These women are travelling through rural N.S. fixing bikes and breaking stereotypes - Action News
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Nova Scotia

These women are travelling through rural N.S. fixing bikes and breaking stereotypes

Simone Mutabazi and her team are travellingacross the province this summer fixing bicycles free of charge in rural areas where repair shops are hard to access.

Group aims to promote bicycle maintenance and self-reliance across the province

A woman wearing glasses and a black shirt with green overalls stands in front of bike repair supplies.
Simone Mutabazi works as a community cycling activation co-ordinator with the Ecology Action Centre. (Paul Poirier/CBC)

Simone Mutabazi has been travellingacross the province this summer fixing bicycles for people who can't easily access repair shops.

She works as a co-ordinator for The Pop-Up Bike Hub, aproject funded by the Ecology Action Centre that caters its services topeople of all ages living in rural areas.

Mutabazi describes it as "a mobile cargo trailer that acts as a bike repair space on wheels."

"Our main goal is providing access to bike repairs and tune-ups for people, because a lot of bike shops in the province are located in a few concentrated areas," she said.

Mutabazi and her team, which includes interns Annabelle Valiant Fraser and Grace Robinson, workon the bikes free of charge.

"I started with zero experience before the program started, and I feel very proud to learn how to fix a bike. We want to promote this to everyone. If I can learn it, anybody can," shesaid with a laugh.

'Anyone can fix bikes'

The project began in 2020 as a collaboration with a programcalled Bike Again thatteaches youth how to repair bicycles. The project isalso affiliated with the Ecology Action Centre, which is funded throughpublic grants and donations.

Fraser and Robinsonjoined the bike hub through the Clean Foundation, a Dartmouth-based environmental charity. Part of the appeal is helping break downgenderstereotypes, as well as promoting active transportation and recycling.

A woman wearing a green ballcap and a blue tank top poses for a photo next to the Pop-Up Bike Hub trailer.
Annabelle Valiant Fraser is an intern working at the Pop-Up Bike Hub. (Paul Poirier/CBC)

"Anyone can fix bikes.It's seen as a male dominated thing and hard to get into but it's not that difficult." Fraser said. "Being able to support girls and lift them up to show them that they can do everything that boys can do is something I'll think about for a long time."

The trailer houses all the project's tools and supplies, likerecycled tires, brake levers, shifters and even donated bikes. Fraser and Robinson rely on scrap bicycles for parts and shelve them for future use.

Nearly 2,000 bikes repaired

Theteam recently travelledto the Sipekne'katik First Nationand Acadia First Nation, and spends a significant amount of time visiting othercommunities in the Confederacy of Mainland Mi'kmaq.

While visiting Millbrook First Nation, Fraser was approached by a child who thanked the teambecause he couldn't affordto fix his bike.

"It's nice to see those barriers dissolving because we're there," she said.

Bike wheels hang on the walls inside a cargo trailer, with other repair supplies contained in buckets on the floor.
The Pop-Up Bike Hub trailer 'acts as a bike repair space on wheels,' the project's community cycling activation co-ordinator says. (Paul Poirier/CBC)

The project has helped repair nearly 2,000 bikes so far, including 215and counting this year. They also helpsupply youth with safety essentialslikehelmets, lightsand locks.

There is a mini version of the bike hub too an e-bikethat travels around the Halifax area to give people easier access to free repairs there.

Now Mutabazi is now preparing for the team's next series of stops in August. They'll be embarking on a15-day trek through the Unama'ki Mi'kmawcommunities in Cape Breton.

"We are travelling through every Mi'kmawcommunity there, and our goal is that all of this is replicable," she said.

"We do our best to impart that knowledge as much as possible to teach the basics, so when we are gone people can do it on their own."

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