An Open Letter to Lime Scooter Riders in Evansville
Hi. We ve never met (I don t think), but we need to talk.
I see you re enjoying the newest toy we have to play with around downtown Evansville. They look like a good time. I haven t ridden one yet, and truthfully, I m not sure that I will. I m kind of afraid I won t be able to keep my balance or stop it in time and end up eating a mouthful of concrete when I flip over the handlebars and plant myself facefirst into the pavement. When my kids were younger, they had one of those Razor Scooters that you push with your feet and I struggled to keep my balance on that. So, I can only imagine the difficulty I d have trying to ride a motorized version.
An Open Letter to Lime Scooter Riders in Evansville
Hi. We ve never met (I don t think), but we need to talk.
I see you re enjoying the newest toy we have to play with around downtown Evansville. They look like a good time. I haven t ridden one yet, and truthfully, I m not sure that I will. I m kind of afraid I won t be able to keep my balance or stop it in time and end up eating a mouthful of concrete when I flip over the handlebars and plant myself facefirst into the pavement. When my kids were younger, they had one of those Razor Scooters that you push with your feet and I struggled to keep my balance on that. So, I can only imagine the difficulty I d have trying to ride a motorized version.
Jenna Gorzalka and her twin girls, Lyric and Loralei, wait for the hunt to start.
It was a colorful scene on Saturday as 53 kids and their families, totaling nearly 130 people from the Clearmont area as well as many from Buffalo, came to hunt plastic Easter Eggs filled with candy, and to be entered in a draw to win various other prizes.
The hunt started at 10 a.m., with three areas of the Arvada-Clearmont school set aside for various age groups to find the Easter Eggs.
“This is an annual event, and this is the 6
th year we have hosted it,” Sarah Walker, Rec District Manager. said. “My husband, three kids and my mother helped me to fill 1627 plastic eggs with candy for the hunt.” Most of the eggs were returned to the Rec District to be used again, however youngsters could keep the eggs if they wanted.