Thank you all so much for your thoughtful and informative responses! You have given me much to consider and to look into. My thinking in going with the Trek+ Verve 2 was that while it is certainly not the most exhilarating ride, it is reliable (no one here seems to have expressed concerns about that) and the least expensive e-bike entry point into the world of Trek’s lauded customer service. And I have a local Trek dealer. I have just about decided that I will not buy a bike online and I have to think seriously about buying a bike where the nearest dealer is over 30 miles away. (A side note, the nearest competent mechanics for my automobile are over 110 miles away and that has proven a major pain.)
Moving up to a more expensive e-bike might be the natural choice if the Verve seems underpowered for my weight and needs, or if its components seem inadequate. But I also reflect on an earlier bicycle buying experience I had back in college. I bought a $350 Specialized from the local bike shop. Very basic and my only research into the matter was to take it for a spin. It changed my life for the better. I used it to get around campus and said goodbye to the endless circling, looking for a parking space with my $50/semester parking pass. And I used the bike to explore the area and take wonderful night rides. I never thought twice about locking the bike wherever I needed to. A year or so later, I decided that if a $350 bike could bring me such joy and convenience, a pricier bike would make me ecstatic. At that time, mountain biking was all the rage. So I bought a fancy $3,000 mountain bike and a car rack to take it to trails and shoes to clip my feet to the bike. It was a beautiful bike, but I had never ridden a bike in the woods and it turns out I don’t care to. This new bike had an aggressive, bent forward body position that the bike shop owners assured me I would want because it was better for climbing. But it wasn’t comfortable for me, and I couldn’t see the cars around me as easily. Furthermore, I was never comfortable locking that $3,000 bicycle out on a public bicycle rack. Gone, on the new bike, was the simple joy I had experienced on my cheap bike. But enough of my twisted psychology!
Again, thank you all. You have been most helpful. I am looking into the other bikes you mentioned and see plenty that is preferable to the Verve’s specs. Hopefully, I won’t go mad from research before ever making it back in the saddle. Take good care and happy riding!
Gabriel