A month of trails

My month of trails: the Hudson River Greenway, the 606/Bloomingdale Trail and the Chicago Lakefront, plus the Lawrence Hopewell Trail by moonlight.

For me, August turned out to be a month of riding on trails.

First up: the Hudson River Greenway in Manhattan, as part of the bucket-list Manhattan Loop Ride with the East Coast Greenway. About 40 of us rode to almost the northern tip of Manhattan (and getting a look from below at the newly reopened High Bridge), then down along the Hudson, around Battery Park and up the East River Greenway until it peters out just south of the United Nations.

While there is a stretch along the river north of the U.N., it dies again at one point, and you need to know your way through Harlem to get to another piece of greenway — and then not miss the hidden sharp left halfway down the ramp to the Harlem River Drive. Close the gap and add some signs!

Here’s the group in front of a fake Grecian temple with the New Jersey Palisades in the background. This sitting area north of the George Washington Bridge was built in 1925.

manhattan bike ride

Then off to Chicago, where I took a Divvy Bike (Chicago’s bikeshare program) to check out the Bloomingdale Trail and the 606 (trail + parks). Just wonderful!

On the Bloomingdale Trail
On the Bloomingdale Trail

It is twice the length of New York City’s High Line, plus wider and open for bikes. Sweeping on-off ramps make it so accessible. The plantings are still going in so it’s not as lush (and won’t be as precious — but you can see the work of the High Line’s designer in the Lurie Gardens in Chicago’s Millennium Park).

And I finally got to bike along Lake Michigan too. I admit it didn’t take long for me to fall in love with Chicago all over again.

August 2015 065

My East Coast Greenway training rides generally haven’t been that arduous this month — blame a lack of time. But I did bike down to the Shore again and again hit the few miles of trail that make up the stalled Capital to Coast Trail.

The month ended with a six-mile moonlight bike ride on part of the almost-finished Lawrence Hopewell Trail, which connects to the East Coast Greenway. Despite the full moon, there wasn’t enough light to cycle without a light (though some people certainly tried). I didn’t see any crashes, thankfully. The organizers smartly sent people headed off in waves, although there were still plenty of people to watch out for. You wondered when some were last on a bike! But at least they were on one!

August 2015 133

Loved being able to glance at the moonlit lake, even if I waited until the end to actually stop. The crunch of tires on gravel drowned out most of the sounds of bugs and other bits of nature. Next time I’d either start late or make sure I have enough power in my lights to do a second loop.

And one day I’ll make it to that moonlight ride around Manhattan.

In the meantime, a video from the Moonlight Ride:

#GetSomeoneRiding

neighborhood kids bikesLove this!

Bicycling magazine is asking everyone to get just one nonrider on a bike with its #GetSomeoneRiding campaign.

I’ll claim credit for getting a neighbor riding — and now she calls herself a bike evangelist. She’s gotten her daughter riding, then her husband — and now some relatives, after taking them on a trail in Connecticut that is part of the East Coast Greenway.

I have colleagues who think it’s insane to bike in New York City because it just doesn’t feel safe. I say try the Hudson River Greenway, look at the bike maps for bike lanes and start with that.

But this is why I love the East Coast Greenway project. It’s about linking trails and linking cities, and it helps inspire cities to do more (because the East Coast Greenway, as awesome as it is, isn’t enough). Too many bike lanes and trails just … end. And that is frustrating for anyone seeking a safe way to get to where they’re going without a car.

Today I led the neighborhood kids around the block in a bike parade, led by some of the soon-to-kindergartners. And then I helped a 3-year-old start to get the hang of pedaling on her bike with training wheels. She has no tricycle experience, so she’s still learning the concept of pedaling. But hearing her joyous laugh as I helped move her legs and she saw she was moving on a bike, just like the big kids … priceless.

Soon she’ll be pedaling on her own and be one of the 300 million reasons we need trails and other safe places to bike.

Bike around Manhattan!

This is a bucket-list ride: A 32-mile Manhattan Loop ride, and part of it is on the East Coast Greenway.

The group gets ready for the Four-Island Bike Ride earlier this year
The group gets ready for the Four-Island Bike Ride earlier this year

This is a bucket-list ride: A 32-mile ride that goes around Manhattan, using part of the East Coast Greenway.

We’ll start along the East River and go north and counter-clockwise, through Harlem and along the Harlem River Park Greenway, eventually west to the amazing Hudson River Greenway all the way to Battery Park and then north along the East River … until the gap south of the United Nations, where the ride ends.

There are some streets and traffic to negotiate, especially on the east side, but mostly on-street bike lanes. There are some hills on northern sections.

The ride is Aug. 2 (rain date Aug. 9) and will go at an easy-going 10-13 mph, with stops. Yes, we will be riding as a group.

It’s sponsored by the ECG’s New York Committee. This is New York City, so yes, there is a charge. BUT it’s free for East Coast Greenway members, and if you are one of my sponsors for the East Coast Greenway’s Week-a-Year bike tour in October, you probably qualify as a member.

And the group will be far, far, far smaller than the insane number on the 42-mile 5-Borough Bike Tour.

Sign up here!

Roadside raspberries

Stopped for a berry break on my ride today. Great mix of sweet and tang.

roadside berries2Stopped for a berry break on my ride today. Great mix of sweet and tang.

33 miles, and then a second, six-miler to pick up a few items from a store. Tough spin class on Saturday. The start of getting serious about my training?

A giveaway for my supporters

I’ve got something to offer all my East Coast Greenway supporters in the Philadelphia area.

Who wants?
Who wants?

Thank you, everyone who has supported the East Coast Greenway through my ride this year and last year. You’ve all been so generous. Beyond the regular updates on training and the ride, I’ve got something (small) to offer all of you in the Philadelphia area (or with friends in the Philly area) in return.

Wawa fans, who wants any of my four my coupons for $1 off a shorti hoagie? (Expire Sept. 30.) And I’ve got four promotional cards from Chick-fil-A for a free chicken sandwich or chicken nuggets from Philly-area restaurants that expire at the end of the year. These were handed out a recent Trenton Thunder game and I’m happy to pass them on.

Someone must be a Wawa or Chick-fil-A fan, or know someone who is!

I’ll work on a proper East Coast Greenway giveaway next.

Thanks for following this blog and for your encouragement. And anyone who wants to go for a ride, just let me know.

Time to fundraise

One part of this East Coast Greenway ride involves fundraising. Here’s the plea. Thank you for your support.

East-Coast-Greenway-logoOne part of this East Coast Greenway ride involves fundraising. Here’s the plea. Thanks to all who have already responded so generously. For everyone else, please consider supporting me and the East Coast Greenway.

Friends,

Once again I’m doing a week-long bike ride for charity and like last year, it is for the East Coast Greenway, an amazing project to string together 2,900 miles of (generally paved) trails through major cities from the Canadian border in Maine down to Key West. Already 30% of the route is away from traffic (such as the D&R Canal towpath and Manhattan’s Hudson River Greenway), and another big chunk is on quieter roads.

Working with governments at all levels to close the gaps is a Herculean effort, but the benefits are enormous — for people young, old and in between, and for those who bike, walk, run .. even cross-country ski.

You can help close one gap just by signing this petition

I’ll be riding 325 miles over six days with about 40 other people, getting a first-hand look at the route from Fredericksburg, Virginia (where last year’s ride ended), to Raleigh, North Carolina. We’ll be paying our own way, so your tax-deductible donation goes straight to the East Coast Greenway Alliance. Everyone who donates at least $25 gets a one-year membership in the ECGA. All those in the New York area, that means there are some ECGA-organized bike rides in NYC that you can do without paying the usual free. I can tell you all about them.

I’ll once again be blogging the ride (and my training), and I hope you’ll follow along.

And you can donate online here.

Finally, should you know anyone who’d like to ride, send them my way!

The sights of New Brunswick’s Ciclovia

Here’s what I saw at Ciclovia and what I discovered in Johnson Park across the river.

Today was a chance to explore a bit of New Brunswick and Johnson Park in Piscataway, as New Brunswick shut down a few miles of street to traffic and turned it over to the people in one of the year’s three Ciclovias. We — a group of five — arrived just as it began, and by the time we left after  ice cream, er lunch, kids had taken over with their bikes and trikes, found the bouncy castle and were cooling off with a temporary fountain:

ciclovia little girl

ciclovia water splash

I got a smattering of that spray and oh did that feel good in the day’s heat!

A colleague took us beyond Ciclovia and guess what I found:

ecg mileage sign in new brunswickecg nj sign

Yes, New Brunswick wants to make one of the river crossings more bike-friendly!

What else did we discover off the bike-friendly trails in Johnson Park?

We wandered around the East Jersey Old Time Village and saw a man going around the racetrack with a horse and carriage. We glimpsed a cricket match:

cricket in johnson park

and rode under the railroad bridge:

johnson park rr bridge

And if blogs could smell, I’d share a whiff of sun-ripened fresh strawberries at the pick-your-own place we cycled past on the way home.

Gearing up for Ciclovia in New Brunswick

cicloviaOn Sunday I’ll be riding with some friends (and the Brit!) to New Brunswick for the summer Ciclovia — one of three times in the year when some city streets are closed to traffic and opened to the people for biking, walking, playing.

Though New Brunswick is on the East Coast Greenway, we’re passing up the trail (ie towpath) and opting for a shorter 20 miles of mostly quiet roads instead. And there’s always the train for those who don’t want to ride another 20 miles home. Our experience at last summer’s Ciclovia was that the streets aren’t anywhere as packed as when New York City shuts down Park Avenue for Summer Saturdays in August — but then New Brunswick is never as packed as New York!

A bonus: One of the people in the group has only recently become comfortable riding with traffic — but he’s now so comfortable that he’s ridden out to the Shore!

My National Trails Day weekend

A 27-mile bike ride, a spin class and teaching bike safety to the neighborhood kids.

Ready for a bike lesson
Ready for a bike lesson

Here’s the rundown: A casual, flat 27-mile loop ride to Allentown NJ with one of last year’s East Coast Greenway Week-A-Year riders (with about 3 miles of trail), a one-hour spin class that probably covered about 20 miles (I go so much faster in spin class than on the road!) — and teaching the neighborhood kids about helmet fitting and bike safety before taking them on a parade around the block as part of a neighborhood party.

What I’m already learning about Virginia bike trails

One article about a small section of trail in Virginia leads to the discovery of Virginia’s awesome plans for long-distance bike routes.

bike virginiaOne article in my Google Alerts, about a two-mile section of a Virginia trail called the Seaboard Coastline Trail, sends me down a rabbit hole.

It’s a trail I hadn’t heard of, in a town called Suffolk, in a part of Virginia I’ve never visited, so of course I want to know where it is and whether it’s part of the East Coast Greenway‘s coastal route (I think so, because another part of the trail is). To boot, this year’s week-long fundraising ride for the East Coast Greenway is mostly in Virginia.

But it gets better. Another article says the trail will eventually be 11.5 miles long and part of something bigger called the South Hampton Roads Trail, eventually a 41-mile trail between Suffolk and Virginia Beach. This same page from the regional planning commission describes two other trails that will go through the area, including one called the Beaches to Bluegrass Trail (B2B) that will traverse the entire state. And it’s supposed to be more than 400 miles long, though not necessarily all trail. It’s seen as one of six trunkline trails in Virginia (the East Coast Greenway is another).

The conceptual plan for that one was finalized late last year. Now I know these things take an awfully long time before they become reality. But linking trails makes each one more powerful — and would get someone like me to spend more time exploring the state on a bike (and boosting small-town economies.) I’ll be watching for updates and one day planning my ride.