ks1g
08-30-07, 07:48 PM
Specifically the toll bridge on Ocean Drive between Rt 109 (Cape May) and Pacific Ave (Wildwood). Or was there a better way I should have tried? (The next causway up - Rt 47, at least has a shoulder, but a lot more traffic.)
This is for historical "I could have kept going" reference at this point - I was in Cape May earlier this month (the week of 8/20 - when fall came a bit early) and tried riding up to Wildwood as far as the toll bridge. Considered the bridge (narrow lanes, no sidewalk), traffic, weather (blowing salt drizzle headwind off the marsh) and decided I didn't need to see Wildwood by bike THAT badly. [We drove thru it on Friday on the way home and it's as fun and tacky as I remember it as a kid.] In restrospect, if I'd figured out a way to get over the bridge (probably walk across on the narrow curb, or wait for a bridge opening to stop traffic), the rest of the road seemed to be bikeable (there were 2 bridges on the Cape May side without shoulders or sidewalks; my technique was to wait for a long break in the traffic and sprint across).
So I headed back to 109, cut across to Seashore and up to 47 (including the nice but way too short rail trail) then back, past Cape May Winery and out along the bay to the ferry terminal, then back to Cape May via the Seashore Rd/Rt 162 bridge (MUCH nicer than the Lafayette St/Rt 109 bridge). Seashore has bike lanes each direction and light-moderate traffic; Lafayette has 4 lanes, a sort of sidewalk on one side, HEAVY traffic that seemed a bit oblivious to the nut (me) out on the bike. Much of the Cape May area roads seemed very bikeable, and I saw a number of roadies out as well as (when the weather improved) mobs of couples and families on rental beach cruisers and MTBs. Glad I brought the bike.
This is for historical "I could have kept going" reference at this point - I was in Cape May earlier this month (the week of 8/20 - when fall came a bit early) and tried riding up to Wildwood as far as the toll bridge. Considered the bridge (narrow lanes, no sidewalk), traffic, weather (blowing salt drizzle headwind off the marsh) and decided I didn't need to see Wildwood by bike THAT badly. [We drove thru it on Friday on the way home and it's as fun and tacky as I remember it as a kid.] In restrospect, if I'd figured out a way to get over the bridge (probably walk across on the narrow curb, or wait for a bridge opening to stop traffic), the rest of the road seemed to be bikeable (there were 2 bridges on the Cape May side without shoulders or sidewalks; my technique was to wait for a long break in the traffic and sprint across).
So I headed back to 109, cut across to Seashore and up to 47 (including the nice but way too short rail trail) then back, past Cape May Winery and out along the bay to the ferry terminal, then back to Cape May via the Seashore Rd/Rt 162 bridge (MUCH nicer than the Lafayette St/Rt 109 bridge). Seashore has bike lanes each direction and light-moderate traffic; Lafayette has 4 lanes, a sort of sidewalk on one side, HEAVY traffic that seemed a bit oblivious to the nut (me) out on the bike. Much of the Cape May area roads seemed very bikeable, and I saw a number of roadies out as well as (when the weather improved) mobs of couples and families on rental beach cruisers and MTBs. Glad I brought the bike.