Northeast - Metro Boston: Good ride today?

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buzzman
03-29-09, 06:39 PM
...Also, as an additional caveat to folks contemplating taking the train to Springfield and riding to Westfield, avoid Rt. 20. That road is a nasty piece of work (and this coming from a guy who commutes into Post Office Square on a daily basis), it adds a few miles to the journey, but it's much easier to just detour south via 147, Springfield St. and 57, then come into Westfield through N. Longyard and Shaker Rd.
Thanks for the info. The boxed bike is not ideal but I'll consider it- it would be fabulous if it were as easy as the MBTA commuter trains or the Harlem Line I take into NYC from upstate NY.
Regarding that stretch of Rt. 20 I will absolutely second that emotion. I've ridden cross state on Route 20 a few times and always regretted the decision- horrible in some sections. Funny, if the train were more bike friendly and/or Rt. 20 were more accommodating getting back and forth across the state by bike would be so much easier.
Anyone get any good rides in this weekend? I managed to get a few in on Saturday- nothing today in the rain. But Saturday was good- did the Harvard Loop, missed a turn on the way back that would have added about 12 miles so ended up shy of the 100 I had hoped to do- 92 miles- and I only managed that by doing an extra loop around the Concord TT course.
I still feel slow as molasses but I'm at least getting some miles in finally.:p
sherbornpeddler
03-29-09, 07:52 PM
Rt 20 by Sturbridge was just paved last year? I only say this from the start of the PMC, might be wrong.
Buzzman, Nice ride!
Harvard loop sounds nice. I've got to get out there and go aforementioned Wachusett way.
Saturday I was the fixed gear caboose on a geezer canter to Starbucks in Concord and back.
Sunday I massaged moss and alerted the weeds that despite 15 years of solid, consistent, predictable history and that I will likely do nothing different, this is my year. I’m talking weed free, green fescue. The economy and I both get good at climbing and see a lot of green.
spokenword
03-29-09, 09:03 PM
Anyone get any good rides in this weekend? I managed to get a few in on Saturday- nothing today in the rain. But Saturday was good- did the Harvard Loop, missed a turn on the way back that would have added about 12 miles so ended up shy of the 100 I had hoped to do- 92 miles- and I only managed that by doing an extra loop around the Concord TT course. 92 miles isn't anything to be ashamed of!
I had errands and chores to take care of this weekend, so kept my rides short. Rode from Belmont to Concord via Concord Rd. and Trapelo to the Bedford Rd. climb to 2A. Picked up some cheese at that wine/chees shop in Concord Center. Intervals along Lowell Rd. to Carlisle, then intervals again along 4/225 to Bedford. Climb over Great Rd. to Lexington then easy spin back and made an omelette with some of the cheese that I bought in Concord. :) Sunday was a rest day.
sherbornpeddler
03-31-09, 06:44 PM
Today was nothing like 92 miles, nothing like intervals and buying cheese and nothing like my miserable attempts at yardwork.
Today was a beeyootiful bicycle stroll on the Blackstone River Trail. First we visited a cute, elderly couple in Cumberland who spend every warm spring day tending their incredibly lush garden.
We began our ride on the brand new northern section of the trail in Woonsocket. This juuust opened and is handsome, clean and already popular. It is perfect for familes, populated enough with walkers and "strolling" bikers that you should leave the spandex at home, take a comfort bike and put a cuff strap on your bluejeans. We headed south along the river and canal stopping to admire and, for a short while, mimic the turtles sunning. Waterfalls, bridges and spotless path made the trip smooth and pleasant. We only rode 15 miles but it was very pleasant. Next week we'll visit the North Providence to Bristol trail.
Jakedatc
03-31-09, 07:52 PM
Make sure you have an extra tube for the E.prov- bristol path.. seagulls think some sections are excellent bombing rangers for clams so there are shells in a few spots.. i've never had a problem but they can be sharp. Have fun though.. on the Northern sections there are some nice open stretches to get a bit of speed up.. a bit more stop and go as you get closer to bristol through warren.
sherbornpeddler
04-01-09, 09:35 AM
re seagull bombing run check list:
1. spare tube
2. helmet
sherbornpeddler
06-03-09, 08:37 PM
How y'all are? I'm curious how we are doing after spring thaw? I've yet to ride Wachusett or Greylock. I'm at 1754 miles year to date, about 1/2 of last year, instead getting mileage out of minor aliments.
I did do Durham to Sherborn today, 100.08 miles including a little noodling the last 10 local miles to get my third century of 2009. From Durham, took Rt 108 south to Rt 125 then got a little off track south of Haverhill, jogging north on Rt 38 but used it as an excuse to swing through Carlisle and home on a route so well known I turn navigation over to my bike.
How are you doing?
Jim from Boston
06-04-09, 03:45 AM
How y'all are? I'm curious how we are doing after spring thaw? I've yet to ride Wachusett or Greylock. I'm at 1754 miles year to date, about 1/2 of last year, instead getting mileage out of minor aliments.
I did do Durham to Sherborn today, 100.08 miles including a little noodling the last 10 local miles to get my third century of 2009. From Durham, took Rt 108 south to Rt 125 then got a little off track south of Haverhill, jogging north on Rt 38 but used it as an excuse to swing through Carlisle and home on a route so well known I turn navigation over to my bike.
How are you doing?
Hi sbp,
Nice to hear from you. As an early AM rider, spring thaw around here begins May 1, IMO. My winter commute is about 70 miles/week, but now I am in week 5 of a 10 week training program for a July Century, about 150 miles this week. BTW, it's for the Prouty ride in NH.
Last Sunday I was on Rte 38 from Winchester to Wilmington and it was a nice road, especially on an early Sunday morning. I had wanted to get on 38 back in Medford, but got lost and wound up on Rte 3 from Arlington to Winchester. :o It's frustrating how street name signs are lacking around here, but even getting lost can be an interesting and learning experience, and I accrue the miles anyway.
sherbornpeddler
06-05-09, 08:29 AM
James de Boston! Delighted to hear from a real commuter and thank you for your navigation commiseration. My daughter and I plan on the 11 July Prouty one day ride so I'll PM you as we get closer. I'd like to do the century but likely will go on her shorter ride. If the stars align with my gumption I'll get my miles in riding up the day before.
Jim from Boston
06-06-09, 04:38 PM
Hi sbp,
See my PM.
PS: I just realized that this thread began in March. :lol:
Doin' good out here in Lancaster, Ma. just turned 500 miles on the new toy (started in April). Still lots of winter road sand, pot holes and tree debris from the ice storm on the back roads. Seems a lot of towns are cutting way back on their maintenance due to budget shortfalls, plenty of "shovel ready" work waiting for nObama $$$. :)
sherbornpeddler
06-14-09, 04:39 PM
I wish cars were more aware we need to dodge potholes.
Dmann, have you tackled Wachusett? It is on my to do list. I also want to make a run up to Peterborough via your neck of the woods.
Spb….Wachusett remains on my to dream list, it’s a nasty little zit just waiting to pop ones ego! The ride into Princeton can be challenging enough; the Rte 62 approach from Sterling is pretty much a 4 mile climb, same for Rte 31, then 2.5 to 3 miles on the Mtn. As for dodging potholes, I have become more assertive/belligerent, I take a look in the big 3rd eye mirror and whenever possible move further into the road, let the cars slow down or pull further around, its my road too ;)
sherbornpeddler
06-20-09, 09:22 PM
25 June Thursday might be the day Rocinante and I tackle potholes, cell phone distracted drivers and that strange tectonic-weather shift causing hills to gain height as I get older and out and back loops become (I’m sure, Im sure, Imsure, imsure, Escher, W.C. Escher) uphill and against the wind both ways.
bikinggrrrl
06-21-09, 09:03 AM
The whole pothole thing got me thinking....
Do you know how anyone can help put pressure on a town's DPW to resurface their roads? As I ride past Walden Pond on Route 126, I often have to take the lane to get through. The Lincoln roads are amazingly awful. I used to think to myself as I strained to keep up with the flow of traffic, "If the residents of Lincoln want me to ride on the right side of the road, they will put some dang pavement there." Well they recently cold-patched some of the holes so I have changed my mantra to "If the residents of Lincoln want me to ride on the right side of the road, they will put some smooth pavement there."
Anyone ever try to contact a town's DPW or selectmen to complain about road conditions? Perhaps write a letter to the editor of local newspaper? I'm not of the mindset that roads should be beautifully maintained for my comfort, but there are definitely roads out there that pose a hazard to cyclists.
FWIW, Carlisle recently did some resurfacing. Rutland Street from the Billerica line to Great Brook Path as well as River Road (aka Monument Street on the Concord end) from Skelton Road to the Concord town line. Plans are in the works to do West Street soon.
Rode into a wood-chipping crew and then a "fix-em-up" road patching crew this afternoon in the Sterling/Princeton area. Unsurprising to me was that all I heard as I pedaled past was Spanish and that the "attempted" repairs were just that...attempted. Sadly, we have lost a war without knowing it......
sherbornpeddler
06-27-09, 08:10 PM
Say dmann,
Time passes and I still ponder which war? Road conditions, Spanish road crew? Something else, as you say, "without knowing it"?
Non biking related thoughts are what I enjoy most about biking. Sometimes road conditions pop back into my head just in time to suddenly steer around a pothole. Personally I veer towards political correctness, tolerance, pulling our fair share. I revel in cycling down a New England road with sun and shade, twisting and turning prodding conversation about hyperinflation, global economy, CEO worship, corruption, stifling entrepreneurs, potholes and wars.
Rode down through Woonsockett today with my daughter to watch lacrosse at Bryant. Nice ride, friendly folk redirected us to the campus and we missed the thunderstorm.
There is something about flying just in cruising speed on shady New England roads (particularly near Emerson's and Thoreaus' stomping grounds) that makes for lively conversations I enjoy. Kinda like shooting the breeze is frowned upon but if I'm chatting with a fishing pole and line then I'm multi-tasking.
nickthaquick1
06-28-09, 06:01 PM
[COLOR=black]
There is something about flying just in cruising speed on shady New England roads (particularly near Emerson's and Thoreaus' stomping grounds) that makes for lively conversations I enjoy. Kinda like shooting the breeze is frowned upon but if I'm chatting with a fishing pole and line then I'm multi-tasking.
i did my undergrad at bryant! and lived with the majority of the lacrosse team in 2008. now that i think of it the roads up and around that area would be excellent for cycling, thanks for the idea!
how is the bike path out in cumberland as far as traffic goes? i used to live in one of those old mill-turn-new-apartment types right on the river, but this was before my biking days.
sherbornpeddler
06-29-09, 03:18 PM
The Blackstone trail beginning at the southern most Woonsockett factory is magnificient. Perfect. It is well used but not crowded. My wife and I go on ride dates down and back on the East Providence to Bristol trail.
Roads around Bryant are very inviting. Nice rolling hills, beautiful area is Smithfield. Our ride to Woonsocket included some of Rt. 126 which wasn't the best but I like exploring urban areas too and Woonsockett has some fascinating history and renovated areas. Traffic seems aware of bicycle traffic and is moderate speed so we didn't feel uncomfortable.
Bryant Universtity has really boomed into a beautiful campus. Great Italian restaurant just south on rt 7 too.
sherbourne...
Time passes and I still ponder which war? Road conditions, Spanish road crew? Something else, as you say, "without knowing it"?
Without getting to cynical, we are losing this country to those whom have no interest in its history, culture, traditions and values; all they want is its money. The moral relativists and PC police have created an Orwellian landscape where the tyranny of the minority prevails callously ignoring the voice of the majority. I am a generation 1.5 American (my fathers parents and my mother were immigrants) as such my childhood could have easily focused on my European roots, but thankfully my parents and local community would have none of that, they were Americans first and insert ethnicity here second. I have witnessed this same pride to be an American in the many Asian and African immigrants that I have had the pleasure to work with. I DO NOT see this from the vast majority of Hispanics I have come across even those born here who inexplicably continue to speak in broken heavily accented English. When I had occasion to spend extended time overseas I made the effort to function within those societies and cultures without any expectation that they submit to my ethnic identity. As you can tell the absolutely abhorrent weather has reduced me to a ranting fool…I need to ride, only 42 miles in the saddle over the last 7 days. :twitchy:
sherbornpeddler
07-02-09, 09:42 AM
Dmann,
We do crave miles, don’t we? Thanks to a 67 miler a couple of days ago I've 173 miles over the last 7 days. My brain, body and outlook so soggy I'm starting to do chores around the house.
When I venture out and think beyond potholes and cellphone drivers with worn out windshield wipers I ponder such stuff. I'm not sure the latest ethnic group is different in benefit to the American soup but I am sure it is different flavor. I imagine my ancestors squinted to see attributes of the each current wave of new folks. Some nose-to-the-grind stone, some arts, some roll-up-the-sleeves labor. If you and I were riding towards Princeton, I’d compare our country to a region like Europe or SE Asia, we trail in diversity, languages, cultures and, most importantly, really good food.
If we turned off Rt 62 and were approaching Wachusett, I’d worry about population growth, standard of living, tax burden on social services, try to think globally rather than just national. I do like the hustle and entrepreneurs of the newest folks, the hand painted signs for a new restaurant and families. I’m not a fan of imperialism, intolerant religions and thinking we are right and “they” are “bad”.
Nice road, your pull.
Sherbourn,
If we are approaching Wachusett from my side of Rt 62 its going to be a long and arduous climb! I am neither a fan/supporter of imperialism nor the "they are bad" school of Americana. All I seek is a level stretch of road for all, like Rt 68 through Rutland and an embracing of this countries language, history and values, those of the melting pot. Generations of "them" hold up in the Barrios of Lowel or Brockton stubbornly clinging to island cultures they fled and spitting at me is just plain wrong. We're at the junction of Rt 62 and Rt 31, your lead for the kick into Princeton center.
sherbornpeddler
07-03-09, 02:45 PM
Nice pull but don't expect anything fancy into virtual Princeton.
BTW, I just rode to Concord, MA, had a sandwich and back at 15.7 mph. Pretty leisurely given 1/4 of the ride was beautiful, quiet meandering along a flood plain.
Barrios have good and bad for sure. Poor behavior and lack of safety in barrios is poor behavior regardless of ethnic group, I agree.
My local area, I like the new Brazilian food in Framingham but miss the Italians that moved out. The Italians replaced the Irish and so forth. The bottom rung on the ladder either work hard to assimilate (Italian and Irish?) or retain their culture (China town in Boston). Seems like the Brazilian want to retain their language and culture but I have to say I see a lot of hustle.
This is so much a better conversation while riding than typing. I hope we meet up on the climb to Wachussett.
BTW, I googled Framingham. My perception is way, way off. I would have guessed it was 20% Brazilian probably because of the change from “in my day”….
. Irish - 17%
· Italian - 12%
· English - 8%
· German - 5%
· Black or African American - 5%
· Brazilian - 5%
· Puerto Rican - 4%
· Russian - 4%
· French (except Basque) - 3%
· Polish - 3%
· Other Hispanic or Latino - 3%
· French Canadian - 3%
· Asian Indian - 2%
· Portuguese - 2%
· Chinese, except Taiwanese - 2%
· Central American: - 2%
· Scottish - 2%
· Scotch-Irish - 1%
· Swedish - 1%
· Subsaharan African - 1%
· Greek - 1%
· South American - 1%
· Salvadoran - 1%
· Canadian - 1%
· West Indian (excluding Hispanic groups) - 1%
· European - 1%
· Guatemalan - 1%
· Lithuanian - 1%
· Arab - 1%
· Eastern European - 1%
· Dominican Republic - 1%
· British - 1%
· Mexican - 1%
Conversations while riding New England roads is pretty cool. Thanks for the ride.
sherbornpeddler
07-06-09, 09:54 PM
I hope y'all got out in this beeeyutiful weather! Rode singlespeed to W. Concord with my daughter during mid day. There was very little traffic and great tune up for our ride in the Prouty this weekend.
bikinggrrrl
07-07-09, 03:55 AM
Nice to have some lovely weather for riding lately. SBP, I'll have to keep my eye out for you in the Concord area!
Jim from Boston
07-07-09, 03:17 PM
I hope y'all got out in this beeeyutiful weather! Rode singlespeed to W. Concord with my daughter during mid day. There was very little traffic and great tune up for our ride in the Prouty this weekend.
Hi SBP,
Thanks for that cheery greeting. Last Saturday, immediately after breaking a rear wheel spoke and loosening the spokes on either side of the broken one I went from Kenmore Square to Lexington, then Rte 225 out to Forge Village, to Ayer, then Rte 110 to Harvard, to Bolton and Rte 117 and Rte 20 back to Boston. I estimate that I had about 20 to 30 miles in Carlisle and beyond where the cyclists outnumbered the cars.
Harvard was such a nice town to pass through on the Fourth. They were doing it up right, including an antique car show. It was virtually a miracle that Saturday was such a gorgeous day, in particular considering the nasty thunderstorms occuring now.
Total mileage was about 75. One block from home my tire exploded because I had worn through my rim. The guys at my shop were impressed. It certainly would have been a ride-stopper way out west there. I'm glad it happened this week-end because I'm planning my Prouty surrogate century on July 11, as we discussed previously. I'm thinking of going northward to the Merrimack Valley region and back. It certainly will be less of a hassle to do, but the Prouty sounds like a memorable adventure. I look forward to your report.
BTW, I enjoyed the style of your preceding posts with dmann on your imaginary bike ride to Wachusetts. I would have added my two cents, but I was too breathless by your pace. :lol:
Sincerely,
James de Boston
sherbornpeddler
07-08-09, 07:45 AM
1. Dmann and I were on an imaginary ride?
2. How do you manage to "half full", wonderful 4th, bask in LBS compliments, coach a broken wheel through a 75 mile ride and dodge T storms. I'd have cursed the glass, complained my half-empty was smaller than your half-full and not known to loosen adjacent spokes.
Were you fuelled by New England roads, ingenuity, the Pops http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pzCoyhanEk ?
As was the case virtualizing Wachusett, tell us of your adjacent spoke strategy, your decision to press on and your rim falling like Phidippides approaching Athens?
Jim from Boston
07-08-09, 09:47 AM
1. Dmann and I were on an imaginary ride?
2. How do you manage to "half full", wonderful 4th, bask in LBS compliments, coach a broken wheel through a 75 mile ride and dodge T storms. I'd have cursed the glass, complained my half-empty was smaller than your half-full and not known to loosen adjacent spokes.
Were you fuelled by New England roads, ingenuity, the Pops http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pzCoyhanEk ?
As was the case virtualizing Wachusett, tell us of your adjacent spoke strategy, your decision to press on and your rim falling like Phidippides approaching Athens?
Hi SBP,
Nice reply, great prose. No thunderstorms on the fourth as I recall; it was a miracle.
I actually broke my spoke on the way to a 24 hour CVS at 6AM to buy a cycle computer battery because the computer was acting up the day before and I thought the battery might be failing. I was out to do 75 miles according to my Century training schedule and I wanted to be as precise as possible (I'm very goal-oriented). After the spoke broke and the rim was significantly rubbing the brake I was concerned if my repair would hold up. I thought about just riding tight loops around town but that seemed too boring so I went way out west, with out any significant wobble after the quick fix.
I always carry a spoke wrench that fits the spoke nipples. All I did was gradually loosen the spokes on either side of the broken one, about a quarter to half turn each time, and checked the wheel postion relative to the brake pad until it centered pretty well with each revolution. The trick is to know which way to turn. The rule is "Righty tighty, lefty loosey" as you face the spokes with the bike in the upright position, but since I set it upside down to fix the wheel, the opposite directions apply.
I didn't notice any problem the entire ride and felt pretty good. I was slowly riding on the sidewalk of my block in Kenmore and the front tube suddenly exploded with a loud bang and I was riding on the rim with a collapsed tire. Fortunately I unclipped in time and shuddered to think how the bike would handle if I was zipping downhill. :eek: (There was a thread on this subject sometime ago. As I recall most correspondent said they were able to handle it OK.). There were some strips of metal protruding out of the rim and at first I thought the tire bead had worn through, but in fact they were shards from the edge of my rim. The shop is building me a new wheel and tuning my bike for this Saturday's century attempt.
Nonetheless, it was a glorious Fourth besides the bike ride. I walked through the teeming masses on the festive Esplanade that afternoon, and that night I watched the concert and fireworks on TV, while I could still hear the bombs bursting in air simultaneously in Kenmore Square.
Best wishes on the Prouty this Saturday. I had been invited to a dinner that Saturday by a colleague who has a summer home up there. :(
Jim
sherbornpeddler
07-12-09, 06:04 PM
Gaahraate Ride Saturday. Daughter and I "stealth camped" nearby Friday night and rode to an 8AM start. Under threat of thunderstorms and rain (ever hear of the stuff?) and to assure a good time was had by all two of us we rode the 50 mile criss-crossing the river north of Hanover in the good company of enthusiastic riders, volunteers, perfect weather and magnificent views.
I strongly recommend this fundraiser ride as well organized, just beautiful views, cool NE towns, excellent, spacious roads, great sponsor food....and ice cream....and a friendly, crowded finish. The roads are very bicycle friendly and what little traffic there was, was well supervised. A great cause and great ride.
sherbornpeddler
07-16-09, 07:59 PM
Wellelsey to Carlisle and beyond century tomorrow with a few friends.
Sunday I cast off one a three day road trial of a Raleigh Cadent 1 converted to a light tourer.
sherbornpeddler
07-20-09, 06:57 PM
2 day cut short to 2 day because of tribal and cycle matters. Tiagra brifter on my Cadent 1 failed with shimano debris; a small, white tape jammed things up. Tribal matters weren’t so easily fixed and I left 11AM. Hot weather, my navigation around Worcester, Western MA hills, 20lbs of gear, bib shorts and my fitness do not make for my favorite combination. I slept soundly on a soft Amherst lawn in my Contrail tent. Today started and middled with hillllls north of Quabbin over to Princeton. Lots of road repair on Rt. 62. It will be nice and road crews are friendly and bicycle considerate. Sitting in the Princeton gazebo, I was a clothed, sagging version of a famous Rodin statue and contemplated Wachusett or a nap. The nap won. Seemed like it was downhill almost all the way to Sherborn. 165 loaded miles was a tough, beautiful ride.
beat.tk
07-21-09, 11:28 AM
Great day for commuting in Cambridge-Somerville because EVERYWHERE SMELLS LIKE BACON.
You'd think the rain would diminish the hammy smell, but no.
sherbornpeddler
07-21-09, 04:40 PM
Great day for commuting in Cambridge-Somerville because EVERYWHERE SMELLS LIKE BACON.
You'd think the rain would diminish the hammy smell, but no.
You are right! Smells are a great part of riding. Terrific observation!
atom bomb
07-22-09, 06:23 AM
Hmmm, when I have ridden through Cambridge and Somerville it usually smells like laundry. But maybe it depends on time of day.
On Saturday, Needham smelled like manure.
ZIPP2001
07-25-09, 07:07 PM
Had a fun ride out to Worcester airport today. Did all thre climbs up to the airport the out to rte. 70 around the resivior thru Clinton, Lancaster, Sterling, Leominster to my moms for a visit. Got in a total of 78 miles.
sherbornpeddler
07-26-09, 09:54 PM
Zipp that is serious hill work! I went through Worcester last week on route to Amherst via Rt. 9. Not the greatest road in Worcester but pretty considerate urban drivers. A truck driver gave me the Sox score. Returning I stayed north of Quabbin to Princeton and angled south on Rt.140, crossed Rt.70 and mucked (aka rode around hills) north of Hopkington to Ashland.
ZIPP2001
07-27-09, 03:05 PM
Hi SBP !
I've done Winchendon rte. 12 into Worcester to rte.9 into Belchertown to rte. 202 back to Winchendon which is a nice route that loops around the Quabbin. It's a nice route with great views. I like going thru Worcester and doing the airport for some reason, I climg the three different roads leading to the airport. My legs have been feeling pretty good lately so i've been doing more climbing. I'm going to be doing a ride out by your way in the next few weeks. I'm going rte. 202 to 119 to rte. 31 thru Mason NH., to rte. 101 over Temple Mt. I'll stay on rte. 101 toward Keene then hit rte. 12 to head back home to Winchendon. As the weather gets hotter I like to ride longer distances.
sherbornpeddler
07-27-09, 03:30 PM
Wow! How long are your Belchertown and Temple rides? How long do these loops take you? Beautiful country. I lived in Mason years ago, major hills. You must fly into Peterborough.
ZIPP2001
07-29-09, 06:19 AM
SBP
The Temple MT. route comes in at 87 miles, and the Beltchertown route is 121 miles. Both routes have plenty of rolling climbs, that make them pretty fun. The last time I did the Beltchertown route I was out for a little over 8 hours of total time, thats rest stop included. If the weather is nice this Saturday i'm going out to Worcester again to do the airport and maybe ride out toward Auburn for a bit.
bikinggrrrl
08-09-09, 04:14 PM
mmmmmmm :).... had a couple of great rides through Harvard this past week.:thumb: Gosh I love those hills (especially on a tandem), even with the baby trailer. Have had to make a few adjustments to our rides with baby in tow: no more 50mph descents (although I'll allow 40), and no blowing around super tight corners at top speed.
sherbornpeddler
08-12-09, 07:18 PM
I didn't notice laundry smells on route 16 and along the river to Cambridge and out via Minuteman and Concord Monday but did enjoy the ride.
Tuesday I found favorite roads in Wellesley (Weston Rd) and Lincoln (Baker Bridge Rd) are under much appreciated repair but Baker Bridge is impassible. I did "ride" it with police warning at 2-5 mph and kept one foot uncleated. The grader driver considerately stopped to make it easier for me to pass but I will avoid BB until September.
Jim from Boston
08-17-09, 04:35 PM
...Tuesday I found favorite roads in Wellesley (Weston Rd) and Lincoln (Baker Bridge Rd) are under much appreciated repair but Baker Bridge is impassible. I did "ride" it with police warning at 2-5 mph and kept one foot uncleated. The grader driver considerately stopped to make it easier for me to pass but I will avoid BB until September.
Hi sbp,
Always enjoy reading about your rides out in the beautiful western sector. This Saturday I rode out to Walden Pond. Baker Bridge Road has been a favorite road of mine ever since moving to Boston, and with reluctance I avoided it on your recommendations, but you can't go wrong with any route out there. I stopped for a nice morning photo of a pastoral landscape at Sandy Pond and Codman Roads.
BTW, as a similar Public Service Announcement, I took Concord Ave outbound from Cambridge towards its end and then on to Trapelo. There is a pretty steep uphill out of Belmont Center and then a steep downhill on a terrible, bone-shaking road surface. I wanted to at least unclip my right pedal, but it was all I could do to hang on. Except for that it was a memorably serene ride on a Saturday AM before 7:00 AM.
Jim
beat.tk
08-17-09, 05:06 PM
Ha
I live off of Concord and don't take it out that way, for those very reasons, unless I'm sure it's a low traffic time of day and my legs are real fresh like.
Belmont St is pretty fun imo.
Went out today when the mercury was saying 92, total slow fest, but I have that nice zapped buzzy feeling, so it's all good.
Jim from Boston
08-17-09, 05:16 PM
Ha
I live off of Concord and don't take it out that way, for those very reasons, unless I'm sure it's a low traffic time of day and my legs are real fresh like.
Belmont St is pretty fun imo...
Thanks for the reply and confirmation of my report. Next time I may do Belmont Rd. to Totten Pond and Winter St around the Reservoir on to Trapelo. Trapelo straight out from Belmont is nice too.
beat.tk
08-28-09, 10:35 AM
So... yesterday, ride was real.
Real smelly.
Dump trucks, shellac, fertilizers, pesticide spray, skunks.
I guess if it's good weather to bike, it's good weather to shellac.
Quite honestly, the skunk scent was refreshing having just rode through a lawn chemical cloud.
Other than that, ride was fine. Everybody and their grandma out enjoying the day.
Did a 45 mile loop through Cambridge/Wilmington/Bedford.
Learned Burlington's not the best town to ride through.
Broken glass everywhere, cranky ladies yellin', those tire trap storm drains.
Where'd everybody else go yesterday?
G-money
08-28-09, 04:20 PM
I have a hard time getting on the bike before 6:30 or so, but I managed to ride 50 miles total between evening rides on Tue, Wed and Thur. Gives me 90 for the week. I live in East Boston, and I either ride out to Deer Island (great sunset) or up Rivere Beach to Point of Pines (which has very few pines). I am bummed that the days are getting so dark so soon, but I am trying to get used to riding at night.
How late in the season does everyone ride in the Boston area?
atom bomb
10-19-09, 04:38 PM
Newton to Lowell and back today on the trike. 60 mi. Via Watertown, Belmont, Arlington, Minuteman, Bedford, Carlisle, Westford. I wanted to check out the first phase of the Bruce Freeman Rail Trail. Straight, flat, beautifully rural and covered with wet leaves and pine needles... so... good to be on three wheels. Nice path. The BFRT crosses some intersections in Chelmsford. I chose to stick to the path and use the ped signals. Sitting waiting for the "walk" and a pickup truck passes, beeps and I see the distinct silhouette of a bird being chucked in my direction. So I'm like, hey, "don't hate me because I'm beautiful".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hz8ul-gmLyA
sherbornpeddler
10-20-09, 03:20 PM
Atom you da bomb! Pantene moments on a trike!
Great to hear from you!
I almost made it to BFRT today riding my crisp, pony like Serotta Fierte on an errand to Burlington and swung through Carlisle and Sudbury (because it was too nice a day not to) for a 71 mile loop.
Pavement notes: Rt. 126 in Concord is grated south of Rt 2 and the Walden esse turn) A section of Weston Rd south of Rt. 9 in Wellesley is also greatly ground.
A nice 20 mile loop up and over the top of Sterling, onto the airport, no gliders up today :( Back home via Chase Hill, George Hill and Lancaster center. I was all smiles even after inhaling a pesudo lady bug beetle and dropping my water bottle :eek: I'm closing in on my mileage goal for my 1st year (April - Nov) of fitness riding.
bikinggrrrl
10-22-09, 07:38 AM
SBP, I wish I had seen your note about 126 before yesterday's ride. Slowed us down quite a bit and opted to take 117 just to get off it. Nearly woke the sleeping baby in the trailer. Boy that sure will be sweet when they finish. Are these improvements part of stimulus $$?
Looks like they are going to work on Sudbury road in Concord between Route 2 and Verrill Farm too. Love love love it!
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