We made it! With our Monday ride around Cayuga Lake we've now circumnavigated all of the Finger Lakes in New York. That's 465 miles and 19,544 feet of climbing according to bikethefingerlakes.org and their ridewithgps.com collection of maps. We are quite pleased with our own bad selves. We'd started with Keuka Lake in 2021 which we rode as part of our Epic Retirement Vacation. Then in 2022 after I got settled in Watkins Glen we started working our way through the lakes from west to east. Read our older blog entries about those rides here.
Curtis Corlew blogs on bike commuting, retirement, buying new bikes, maintaining his bicycles and other bike and bicycle related stuff. Complete with lots of photos of Tricia.
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
Bike the Finger Lakes 11 completed with Cayuga #BTFL11
We made it! With our Monday ride around Cayuga Lake we've now circumnavigated all of the Finger Lakes in New York. That's 465 miles and 19,544 feet of climbing according to bikethefingerlakes.org and their ridewithgps.com collection of maps. We are quite pleased with our own bad selves. We'd started with Keuka Lake in 2021 which we rode as part of our Epic Retirement Vacation. Then in 2022 after I got settled in Watkins Glen we started working our way through the lakes from west to east. Read our older blog entries about those rides here.
Monday, August 28, 2023
Cycle the Hudson Valley with PTNY 2023
The storm blew in about the time we finished setting up the tent on the football field at Hudson Valley Community College in Troy NY. We headed to the cafeteria for our first-night dinner and watched the wind whip the rain into the windows. This did not feel like a good way to start a week-long ride through an area recently battered by rain and floods.
Back in January, shortly after we'd signed up for the Cycle the Erie Canal ride, we received an announcement that Parks and Trails New York was going to offer their inaugural "Cycle the Hudson Valley" tour. We'd have completed two tours already this summer, and who wants to be the test subject on first attempt anyway. But Tricia said, "Hudson Valley? Sign us up!" So we sent in our money. After all, the PTNY had experience with running big rides, and it was the Hudson Valley, home of so much US History and birthplace of the Hudson River School of art. This ride would also be another leg of the Empire State Trail, meaning we'll have ridden from Buffalo to New York City this summer.
When we finished our dinner the storm had passed. Not only was the rain over, but there was a wonderful double rainbow greeting us as we headed for our tent.
There weren't as many people on this ride as there were on the Erie Canal ride, which was nice. But we still made an impressive tent city. Tricia and I took our own tent, but many riders used the "Comfy Campers" service who set up and tear down a tent for you each day.We had to ride down to, and climb out of, our rest stop at Claremont Historical Site. But it was worth it. I make still photos and often forget my phone and cameras can shoot video. Tricia often shoots panoramic videos that capture the vast feel of where we are better than my stills.
We always play "Should we get buy this house?" on rides. This one in Rhinebeck was for sale and I said "Yes." But instead we ended up just stopping for ice cream.
After a weird climb over a long bridge we ended up in Kingston, camping right on the shore of the Hudson at Hutton Brickyards, a beautiful event center.
The bridge in Rosendale was a selfie hot spot for the riders. I don't know who this is, but I love the photo.
The trip's hard working photographer David Kraus was a journalist in California in a neighboring city where I also worked in the newspaper industry.
After riding through New Paltz, a town founded in 1678 by Huguenots escaping France, we had the option to add a few miles on a trail outside the town.
The ped/bike bridge over the Hudson into Poughkeepsie is quite an attraction. Whoever managed to make it a reality gets a tip o' the hat from me. It's 1.28 miles long and is the longest, elevated (212 feet!) pedestrian bridge in the world. It's a repurposed rail bridge from the 1800s.
We expected rain on our ride to Dobbs Ferry, but it never happened. We took a side trip to ride over the Mario M. Cuomo Bridge between Tarrytown and Nyack. The designers installed points that cantilevered out over the water for people to stop safely and enjoy the view. This one is called "Artists Point" so we made art.
Dobbs Ferry to NYC
Required tourist photo at Fort Washington Park under the George Washington Bridge on the Hudson River Greenway path. Yep, we are in New York City.
We were able to catch a glimpse of the Statue of Liberty. Kind of.
This is the official end of the Empire State Trail. It's really just a kiosk looking thing. I'd expected something more grand. We even rode past it once and didn't realize what it was. We still had to get to our end of the ride bus pickup.
We'd have enjoyed riding in NYC more if we hadn't have been so psychologically exhausted. We rode across the Brooklyn Bridge in the "bike lane." It was narrow, bikes going both directions, with cement walls on each side. It was crowded with the clueless. There were more than a couple of folks on rented eBikes who had their batteries die on the trip over. They'd grind to a halt and everyone behind them have to swing into oncoming bike traffic to get around.
Sunday, August 27, 2023
Bike tool organization
I have kept my bike tools in a shoe box, a paper bag and scattered in a drawer forever. But at last I have the space and time to create a more reasonable organizational system. I always liked pegboards, but the one attached to my workbench was small and, well, crappy. I really wanted something better. My cycling friend found Wall Control and suggested it to me. They make metal slotted "pegboard" that looks cool and has hangers that don't fall out when you look at them sideways. I added an inexpensive socket holder and a magnetic wrench holder and shazam, it looks swell already. My favorite part: The paper towel holder.
Sure, it may have cost more than I really wanted. But the results are totally cool. I even bought another horizontal version for the other side of the garage to hold yard tools.
This it how it looks now, but there there's room for more, and it's easy to rearrange.
Maybe I'll become truly organized and, equally importantly, stay organized. It's already proven better than shuffling through a shoebox looking for the right size socket.
Wednesday, August 23, 2023
Skaneateles and Otisco Lakes #BTFL11
Tricia and I took the adventure van on a short road trip overnighter to check off two more lakes for the Bike the Finger Lakes challenge, leaving only Cayuga to meet our goal . Sure, we had to look up how to pronounce Skaneateles and Otisco, the most easterly of the Finger Lakes. And a few times we really wondered if we were lost on our way there. But we only got slightly wrong turned once.