2020 : Our Rides in Words, Photos & Videos

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Thanks to everyone for this thread. For me, biking has always been about experiencing the world from a bike and the many places and experiences that open up to you when you ride. The exercise is welcome, but secondary.

If you will settle yourself into your chair and open your imagination, I'll relate something I saw on Wednesday night.

I was out riding about 1:45 am on rural roads in Minnesota, there was a near full moon and the temp was about 40 F / 4 C.

The winds were light and the roads were deserted as we are still under a stay at home order.

About ten miles into the ride, I'm northbound when I notice some bright white lights on the far horizon ahead of me and to the left. They were in two rows and there were maybe a hundred of them. I think to myself "that town is really lit up for 2 am in the morning."

I continue to pedal along and realize that there has never been a town in the area where the lights are, so I adjust my thinking to "it must be a very large factory, but I don't recall one around here."

I continue to ride towards it when I notice an industrial noise, but at a far distance yet.

The next time I look up I question if the whole enterprise has barely moved to the right toward where I'm headed.

A few seconds later, I had approached to maybe half a mile and the noise was getting louder when my jaw drops as I see the entire length of it is on fire.


I hope one of you will guess at what I was about to see up close.

I'll post later tonight or tomorrow with the rest of the story and a video clip.
 
Another "gotta get buns toughened up" ride today on pavement. I woosed out of riding yesterday. I could not believe the traffic that was on the roads then. This morning seemed quieter so I took off from my house. We were supposed to have strong winds today. I thought I could beat them.

The not very strong wind seemed to be one of those headwinds that switches to be a headwind as you ride. I couldn't get rid of it.

There was a very cute moment. I was riding past a mobile home with 4 little girls sitting on the steps. They yelled out "Hello." I replied back in the same way. They yelled "HAVE A VERY VERY NICE DAY." I yelled back, "YOU TOO AND BE NICE TO YOUR MOM." They replied, "OK, WE WILL." It was a socially distanced conversation.

But, we need a picture or so, and this was taken a few miles before the conversation. Why, it is another picture of the Tiffanies which are west of here! They had more snow on them the other day, but we are having summer like temperatures so it melted.
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Did I say it was summer like? Sometimes the wind felt hot, which is odd for this time of year. I made a few water stops and saw this spot where tweety birds are perching on cat tails. Earlier this spring, this was a pond with ducks paddling around in it. Speaking of birds, I also had a couple of hawks flying along with me briefly. No pictures. The camera was back in the pack and not easy to pull out.

The ride was uneventful. When going along areas with irrigation and houses, the lilacs gave out a nice smell. I need to go shrubbery shopping again and get some for my yard.

That's it. Oh, and the strong winds haven't happened yet. That's a good thing.
 

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Someone mention power lines?
Now all we have to do is work on making pictures of power lines be socially acceptable here.
They actually fuel your bike, so why not admire them?

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A bit of reality is always good too.

A lot of the riding I do in the industrial areas is in places that people would probably not see as very appealing. Maybe it's time for a "reality photo" thread..

Reality (albeit slightly warped!) courtesy of Google Street View …
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Gateway Motorway (part of Highway 1), Brisbane.
The bikeway is between the concrete barrier (to stop motor vehicles from bumping into cyclists) and the wildlife fence (to stop wallabies from bouncing into cyclists). That fence would be near-useless in the outback for deterring 'big reds' (the huge males that 'box' one another on wildlife documentaries) . Special underpasses and overpasses are provided for wallabies and possums to cross the motorway.

There is a general expectation that any motorway near a city will have a complementary cycleway. Good idea; but, if possible, I avoid them – there's a pleasant track through the wetland area beyond the hill on the left.

The vehicles travelling away from the Googlemobile should be in Brisbane Central in twenty minutes; those following, are also heading towards Brisbane but, assuming they persist, it will take them about twenty days to get to Brisbane on the world's longest ring road which goes right around the continent in an endless loop.
 
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Mother's Day, Gifts, and Life in the Rear View Mirror

It had been catch-as-catch-can for sunny, just-the-right-temperature days lately, so to have one on Mother's Day was just...awesome. Breakfast in bed notwithstanding, this was the present that begged to be enjoyed next.

So I did, taking the LaFree as my companion for a quiet loop on the local gravel roads. My neighbor, another mom, wanted to ride with me, but her family calendar refused to sync with mine, and after the two of us struggled back and forth via text to find the right time to meet where we'd both be back home for the prerequisite family arrivals with more gifts and celebrations, we just ultimately decided that Wednesday was the best alternative.

So it was the LaFree and I setting out together for some peaceful pedaling.

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I don't know where my GPS came up with a top speed of almost 20mph because my pace was deliberately slow, my only intention to mimic the lazy looping glides of the raptor overhead, calmly watching the scenery pass by as the road slipped away under my wheels with nary a sound, the trees all dressed in vibrant green for my day, eager to share their desire to offer gifts of cool shade wrapped in dappled ribbons of gravel byways.
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A few times, as the road gave me the much appreciated gift of a level passage, I turned off the bike's motor, just to hear the complete and overwhelming silence around me, as if nothing in the world was wrong, no pandemic ranged to squash the normal celebrations of the day, nothing anywhere could be a finer gift but the cheerful sounds of Mother Nature herself in full volume of songbird choruses singing their hearts out, enjoying the day with me.

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I climbed a private driveway for this shot. The owners had been old friends for many years, but were no longer in residence. The husband, who bred thoroughbred race horses, had written and published several equine related books, and I was in two of the many photographs he used for the books. He jokingly told me one day, when I stopped in for a visit, that I was the only person who appeared twice in his books (everyone else only had one photograph), which I found both entertaining and funny. I have copies those books, autographed by him, but no longer have him as my neighbor since his death a year or so back. His wife, a wonderful sweet individual, now lives in a small house in town. The kids, sadly, didn't want the spectacular several hundred acre mountainside thoroughbred breeding property, so it now sits empty, all the broodmares sold long ago, the fields still beautifully groomed, still ready for horses, yet still silent. The property is listed for sale for several million.

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As I came down the driveway I notice a bevy of cyclists passing by on the gravel road below. I paused and watched them tackle the hill just off the driveway entrance, standing in their pedals as they worked their way up to the top of the slope, and wondered if they gave half a thought to the history around them - that the property they had just passed was once owned by the former Under Secretary of Commerce in the Reagan administration, that the driveway they were passing is actually the entryway to the centuries old Mt. Weather Road which goes to the top of the mountain on a byway that dates back well over 200 years ago and still faithfully follows the same path as shown on the document now residing in the county archives, that exact same document given to the Road commissioners 200 years ago by the owners of the mountain lands when they petitioned to have this mountain road built, and the old abandoned building just at the top of the hill to their right being a former thriving gas station and country store in the 1950s, a once bustling village center, now standing mute, ramshackle, vinecovered and forgotten, kept company only by an ancient pickup truck that has remained parked next to the deteriorating building for many years, slowly rusting away even as it faithfully waits for an owner who will never return.

I guess they didn't as they topped the hill and disappeared, never once glancing back to see me return to the gravel road and continue on my way.

I headed the opposite way on the quiet gravel road, studying the mountains to one side, and the fields around me. It was about then that I noticed the scenery around me never left my side, and each time I glanced in my rear view mirror I was gifted with another unique present - that of the road behind.

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It was different, every bit as pretty, and exquisitely framed by my mirror. With the entire countryside to myself I began watching the ribbons of road trail behind me, nonplussed, unraveling with abandon as they draped across the landscape with only my bike's tire marks to show they had been thus enjoyed and hence summarily discarded. Their gift never failed to delight me with how it looked in the rear view mirror.

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I discovered that cows in a rear view mirror don't run away. Never knew that before.

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I was surprised to see a few other moms out, solitary, enjoying the roads. This mom had been ahead of me for a bit, and then disappeared into the distance while I stopped to enjoy the loving attention of a very obese Labrador by the name of Percy who was out escorting his own mom around his yard. Percy was fully aware of this special day to all moms, and was thrilled to offer me his gift of a massively overstated wiggly body complete with a happy tail and big ol' doggy grin. His mom was full of smiles as she watched her boy envelope me with his delightful canine goodwill, and I wasn't the least perturbed to stand and give his big head as many loving pats and "such a good boy" compliments as he could adorably eat up like they were the best treats in the whole wide world. Percy was in such heaven dispensing good will that he had a hard time saying goodbye, but with smiles and waves and exchanged Happy Mother's Day greetings with his mom who had to hold tight to his collar to prevent Percy from happily escorting me down the road (which she said she certainly wouldn't mind because maybe it would help him lose some weight), I was finally on my way.

The mom ahead of me had stopped at a crossroads, and we had a chance to talk. She was from the DC area, from the county next to mine, and had heard from friends how beautiful the gravel roads were out in here. This was her first time exploring, and so she had downloaded the maps created for last year's Gravel Grinder ride to support the rural roads. (The 2020 ride had been scheduled for this coming weekend, but due to the current pandemic was now rescheduled for mid-October). I knew from the online GPS maps the route would lead her right past my farm, so told her where to expect it. She smiled as she told me I was so very lucky to live out here. I smiled back and told her I was glad to see her, and so many other cyclists, out enjoying the area.

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This mom I actually passed twice, quite a few miles apart, and we greeted each other both times. She told me she was thoroughly enjoying her ride as we exchanged Mother's Day greetings.

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They are almost invisible in this picture, but there are two cyclists at the top of this road, both paused to consult the maps on their phones, take a drink of water, and then head on their way for more adventures. Little did they know that within seconds they would pass my driveway where a little Mother's Day celebration would be held within the hour. A celebration of love, happiness, family and gifts in the form of strawberry plants for the new garden.

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Best view of all - home. Time to reconnect with loved ones and finish out the day with heartfelt celebration and good cheer and a special thank you to Mother Nature for her gift of a gorgous morning for a pleasant Mother's Day bike ride.

Best Day Ever.
 
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Social distancing taken to the extreme …
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Hays Inlet (Pine River estuary)
Looking north from midpoint of ride.
Location …
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  • Concrete strips = Moreton Bay Cycleway​
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Well, no takers on guessing what wierdness I saw on my ride so I'll post this video. At 3:29 you can see what it was that I finally came across. Just to make things more fun all the dead overgrowth on the sides of the tracks was catching fire and the last car had four fire hoses to put out the flames.

15 sec at 3:29, not my video, but very similar to what I saw


First time I've ever even heard of such a thing.

There is a scene with a flaming train at a crossing in the movie War of the Worlds, I wonder if this inspired the director?
 
I had a Bike Dog! morning. The object is to drain the energy out of a very energetic dog. I usually succeed but she recharges quickly. This is in what we call the South Summit area (of Loup Loup Pass). I decided to carry pepper spray in case we came across an irate moose. I've seen two up here in the past, but they were not irate. The Demon dog had a good time running around and doing dog stuff. Part of today's ride went through an area that fried a few years ago in the Carlton Complex ( I think) fire.
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Some recreational swimming took place.
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This part reminded me of the Mt St Helens area.
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The Larch.
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She Who Waits While I Load Up The Bike. The ride is over, objective achieved. Two cars went by during this ride.
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north wind howling for days now so ready for some truly spring like weather to warm up the old body,, looked for coulees to head down out of the wind at every opportunity - no powerlines here but the Canadian snow geese, American white pelicans, blue herons and so many variety of
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ducks kept me company
 
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