Meet Your Neighbors
Ed Bartunek:
Pedaling Conservation

Bartunek,
biking through an open woods CAMBr has helped restore, argues that dirt
“single-track” trails can work in harmony with the landscape.
Photo: Dave Jagodzinski
When
Ed Bartunek first started riding his mountain bike through Chicago-area
forest preserves, he was simply looking to have some fun. Today he’s
become a leader in the mountain biking community, and an active steward
of the natural areas where he rides.
Bartunek worked as a network administrator for Procter & Gamble for 25 years and owned a bar in Berwyn, The Harlem Avenue Lounge,
for nearly 20 years. The 55-year-old resident of southwest-suburban
Stickney, Illinois, took some of his first rides along the Salt Creek Bike Trail and in the Palos Forest Preserves.
But he couldn’t devote much time to riding until he retired from
Procter & Gamble in 1995. Shortly after that, he decided to sell
the bar, in part because of his growing interest in mountain biking.
Bartunek
says a group of guys would come in to his bar after rides and talk for
hours about their experience on the trails. “I got stuck working
Sundays and had to miss the rides,” he says.
After Bartunek
sold the bar, he met a group of mountain bikers who invited him to join
them to work on the trails, ride, and barbeque. “So I decided to give
it a try,” he says, “and they had me hooked. I love being outside on my
bike or doing restoration work. I just enjoy being in nature.”
The
restoration work Bartunek refers to includes more than just maintaining
trails. His trips to the local forest preserves inspired him to learn
more about caring for them, so he started attending restoration
workdays, often at Theodore Stone Woods. Next he took classes on controlled burning and herbicide use, and he is now a certified master steward.
Bartunek
is also currently executive director of the Chicago Area Mountain
Bikers (CAMBr) and the Chicagoland representative for the International
Mountain Bicycling Association. He works to build good relations
between mountain bikers and the Forest Preserve District, restoration
groups, hikers, and equestrians, groups that sometimes express
different ideas about proper use of the preserves. Bartunek says many
people still have an image of mountain bikers as young, wild, and
destructive — like those depicted on a Mountain Dew
commercial.
But the amicable Bartunek emphasizes the common
interest all groups have in caring for and enjoying the region’s
natural areas. CAMBr, with 400 paid members and more than 1,200 people
on its e-mail list, promotes responsible trail
use — reminding riders to stay on trails marked for mountain
bikes, to ride only when the trails are dry or frozen, and to be
friendly and courteous to other preserve users.
CAMBr also
encourages mountain bikers to help out in the local forest preserves.
CAMBr workdays, overseen by Bartunek, involve trail maintenance,
cleanup, and even habitat restoration, where the bikers remove invasive
buckthorn and honeysuckle. The CAMBr workdays focus only on the areas
extending ten feet to either side of the trails, but Bartunek also
encourages bikers to volunteer in other parts of the preserves. At one
workday at Theodore Stone Woods, he says, the volunteer mountain bikers
outnumbered the regular restoration volunteers.
Many
restoration advocates are wary of mountain bikers riding in local
preserves. Renegade mountain bikers have removed or destroyed trail
markers and carved new trails through sensitive plant communities, and
some trails have caused erosion nightmares (see our profile on Deer Grove).
But mountain bikers, Bartunek included, generally prefer narrow,
single-track dirt trails to the wider, crushed limestone trails found
in some preserves. “The crushed limestone is like a highway,” he says.
“On the primitive trails you go slower and really pay attention to the
plants and animals.” CAMBr argues that well-designed single-track can
have less ecological and aesthetic impact. Keeping well-placed trails
well-marked is essential, says Bartunek, since they keep riders away
from sensitive areas.
Bartunek takes this pro-biker message to
public meetings and nearly everywhere else he goes. He wants officials
and other forest preserve users to know that mountain bikers can be
good citizens who help to care for the places where they love to ride.
— Stephanie Folk