Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Ride Completed!

Finished the ride at 2:00 PM today!  Total distance was 3,160 miles.

One late pie entry - Boston Cream Pie.   More of a cake but very tasty -  In the top ten but not the top three.

Watch for a trip wrap up in a week or so.

- Chris


Friday, June 26, 2015

3000 Miles

Reached 3000 miles!  Three more riding days.

Two more pies:
  Rhubarb Pie - very good - Solid A.
  Blueberry Pie - fair - C+

Almost done!!!




Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Maine

I am now in Maine! Just a few more days to go.


Friday, June 19, 2015

Boston

Outside Boston now. I have completed 2690 miles!  Just a little over a week to go!



Sunday, June 14, 2015

New York State

Continuing north, we are in New York.  Over 3/4 done - a little over two weeks left to go!
Had a real good Apple pie (from the grocery store)  a B+.


Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Philadelphia

Now in Philadelphia. Onward to New Jersey!

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Pennsylvania

Through Maryland and now in Pennsylvania.  Over 2/3 done - less than 1000 miles to go!
Had a lot of rain the last few days.

New Pies!

Peach Pie - a solid C.
Whoopee Pie -  a home made version of the Moon Pie but much better - a B.
Home made Lemon Custard Pie made by Sandra Sweeney in Maryland -  the best pie so far - an A or A+!


Friday, June 5, 2015

DC

I am in DC now.  Almost 2/3 done!  We had a lot rain the last three days.  Need to checkout more pies!

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Williamsburg, Virginia

It is getting hot again. We are over half way. Onward to DC.


Thursday, May 28, 2015

Half Way

I am now in Kitty Hawk - half way!


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Outer Banks

I am in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Almost half way!  Great weather now.  Hope it continues.
Need to check out more pies.

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Surf City North Carolina

Heading to the outer banks. Today's pie was Coconut Cream pie from the Food Lion grocery store.  Just a C+.

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Cape Fear

Finally got out of South Carolina.   It is by far the worst state for riding I have ever been in.  Heavy traffic and if shoulders exist they have rumble strips that makes them unusable.
North Carolina is much better riding!

Pie update - had Little Debbie Oatmeal pie from the gas station.  I give it a C.  Also had an Apple Pie from the Piggley Wiggley. Just a C+.

I should be about half way in a few more days.



Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Over One Third Done

I am in Charleston, SC and have over 1,000 miles complete!  We have our second rest day today so I toured the town by foot.  I learned a new version of the Civil War at the local museum.  I also discovered a store that specializes in Moon Pies!  Many sizes and flavors!  Moon Pies with ice cream.  They even run a movie on the history of Moon Pies (since 1917)!


Sunday, May 17, 2015

South Carolina

Entered South Carolina today. We are on the third map (out of 7) almost a third of the way done.
Another flavor of Moon Pie -Strawberry.  I need to try some better pies.


Friday, May 15, 2015

Two more kinds of Moon Pies

Had two more kinds of Moon Pies today (Vanilla and Banana)   Yum, yum.
Also rode 86 miles .




Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Georgia

Finally out of Florida!  It is HOT and HUMID.  We are camped just outside the Okefenokee Swamp.
Another entry in the best pie contest -  Moon Pies from the gas station.  A nice treat when you are hungry but not a continder for the best pie on the east coast.


Monday, May 11, 2015

St Augustine

Some more long hot and humid days.  Finally a rest day at St. Augustine.  We are now finished with map One (six more to go).  We will be out of Florida soon.

Funny  thing about St. Augustine,  it claims to be the oldest Settlement in the US but Santa Fe, NM has much older buildings.  It turns out that St. Augustine was burned down three times by the British and once by pirates so the oldest buildings are from around 1740. Most are much newer than that.


Thursday, May 7, 2015

Another long day

May 7:  Today was suppose to be only 65 miles but it was 78.  One mile shorter than yesterday.  Now it is getting real HOT.  Glad I have a fan for my tent.   

Palm Beach

May 6:  Today was long with a head wind all day - 79 miles.  One person got a hotel room 20 miles before the end and another came in at dark.  We had lots of food left over from dinner (with two pies - Pecan and Pumpkin).  Everyone loved the Pecan pie - a solid A!


Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Miami

It rained most of the day (60 miles).  We went right through downtown Miami back to Hollywood.  Further north to tomorrow.


Monday, May 4, 2015

Everglades

A short day (27 miles).  But we hiked and kayaked in the Everglades.  The hike was in up to 20 inches of water!  I prefer walking on wood decks.  Up to Hollywood tomorrow.


Sunday, May 3, 2015

A lot more wind

May 3:  Got to Key Largo today.  57 miles and a lot of wind!  We leave the Keys tomorrow.  No pies today.


Leaving Key West

We left Key West on May 1st.  A lot of wind and TWO Key Lime pies!  The first was at a bakery 25 miles out.  It got a B+.

We also had one at dinner from the grocery store.  Big surprised - it was the best pie so far!  An A-.
More later.


Friday, May 1, 2015

The Journey Begins

I started riding from Key West today.  The Key Lime pie I tried was just so so.  I give  it just a C+.

He is a quote for today:

"The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step"

-Lao



Thursday, April 30, 2015

Cherry Pie

I had my first pie of the trip.  The pie that all others will be judged.  Cherry pie from Giorgio's Bakery in Hollywood.

I give it a solid "C".  Looking forward to Key Lime pie when we get into the Keys.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Hollywood

I am in Hollywood, FL where I will met the group tomarrow.  Everything got here and the bike is working fine.  I rode to the hostel from the airport.  More later.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

The Best Pie on the East Coast

The Great Pie Search

Part of my journey will be to find the best pie on the East Coast.  I will start with Key Lime Pie and move up to Georgia Peach Pie and Pecan Pie.  I might even throw in some Maryland Crab Cakes before trying Shoe Fly Pie in Amish Pennsylvania and New Jersey Pizza Pie.  Onward to Boston there will be Boston Cream Pie and Pumpkin Pie before I finish it with Maine Blueberry Pie.  According to Wikipedia, fruit pies were invented by the Pilgrims with help from the Native Americans who pointed out the local ingredients.  (FYI - I came up with this idea on March 14 - pi day - 3 14.)

Monday, April 20, 2015

The Details

Here is a an itinerary of the trip.


MAY


Week 1

After gathering in Fort Lauderdale and starting our shuttle to Key West, Jimmy Buffet tunes will come to mind as we search for Margaritaville in the Florida Keys, that pearl-necklace string of some 1,700 islands whose “bottom” marks the southernmost point in the contiguous U.S. Each of the Keys offers its own information center with listings of local happenings and attractions. Starting at milepost 0 of US Route 1, we will ride along many of the keys: Key West, Big Pine Key, Marathon, Islamorada and Key Largo. We will finish the week riding past our original start location of Ft. Lauderdale; making our way North.

Week 2

We’ll start the week at the Backpackers Beach Hostel in Fort Lauderdale, famous among spring breakers of yore and for an extensive canal system that’s earned it the moniker “the Venice of America.” From here on north, the route alternates between urban and suburban conditions. We’ll no doubt detect the roar of stock cars as we pass through the Daytona Beach vicinity, birthplace of NASCAR. We’ll also enjoy an overnight in Bellwood, located just six miles from the Kennedy Space Center.
We’ll enjoy a layover day in the oldest continually occupied European-settled city in the United States, St. Augustine. Continuing our self-powered journey through the past and present, we’ll skirt around the congestion of Jacksonville and then head inland.

Week 3

After leaving the beautiful state of Florida and into Georgia, we’ll tour the mother of all swamps, the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge — keeping an eye out, of course, for Pogo Possum and his compadres (alligators included). Near Reidsville we’ll camp at lovely Gordonia-Alatamaha State Park, whose unusual name derives from the rare Gordonia tree, a member of the bay family that once grew here, and the original spelling of the Altamaha River that flows nearby. Continuing in Georgia, we’ll have a long piece of inland riding, passing through Savannah and Statesboro, made famous in rock ’n’ roll circles by the Allman Brothers’ cover of “Statesboro Blues,” a 1920s Blind Willie McTell composition. We will end the week in South Carolina at Givhans Ferry State Park, with its shaded sites and put-in for canoeing the Edisto River, the longest free-flowing blackwater stream in North America.

Week 4

Charleston, South Carolina the most hospitable and beautiful city in the South is on our agenda as we take a spur into the city. Highlights include the wonderful parade of antebellum homes lining Battery Park, and Fort Sumter National Monument, where the first shots of the Civil War resounded on April 12, 1861, when Confederate artillery opened fire on the federal fort located in Charleston Harbor. After a ride through some farms and swamps it is Surf City, here we come! Though it may be a continent away from the Surf City the Southern California duo Jan & Dean sang about, this is no inland town, either. Residing on Topsail, a 26-mile-long barrier island, the area is heralded for some of the most unspoiled and uncrowded beaches on the entire East Coast.

Week 5

We’ll take a layover day at the Outer Banks Hostel and Campground in Kitty Hawk, where we can visit the Wright Brothers National Memorial. The subsequent ride along Cape Hatteras National Seashore, a sandscape that is constantly changing due the action of wind and waves, is one you will long remember — even lacking a Blackbeard the Pirate sighting. Before we know it, we will leave coastal North Carolina and the blustery Outer Banks heading inland to farm country and one of the oldest working farms in America; Chippokes Plantation State Park. Taking the ferry across the James River you will think we have landed in colonial America as we ride through historic Jamestown and Williamsburg. We end the week as we begin to leave the “South” making our way via a mix of quiet, hilly Virginia country byways and busy urban roads leading us to Richmond, where we’ll sense things beginning to feel more “Southern” — and not surprisingly so, considering that this city was the capital of the Confederacy during the Civil War.

JUNE

Week 6

Having begin the in the vicinity of Fredericksburg, Virginia, where we have our first brush with a major Civil War battlefield. Moving toward our Nation’s capital we will travel along a well-utilized bike path southward to Washington’s Mount Vernon, where the Father of Our Nation resided until his death in 1799. We will take a day to visit the National Mall and other famous sites. Traveling across Maryland and Pennsylvania we will traverse Amish country, no doubt sharing the roads with horse-drawn buggies as we make our way to Philadelphia. We’ll visit evocative Valley Forge National Historical Park, where Washington built his Continental Army into a fighting force over the winter of 1777-78, despite ravaging cold, hunger, and disease. According to the National Park Service, the 3,600-acre park “commemorates the sacrifices and perseverance of the Revolutionary War generation and honors the ability of citizens to pull together and overcome adversity during extraordinary times.”

Week 7

In Philadelphia, we will have a chance to visit sites and attractions like Independence Hall, the Liberty Bell, and the National Constitution Center on a rest day. We will depart the City of Brotherly Love and ride into in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, the Middle Delaware River makes a run of some 40 miles through a hill country so wild that it might take you by surprise. After riding through a gorgeous stretch of New Jersey along the Delaware River we will enter Port Jervis, New York and on to Hyde Park, New York and a visit to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt National Historic Site near Hyde Park, New York, Roosevelt once famously said, “All that is within me cries out to go back to my home on the Hudson River.” And when you see that home, known as Springwood, and its setting, you will understand why he felt this way.

Week 8

The start of our final two weeks we will find ourselves threading our way through the heart of (very) hilly New England by way of Connecticut and Rhode Island, visiting wall-calendar-worthy villages like Thompson and Pleasant Valley. You will shout “the British are coming, the British are coming” as you ride your way into colonial America and the Minuteman National Historical Park, situated between Lexington and Concord, where the opening battle of the American Revolution is brought to life through exhibits and docent activities. We may take a 35-mile spur to explore the city of Boston. In any case we will finish our last week in the towns of Exeter and Derry, New Hampshire.

Week 9

You will be asking yourself “where did the weeks go” as the tiny New England states whiz by after we enter our last state and first evening in Maine at Wells, founded in 1643 and one of the state’s oldest communities. We will leave the coast again and spend one night near Sebago Lake, the deepest (more than 300 feet in places) and second largest lake in the Pine Tree State and skirt the hustle and bustle of Portland. After a short inland jaunt, we head back to the shoreline as we set sail up the Eastern Seaboard, passing through gorgeous coastal towns like Camden and Damariscotta. Bar Harbor is our next stop along with a ride along the old carriage paths webbing Acadia National Park. We end our long journey on the Canadian border in the US town of Callais, ME, pronounced callous. We will celebrate our new found friendships and accomplishments with a great dinner and restful night before we shuttle back to Bangor, ME and depart each other’s company.

Friday, April 17, 2015

Thoreau

This was a quote I found on my 1981 cross country bike trip:
I go forth to make new demands on life.
I pray that the life of this spring and summer
may never lie fair in my memory.
May I dare as I have never done!
May I persevere as I have never done!
A person should be worthier at the end of the journey
than at the beginning!
- Thoreau

Friday, March 6, 2015

Introduction

Atlantic Coast Bicycle Trip
April 30 - July 1, 2015


This blog will follow my bicycle journey with Adventure Cycling up the US East Coast from Key West, Flordia to Canada.

Here is a description of the trip from the Adventure Cycling website:

This van-supported grand tour of the Atlantic Coast leads past battlefields and other reminders of the American Revolution and the Civil War; through our country’s earliest European settlements, Jamestown and St. Augustine, and a handful of major cities; and to the doorstep of the homes of two of our most accomplished presidents. We’ll also trace the history of flight, from Kitty Hawk, North Carolina — where a pair of bicycle builders known as the Wright Brothers first put wing to air in 1903 — to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Here, on July 16, 1969, the Apollo 11 launch took place, and four days later the spaceship landed on the moon.

But we’ll remain down to Earth for this terrific ride. Going from Key West, Florida, through Bar Harbor, to the Canadian border in Calais, the Atlantic Coast Route will take us through the “best of the East,” a spectrum of beauty that is often subtle but at other times eyepopping. We’ll spin through quiet farm country, lush state parks, and refuges teeming with wildlife. So much more than a 63-day, 2,864-mile bike tour up the Eastern Seaboard — this tour is a history lesson on the go, where the past comes to life in dynamic ways.