Coincidentally, the day that I brought home the electric Yuba Boda Boda bike was the day that the city of Portland decided to start a major construction project on the thoroughfare that goes by my house.
For a week, car commuters have been wandering around in a daze, finding their way through a maze of detours. “It’s like they’re a bunch of ants and their home has been destroyed,” our babysitter mused. I’ve bypassed all the confusion by e-biking to the construction site and walking my daughter and myself through the crosswalk.
Contrary to what my colleagues think (I love you guys!), I don’t believe that the bike revolution will happen when infrastructure improves. You see, I live in Portland, one of the most famously bike-friendly cities in the country. I’m (relatively) young, I don’t have a disability, and almost all of my destinations are less than a mile from my house, reachable through quiet residential roads.
Even armed with the best intentions, ideal circumstances, and gear, there are still some days when it’s just faster to pop my screaming toddler into a carseat than to get on my bike and do a SoulCycle-esque uphill sprint to her daycare. I don’t think people will take to biking en masse until it’s faster and easier to bike than it is to drive a car.
For the first time since I’ve become a mom, the electric Yuba Boda Boda has made that possible. It’s faster and easier to wheel the Boda Boda out of my garage, strap my toddler on the back, and e-bike, than it is to get in my car. The sound of my toddler shrieking, “This is so fun!” from the bike’s seat behind me is just a bonus.
Unlike the Yuba Supermarche, the electric Boda Boda is really easy to ride. It has a more compact aluminum frame with an extended rear rack, and comes in either a step-through or a step-over option. It has a 1.5-inch Chromoly fork, hydraulic disc brakes, and big, fat, 26-inch Cruz commuter tires. The tester model was in a wonderful bright teal color, and it was easy to adjust the seat and handlebars to fit my 5 foot, 2 inch height.
Yuba informed me that they don’t do home delivery, so I would have to pick up the bike myself at the retailer. I don’t own a vehicle big enough to fit the bike inside, and it wouldn't fit on my roof rack. No matter, I said. I’d just ride it fifteen miles home.
The electric Boda Boda is kitted out with the e6000 Shimano Steps motor, which is an intelligent, weatherproof electric system with an integrated computer that assists you when you’re walking or riding the bike. It made the ride from the bike shop back to my house a total breeze.
The Steps system provides up to 50 newton meters of torque while pedaling. It automatically downshifts to a lower gear for an easier start, and even while stopping and starting on steep hills (curse you, stoplights!), I never felt like I had a hard time getting going.
Because the system provides power only when you need it, the motor has a colossal range of up to 93 miles, or around six hours, on one charge. That initial 15-mile bike ride on high assistance ate up only 24 percent of the battery life, even when I was hauling ass uphill at around 20 mph. If you ever want to surprise dedicated bike commuters, I suggest putting a Shimano Steps motor on the mom-liest bike of all time and waving as you pass them, hunched over in their racing crouches. I felt the way Paul Newman must have when he dropped a V8 engine in his tiny VW Bug.