My wife was going to be away for a week in early January so I took that opportunity to take my bike to Florida and ride some of the many rail trails in the state. I didn't want to drive the 1000+ miles with the bike on the hitch carrier both for reasons of security and not reducing the range of my Tesla. Took a bit of trial and error but got it inside the Model Y. Only about ten minutes to unpack / repack.
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First stop was the Tallahassee - St Marks trail. About a 35 mile round trip.
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The tail is arrow straight for almost all of the 16 miles to St Marks.
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With the tiny (pop 500) town of St. Marks at the southern end.
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Charming dive bar/ restaurant for a fresh grouper sandwich. The marsh across the river goes several miles more to the Gulf of
Mexico America.
My next stop was Clermont Fl, a northern suburb of Orlando, about a 5 hour drive south and east of Tallahassee. A really nice bike trail extends about 30 miles with Clermont right in the middle. Riding east from Clermont its called the West Orange Trail.
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Friends from Nashville joined me for a day. We stopped for lunch near the eastern end of the trail.
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A bridge over a busy highway along the way
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After 44 miles of riding we packed up and drove a few miles to a lovely lakeside restaurant for dinner on Lake Minneola.
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The next day I rode west on the trail, now called the South Lake Trail. There were three or four rest stations like this along the trail with shade, water and bike tools and an air pump.
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The trail skirts Lake Minneola for several miles.
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This was a shorter riding day - only 26 miles as an approaching cold front chased me back to Clermont. I almost made it before the rain started.
The last of my three days in Clermont was spent on the Lake Apopka North Shore Trail. This is a huge natural area that is reclaimed farmland that had been a freshwater swamp before it was drained and converted to growing vegetables in the 1940s. By the 1980s so much fertilizer had run off into the lake that it was pea green and mostly devoid of life. It was bought by the state in the 1990s, the dykes removed and allowed to go back to its natural state. Now it has 40 miles of gravel / hard packed sand roads closed to automobiles. I'd never ridden more than a few miles on unpaved roads so was curious how this would go. My bike has 2.2" tires and front shocks so it was no trouble at all. At least there weren't tree root ridges in the trail (no trees).
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Flat, straight roads and almost no people on this chilly Monday morning. I bet I didn't see ten other people in the three hours I was there.
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The most scenic part was along the Lake Apopka shore.
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Some of the wildlife. I didn't stop to photograph any on my side of the creek!
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After a great day in the relative wilderness I drove 100 miles back north to Gainesville and the Paines Prairie- Hawthorne Trail
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Another rail trail almost entirely within the Paines Prairie State Park. 30 miles out and back.
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Paines Prairie is a (sometimes) dry lake.
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And sadly the final loading for the trip back home.
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Total for the five days was 170 miles. I was a little concerned that my creaky old 78 y/o body would protest but honestly afterward I felt like my hips and knees got an oil change.
Can't wait to get my new Vado SL 2 and find some more new rail trails to ride.