Less Zoom, More Pedaling - Cycling West - Cycling Utah

2022-08-15 10:54:37 By : Ms. Monica Pan

By Matt Davidson — It's always a good time for a bike tour! When I tour, I am all about enjoying the outdoors, meeting new people, absorbing new smells, and seeing amazing sights which may not be accessible on a car vacation. And there's nothing like the experience of bicycle touring at 10 mph and taking it all in.

Prior to starting my adventure, I trained daily for two months with gallon jugs of water in my panniers. I often rode along a nearly flat dedicated bike path (Murdock Canal Trail) and also regularly climbed the 1,000-foot Suncrest mountain pass, between Lehi and Draper, UT. My skinny chicken legs were ready and were accustomed for days that reached 75 miles carrying 40 lbs, without feeling cramped and spent.

Along with getting physically ready, I wanted to be sure that my well-worn Trek 520 didn't encounter any problems. Mechanically, I spent at least 10-20 hours in total going over my bicycle, ensuring that my brakes, cables, gear shifting, tires, and lubrication were tour ready or replaced and new. As a final check I had an expert bike mechanic at Saturday Cycles inspect my wheels, replacing a broken spoke in the process and also used my local bike shop, Hangar 15 for recommendations on a new hub.

Where to go? Well, after considering a few different routes my friend Lou Melini, a truly knowledgeable and well-traveled bike adventurer, tipped me off to the Eastern Express tour. I changed the overall route and targeted 1,200 miles between Washington, DC and Chicago, Illinois, eventually averaging about 50 miles per day, with a handful of zero-mile R&R days thrown in for good measure.

This tour I traveled solo and relied on camping, hotels, and Warmshowers. Everyone has a unique pace and style when touring – not necessarily better than other styles, simply different. However, traveling by myself let me set my own schedule, pace, and route itinerary. Certainly, meeting other bicyclists on tour and sharing the road added even more variety to each day. Additionally, not having each day's stop exactly planned out far in advance added to my sense of adventure. Seeing Washington, DC coupled with a sliver of the Eastern U.S. was the original attraction for my ride. What I didn't expect was to tour through a history book and having a geographical tutorial unfold on events I had only read about.

Prior to officially starting the riding portion of my tour, I explored Washington, DC, the center of U.S. government power, and saw major tourist sites including the White House, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, US Capitol, Supreme Court, Library of Congress, National Gallery, African American and Holocaust Museums. In hindsight my complete tour felt like a small part of the back-story leading to present day. At mile zero, my cycling tour began along The Chesapeake & Ohio Canal towpath, built by immigrants and slaves between 1828-1850. Built without the benefit of modern diesel-powered hydraulic machinery, the C&O Canal with its 77 locks spanning 180 miles, is an incredible engineering marvel. I could not help wondering about the long-term vision George Washington and James Monroe had when they put the wheels in motion for this transportation pathway.

As with all major transportation corridors, towns grew up along the canal. However, these towns soon withered with the emergence of the speed and efficiency of railroad transportation. My next chapter of history unfolded starting with Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, the site of a major Civil War battle spanning four days from Sept 11-15 in 1862. Riding along the C&O towpath, I envisioned what it must have been like for the Union and Confederate troops, traversing undeveloped forested areas and trying to stay fed, healthy, and alive in extremely challenging circumstances.

After relatively easy riding along the C&O and Great Allegheny Passage trails, I entered Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Once gritty and shrouded in soot, Pittsburgh played a significant role in U.S. history and has now transitioned to a vibrant economic powerhouse with skyscrapers and a diverse economy not solely dependent on steel. Steel was one backbone of the Industrial Revolution that helped grow our country – and somewhat similar to today’s tech billionaires Zuckerberg and Bezos, Pittsburgh's shrewd and ruthless steel barons, Carnegie and Frick, played a significant role and definitely affected the country's growth. Historically, the city flourished based on steel production at the apex of the Monongahela and Allegheny Rivers. My tour took me along these waterways that flow through Southwest Pennsylvania and eventually drain into the Ohio River directly at downtown Pittsburgh.

Even today steel still needs coal, and I cycled past heavily laden river barges being guided downstream, floating low with loads headed for furnaces or coke production. But as coal use declined, so did the towns that depend on coal jobs. Some of the towns I rode past felt like they were hanging on by their fingernails because they have not transitioned to new revenue sources. Wheeling, West Virginia was once a thriving town visited by Presidents and now is littered with shuttered storefronts. I wondered how long before they build their economy back based on something other than coal.

Riding through small towns, I avoided national chain businesses, opting to spend my tourist dollars at local shops and restaurants. There was also a trade-off between carrying my own food that gave me the ability to eat whenever I felt hungry versus riding until the next available diner. My preference was to stop and eat lunch at a relaxing park or viewpoint, rather than sitting at a table waiting to be served. Certainly, another benefit of riding solo was a wide-open flexibility on when and where I replenished my calories.

Reflecting on the overall tour, it renewed my faith in the underlying goodness that exists in our country. Most of the goodness played out with Warmshowers hosts that made my tour extremely interesting and enabled me to peer into their lives during those stays. I found friendly, generous folks in most every town. Maybe that's not groundbreaking news, but it certainly felt good and was a refreshing boost to my daily riding. I avoided political jousting altogether, and when seniors (older than me!) in small towns appeared wary of my Lycra-clad presence, I always started conversations with, “I'm touring this great country of ours.” That statement instantly put strangers at ease. Young and old, almost everyone wants to find out more about a Crazy Guy riding through their town. At the end of the day, every bike tourist wants to experience new situations no matter the challenge and that's the draw of plotting a new ride and meeting new people. I’m already looking forward to my next tour!

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About Cycling West: Cycling West is a print publication and website that works to grow, connect, and inform the cycling community in Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, Nevada, N. Arizona, N. California, and Western Colorado. We have a complete calendar of events in the region, and strive to reach cyclists of all types. We distribute approximately 13000-15000 copies each month throughout the region. We also post the issue for digital download. Our mission is to make the world a better place through bicycling. Please join us! Contact us: [email protected]

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