Archive for June, 2011

Bike To The Bakken

Posted by Bikeverywhere, June 21st , 2011.

This from the Bakken Museum:
Celebrate pedal power! The Bakken Museum is partnering with Bike Walk Twin Cities (BWTC) to improve the health and safety of our communities by decreasing driving. This summer, ride your bike to The Bakken Museum and receive one free admission with one paid admission.

To redeem one free admission with one paid admission, park your bike outside, and check in at the museum’s Visitor Service desk inside. This offer is valid June 1, 2011-September 30, 2011, and may not be used in conjunction with any other offers or discounts. Limit 4 free admissions with 4 paid admissions per group, per visit.

Filed under: Bikeverywhere News

Cedar Lake Trail Officially Open

Posted by Bikeverywhere, June 13th , 2011.

The Cedar Lake Trail connector to the Mississippi River has been open for several weeks, but tomorrow it becomes official with all the ribbon cutting and official proclamations. If this sort of thing interests you, the details are below. The trail is an important link that has been long overdue. With this link, it is now possible to slip under the Twin Stadium, past the warehouse district and into town using a number of access points, thus avoiding much of downtown traffic and the bizarre system of bike lanes through downtown.

The final phase of the Cedar Lake Trail is now complete! Come to a grand opening (pdf) on Tuesday, June 14th at 5 pm on West River Parkway near the Cedar Lake Trail access point (just north of the Hennepin Bridge)

Filed under: Bikeverywhere News

Wisconsin Bike Tour cont.

Posted by Bikeverywhere, June 10th , 2011.

To co-workers and friends I billed it as an “Extreme Leisure” bike tour. It was an intentional spoof and antidote to the extreme rides some had taken recently, like the Arrowhead ride; 138 miles of snowmobile trails in the dead of winter, or the Continental Divide Race; from Canada to Mexico on jeep tracks and mountain bike trails at a pace of 120 miles per day. My plan: 50 miles per day, lots of lounging, photos, talking with the locals.

In reality, it was a little tougher, with one 88 mile day and several days of 60 plus miles. I also rode through temperatures over 90 degrees, with high humidity and one day that started in the 40s, with 20 mph winds. Today, my last day, looks to be in the low 50s with a light drizzle.

I wandered off the planned route several times just because the road ahead looked better than the one I was on. I also spent several mid-days laying on picnic tables in the shade whle waiting for the most intense heat and sunlight of the day to pass. Met a Mennonite family and talked with them as I was buying asparagus directly from their garden and spent an hour in a bar, drinking a beer and eating pork rib sandwiches as my phone charged in an outlet. Spent one night in a campsite next to a gurgling, boulder-filled river and a couple of nights in a state park with warm showers. Those are the experiences that make a bike trip for me. Mega miles and extreme conditions test your limits and provide their own kind of experience, but they don’t work for me.

I finish this afternoon. Total miles will be approximately 370. My only regret is that the trip wasn’t longer. It takes several days just to settle into the routine, and my trip was broken up with a visit to family- enjoyable, but it diisrupted the flow I was developing. I’m hungry for another tour.

My apologies to anyone who didn’t get their orders fulfilled immediately while I was on vacation. I made the best arrangements I could think of, but some things fell through the cracks.

Filed under: Bikeverywhere News