RSS Feed

Tag Archives: Motorcycle Lane

Another Uncle Wiggily

Many moons ago I lived with a host family in Painesville, Ohio.  I have very fond memories of my year as an American Field Service (AFS) exchange student.  One memory in particular is of Uncle Wiggily Longears.  Uncle Wiggily is the main character in more than seventy children’s books by Howard Garis.  Those books must have been a childhood favourite in my host family.  “An Uncle Wiggily” came to mean a new adventure or experience.

I just had my latest “Uncle Wiggily”.  I have driven along the Shah Alam Expressway on countless occasions.  Also known as KESAS, it is a major roadway linking Kuala Lumpur, Cheras, Petaling Jaya, Subang Jaya, Shah Alam and Klang.  I never dreamt that one day I would cycle a part of it.  That day, or night to be precise, came yesterday.

Six of us started off near the Sunway Lagoon Theme Park.  I managed to have a rear tire puncture as we rode past the Monash University Malaysia campus on the way to the highway.  All of two kilometers from where we had parked our cars.  I suppose better there than alongside the highway.  The university carpark came in useful as a safe place to replace the inner tube.  My companions were ahead of me when I stopped.  It is a good thing they came back for me.  I didn’t know the route.  It would have been a short ride back to my car.

KESAS Night

Photo courtesy of maslogo

We rode on the motorcycle lane beside the highway.  The riding surface is very good and all the tunnels are well-lit.  Best of all we didn’t get buzzed by many motorcycles and scooters

Photo courtesy of Sam Cheong at The Samosaurus Chronicles

Photo courtesy of Sam Cheong at The Samosaurus Chronicles

We covered about 30 kilometers from the Kewajipan interchange to the Sukom interchange and back to the Sunway interchange.  Negotiating the Sunway interchange toll booths in a car is often a fraught-filled experience because of all the traffic.  Cycling unhindered around those toll booths was a most pleasant “Uncle Wiggily”.

KESAS Toll

Alternative Reality

I have been driving on the Federal Highway since the 1980s.  It is Malaysia’s first expressway, and it runs for 45 km from Kuala Lumpur to Klang on the west coast.  During the four years before I left Kuala Lumpur for Houston I lived just off the Federal Highway in Pantai Hill Park.  I drove along the Federal Highway almost daily.  The Mid-Valley Megamall was a frequent destination.  I took my mother for regular medical checkups at the University Malaya Medical Centre.  I ate many meals at the restaurants in the Petaling Jaya Hilton.  A corollary to all those car journeys on the Federal Highway was the number of hours I wasted whilst inching along in the traffic jams for which the highway has become infamous.

I didn’t think it was possible to cycle along the Federal Highway.  But that is exactly what I found myself doing last Saturday morning.  I had agreed to help out with a cycling safety class being run by YC and Albert K. at Van’s Urban Bicycle Co.  So after a brief talk about the do’s and don’ts of riding on city streets  Albert led us from the shop to the motorcycle lane running alongside the Federal Highway headed toward Kuala Lumpur.

Photo courtesy of Albert Koo

Before long we were cycling under the Kota Darul Ehsan arch, which marks the border between the state of Selangor and the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur.  From the vantage point of a bicycle saddle it certainly looks like the the biggest arch in Malaysia.

Photo courtesy of Albert Koo

Apparently the motorcycle lanes were originally intended for bicycles.  We cyclists were definitely in the minority though.  Riding single file was essential as we were continually being passed by motorcycles.  You can see them in the distance in these photos.  That motorcyclist on the right in the picture below should be on the motorcycle lane by the way.  The skyscraper is the Menara Telekom.

Photo courtesy of Albert Koo

Less than ten minutes later we were at the Mid-Valley Megamall.  It has often taken me at least three times that long to drive from the Menara Telekom to the Mid-Valley Megamall.  Now I know there is an alternative I’m going to see if there is a place to safely park a bicycle at the mall.

We turned around at the mall and headed back on the opposite side of the Federal Highway.  We took a different route from the highway back to Van’s Urban Bicycle Co.  Conveniently there is a mamak restaurant below Van’s.  Ravi’s Banana Leaf, which as the name suggests, uses banana leaves as plates.  If you read my post about the ride from Bukit Jelutong you already know what we had at Ravi’s.  Teh tarik and roti canai of course!

Photo courtesy of Albert Koo