Thursday, October 3, 2019
Connecticut's Chlorophyll Superhighways: Day Four of the Vermont to Rhode Island Adventure Ride
The coughing from my neighbor’s room woke me from a dead sleep. My eyes opened, and I gasped for breath. As I wandered into the bathroom, the air was thick with nostalgia and mold spores. The grungy and faded mid 1960’s brown, tan and orange tile décor in the bathroom conjured memories from my childhood home. The décor was “dated” in the 80’s when I was growing up. Now it was on the line between comical and ironically vintage. After a hot shower I loaded up the bike and escaped out into the fresh air under brilliant blue skies. I had a lot of ground to cover that day. Luckily Connecticut is criss crossed with bikeways- chlorophyll superhighways that were just what the doctor ordered to transport me across the state and nurse me back to my old self.
Labels:
2018,
Bikepacking,
Connecticut,
Mountain Biking,
Trip Report
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Miles of Metacomet: Day Three, Vermont to Rhode Island Adventure Ride
Despite it being part of New England, I’ve never looked at Connecticut with the same respect or admiration as I do to Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, and yes, even Rhode Island.
It has vast tracts of wildlands, hard flowing rivers, and abundant trail networks, and yet I always felt like the state was one large suburban neighborhood for New York City. I always pictured busy ten lane highways with jersey barriers, dirty highway rest areas, pretentious manicured “towne” centers, and traffic choked suburban hell. That’s because I was prejudiced against Connecticut. There, I said it out loud. And like any ill-informed opinion, the cure was experience. It was time for Connecticut and I to spend some quality time together: and what better place than on the Metacomet Trail.
Labels:
2018,
Bikepacking,
Connecticut,
Mountain Biking,
Trip Report
Saturday, January 12, 2019
Seven Levels of Wet: Day Two, Vermont to Rhode Island Adventure Ride
I was on the second day of my Vermont to Rhode Island
adventure ride trying to link together trails all the way across New
England. Thunderstorms and thousands offeet of elevation had served up a slice of humble pie on day one. I was already forced to improvise. But day two promised to be drier. At least that’s what the weatherman told me. Instead I was about visit the seven levels
of wet.
Labels:
Bikepacking,
Massachusetts,
Mountain Biking,
Trip Report
Monday, January 7, 2019
Taconicked: Day One, Vermont to Rhode Island Adventure Ride
How far can you get on trails? That’s the burning question that has motivated my bike adventures for the better part of two years now: The Kingdom Sampler, Boston to Northampton, Southern NH Overnighter, the Trunkline Adventure, and the Big Dirty South ride. All iterations of the same goal: get as far as I can using as little road as possible.
Labels:
2018,
Bikepacking,
Massachusetts,
Mountain Biking,
New York,
Trip Report,
Vermont
Monday, December 31, 2018
Singletrack Mining in Southern New Hampshire
Bikepacking highway. |
The White Mountains.
Winnipesaukee. The Seacoast.
Ask any New Englander to talk about must-see destinations in
New Hampshire and these three areas invariably come to the top of the
list. Dig a little deeper and you might
get mentions of Mount Monadnock, Santa’s Village, or even Manch-Vegas. You’ll have to wait a while- a long while-
before you hear someone tell you that you should definitely go visit
Milford. Or that you can’t miss Mason or
Brookline. And Greenville? Yeah, that’s not going to be on the list. But it should be. It is time to visit the region that put the
granite in the Granite State.
Labels:
Bikepacking,
Mountain Biking,
New Hampshire,
Trip Report
Friday, October 26, 2018
Why Plus Bikes Make So Much Sense
There was a time when I obsessed over skinny tires. 2.1, 2.0 and even the svelte 1.9 inch
offerings in bike catalogs and seedy online part wholesalers got me all hot and bothered.
In my mind, less rubber on the trail equaled less friction and more
speed. Skinny was fast. Skinny was light.
But skinny was wrong.
Labels:
Gear Review,
Mountain Biking
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