Part of my commute to work everyday. |
First, I thought that it is kind of weird that we don't think about our "own back yards" as a place to find adventure much. Oh, there are folks who do this, but I think many do not think they can have an "epic' ride unless they go to Colorado, South America, or Finland. Ya know what I mean? It's as if these certain sites and media wonks have made it so that unless you have some grandiose back drop for your bicycle ride, you can't be having a "real adventure". Now there's something all the "any bike is an adventure bike" complainers should really be getting amped up over. Forget about the bike, it's all these media sites cramming their "We went to Uruguay to ride the spine of a Piranha" crap that is dumbing down cycling adventures. I mean, we look at that stuff, realize we'll never get there, not to mention be able to afford it, and we get all down about our mundane cycling we do get to do. We don't measure up.
That's a pile of horse crap, by the way, and you can have a fantastic adventure wherever you live if you open your eyes up to it.
So I thought, hey! I have some pretty cool and varied terrain right within my city limits. So, I figured I would string together a ride to hit up a multi-terrain route and never leave the city limits of Waterloo/Cedar Falls, which blend together so seamlessly that you never know when you've crossed the border between the two. I count it as one municipality, so there!
Some paved bike path.... |
Most town/city cyclists I see do not have a clue on how to string together a route that has low/no traffic. I see so many folks riding their bikes on routes that they would drive cars on, it isn't even funny. In fact, it is down right dangerous. Invest in time to explore different, safer, and yes......more circuitous and lengthy options. It's riding a bike, for crying out loud, so if you like that, you should want the ride to take longer. That's my take, anyway.
It also leads to exploration, discovery, and yes- adventure! You know, the whole reason you probably rode away from your home when you were a kid in the first place. Relive that! Why do the county roads, same ol' training loops, and the closed loop bike paths over and over again. Take the path less pedaled, and less car driven. You'll find some cool things you never knew about your city before. I know that I do whenever I find a route, street, or path I haven't ridden on yet. Which is getting harder to do the longer I live here, by the way!
This used to be a trolley car track. Now it is a dirt path. I hope they NEVER pave it! |
Bushwhacking a short bit between other more open bits. |
What amounts to a B Level Service road in the city limits that is closed to traffic. |
Hidden gem- alleys. If you are not riding alleys you are missing out on a great amount of fun! |
So, if you have a crumbling infrastructure, rejoice and have fun with it! There are a ton of places to go have fun, even if the back drop isn't a high Rocky Mountain pass sign, or some exotic foreign landscape. Find adventure right where you live and don't let anyone say to you that it isn't as good as some far flung location with exotic names.
Great advice, GT!
ReplyDeleteGreat commentary this morning! I've been pushing people to make your own backyard adventure lately as well. No need to get out of state, just look at Google Maps and find a green space someplace within riding distance. Ride there, camp, return. Easy to create your own adventure. I'm actually getting quite bored reading the "epic" trip reports to foreign lands.
ReplyDeleteBicycling magazine is one of the worst offenders
ReplyDeleteFantastic advice! I ride with a group of people that do much the same thing. We start our rides every Tuesday with a route in mind, but rarely do we stick to the plan. It's because of these rides that I can take off from my house and string together routes that take me all over the country surrounding Fairbanks. While I would love to ride these far-off destinations, there is plenty of adventure to be had right here in my backyard.
ReplyDeletehere is the stuff you were talkin about in spades! hurry folks before you die a total failure!!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bicycling.com/rides/vacation/7-places-ride-you-die?cid=soc_BICYCLING%20magazine%20-%20bicyclingmag_FBPAGE_Bicycling__
Excellent point! It ain't always about the dollar bill.
ReplyDeleteI love this. Great post.
ReplyDeleteI coudn't agree with you more. Traveling to far off lands is great but you make your adventures where you are. Here's a link to a video of my morning adventure. Nothing more beautiful than a Midwestern morning sky. Thanks Guitar Ted , you are an inspiration.
ReplyDeletehttps://vimeo.com/65982972
those gravel alleys are backyard gold for kids... at least they were for us. we'd find spare/old doors or boards and build ramps for our dirt/bmx bikes... you can ride all over town on those alleys, just need to use your fisheye vision at intersections. i will still lead my kids down the gravel alley-ways in town when we ride, they love it. and AMEN to the bike route vs car route logic... college students seem notorious for riding their bikes on the 4-lanes around here... there are other ways to wal-mart folks, get a clue!
ReplyDeleteGT, this post is awesome. One of the reasons thati check in almost every day. A gem in the gravel, if you will. I was instantly inspired to ride alleys. Who among us didn't cut their cycling teeth ina city alley? "We" used to play chicken with the garbage truck, built ramps, perfected or skids and power sliding, everything was done in an alley! I'm going to do an urban alley adventure to post on my own blog, thanks for the #Alley Stoke!
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone! This seems to have struck a nerve, and I am glad to find many of you are, or have done in the past, your own CIR's. Adventure cycling on the local level just isn't something that's talked about much, but if it were, don't you think more folks would want to ride? I do.
ReplyDeleteHopefully this is a small contribution to inspiring more of thesame.
#CIR
Chicagoland is also great for this sort of thing. Hidden railroad underpasses, some gravel alleys, and plenty of crumbling infrastructure...
ReplyDeleteHear, hear. I've had some of my most enjoyable rides just bombing around town. Doesn't seem to matter which bike I take; any bike can be an Adventure bike !
ReplyDelete