Anyone ridden Boston to NY City?
#2
Bye Bye
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 3,677
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From: Gone gone gone
i think there are a bunch of SS / FG riders that have done this. might want to post over there.
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So long. Been nice knowing you BF.... to all the friends I've made here and in real life... its been great. But this place needs an enema.
So long. Been nice knowing you BF.... to all the friends I've made here and in real life... its been great. But this place needs an enema.
#3
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2006
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Bikes: ANT Club Racer, 2004 Trek 520
I did the reverse, NY > BOS. It was a few years ago and the details are a little fuzzy. Basically, you can take this route from Boston to Providence. Then, use the Providence state bike map to piece together a path to Connecticut (following the Coventry Greenway from Providence to Rt. 14 is a good bet), then use the Transalt CT bike map to navigate CT (we'd do Norwich > Middletown > New Haven > Danbury > NY state border), then use the TransAlt Westchester map to get you the rest of the way.
It's a bit of a sprawl-y route as you'll be hitting metropolitan suburbs through most of the segments in MA and RI. CT is scenic, though. An alternate, if you don't mind hill climbing, is to head west from Boston towards Oxford, then south to CT, skipping RI entirely. The sections between Natick / Southboro > Hopkinton > Sutton > Oxford are gorgeous but rolling. The Boston > Providence route, by contrast is reasonably flat, and you won't really hit any serious climbs until you get to CT.
It's a bit of a sprawl-y route as you'll be hitting metropolitan suburbs through most of the segments in MA and RI. CT is scenic, though. An alternate, if you don't mind hill climbing, is to head west from Boston towards Oxford, then south to CT, skipping RI entirely. The sections between Natick / Southboro > Hopkinton > Sutton > Oxford are gorgeous but rolling. The Boston > Providence route, by contrast is reasonably flat, and you won't really hit any serious climbs until you get to CT.
#4
Originally Posted by spokenword
I did the reverse, NY > BOS. It was a few years ago and the details are a little fuzzy. Basically, you can take this route from Boston to Providence. Then, use the Providence state bike map to piece together a path to Connecticut (following the Coventry Greenway from Providence to Rt. 14 is a good bet), then use the Transalt CT bike map to navigate CT (we'd do Norwich > Middletown > New Haven > Danbury > NY state border), then use the TransAlt Westchester map to get you the rest of the way.
It's a bit of a sprawl-y route as you'll be hitting metropolitan suburbs through most of the segments in MA and RI. CT is scenic, though. An alternate, if you don't mind hill climbing, is to head west from Boston towards Oxford, then south to CT, skipping RI entirely. The sections between Natick / Southboro > Hopkinton > Sutton > Oxford are gorgeous but rolling. The Boston > Providence route, by contrast is reasonably flat, and you won't really hit any serious climbs until you get to CT.
It's a bit of a sprawl-y route as you'll be hitting metropolitan suburbs through most of the segments in MA and RI. CT is scenic, though. An alternate, if you don't mind hill climbing, is to head west from Boston towards Oxford, then south to CT, skipping RI entirely. The sections between Natick / Southboro > Hopkinton > Sutton > Oxford are gorgeous but rolling. The Boston > Providence route, by contrast is reasonably flat, and you won't really hit any serious climbs until you get to CT.
Thanks! i'll take a look at those. As for the "serious climbs" what do you define as such? I might not be averse to that but if there's a bunch of mt. washingtons, then I'd never make it.
#5
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Joined: Jun 2006
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Bikes: ANT Club Racer, 2004 Trek 520
Originally Posted by donrhummy
Thanks! i'll take a look at those. As for the "serious climbs" what do you define as such? I might not be averse to that but if there's a bunch of mt. washingtons, then I'd never make it.
#6
Member
Joined: Feb 2007
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I've never ridden anything like that but I do live in CT and if I were you I'd try to go south early, perhaps in RI and consider doing some extra miles to avoid the hills of northern CT. Although if you stay north you will avoid a lot more urban areas. There's a ridge in central CT plus tons of rollers in eastern CT, but it's probably better than the birkshires.
Also, I'm not sure if you meant in one day or not, but if it's not in one day just go for the most rural/safe route. Hills are part of life, you just don't want them to kill you on a long day.
Also, I'm not sure if you meant in one day or not, but if it's not in one day just go for the most rural/safe route. Hills are part of life, you just don't want them to kill you on a long day.





