Hosted Touring Cyclists
#1
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Hosted Touring Cyclists
My wife and I hosted Janet and Stephen Rickey, about 7300 miles into their "no end in sight" ride that started in Seattle, went down to San Diego, then over to Key West FL and now up the East Coast. They have been enjoying the East Coast Greenway trail.
Janet and Stephen and their loaded e-bikes as they set off from Lake Artemesia MD on the way to Annapolis MD.
You can see their journal at https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/...a-trail-rocks/ where they reached us.
I'm going to try to meet up with them as they ride into Baltimore today, if I can sneak it in between some annoying work commitments.
Janet and Stephen and their loaded e-bikes as they set off from Lake Artemesia MD on the way to Annapolis MD.
You can see their journal at https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/...a-trail-rocks/ where they reached us.
I'm going to try to meet up with them as they ride into Baltimore today, if I can sneak it in between some annoying work commitments.
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My wife and I hosted Janet and Stephen Rickey, about 7300 miles into their "no end in sight" ride that started in Seattle, went down to San Diego, then over to Key West FL and now up the East Coast. They have been enjoying the East Coast Greenway trail.
You can see their journal at https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/...a-trail-rocks/ where they reached us.
I'm going to try to meet up with them as they ride into Baltimore today, if I can sneak it in between some annoying work commitments.
You can see their journal at https://www.cycleblaze.com/journals/...a-trail-rocks/ where they reached us.
I'm going to try to meet up with them as they ride into Baltimore today, if I can sneak it in between some annoying work commitments.
... All my visitors have a great time here. Not to brag, but e.g…
I really enjoy showing visitors around Boston on informal walking tours [or bikes], and I would offer that to a fellow BF subscriber, but I'm a pretty busy person, and would need a heads up to see if I'm available at a mutually agreeable time
I really enjoy showing visitors around Boston on informal walking tours [or bikes], and I would offer that to a fellow BF subscriber, but I'm a pretty busy person, and would need a heads up to see if I'm available at a mutually agreeable time
I took particular note of their itinerary:
…We toured also during those decades, including an eight-week cross country cycling honeymoon from Los Angeles to Washington DC. I'm doubtful she would want to go back to touring, but might want to participate as follows. When I win the big lottery, I want to buy a luxury RV as my sag wagon and cycle the perimeter of the country, so I’ll need a driver.
I have daydreamed about it to the extent of defining the perimeter as riding within 50 miles of the border all around the country. The only other definition I know of is in the motorcycle community, where I have read the definition as traveling from the cornermost towns in the country. This would obviously be a shorter route since it would bypass the additional contours of Michigan, upstate New York, and Texas.
I'd like to try for a continuous ride: starting in Boston around September and down the east Coast to Florida in December; across the South though to March or April, the West Coast to June/July (though North to South is apparently the preferred direction), then across the North in the heat of the summer (or start in Boston in around June or July for the counterclockwise route).
In the course of my fantasizing, I have discovered Perimeter Accomplishments - Perimeter Bicycling]The Perimeter Bicycling Association of America Inc. which maintains perimeter cycling records for various political and geographic entities. (link. Scroll down to World Records). For the USA, the record is 12,092 miles in 180 days held by Richard J. DeBernardis (date not specified).
I have daydreamed about it to the extent of defining the perimeter as riding within 50 miles of the border all around the country. The only other definition I know of is in the motorcycle community, where I have read the definition as traveling from the cornermost towns in the country. This would obviously be a shorter route since it would bypass the additional contours of Michigan, upstate New York, and Texas.
I'd like to try for a continuous ride: starting in Boston around September and down the east Coast to Florida in December; across the South though to March or April, the West Coast to June/July (though North to South is apparently the preferred direction), then across the North in the heat of the summer (or start in Boston in around June or July for the counterclockwise route).
In the course of my fantasizing, I have discovered Perimeter Accomplishments - Perimeter Bicycling]The Perimeter Bicycling Association of America Inc. which maintains perimeter cycling records for various political and geographic entities. (link. Scroll down to World Records). For the USA, the record is 12,092 miles in 180 days held by Richard J. DeBernardis (date not specified).
Last edited by Jim from Boston; 05-09-19 at 06:03 PM.
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[QUOTE=jpescatore;20920997]They have been enjoying the East Coast Greenway trail.
[/QUOTE]
Which enjoyment will likely all come to an end when they hit the PA border, if not before. Nothing says "Greenway" quite like PA 291, which is also called "Industrial Highway." I love the smell of Marcus Hook in the morning. It smells like....Cancer.
Safe travels! Seriously.
[/QUOTE]
Which enjoyment will likely all come to an end when they hit the PA border, if not before. Nothing says "Greenway" quite like PA 291, which is also called "Industrial Highway." I love the smell of Marcus Hook in the morning. It smells like....Cancer.
Safe travels! Seriously.
#4
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Which enjoyment will likely all come to an end when they hit the PA border, if not before. Nothing says "Greenway" quite like PA 291, which is also called "Industrial Highway." I love the smell of Marcus Hook in the morning. It smells like....Cancer.
Safe travels! Seriously.
Safe travels! Seriously.
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#6
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#7
I was wondering if you asked your guests as to why they chose motorized-bikes to do their tour?
Last edited by BigAura; 05-09-19 at 06:08 PM.
#8
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He is 72 and last year started to find he could not do the mileage/climbing combinations he had been able to do in the past, due to health issues. They have done multiple cross country tours on standard bikes over many years, and did not want to stop being able to do that.
They run the e-bikes in "eco" mode vs. "turbo" mode - not because of religious arguments against having a motor, but because it both gets them the physical exercise biking that they have always enjoyed and because the batteries last longer!
In the motorcycle world, aging bikers have been buying 3-wheeled motorcycles for similar reasons, and I see a lot more 3 or 4 wheeled bicycles on the roads and paths these days, too.
They run the e-bikes in "eco" mode vs. "turbo" mode - not because of religious arguments against having a motor, but because it both gets them the physical exercise biking that they have always enjoyed and because the batteries last longer!
In the motorcycle world, aging bikers have been buying 3-wheeled motorcycles for similar reasons, and I see a lot more 3 or 4 wheeled bicycles on the roads and paths these days, too.
Last edited by jpescatore; 05-10-19 at 04:43 AM.
#9
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Over their 7300 miles on this trip and multiple previous cross country tours in past years, they've pretty much biked on the best and the worst roads out there!
I met them on my bike yesterday, about half way on their ride from Annapolis to Baltimore MD and road about 15 miles with them. After the B&A Trail ends, the ECG route into Baltimore makes the best of getting into the city from the south, but it many parts of the route are not anything anyone around here would ride on for recreation - pure transportation. They were pretty much unfazed.
The ECG shows some unpaved trails as alternate routes for part of the route into Philadelphia - I told them I haven't biked up there, but often drove up for business, and that I would err on the side of trying the unpaved paths vs. the surface streets...
Which enjoyment will likely all come to an end when they hit the PA border, if not before. Nothing says "Greenway" quite like PA 291, which is also called "Industrial Highway." I love the smell of Marcus Hook in the morning. It smells like....Cancer.
Safe travels! Seriously.[/QUOTE]
I met them on my bike yesterday, about half way on their ride from Annapolis to Baltimore MD and road about 15 miles with them. After the B&A Trail ends, the ECG route into Baltimore makes the best of getting into the city from the south, but it many parts of the route are not anything anyone around here would ride on for recreation - pure transportation. They were pretty much unfazed.
The ECG shows some unpaved trails as alternate routes for part of the route into Philadelphia - I told them I haven't biked up there, but often drove up for business, and that I would err on the side of trying the unpaved paths vs. the surface streets...
Which enjoyment will likely all come to an end when they hit the PA border, if not before. Nothing says "Greenway" quite like PA 291, which is also called "Industrial Highway." I love the smell of Marcus Hook in the morning. It smells like....Cancer.
Safe travels! Seriously.[/QUOTE]
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https://www.google.com/maps/@39.9668...7i16384!8i8192
#11
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They are welcome to post here, unlike CGOAB. Apparently some people here are interested in e-bike touring. I’m not one of them, but I don’t think anyone would be offended.
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D'oh, I just woke and realized I should include trikes, quadricycles, and other human-powered multi-wheeled vehicles like party bikes. And what about scooters, elliptical trainers...pogo sticks (though not wheeled); as confusing as Gender Identity nowadays.
Just this morning on the 6-7 AM segment of the Jeff Kuhner talk show on WRKO he discussed proposals by mayor Marty Walsh to decrease the speed limit in Boston to 20 mph, and increase the number of bus and bike lanes. He was vehemently against it, as were many of the callers, with snide comments about cyclists.…
I called in as Jim from Boston“speaking for "Boston’s cycling community” [since I was sure that no other cyclists would be calling in] and introduced myself as his Number One Fan among Boston cyclists…
Jeff was pretty gracious, but I (accidentally) got cut off. Afterwards, he made some reasonable remarks about my call, but took me to task to speak for Boston’s cycling community, as “another protected class.” (Another WRKO talk show host, Howie Carr, once referred to us as Spandex-Americans.
I called in as Jim from Boston“speaking for "Boston’s cycling community” [since I was sure that no other cyclists would be calling in] and introduced myself as his Number One Fan among Boston cyclists…
Jeff was pretty gracious, but I (accidentally) got cut off. Afterwards, he made some reasonable remarks about my call, but took me to task to speak for Boston’s cycling community, as “another protected class.” (Another WRKO talk show host, Howie Carr, once referred to us as Spandex-Americans.
Last edited by Jim from Boston; 05-10-19 at 09:36 AM.
#13
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I hope I can still bike tour when I'm that age. That's awesome. Are they camping too, or just staying with hosts or hotel? They're certainly fully loaded, so I assume camping gear?
And why not on an e-bike? It's all of the great parts of riding a bike, none of the less enjoyable stuff like pressing your worn out legs up a long, steep hill or that last crappy 5-10 miles after you're tired and not to the camp ground yet. I haven't toured on an e-bike, but I bet it's pretty great.
And why not on an e-bike? It's all of the great parts of riding a bike, none of the less enjoyable stuff like pressing your worn out legs up a long, steep hill or that last crappy 5-10 miles after you're tired and not to the camp ground yet. I haven't toured on an e-bike, but I bet it's pretty great.
#14
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They are mostly staying at Warm Showers hosts, or friends. Next choice is cheap hotels/motels, then camping only when they can't or don't reach an indoor place to stay. They are carrying everything just in case no place to stay or no place for food.
I'm a credit card style tourist myself!
I'm a credit card style tourist myself!
#15
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I’d be a little irritated as a Warmshowers host if they showed up up on e-bikes without letting me know in advance. Hopefully they do that.
#16
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I was following them on their journal, so I knew they were on e-bikes. With Warm Showers hosts they said they told them in advance to make sure there were no storage issues. They don't seem to have run into any Warm Showers host objections to them being on ebikes when they did so.