Saturday, May 19, 2018

Iowabama


















Let me see, how to tie my new t-shirt (gift from Patty) to this blog? Perhaps, a touring T for the Vermont bike tour in July. Iowa just passed the nation's most restrictive and clearly, for now anyway, unconstitutional anti-choice legislation. The Troglodyte Iowa GOP, who hate women of all kinds (except perhaps The Dark Pence's wife, Ofmike) no doubt hope to provoke a Supreme Court challenge to this 1950's law.

Monday, May 14, 2018

Bike Touring by Train: The Vermonter

The Vermonter, which runs daily between St. Albans, Vermont and Washington's Union Station.
This will be my third bike tour using trains to get there and back, for at least part of the journey. In 2013, my biking partner Pat and I took the Capitol Limited to Pittsburg back from Washington, D.C., after riding 300+ miles on the Great Allegheny Passage and the C.&O. Canal towpath trails from Pittsburg to Washington.


Somewhere along the C&O Canal towpath, May 2013. The trail was quite rough in spots, with protruding rocks and tree trunks, a condition exacerbated by the park closures caused by Republicans (who else?).







Somewhere along the Great Allegheny Passage trail, probably in Ohio, May 2013.

The second such tour happened in 2014, when Pat and I rode the Empire Builder from St. Paul, Minnesota, to Portland, Oregon and back for a week-long 500-mile tour. That trip included a trip down the Oregon coast, a haul over the mountains from Florence to Eugene, and a return to Portland up the Willamette Valley. Both times we were required to take off our pedals and bags, turn our handlebars 90 degrees, and box up our bikes. That has all changed as Amtrak now allows roll-on service on nearly all of its routes. And I must say, the Empire Builder, which shares the track with freight trains, was quite late both out and back as we people had to give the right-of-way to cargo. Ain't capitalism great?

After arriving in Portland, Oregon, we waited a couple hours for the bus to Astoria, on the very northernmost coast, to begin our tour the next morning.

One of the $5/night hiker-biker campgrounds that dot the Oregon Coast. We were the only campers that night. The jam-packed RV campground next door (where we showered) was luckily out of earshot, especially with the sounds of crashing waves that lulled us to sleep.
During our trip from Florence to Eugene, about a 90 mile day, before we hit the mountain climbs.



This trip, we'll board the train in Galesburg, Illinois (my buddy Dean lives in Bettendorf, an hour north)  and switch to the Capitol Limited at Chicago's Union Station. We'll spend an overnight in Washington, staying with relatives in Bethesda, Maryland. Then, the next morning early, we'll ride back down to Union Station, hang our bikes in separate cars on the Vermonter (one bike allowed per passenger car for a total of three per train), and enjoy the 12-hour+ ride to Essex Junction (Burlington). I hope to get a lot of reading in on this trip.



The return trip will be on the Vermonter to Springfield, Massachusetts, where we switch to the overnight Lake Shore Limited into Chicago.



























We did spring for business-class seats and sleeper cars for our overnight legs. An admitted acquiescence to age.



Thursday, May 10, 2018

Vermont Bicycle Tour 2018


Returning to my old stomping grounds for a little bike tour in July. I haven't biked in Vermont since attending Middlebury College in the 1980s. Some killer hills going east-west over the Green Mountains. The loop we're taking starts and ends in Burlington, with forays into Quebec, New Hampshire, and New York. About 400 miles spread out over a leisurely seven days. We'll mostly be camping but for two nights. This nerdy post is mostly about my infatuation with the new Adventure Cycling Route Navigator App that allows you to navigate all their routes with your phone and Google Maps.


This is the overview from Adventure Cycling. I bought the detailed map set, but their new app renders that somewhat obsolete.
The app, which works on a phone or a tablet, shows campgrounds, cities, hotels and B&Bs. bike shops, grocery stores, etc. This can be turned on or off as needed. Above, I have only campgrounds showing for less clutter.
You can also select two points on the map, mark them with the green and red push pins at beginning and end. Then you can get an elevation gain profile and distance, helpful for the lazy hoping to avoid a mountain or two.
Clicking on an icon brings up a tag with a name and distance from the route, in this case, a bike shop.
Clicking on the tab brings up a map, address, a phone number, and a link to dial it.


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Scroll down for new videos. Now for a tortured segue between my last post—from February 10—and today’s. Last time out I reported completing ...