Bike Tour 2023 – Day 39: Meadville to New Castle

Today was a day that I was not looking forward to: the dreaded hills of Pennsylvania. As it turned out, the hills weren’t bad at all or, maybe, the White, Green, and Adirondack Mountains taught me a thing or two about climbing.

The day started with a pretty darn good hotel breakfast. Biscuit and gravy, wee cheese omelette, Raisin Bran, a slice of buttered bread, coffee, and OJ.

Getting back to the route 1.5 miles away in downtown Meadville was simple enough. Once on route I headed south and up.

Up 300 feet, down 200, up 200, down 400 etc. All day long. None of the climbs seemed particularly steep. I’d find a gear, get into a rhythm and just spin. No walking. No stopping.

The smoke from the Canadian wildfires was back so I put on my new N95 mask, acquired for free from CVS.

Smoky day

I lost my second item today, my first being a razor back in New Hampshire. Today I lost a sun sleeve. (It’s a sleeve you wear on your arms in lieu of sunscreen.)

I was initially going to stay in Mercer with a Warmshowers host but I decided they’ve 40-mile day would leave me with too much distance and climbing for my ride to Pittsburgh tomorrow.

I decided to ride to New Castle, near the Ohio state line. My route went from Meadville to Cochranton to Sandy Lake to Mercer to New Castle.

The road quality declined near the end of the day. I started to see potholes and other winter wear on the roads. I also had to deal with the odd depression in the travel lane caused my Amish buggy horses.

Speaking of horses, I saw one colt with its mother near the road. I stopped to take a picture and mom was not having it. She started to trot away with her youngster in tow.

Come back!

I grabbed lunch at a Subway, my first of the trip, that was attached to a gas station convenience stores outside an Amish man was filling up a gas can. He parked his horse and buggy off to the side.

Personally, I think the horse was feeling disrespected

After yesterday’s very good experience at a Holiday Inn Express, I decided Gyp spring for another. Nice hotels sure beat the skanky ones I usually stay at.

I’m staying with friends in Pittsburgh tomorrow night then, if I get some weather luck, I can camp for the remaining five days of the tour.

Time to go check out the burrito joint next door.

Mikes today: 59.5

Tour miles: 2,218.5

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 38: Erie to Meadville

My Warmshowers stay in Erie was yet another success. Two meals, a private bath, a queen-size air mattress, secure bike parking, and a chatty hostess is hard to beat.

I hit the dusty trail around 8 headed west out of Erie. Before leaving town I took a roughly 20-mile spin through Presque Isle State Park. The park occupies an peninsula that protects the Erie harbor. It was here that Commodore Perry built the ships he used to defeat British naval forces during the War of 1812.

On this weekday morning the park road was a delightful place to be. Views of the bay and lake alternated with wooded fresh water marshland. As I rode to the end and back I was entertained by countless birds tweeting and chirping and calling.

Pretty good way to start the day

I stopped to check out the Perry monument and have a chat with a family of Canada geese.

Don’t give up the ship!
Family outing

After a couple of hours I was back on my route headed west. After a stop for coffee, muffin, and pie-in-a-box, I made it to the end of my westward journey. I turned south for the final leg of the tour.

Up to this point the day’s ride had been on level ground but now I began to climb away from the lake. Except for some down and up river crossings, I was riding uphill on a one or two percent grade for about 12 miles. I gained 500 feet of elevation in the process.

The smoke seemed to finish as the day progressed (although it appears to have returned as I right this in the evening).

I gave up 100 feet with a short down hill before riding once more on level ground until I arrived in Meadville and went back up.

In town I had a humongous lunner or lupper. A big bowl of broccoli and cheese soup and pot roast on bread with mashed potatoes and gravy, all washed down with my usual iced tea.

I checked into the Holiday Inn Express a few minutes later. The desk clerk handed me a cold bottle of water and advised me that there would be complimentary popcorn in the lobby at 4 and ice cream and cookies at 7. This will be dinner.

Tomorrow the hilly stuff begins. I’ll climb to 1,550 feet before giving the elevation back in fits and starts until I reach Mercer. I hope to score another Warmshowers situation but, failing that, there are two motels in town. If I’m feeling my oats I could continue to New Castle which had beaucoup hotels.

My front tire is starting to show signs of battle fatigue. It has about 7,000 miles on it so I’m not surprised. I carry a spare tire and can always buy a new tire if need be.

Miles today: 60.5

Tour miles: 2,159

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 37: Dunkirk, New York to Erie, Pennsylvania

The hotel proved to be a great find. The complimentary breakfast was a feast. Eggs, sausage, a bagel, a bowl of Cheerios, coffee, and OJ.

My Warmshowers host in Erie texted me to say that smoke from Canadian wildfires had shut down all outdoor activities in town. She suggested waiting a day to ride but I decided to forge ahead wearing my N95 mask.

Have mask, will travel
Everybody sing: smoke on the water…

The mask worked great. It slowed me down mostly because I had to stop and take it off to eat or drink. Fortunately the terrain was very forgiving but for a couple of climbs near the end of the day.

I was riding along Lake Erie but didn’t see it much because of all the shoreline homes. I did see a red and acres of vineyards. This area is crazy for the grape.

There were several interesting oddities along the way. One was a stone lighthouse. Another was a sign looking for workers that quoted a song from the 70s. A third was a promotion for a book about which I know nothing. Finally there was a drive in movie theater, a dinosaur of a business.

The haze from the fires increased throughout the day. I can see why Erie called a time out.

Impressive stone lighthouse

On my way to my Warmshowers host I rode down Millionaires’ Row, a street lined with century-old mansions of all manner of design.

I am sleeping in the basement of my hosts house. It’s very close to my route. Tomorrow I am springing for a Holiday Inn because I can’t stand the thought of another skanky motel. The smoke is expected to be gone tomorrow but I picked up another N-95 mask just in case.

If all goes to plan I’ll be in Pittsburgh in three days.

Miles today: 51

Tour miles: 2,099.5

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 36: Buffalo to Dunkirk

Last night I settled on a burger, chips, and a beer at a bar near the hostel in downtown Buffalo. This was after trying to buy Mexican food at a fast food place where the staff seemed indifferent. I was tempted to order a second round of food and beer after the day’s effort but decided to head back to my room to avoid getting caught in another downpour.

My hostel room had beds for 14. There were two people in it, both of us bike tourists. My roommate was starting his tour tomorrow, going to New York City via Albany.

In the morning I took off about 7:30 in search of breakfast. Downtown Buffalo doesn’t wake up until 8 so it was a while before my tummy was taken care of.

I rode south through downtrodden Lackawanna. As I proceeded into Orchard Park the houses became nicer and the business went from tattoo parlors and bars to medical practices and chain retail stores.

I looked and looked for a diner until my tummy forced me to eat breakfast at McDonalds. It’s actually good, inexpensive, and fast so I can’t deny that it was a good choice.

After Orchard Park came some more suburban riding, now in the rain, until I reached the town of Hamburg. The rain stopped so I did some shopping. I hit a grocery store for on-bike food and a bike shop for some chamois cream (to protect my bum).

After blowing an hour in Hamburg I took the very pleasant Pleasant Avenue to Old Lake Shore Drive along the south shore of Lake Erie.

The riding all day was nearly hill-free but as the day went on the winds, headwinds increased.

Near The town of Derby I checked out a Frank Lloyd Wright house called Graycliff. I tried to get a look at the house from the parking area but it was deliberately screened from view by a tall hedge. not wanting to spent a bunch of time and money checking out a house I’d never heard of I went back to the business of riding.

In Lake Erie Beach I went to the grill at a public golf course. The cook was playing golf so no lunch for me.

Riding along the shore is frustrating because so much of it is in private hands. Many of the lakeside estates were decades old making me think that this area was a summer escape for railroad barons and industrialists.

Lake Erie
Graycliff

I traversed the Cattarragus Resevation where cigs, weed, and gasoline are a bargain.

In Silver Creek I stopped for a late lunch. Massive burger, fries, and iced tea.

After eating I researched hotel choices near Dunkirk, about ten miles away. There were several that were relatively inexpensive but some of the reviews were nasty. I decided to choose the only hotel that was in my line of travel.

It turned out to be a much nicer place than the reviews had indicated. Unfortunately, getting to the hotel involved a 13-mile slog into a 20-mph headwind. At least it wasn’t raining.

The hotel turned out to be quite nice. It even has a restaurant which allowed me to avoid a walk into town. This is important because it started to rain again.

There’s another bike tourist in the hotel. He’s headed to Chicago from Boston.

Time for some sleep. Next stop Erie, PA or beyond.

Miles today: 61

Tour miles: 2,048.5

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 35: Middleport to Buffalo

I woke up with the birds, sort of. As usual I barely slept but somehow it was 5 a.m. the weather forecast called for thunderstorms at 8 so I packed up my things grateful that everything was dry.

I said goodbye to The Erie Five and headed west on the canal for Lockport. It was a pretty ride but the towpath surface was muddy in spots making for slow going.

Every tour I manage to kill a pair of bicycling gloves

In Lockport the path is paved. At the very end of the canal the path goes straight up. I mean a 10% grade or steeper for a few hundred feet. I went to shift into my granny and the chain wouldn’t move. I resorted to pushing The Mule up the hill. I realized that the wet limestone grit on the trail had gummed up my front derailer.

At the top of the hill I started looking for a hose to get the grit out. Unbelievably, the town had a little park set up for canal riders, and in it was a hose hooked up to a fire hydrant. The hydrant had a pressure reducing valve attached to keep people from damaging their bikes. It worked like a charm, freeing up the movement in the front derailer.

Next up was breakfast. Lockport has some sketchy looking diners. After two duds I found a good one and ate eggs and sausage and toast and home fries washed down with coffee.

After breakfast came more bike maintenance. I cleaned and lubed the chain and put drops of lube on the cables to free them up.

I hit the road, traveling due west for the Lewiston-Queenston bridge to Canada. The skies were darkening. I stopped to put on my rain jacket. A man in his driveway told me a bad storm was coming and I should seek shelter. He suggested at a gas station about a mile ahead on the Tuscarora Reservation. He said that after that there was nothing for miles.

I took my chances and kept riding past the gas station. What rain there was was very light. The road took me straight to the bridge to Canada. After 15 minutes in line, I was admitted to the Great White North without ceremony.

Kind of a small arrow for such a huge country

After a bit of confusion getting out of the border complex I found the Niagara River Trail that took me north past massive hydropower operations and a botanical garden.

A few miles late I arrived at “The Falls” as the road signs say. The place was very crowded as expected so I walked The Mule past American and Horseshoe Falls.

American and Horseshoe Falls

It took quite a while to extricate me from the crowd. Every time I thought I was clear of the throng a bus would stop and disgorge another wall of people.

Horseshoe Falls from the rear. This creeps me out.

Once clear of the tourists in switched to the Niagara River Parkway. Traffic was very light and I started making good time until the black clouds ahead and I met.

Pouring cold rain with thunder, and eventually lightning, mixed in for atmosphere.

In no time I was soaked. The only thing to do was to keep pedaling do I did. It was a residential area with no place to shelter except an ice cream parlor. I feared that if I stopped I’d get hypothermia so I kept plowing into the storm.

At the Peace Bridge to Buffalo I was a good boy and walked The Mule. It must have been a mile. Customs and Immigration was by the numbers, soon I was following my Google master to the hostel smack in the middle of downtown and only a mile or so off route.

I promptly threw all my clothes into the washing machine and took a hot shower.

What a day. At least I can now say I’ve ridden outside the U.S.

Tomorrow promises more rain. Why not?

Miles today: 64

Tour miles: 1,987.5

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 34: Macedon to Middleport

Today was a day filled with variety. After a sound night’s sleep I slogged four miles into Fairport for breakfast. I ate at Riki’s, a family restsurant that I ate at in 2004 on my Erie Canal west to east tour. Country fried steak, home fries, two eggs over east, Texas toast, and coffee. It was the best diner breakfast I’ve had on this trip.

After eating I hit the canal trail. It was warm and muggy but that didn’t diminish the trail traffic one bit. When I wasn’t dodging people, I was riding through massive gaggles of Canada geese. There were goslings of every stage of development mixed in with the adults. The goslings seemed to be older the further west I went.

The path in most places was hard packed dirt with crushed limestone and geese poop on top. I’m serious. I’ve never seen so much geese poop.

Pittsford was the next town. It’s a bit bougie and the canal was very busy so bikes are shunted off to the town streets, past all the cute little shops.

After Pittsford came the great Rochester bypass. The trail is paved but in pretty nasty condition. Root heaves, some marked, some not, gave me plenty of jolts.

The canal trail mixes with other trails in this area so I am grateful that somebody thought to put yellow arrows on the pavement to keep through riders on course.

After Rochester the trail conditions improved. I waved at a passing packet boat. Rowers we’re learning how to use a shell.

I stopped and talked with an eastbounder. Mike had started in Los Angeles. He was headed to the Gaspe Peninsula then onward by plane for two more months in Europe. I noticed that his hand had tremors. I didn’t ask but wondered if he had Parkinson’s.

I stopped in Spencerport for lunch and bought some water and lunch at a grocery store. The humidity has been riding and I didn’t realize that I was getting dehydrated.

The next couple of hours featured some wonderful riding on the canal. Ah, but storm clouds were looming ahead. After Brockport it started to rain.

And rain and rain. The trail surface became harder and harder to ride on. The added resistance of the wet limestone slowed me considerably.

A woman was waiting out the rain under a bridge. She told me of a new hotel near Medina just a few miles further. After a few more miles of slogging I looked it up on my phone. $150+ tax. Nope.

As luck would have it, a few miles later the rain came to an end. A tailwind started nudging me along. And the trail seemed to be dryer with each passing mile. The sun came out.

I met up with a group of two adults and three kids, aged 14, 13, and 10. They were riding the trail end to end. They had gotten soaked just like me and seemed to be having a blast.

After some very tough trail riding through Medina, I came to Middleport where five eastbounders were discussing next steps. One of them learned from a bridge attendant that we could camp on the opposite side of the canal with electricity, bathrooms, and showers for a $20 donation.

By now the ground had dried and the sun was still shining so I joined them in camp. It turns out they one of them had been through Wisdom, Montana the same day as Corey, Mark, and me last summer. He and his friends were riding east and we were riding west. He swears he remembers seeing us go by. None of us remember him but he knew details of the day (a stranded father and son trail riders, a bazillion mosquitos). What a weird coincidence.

I had pizza for dinner and an finally got in my tent 9:30. It looks like tonight will be dark and stormy. And tomorrow will be stormy too. I booked a bed in a hostel in Buffalo for tomorrow night. But first I need to finish the canal and then slip into Ontario for some waterfall fun.

Oh, and The Mule hit 72,000 miles today.

Looked great before the rain
The Genessee River in Rochester
Best diner food of the trip
A packet going under a lift bridge

Miles today: 70

Tour miles: 1,923.5

Bike Tour 2023: Day 33 – Wolcott to Macedon

While writing yesterday’s post, I conked out for 2 1/2 hours. I woke up and finished the post around 11:30 last night. While I was writing two sirens went off outside. I figured it was just the volunteer fire department summoning its members. Only 12 hours later did I realize that it was a test of the accident sirens for the nuclear power plant a few miles away on the shore of Lake Ontario.

In the morning I walked to the diner next door in the rain. I had eggs, bacon, home fries, and coffee augmented by a single pancake.

Window sticker at my hotel this morning

After fueling I packed up and carried all my gear down to the lobby. Then I half carried, half rolled The Mule down the stairs. At 9, I loaded up the bike and headed west in a misty drizzle or a drizzly mist. These things are hard to sort out.

Going east to west involves riding up and down small hills every mile or so. I think the bottoms are streams and creeks that glow to the lake. My legs did not appreciate the climbs. I turned north and headed to Sodus Point on the lake. It’s a typical waterfront place with marinas and bars catering to vacationers and weekenders.

After exploring greater metropolitan Sodus Point and gawking at the lake (which was socked in with misty fog or foggy mist) I headed west again.

I passed the site of a World War II prisoner of war camp. It was a small operation that was only used for a couple of years. All through the day I passed houses that were shelters for escaped enslaved people on the Underground Railroad. This is the northern part of Harriet Tubman’s route to freedom in Canada. (Runaways had a bounty on their heads. Nowhere in the United States was safe.)

135 POWs were kept here. Some came back to live here after the war
One of many safe houses in the area

After 25 miles I stopped for first lunch, a fish sandwich, coleslaw, a bag of chips, and an unsweetened iced tea.

The mistiness had turned to warm-and-mustiness as I rode away from the lake. The forecast called for intermittent rain. I had tried to get a Warmshowers host but was turned down. After eating I booked a motel near Macedon, just off route.

Then I headed south. Adios, Lake Ontario. The route was mostly between the annoying hills making for easy going. This area is notably more densely populated than the Adirondack foothills that I rode through yesterday. It is also more agricultural.

Misty Lake Ontario

Most of the crops are just getting started. There are many fruit orchards, presumably apples (I can’t tell an apple tree from a pear tree from a peach tree). Other than some hay, the only other crop that I could identify was hops.

After 40 miles I stopped for second lunch at a Byrnes Dairy gas station in Palmyra. I wanted a roast beef sandwich but all they had was ham. I had half a ham and cheese sandwich (which is the size of a normal ham and cheese sammie) and saved the other half for dinner. I also had a cup of ice cream and a Diet Pepsi.

I took the canal towpath another seven miles west before hitting NY Bike Route 5 to the hotel. (Bike Route 5 is an on-road alternative to the canal.)

Erie Canal at Palmyra

The motel is fine. My room is on the first floor. There is no continental breakfast offered so I’ll ride to Fairport, a canal town, got breakies tomorrow.

My planned destination for tomorrow was Brockport but that is barely 40 level miles from here. I think I’ll just ride to the end of the canal at Lockport. This will put me about 20 miles from the bridge to Ontario for Monday.

Miles today: 55

Tour miles: 1,853.5

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 32: Boonville to Walcott

All that climbing I’ve been doing takes a whole bunch of downhill miles to undo. And I undid them today.

Once again I slept poorly even though my room could not have been better. At six, I walked down the hall to the breakfast room. I was pleased to see some decent food for a change. I had scrambled eggs, sausage links, two bowls of Cheerios, and three cups of coffee. I grabbed an apple and a banana for the road and got to work.

The first half of the day was a repeat of yesterday: a slight downhill grade for miles and miles interrupted by a few, short climbs. I had a steady tailwind, too. The skies were overcast but not threatening. Temperatures and the relative humidity rose gradually throughout the day. Temps topped out around 80 degrees.

This is Amish country. I dodged horse poop and saw horseshoe marks and cart tracks in the road all day. At one home I saw a girl, about four years old. She had on a dark bonnet and dark dress that covered everything except her hands and face. She looked joyless.

The woods are now broken up by homes on big lots. The houses looked lived in, in some cases they are run down. Winters are hard on houses up here.

I cruised through West Leyden and down into Osceola on the Salmon River. The climb back up was a thigh burner. In Redfield I stopped to refuel. A chocolate chip cookie ice cream sandwich revived my blood sugar levels.

I continued through Orwell (again!), Richland, and Pulaski. I arrived at Port Ontario, my planned destination, after 51 miles. It was 11:45 a.m.

I went into a gas station convenience store and had a slice of pizza and an iced tea. If I walked across the road, I could check into a motel (vacancy sign displayed). I thought this would be a waste of a good afternoon of riding so I decided to continue on to Fulton where there is a Motel 6.

I was seriously thinking of riding down to the Syracuse area for better lodging options. If I did that I’d wouldn’t bother returning to the Northern Tier route, opting to take the Erie Canal west instead.

I thought it would be a good idea to see Lake Ontario before turning south so I rode a mile north to Mexico Bay Beach. I had ridden about 52 miles to this point.

Lake Ontario

I re-assessed my lodging options. Ride off route south to Baldwinsville and get a room at a Microtel hotel. Continue on the route and stay at a Motel 6 in Fulton. Find something on route beyond Fulton.

Fulton was the closest at around 70 total miles but its hotel had scathing reviews online. Nope.

Baldwinsville was 31 miles away. Maybe.

I checked places after Fulton. A B&B in Fair Haven wanted over $240. Not gonna happen.

I tried a hotel in Walcott not realizing how far away it was. They had a room in an old building above a bar, like Raquette Lake. It was $50. I took it.

Now to get there. Wolcott was another 52 miles away.

Texas. New Haven. The road was back to having rolling hills. The wind was now at my side or in my face.

Once I committed to the room I stopped thinking about the day’s total mileage and focused more on the minute by minute business of the riding.

I arrived in Fulton and stopped at Byrne Dairy, a gas station with a convenience store and deli. I ordered a turkey sandwich. It was HUGE. I could only eat half. I saved the rest for dinner. (I did this yesterday but never took that half eaten sandwich out of the mini refrigerator. What a tip for the cleaning crew.)

Granby Center, Hannibal, Sterling, and Fair Haven were separated by rolling hills.

Finally, after 103 1/2 miles I arrived at Wolcott. The hotel gave me a room on the third floor. I checked in and lugged The Mule and my stuff up to my room. My legs were seriously spent.

The Mule at rest in my hotel room

Today was my first century on a tour since 2018 when I did 132 miles in North Dakota.

I cleaned up and went to the bar. It was a smoker’s bar. Everyone in it was smoking a cig. There must have been 20 ashtrays in the place. All of them had been used. Ugh.

I went for a walk and found a grocery where I bought a few things to complement my sandwich. I sat at a table in the hotel’s covered porch and ate in the rain while watching small town America pass by.

My target destination for tomorrow is Sodus Point in the lake. It’s about 13 miles away from Wolcott so I’m at reassessing my destination. With rain in the forecast, I have a Warmshowers request for Pittsford on the canal near Rochester. In any event, finding a hotel should be easy.

Miles today: 103.5

Tour miles: 1,798.5

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 31: Raquette Lake to Boonville

Short of having a 25 mph tailwind, today could not have been better. But let’s start with last night…

I stayed at a hotel that was above a bar/restaurant. The building dated to the 1920s and the rooms hadn’t been updated. I felt like I was sleeping in a room in my grandparent’s house in Freehold, NJ. Not coincidentally that house was built in the early 1900s.

There was a long steep staircase with a handrail on the left to the second floor. It occurred to me that back in the day there might have been some sportin’ women up yonder.

I humped my gear up in several trips. The Mule was left for last. I hefted it up there without incident but my lower back was screaming at me once I set it down.

I took a couple of Advil and sat down on the squeaky double bed to let the medicine do its thing. In addition to the bed, my room had a small nightstand, a dresser, and an old wooden desk chair. The two windows were stuck open and only partially screened, with a gap at the bottom. The bathroom was shared with the room across the hall which was vacant for the night. The toilet was manufactured by Gerber, a manufacturer that I’ve not heard of. The sink, faucet, and claw foot bathtub looked just like Grandpop’s house. I was beginning to think there might be a nook with a treadle sewing machine or a Victrola with a stack of 78s next to it down the hall.

After cleaning myself up and stuffing towels in the window gaps, I had dinner in the bar. The Italian wedding soup and chicken Caesar wrap weren’t very good but the Labatt Blue made up for it.

In the morning, after a hearty breakfast of two frosted cherry pop tarts, I hauled all my stuff back down the stairway of certain death. I waited for the sportin’ woman to give me assistance but she must have been sleeping in. I hefted The Mule and thankfully made an effortless, uneventful descent.

As I was loading my bike, a woman popped out of the restaurant kitchen and offered to sell me coffee and fresh baked goods. She’s a retired school teacher who makes some money baking. Her coffee was fine, but her blueberry muffin, fresh from the oven, was truly superb.

The restaurant stopped serving breakfast last week because they can’t find any help. Later, I tried to buy chamois cream (for bicycle butt) at an outdoors shop in Old Forge. The very busy owner said they don’t have a bicycle person on staff anymore to buy bike merchandise. He can’t find anyone who will work. He blamed the labor problem on Air B&B which he said is crowding out housing in the area.

Before leaving town I read a few of the many historical signs. Raquette Lake used to be quite the place with a railroad station and another hotel. They both burned many years ago. It turns out Theodore Roosevelt summered nearby a Sagamore Hill. (I didn’t go see it; touring times are limited.)

Leaving Raquette Lake I turned onto NYS Highway 28, a two-lane highway with broad paved shoulders. Mostly the pavement is in very good shape but here and there I encountered problems. Longitudinal cracks can grab a tire at the edge between the main road and shoulder. Fresh loose asphalt stones from this morning’s sloppy patch jobs stuck to my tires and went spinning annoyingly up into my fenders.

As I suspected, the ride was a gradual downhill, mostly about one percent grade. With perfect weather it took very little effort to spin along at 12 mph. From time to time, I had to negotiate a brief climb but granny served me well.

Snowmobile track to the right.

At ten miles, the town of Inlet offered nothing so I kept cruising. I missed a turn, staying on Highway 28 on the north side of a lake. No worries, the road rejoined the route at west end of the lake at the town of Old Forge. I’d been here before with my family and kids. In peak summer season, it’s a mobbed tourist magnet. We saw people feeding wild black bears on the side of the road and could only wonder how they (the people) had escaped the laws of natural selection.

As I rolled into town a Jeep with bikes on a rear rack went by. The rearmost bike had flopped over and was being dragged by the end of its handlebar. I veered behind the jeep and started yelling and waving maniacally. The driver clued in and stopped, saving the bike from an unpleasant demise.

There are so many lakes they ran out of names.

I stopped at a diner for second breakfast: gravy and biscuits (the menu had it backwards) with a side of home fries, and coffee. I struck up a conversation with two Kiwis who were in the area for the summer. They wanted to know where to go. Niagara Falls, Ithaca gorges, New York City, Boston, and Newport all made the list. Montreal would have been good had I thought of it.

After stopping at a drug store for toothpaste and bug spray (which I hope not to get mixed up) I cruised down Highway 28 through Thendara. At 30 miles I came fast down a hill to a bridge over the Moose River. I hit the brakes when I saw the bridge had an open steel deck. These give The Mule and me the heebie jeebies. The Mule and I walked across the deck. At the far end, the steel deck had a few missing pieces which could have swallowed my front tire and sent me flying.

I took a right on Moose Lake Road and pedaled along the river under a leafy canopy. Bicycle bliss.

Moose River Road
Moose River

The road had a couple of minor climbs made a bit harder by my daydreaming. (Oops. A hill! Hello, granny.)

As I descended into Boonville, my destination for the day, a family of geese walked across the road in front of me. One adult goose led the way followed by several goslings. Another adult goose pulled up the rear. I stopped and fumbled for my phone. By the time I had it in my hands the line had moved to the roadside. I did get a picture but it doesn’t capture the “Make way for goslings ” moment.

Are we there yet?

I cruised around Boonville. This place used to be home to an Ethan Allen furniture plant but that was years ago. It still has plenty of businesses but most of the infrastructure is old. Boonville is famous for getting ludicrous amounts of snowfall each winter.

I bought lunch at a cafe in town (it was not very good) then I rode to my motel just outside town. It’s a lovely looking place conveniently close to dairy with an ice cream parlor. I was tempted to try the wine ice cream but settled for my usual cookie dough.

The perfect compliment to rum buns

The motel is surprisingly nice. Clean. Modern. Lots of comfy chairs in the lobby. A massive lawn dotted with Adirondack chairs. And, from the looks of it, a pretty good free breakfast tomorrow.

I walked back to town for a dinner on salad, spaghetti and meatballs (the menu said “meatball” but I was served two), and a Labatt.

On the way back I met up with another bike tourist staying at the motel. He’s credit-card touring (minimal gear) and did 100 miles into the wind today and looked knackered.

Tomorrow I plan to ride to Lake Ontario. Rain is forecast for the afternoon and the ensuing five days.

Miles today: 53

Tour miles: 1,695

Bike Tour 2023 – Day 30: Severance to Raquette Lake

I suppose I should have bought two cans of Chef Boyardee spaghetti and meatballs for dinner last night but I was distracted by the display of bagged junk food right next to the canned stuff. So it was unheated spaghetti and Doritos with iced tea for dinner. The camp assistant manager comped me a Slim Jim. (I ate it. It was disgusting.) By the time I finished I’m sure the mosquitos had extracted more nutrients than I took in.

I slept not a wink and have no idea why. I was comfortably warm and my camp site was level and soft.

Breakfast wasn’t much better. Two English muffins with PB&J. My onboard food was down to three Clif bars, two bananas, an apple, and one final English muffin PB&J. Google said there was a gas station six miles into the route and nothing else until Long Lake, 46 miles away.

Riding on inadequate fuel just doesn’t work. It’s like bonking for hours on end. I felt lethargic, my legs felt like lead, and I had a headache. And there was another monster hill about 10 miles into the day. Good thing the scenery was great, otherwise I would have called a cab.

There were plenty of critters during the day: wild and domestic turkeys, a couple of deer, mysterious sounding birds, a red squirrel, and a mini herd of buffalo.

There’s buffalo I tell ya!

In Newcomb I met two bicycle tourists who were on their second day of a ride around the Adirondacks. They were going to camp near Long Lake.

Lots of good scenery today. Since I was dead tired I stopped and took pictures for a change.
Good day for a bike ride

When I arrived in Long Lake they were eating at Stewart’s, upstate New York’s gas station and ice cream chain.

They left as I arrived hardly saying a word. I wonder if they use the Coldshowers app.

I bought something resembling food and started looking for a place to stay in either Long Lake or ten miles further in Blue Mountain Lake. (The Adirondacks are Minnesota East in the lake department.)

Google said the indoor places were either closed or prohibitively expensive ($300+). Campgrounds were several miles off route.

Then I got the idea to check out Raquette Lake, 13 miles past Blue Mountain Lake. They had a bar that served food and had cheap ($60) rooms. Bingo. An added, albeit somewhat masochistic, benefit was the fact that I’d do one of tomorrow’s climbs today.

Raquette Lake, just one of the many beautiful lakes I rode past today

I bought some ice cream which combined with a tailwind to nudge me another 24 miles.

As I rode I passed at least an dozen motels not mentioned by Google that had vacancies. Let’s just say I am losing my faith in the mother of all search engines.

According to the info on my maps, the mountainous part of the Adirondacks ends at Old Forge, which I should reach before noon. Word cannot convey how much I want to put the mountains behind me. I dream of long, level terrain with a tailwind pushing me along at 15 miles per hour. I dream of Kansas. I am losing my mind.

Miles today: 70

Tour miles: 1,642