women on bikes.

“We want more and more black women, and women in general, to ride,” said Sonja West, a 50-year-old Verizon technician who leads the Friday morning rides. “You don’t see many black women on bikes.”

Why? A number of reasons, all of which can be traced back to a history of racism. Among them: poor bike infrastructure in black neighborhoods, the idea of car ownership as a status symbol, a lack of representation in bike advocacy groups. Think of how the city’s Indego bikeshare has struggled to get black and lower-income people to use its bikes. “The majority of conversation is, ‘This isn’t for us,’” Indego bike ambassador Kim Smith told Billy Penn in 2016.

West says cycling was never an activity she saw a black woman like herself doing.

For that reason, when the Pedal Posse Divas take to the streets for neighborhood rides …

 

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I am a future butterfly at the stage of growth when I am turning into an adult. I am enclosed in a hard case shell formed by love, family, and friends. It is the hardest stage of becoming a black butterfly. You will encounter many hardships only to come out stronger and better than what you went in. At this stage, you are finding out who you truly are and how to love yourself.

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