As Fall descends on the Western Greenway, my singletrack commute home starts to take a little longer. |
Showing posts with label Western Greenway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western Greenway. Show all posts
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Fall On the Western Greenway
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
2011 Giant Talon 29er 1
Meet the 2011 Giant Talon 29er 1 |
Labels:
29er,
Gear Review,
Giant Talon,
Giant Trance,
Mountain Biking,
Suntour,
Western Greenway
Friday, September 21, 2012
Wild Wild Weston (July 2012)
A really trashy part of Weston. No really. You're looking at a pile of trash. |
Eight lanes of asphalt highway are all that separate the towns of Waltham and Weston, Massachusetts. These hundred or so feet divide people making around $50,000 a year from those making closer to $200,000. Perhaps this is the unspoken math that has prevented Weston from embracing a rail trail to connect the two communities. While they might shop together at the Auburndale Star Market, the folks in Weston are a little reluctant to invite the masses into their manicured back yards.
Regardless of the reason, the reluctance to develop a paved trail along the old railbed connecting Waltham with the rest of Western Massachusetts is a gift to fat tire bikers.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Lexington Singletracks (July 2012)
Not exactly a straight line. |
The Minuteman Bikeway in MetroWest Boston is one of the most
famous rail trails in the country. And
with good reason. It provides a scenic
and historic byway from Cambridge
all the way to Bedford . Along the
way it visits the town centers of Arlington
and Lexington with their excellent
restaurants and cultural attractions. It
is gem. But it is also an attention
whore.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
1000 Miles from Home
Somewhere near mile 994. |
Labels:
Mountain Biking,
Western Greenway
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
One Down. Two to Go.
The squiggly blue line is much more fun than the yellow lines. |
I mountain biked to work.
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
My Evening Loop
Luckily they're all pinecones |
The Middlesex Fells are close, but there's a lot of "forest service road". The trails have a few technical spots, and the hills will get you in shape pretty quickly. However, there is only one loop for mountain bikers. I treat it like my time trial course: where I go to gauge the progress in my conditioning. That is to say I like to avoid it because it reminds me what a fat wheezy creampuff I really am.
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