Frequently asked questions

From World Naked Bike Ride
Revision as of 09:02, 18 January 2006 by Nsayers (talk | contribs) (Isn't public nudity offensive?)
Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Practicalities

What kind of chants do you have for the ride?

  • Hey, it's getting hot in here, stop putting CO2 in the atmosphere!
  • Hey, it's getting hot in here, so take off all your clothes and go cycling!
  • Burn fat not oil! Sweat smells sweeter than CO2!
  • Crude is rude! Don't be a prude - go nude!
  • Be all you can be! Be auto- and clothes-free!
  • Travel lightly - leave your cars and clothes behind!
  • Honk if you love bikes! Honk twice if you love naked cyclists!
  • Your butt looks better on a bike! Your skin is outta sight! You'll travel with ease as you feel that breeze, and drip clean sweat instead of oil!
  • Bicycles make cleaner traffic jams!
  • Less gas, more ass!
  • 1,2,3,4 cars and petrol lead to war. 5,6,7,8 cars stink, bikes are great!

Do I have to ride a bike?

No! You won't be able to keep up with us if you are travelling on foot, but alternate body powered transport is welcome. Last year several rides had skaters, people riding unicycles, and we have even seen people ride tricycles, chopper bikes, and rickshaws in other naked bike rides. We encourage people to ride any number of human-powered vehicles.

Can I bring a placard, leaflets etc? What message should I communicate?

We recommend bringing something that communicates the messages of the ride (opposition to oil dependency and celebration of our bodies). You could paint the message onto your body (click here for a terrific photo of painted messages from Aukland's Feb 2005 ride, and inspiring use of stencils from the USA's RNC 2004 protests in NYC). You could mount a sign/object/flag onto your bicycle. You might want to wear a prop (mask, wings, tail, etc). Use your imagination.

Don't feel limited by the main WNBR messages. You can communicate opposition to oil dependency through a number of local-specific issues. You may feel strongly opposed to the UK and US led war in Iraq. It can be easily argued that this war wouldn't have happened if the world were no longer oil dependent. It would make sense to attend the World Naked Bike Ride in protest of the war in Iraq or any other conflict fuelled by oil dependency.

Can I hurt myself by cycling in the nude?

Only if you don't wear any sunscreen or if you fall off the bike. We recommend that you wear sunscreen, shoes, and a helmet. Ride carefully and you won't get hurt. Your butt will probably not hurt any more than when you ride with your clothes on. If you get sore, perhaps you need to get a padded bike seat or get in shape by cycling more often.

What does it feel like to ride nude?

Just like it does with clothes but a bit cooler.

Should I wear shoes?

If you're not sure about this, then you should wear shoes. Most riders wear shoes for safety/comfort reasons. If you are not going to wear shoes, you better try it out first on an urban ride before you decide you try it at WNBR.

Will people/press photograph me?

They might. If it makes you uncomfortable, let the photographers know that they don't have permission to photograph you. Also, let other riders know this so they can tell photographers not to photograph you. Another approach is to keep your clothes on during the first bit of the ride, and take them off after you have left the assembly point. We recommend this approach too. Both of these approaches will cut down on photographs taken at the start of the ride, but it's not really possible to stop people from photographing during the ride.

WNBR local events often do have a documentary team taking pictures and video, but they are generally very considerate people and will try to keep your best wishes in mind as much as possible. You can see many of their images on this website and on WNBR-generated media, which is sometimes shared with other non-profit progressive groups.

There are also those who are at the event to use the images for other reasons, and you won't know without asking. If someone is being aggressive, acting suspiciously, or making you feel uncomfortable please tell a WNBR team coordinator or someone who can confront them and tell them to back off a bit and give people personal space. People need to understand the positive message of WNBR and understand that part of respecting each others' bodies is giving each other enough personal space to be comfortable, this is especially important for those that have never been naked in front of strangers or in public before. They have their own issues they are dealing with and aggressive gawking or unwanted exposure adds an additional unwanted complication to their experience. So speak up!

What will the gender ratio be?

It is hard to know the gender ratio in advance.

While many rides have been gender-balanced, it is rare that females outnumbered males on any ride. Of course we would like it if every mass ride had a good gender balance, but the only people who can help make it happen is the promotion team and the people who show up themselves.

One good example of a gender-balanced painted naked cycling group is the painted cyclists of the Summer Solstice Parade in Fremont, Seattle. That group has been cycling for years, and there is a strong tradition of creative diversity. Having a ride that approaches the diversity of the community is a sign that the ride is maturing, has earned the trust of the community, and is attracting a wide range of people.

Obviously, cycling and opposing oil dependency are not gender-specific activities. Public nudity has a very different meaning for each of us personally and this often relates to our experience of being male or female.

I don't own a bike. How can I participate?

If you don't own a bike, you can bring or rent or borrow some skates. You can also rent or borrow a bike.

I want to organize a WNBR event but leave out the activist, oil dependency theme or leave out the body-positive component or require people to wear a minimum amount of clothing to avoid arrest. Is that OK?

No. This question has come up several times before. As we said above, people are entirely welcome to organize their own naked bike ride as long as their event is a protest against oil dependency and participants have the option to ride their bikes naked. The main WNBR web site will then agree to promote the event.

Do I have to ride naked? Can I participate clothed or top-free?

The World Naked Bike Ride dress code is "Bare As You Dare"... How bare is that? How dare is that? Its all up to you, you decide what you are comfortable with. The ride is clothing-optional.

No one is excluded or discriminated against based on levels of clothing, bodypaint, or anything else for that matter!

While nudity isn't required to participate in this ride we encourage you to challenge yourself. Where as little as you can while still feeling comfortable about it. Last year, people came wearing shorts, bra-tops, swim-wear, body paint, masks, etc. There will be plenty of people who will cycle fully nude, so don't feel that it is your duty to do this if you aren't comfortable showing all of your body. Respect your own boundaries, and Go As Bare As You Dare!

What if I'm not thin? What if I'm not young? What if I have scars on my body? What if my body shape just isn't normal? What if I look different?

Great! Please come to the ride! We'll all be there to ride with you in celebration of your body's strength and individuality. Last year there were people of all ages, sizes, builds, and appearances. At the ride, you will be treated with dignity and respect no matter what your body looks like.

What should I wear? How should I decorate myself?

Please be creative and colourful in expressing yourself! Bodypainting, customising your bike, and other creative expression is strongly encouraged!

If you look at the history section of this site you will notice different groups have different approaches to their rides regarding body adornment.

Seattle has a well-established naked bike ride during the Summer Solstice Parade that prides itself on its display of body painting creativity. In fact some even have dropped the "naked" in their name to call them the Painted Cyclists. Despite their streaker roots, a few among them even look down on participants who are just naked. We don't do that, our event is not strictly artistic, however, we strongly encourage people to express themselves and be colourful.

You can find ideas and resources for bodypainting on our bodypainting page.

I'm not sure if I actually want to participate in the ride, can I just show up and watch from a distance, behind a bush, with binoculars?

WNBR is not just a great event for spectators, visiting tourists, and the general public, it is an amazing experience that everybody can either participate in or support. For example, many cities have a bodypainting party in one location with live music, then move to another start location, then hold various happenings around the city or stop off at different points during the ride for various activities. These additional activities can include a massive group splash in a prominent urban fountain, a photo shoot with a spectacular backdrop, somewhere to protest oil dependency (such as a petrol station), and maybe to conclude at a house party or pub.

Blah blah blah bike seats?

Very funny.

Legality and offence

Do I need to get a permit to ride naked on the streets in a large group?

How many Critical Mass groups seek permits to ride in the streets? Do car drivers get permits to cause traffic jams? Do you think you need permission to ride your bicycle with others? Isn't bicycle riding one of the most responsible and efficient ways to get around? Shouldn't the community government be supporting activists who encourage change for the better? Do you need a permit to swim naked at the beach or to sunbathe in the park? Think about it. Think about the implications of asking The Man for your freedom versus giving yourself permission to live fully and completely.

   "Argue for your limitations and they're yours" - Richard Bach, from Illusions

Its one thing to work with officials or other community groups to make sure the event happens in a successful way if you are using city resources or community space, but quite another to ask for permission to use the roads that you collectively own with other tax payers to go cycling in a responsible manner.

Will I get arrested?

   "Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison." - Henry David Thoreau

A common question that seems to be coming up is, what does the law say?

Yup, it seems that almost everywhere in the world riding your bicycle naked is illegal — but still we do it !!! aawbikeride.jpg (38312 bytes)

Picture at left is from a past Artists for Peace naked bike ride in Vancouver, BC. Click on image for larger view.

Most of the naked rides that we have done in Vancouver, have been, well pretty much naked, but Vancouver is a lot more tolerant than say Beijing or Riyadh.

Alanis Morissette attacks "US censorship" at the 2004 Juno Awards in her full-body suit complete with pubic hair and nipples. Read the Reuters story. Click on image to enlarge. Just one way to be legal for those who are not quite comfortable to go fully naked.

If you feel uncomfortable going completely naked or you are afraid of any legal scuffles, here is some advice. Don't go completely naked.

Naked body suits were also used in 1999 by Fremont Arts Council members to spoof the naked cyclists in the Summer Solstice Parade in Seattle. Photo by Komo 4 News.

Here is why we have been getting away with it.

(1) The laws on nudity, for the most part are incredibly vague and difficult to enforce. You probably don't not need to cover up an awful lot to be legal. With the incredible transforming powers of a little body paint, or liquid latex, or a strategically placed sock, or a piece of duct tape you too can transform the average city streaking naked wild cyclist into "the legal city streaking naked wild cyclist". Be creative a little imagination can change everything.

The laws on nudity also seem to hinge on something called "indecent exposure". The fact of the mater is that being naked is not "indecent". There is nothing indecent about a naked body. The only thing that is indecent are the laws on indecent exposure. Simon Oosterman of the Auckland 2005 WNBR says it best: "Stop the indecent exposure to vehicle emissions!" After all, the shame is on them, not on us!

There are many indecent laws that we the citizens of the world have to stand up to. (For example, those that are infringing on our personal freedoms)

   "Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience. Our problem is that numbers of people all over the world have obeyed the dictates of the leaders of their government and have gone to war, and millions have been killed because of this obedience... Our problem is that people are obedient all over the world in the face of poverty and starvation and stupidity, and war, and cruelty. Our problem is that people are obedient while the jails are full of petty thieves, and all the while the grand thieves are running and robbing the country. That's our problem." - Howard Zinn, 'Failure To Quit'

(2) Police do not want to be seen confronting a large group of peaceful naked people. It's too embarrassing.

Above, an artist produced this painting to invite the community of Seattle to mock the looming threat of police arrests of naked participants, including the Naked Bicyclists, during the 2001 Fremont Summer Solstice Parade. Pictures above and below appear courtesy of Gary David Yngve.

(3) The World Naked Bike Ride is clothing-optional.

(4) This is a very important one, If you do encounter police or any other aggression do not reciprocate the aggression, keep it light, our best weapon is humour. It's tough getting angry at a colourful naked person on a bicycle.

Anger and aggression only returns anger and aggression.

None of our rides in Vancouver have been behind closed doors, we do them LOUD and we do them proud. After all who would care if we did the ride at nudist club ghettoes or where no one could see us? We advertise them in local non-mainstream newspapers. We are challenging social norms, we are challenging the template laws that tell us that what is right is wrong.

   "Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth." - JFK

I have had many fun encounters with police officers, one of the most interesting was when this grumpy police officer came up to me and told me that he thought that what I was wearing was indecent. I looked him straight in the eye and told him that I thought his opinion was indecent. I was right —and no— I was not arrested.

   "Those who, while they disapprove of the character and measures of government, yield to it their allegiance and support are ... frequently the most serious obstacles to reform." - Henry David Thoreau

Nobody has ever been arrested at any of the major naked cycling events in Vancouver, Spain or Germany. There have been arrests in Seattle during the Solstice Parade, but charges were dropped and police do not generally engage the naked cyclists during that event anymore. One of the other arrests at that event was due to an situation where one of the bicyclists accidentally hit a child on the parade route. Just bicycle responsibly and use common sense.

The only arrest that has ever been made at a WNBR event was on February 13, 2005 in Auckland. More info at the Enzyme WNBR web site

WNBR is not just a ride against oil dependency, its a ride for self-empowerment.

[ This section written by Conrad (Vancouver) and Daniel (Seattle) ]

Isn't public nudity offensive?

"Laws against public nudity stem from people's unease with the human body. It makes people uneasy that others are comfortable enough to be naked in public, when they are not." - Katie Mann, from article in Going Natural, Vol 17, No 2

People are offended by all kinds of harmless things, people and ideas. People have been offended by Martin Luther King, Jesus, Gandhi, the accidental exposure of Janet Jackson's breasts, rock'n'roll, sex education, tattoos, dancing, the peace movement, environmentalists, droopy pants, "minority" groups, potbellies, hairy chests, Teletubbies, and most likely even you at some point.

For a good essay looking at this issue look at The Offence of Public Nudity by Mark Storey

What about the children? Aren't they especially at risk from the adverse consequences of seeing naked people?

   "A child who has never been allowed to see his parents and brothers and sisters naked sees nudity as something shocking." - Dr. Helga Fleischhauer-Hardt, Show Me (New York: St. Martin`s Press, 1975).

The idea that somehow children are negatively affected by non-sexualized nudity is a myth. Children are more likely to be curious if nudity was discouraged in their family. The only thing prudish parents have to worry about is that their children might want to get naked themselves if it looks like people are having fun. As children grow older they are more likely to resent repressive parents if they think they lack common sensibilities.

Image at right come from the German bicycling event, Radtour 2001 June 14, 2001.

   Being natural and matter-of-fact about nudity prevents your children from developing an attitude of shame or disgust about the human body. If parents are very secretive about their bodies and go to great lengths to prevent their children from ever seeing a buttock or breast, children will wonder what is so unusual, and even alarming, about human nudity. - Dr. Lee Salk, psychiatrist

What about paedophiles and perverts who might try to become aggressive and take advantage of the situation?

People should not avoid riding bicycles because they are afraid of negligent drivers. People should not avoid getting naked in public or at home because of their fear of paedophiles and perverts or prying neighbours who want to clog up the courts with frivolous lawsuits. Who wins when you change the way you live out of fear? Think about it.

Problem behaviour can be dealt with directly by confronting people who are behaving inappropriately and alerting law enforcement authorities if the behaviour continues to be suspicious or the individual becomes a threat.

Finding or organising a local ride

Can you tell me if there is a local event being organized in my city or region?

Find a ride by country on the main page, or look over the list of upcoming rides. If you don't see a ride close by, perhaps it is time for you to start networking and organize your own ride! Organizing a ride is almost as fun as the ride itself! You'll be amazed what you will be able to do.

How can I organize or get involved in a local ride?

You are invited to not only ride with us but also to help organize a WNBR event in the city of your choosing. All you have to do is fill out the sign-up form (at http://worldnakedbikeride.org) and we will help you set up a web page with all the necessary information, such as meeting and after party location. There are other resources on the main WNBR site as well that you may find interesting and useful. There resources include info on helping you promote an event and other ideas and suggestions for organizing rides.

Anybody who wants to organize a meeting to organize a ride, please post it on the main announcement list.

Anybody who wants to volunteer can do any of the following:

  • contact the coordinator in that city,
  • become a coordinator in that city,
  • attend meetings
  • design a flyer and post to the main web site
  • join the discussion groups. A list of all the discussion groups is on the at http://worldnakedbikeride.org
  • make a donation to your local coordinator; ( don't leave them saddled with the debts ).
  • if you want to get involved and your local coordinator is not helping, organize your own ride.

The World Naked Bike Ride belongs to everybody.

That means that you are entirely welcome to organize your own naked bike ride as long as your event is a protest against oil dependency and participants have the option to ride their bikes naked, the main WNBR web site will promote your event.

How can I contact local WNBR event coordination teams?

Search for a ride by country on the main page, or look over the list of upcoming rides by city. Sometimes contact info is there.

If not you can use the form on the main page after selecting an existing ride from the pull-down menu and then posting your comments or questions to the coordination team in the comments/question area of the form. Then hit submit.

If that does not work, one can then join the main or regional WNBR groups and ask your question of the coordination team there.

How many participants do I need to have a successful WNBR event?

It's not about the size of the event.

WNBR is not a competition, its about the empowerment of the individual. A ride with only two people can be just as successful as a ride with 400.

Even though there was a really cold autumn rain storm in Brazil June 12th 2004 the WNBR event went ahead as planned. Two really cold and completely naked cyclists took to the streets of Brazil. It often takes more courage to do something when you are all alone than when you are in a big group.

The first naked bike ride that we organized in Vancouver had only 13 people; but it was the best ride we ever organized. Even though we had only 13 cyclists we cycled straight past the biggest police station in Vancouver and we didn't do it quietly either.

Courage is the first step towards solutions.

- Conrad Schmidt, 22 January 2005

About WNBR

What is World Naked Bike Ride all about?

World Naked Bike Ride (WNBR) is about protesting oil dependency and celebrating the power and individuality of our bodies. Naked bicycle people power!

What does riding bikes naked have to do with protesting oil dependency?

We face automobile traffic with our naked bodies as the best way of defending our dignity and exposing the unique dangers faced by cyclists and pedestrians as well as the negative consequences we all face due to dependence on oil, and other forms of non-renewable energy.

It looks more like a joy ride or party than a protest. Why should WNBR be taken seriously as a form of political expression?

   "Be the change you want to see in the world." - Gandhi

Having fun and doing public outreach are not mutually exclusive goals. People see us on the streets and you can see the gears turning in their heads. People see a large group of cyclists and they think to themselves, what is this, why are they doing that? It won't take long for them to figure out that by doing something different, by immersing ourselves in lanes intended for cars and not for bicycles, by tossing our clothes and rejecting our shame, we are protesting a way of life which needs to abandoned.

We paint our bodies with political messages or beautiful designs to complement our forms. We pass out flyers informing the public about our message. We use portable public address systems or raise our voices and chant in unison

Getting people to laugh and smile is a great way to connect and share ideas in a non-threatening way. We realize there will always be the occasional grinch that just can't share the road with cyclists or stand the sight of a natural human being. Fortunately for us, their numbers are decreasing and ours are increasing.

What is the appeal of WNBR? Why do people do it? Why has it grown so fast?

   "Everybody should run through the streets [naked] at least once. If you can do that, chances are you can have a lot of fun in other areas of your life." - Madonna, singer

WNBR is highly infectious. Its message and image has immediate widespread appeal. It operates on a simple, scaleable model, relies on grassroots promotion, and integrates easily into collaborative projects and interests in the vast majority of progressive communities across the globe. It is no wonder that events are rapidly spreading to other cities all over the globe!

   If you see someone you know while riding, it's easy to stop and say hello. Bicycles create public space, enhance street life and build a sense of community. - Go by Bicycle

WNBR is not just a great event for spectators, visiting tourists and the general public, it is an amazing experience that everybody can either participate in, witness or support at whatever level they are comfortable.

People love the idea of participating in a ride that celebrates the natural beauty of the human body, the shameless freedom and innocent sensual pleasure from not wearing clothes while travelling pollution-free through the breeze through our communities. Auroroa Denai, one of Chicago's high-energy riders, urges her fellow riders to

   ...inject the hearts of our neighbourhoods with the reality of our beautiful bodies which have developed over millions of years into their current perfect beingness. Join hundreds of naked compatriots in a free, non-sexual, fun bike ride.

They also enjoy engaging the public in a cheerful, light-hearted way about a very serious threat to the entire globe – oil dependency and car culture. For some it is also a great feeling to stick it to the man, to challenge the status quo, and raise the blood pressure of prudes and gas guzzlers alike. We have noticed that the same people who support the oil industry and a culture of complacency on important environmental issues tend to also be repressive of other peoples' personal freedom.

   If you stand in a closed garage with a running car, you will die in a matter of minutes. Hundreds of thousands of cars in our cities create dirty, unhealthy air. - Go by Bicycle
   Terrorist organizations use our gas money. In order to protect political and corporate interests, the United States supports dictatorial regimes in the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, which is the number one producer of oil in the world. 15 of the 19 September hijackers were Saudi. Iraq is the second largest producer of oil, and Kuwait the third. Do those countries sound familiar? The government supported Saddam through his worst atrocities, then Saddam began to disobey U.S. orders. That is precisely when he became our enemy. - Go by Bicycle

Others see it as delivering a very powerful, life-affirming, basic message. Conrad Schmidt of The Work Less Party and part of the Vancouver, BC WNBR team has this to say:

   Our message to the world is one of simplification, human harmony and love. For a future to exist for tomorrows generations, we have to stop wasting the life blood energy of the Earth, stop fighting and killing in the name of consumerist wealth accumulation and learn to love and respect all life on this planet.

This sounds a lot like Critical Mass bike rides. Are you trying to disrupt or stop traffic? Are you a bunch of agitators?

We are not STOPPING traffic, we ARE traffic! Critical Mass and other bike activist groups promote awareness of cyclists out of necessity — many cyclists are seriously injured and killed by careless drivers. That includes commuters, students, children, police officers on bicycles, every body is at risk in a society that promotes car culture over cyclist culture and walkable communities.

Many roads were not built for bicycle traffic, many communities were not designed to take advantage of the world's most efficient means of personal transport. Instead, we have subordinated our common sense and community values to the requirements of large, expensive, dangerous, loud, and polluting vehicles. Oil has become one of our most important commodities despite its inherit evils, despite the costs of war and innocent lives. No wild area is too pristine to mine this "black gold". This must change.

   "Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer despair for the human race." (H G Wells)

Like Critical Mass, WNBR aims to promote bicycle transportation and recreation, walkable communities, and environmentally-responsibility, sustainable solutions to living in the 21st century. Who can turn down the opportunity to be free of emissions, free parking, and the free feeling?

Is there a main discussion group or local discussion groups for World Naked Bike Ride that I can join?

Yes, people who support the message of WNBR are invited to join the main discussion group at

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WorldNakedBikeRide/

Several of the cities or countries will also have local, grassroots discussion groups that you can join. You can find a listing of those groups on the list of upcoming rides.

Where can I find out more about past WNBR events?

Visit the WNBR past events page.

Who is endorsing and supporting WNBR?

World Naked Bike Ride (WNBR) is being organized and supported by many different groups. The groups are only connected by their determination to all be naked on their bikes June 11th, riding in celebration, jubilation to deliver a vision of a cleaner, safer, body-positive world to the masses. Yes, we have many great reasons to be celebrating June 11th with all the glory of naked two wheel sanity. It's time to join hundreds of naked compatriots in a free, non-sexual, fun bike ride!

What kind of media coverage have you had? Do you have any links to past coverage?

What is the deal with The Sydney Body Art Ride (SBAR)? I hear they required people to wear a minimum amount of clothing during the Feb 2005 event. Is SBAR a WNBR event?

The Sydney Body Art Ride (SBAR) was initially going to be a WNBR-affiliated Valentine's Day 2005 event, until WNBR organizers found out that their dress code policy was requiring people to wear a minimum amount of clothing around their waist. There was a large uproar and it was decided that the SBAR dress code and message was not in line with that of WNBR. Of course, just because it is a non-WNBR ride does not mean the ride would not be fun, or have value, or indicate that WNBR riders will not participate.

What is the history of WNBR?

Photo of the 2003 Bare As You Dare bikers courtesy of Artists For Peace. Click on image for larger view.

Above image courtesy of Manifestación Ciclonudista, from ride in 2002.

The World Naked Bike Ride (WNBR) group was created by Daniel and Conrad to help coordinate a large international naked bike ride between many different activist groups across the World. The World's first international naked bike ride in 2004 was a collaboration between the WNBR group which rode on June 12th and Manifestación Ciclonudista in Spain which rode on June 19th.

Prior to the June 2004 World Naked bike ride, there were two independent organizations organizing very similar events with virtually identical messages of protesting oil dependency, they were Artists for Peace in Canada and Manifestación Ciclonudista in Spain. Despite having virtually identical messages neither of these groups even knew of the existence of the other. -

Pretty Cool, huh?!

Where can I find out more about the history of naked cycling in general?

Visit the naked cycling history page. For media coverage, collaborative partners, and endorsements click here.

Why are there not more riders who are women, teens, pregnant, obese, elderly, Mormon, disabled, Muslim, et cetera? Why are there no rides scheduled for Africa? Why are most of the riders white? Why are the rides primarily in western countries?

Everybody is invited not only to participate in local rides but also organize rides in their own cities.

What kind of people participate in WNBR?

People from all walks of life and beliefs. We have families with children, engineers, university professors, carpenters, environmentalists, sport cyclists, gardeners, multimedia artists, bike activists, naturists/nudists, social activists, therapists, poets, city workers, lots of college students, artists, millionaires, people who are living in poverty, Burning Man people, union workers, legal professionals, people who are just curious what it would be like to ride — people just like you! You would be surprised!

   "It is an interesting question how far people would retain their relative rank if they were divested of their clothes." - Henry David Thoreau

Why would anybody embrace public nudity?

   "The visual appearance of the human body is our human identity and we should not be forced to fear or hide our identity." - Vincent Bethell

Non-sexualized, colourful and creative nakedness in uptight societies is a refreshing way to remind people of some of the fundamental freedoms of life that people have collectively handed over, without really thinking of the consequences. Its about body-positive values: living a healthy life in tune with, not against, our environment; respecting the natural beauty and diversity of human bodies; and establishing and projecting a positive self-image and rejecting shame.

   Watch any TV show, listen to any radio program, look through any magazine or newspaper and you will come across ads showing how cars will make you cool, sexy, popular, respected, at one with nature, safe, etc. The car and oil industries spend billions of dollars each year to promote a benign image of driving, but the function of all this is to assure profits and manipulate consumers, and nothing more. - Go by Bicycle

Are there any kind of fundraising items you are selling?

Yes, we have WNBR T-shirts. Funds from the T-shirt go into a legal fund for the defence of arrested cyclists.

Can you please send me some pictures of naked people?

Sorry, probably not. There are plenty of pictures available all over the web. We encourage active participation in the ride itself.

Can I write off my generous financial contributions to World Naked Bike Ride on my tax return?

Thank you for offering to help out. Please contact your local WNBR event coordinator for details about making donations.