Originally Posted by
BobbyG
I drove North a few miles to an after work meeting this afternoon. Google Maps showed an accident and traffic jam on the highway. Whenever that happens the two next alternate surface streets it suggests also jam.
Then I remembered some residential and access streets I used to ride before Colorado Springs added its newer MUPs. Sure enough, it was clear sailing. And while the speed limits varied from 30 to 40mph, I beat the estimated Google Maps time. I even had periodic views of the slower highway traffic inching along.
Not only that, there was the nostalgia factor of the old routes.
Originally Posted by
no motor?
The other day I had something similar happen where I got off the main road and on to some old bike routes.
Better than sitting in traffic!
Originally Posted by
Jim from Boston
When I was growing up in Detroit, around grades 6 to 8, my good friend and I used to also like to go out on our bikes and “get lost,” as well as our intentional rides throughout the neighborhood.
Detroit though, is laid out on a rectangular grid system, so we were never really that lost, compared to riding in Boston.
One benefit of cycling around Boston and knowing the back roads, is that occasionally when driving on a freeway if I encounter a traffic jam, I know how to get off and bypass the jam on the local surface roads, while the unaware drivers sit it out
Originally Posted by
Jim from Boston
This weekend, Friday PM through Monday PM I did a 1600 mile round trip drive to North Carolina. (I took my bike, but time and family activities precluded riding.)…
While in Connecticut [on the way back to Boston]
, I heard about the bus explosion on the eastbound Mass Pike in Newton that shut it down with a miles-long back up in my direction, that I would soon encounter.
A favorite training ride segment is to ride from Hopkinton [starting line for the Boston Marathon]
to Norwood through some beautiful back roads with little traffic. So I got off the Mass Pike at I-495, well before the traffic jam, and off at Hopkinton and followed my route.
I went through Hopkinton to Holliston … through Sherborn to Dover, but rather continued on to Millis and then backtracked via Rte 109 to Norwood.
Though only traveling 30-40 mph, at least I was continuously moving, with only rare traffic lights, it was so backroad. I was a bit chagrinned to “despoil” the route by car, but I do get a different perspective with my head up, above road-view.
When I arrived at Norwood, my colleague had not even heard about the bus explosion.
Originally Posted by
chas58
I do like those quiet residential streets. They are pretty much my goto for commuting.
Originally Posted by
nomadmax
I'd rather be making good time going the wrong way than sitting in traffic 
PS to [MENTION=200675]chas58[/MENTION]: I note you post from Michigan. I grew up on the East Side of Detroit, and I remember
wide, long, straight residential streets in the City Proper, safe to ride on.