advcycle Archives - Adventure Cycling Association https://www.adventurecycling.org/blog/author/advcycle/ Discover What Awaits Thu, 20 Apr 2023 16:51:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://www.adventurecycling.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/cropped-web_2-color_icon-only-32x32.png advcycle Archives - Adventure Cycling Association https://www.adventurecycling.org/blog/author/advcycle/ 32 32 Our Impact at Bikerversary https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/our-impact-at-bikerversary/ Wed, 15 Jun 2022 08:54:27 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/our-impact-at-bikerversary/ Adventure Cycling Association’s mission to inspire, empower, and connect with people to bicycle travel is the reason for our Bike Overnights Program. We were invited to Bikerversary in Atlanta, Georgia. […]

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Adventure Cycling Association’s mission to inspire, empower, and connect with people to bicycle travel is the reason for our Bike Overnights Program. We were invited to Bikerversary in Atlanta, Georgia. Bikerversary is an outdoor bicycle festival that celebrates black folks on bikes with a block party, rides, races, panels, art exhibit, and awards.

As part of our participation in Bikerversary, Adventure Cycling board member Erick Cedeño — also of Bicycle Nomad — joined the festivities. To share the joy of bicycle travel, he went on a bikepacking trip to Panola State Mountain Park and talked about his unique bicycle adventures with people new to bicycle travel.

Once Erick arrived in Atlanta, he met with our new Events Coordinator, Timberley Jones of Spokes Digital Media. Their partnership included spreading the word about Adventure Cycling and our Bike Overnights Program.

The bike overnights adventure started at Loose Nuts Cycles and ended about 25 miles away at Panola State Mountain Park Campgrounds. The weather and vibes were great! Along the way, Erick and Timberley brainstormed ways to inspire and share resources with people who are interested in experiencing the joy of bike travel.

Erick and Timberley rode to Panola Mountain State Park, set up their tents, and spent the night under the stars. Friday morning came fast, and they left the campsite for the ride back to Atlanta.

Bikerversary 2022 Community Ride

Saturday, Timberley set up an information table at the outdoor event. She engaged cyclists with questions about their bike adventures and interest in participating in a Bike Overnight trip. The tabling portion was a team effort. Timberley trained a local ambassador, Alexander, on Adventure Cycling’s mission and key talking points for bike travel. The table included items a cyclist would need if they decided to go on a bike overnight trip self supported. 

With Erick and the event team working the crowd, we reached our event goals. New cyclists were introduced to Adventure Cycling Association and we got their gears spinning about what’s possible.  

Bike Travel Presentation

Sunday, Erick gave a presentation sharing tips and tricks for bicycle travel. The participants asked questions about Erick’s adventures over the last 13+ years. He’s a great storyteller and really got the participants excited about loading up their bikes for their own unique bike travel adventure.

Join the Bike Overnights Mission

If you are interested in collaborations and partnerships, please reach out to our events team at t.jones@adventurecycling.org.

We’re available to come to an event, or present to your organization about bike travel in person or virtually.

Photos and info courtesy Timberley Jones, Spokes Digital Media

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Updates from Adventure Cycling’s Executive Director https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/updates-from-adventure-cyclings-executive-director/ Tue, 12 Apr 2022 15:28:33 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/updates-from-adventure-cyclings-executive-director/ A version of this message went out via email to all members who are subscribed to our updates on March 8. Letter from the Executive Director First, I’d like to […]

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A version of this message went out via email to all members who are subscribed to our updates on March 8.

Letter from the Executive Director
First, I’d like to discuss how we’re impacting our mission, which is, “To engage, empower, and connect people to travel by bicycle.”

I’m very excited to report that we started the year with record Tour registrations! We have 1,274 registered participants, which is double where we typically are this time of year. We wrapped up 2021 with 980 tour participants. We are getting prepped for the 2022 season with leader training, new leadership development, and the start of the season with tours in Florida and Hawaii. 

Our Bike Overnights program is a strategy we use to entice more people into multi-day cycling trips, and it has been a success in helping people from marginalized communities travel by bike. Late last year we completed an assessment of the initiative, and learned that giving stipends is our most effective strategy. In 2021, Bike Overnights rights in Chicago, Mexico City, Seattle, Portland, Austin, New Haven and Madison engaged 100 entry-level riders with $3,000 in stipends. This was a great validation, and we’ll increase these stipends in 2022 to reach even more people. 

We also continue to advocate for improved policy and more routes. This March, at the National Bike Summit, we’ll partner with Rails-to-Trails, East Coast Greenway, WABA and local groups in DC to host a mobile workshop focused on partnerships as a strategy for infrastructure advocacy.  We’re also making progress on the BOLT Act—which would establish long-distance trails on federal land—by coordinating with other national partners to improve the bill language. 

Staff updates

In December, we said goodbye to long-time staffer Eva Dunn Froebig. Eva spearheaded our 40th anniversary event, and grew Bike Travel Weekend and Bike Your Park Day into the large-scale events they are today. We also wished adieu to Development Director Jackie Slovak, who organized the Philanthropy Committee to develop a long-term strategic plan for development and fundraising, and to tours specialist Shannon Fischer-Kendro. We will miss them all!

We also celebrate the addition of a new role at Adventure Cycling: the Chief People and Culture Officer.  Nicki Bailey (she/her) has blazed a lot of new trails in a short period of time. About half of Nicki’s time is dedicated to advancing our diversity, equity and inclusion work (both internally and within our programming). The other half is spent helping us with people management and leader development. We’ve grown a lot in the past 47 years, and Nicki is helping us create the systems and tools we need to ensure we recruit and retain the best talent to further our mission. She’s already accomplished a lot, including transitioning us to a new payroll system; drafting a template library for staff reviews; finalizing our DEI plan and established a JEDI working group; securing grant funding for staff training; and is currently evaluating all job descriptions across the entire organization, including updates of policy and procedures for our tour leaders. We couldn’t be more thrilled to have her on the team!

We are also joined by new staff Kelly Fehn, Membership Coordinator.  Phil Shutler has been contracted to work on the Route Conditions Mapping Tool.  Ambar Johnson (she/her) has been contracted as Production Assistant to work on season 2 of the podcast.  Marketing staff hired Gott Advertising to run Facebook and Google Grant Ads for the organization. 

Our programs continue to show a lot of momentum. This is a building year for us, and we are working hard to set a solid foundation so we can more effectively accelerate our work. I’m energized by all we’ve accomplished in late 2021 and early 2022. Thanks to all our members —  you are what makes this organization great!

—Jennifer O’Dell, Executive Director

Employee Spotlight

Meet Jenn Hamelman, our current USBRS Program Manager! Jenn first started at Adventure Cycling in 1994 as part of a college work study program, and is currently in her third act of employment here. She’s been a cartographer, senior cartographer and assistant director. When Jenn first started, Adventure Cycling was just beginning the transformation from pen and ink, 3-color maps to 4-color maps drawn on the computer. The route network was at about 20,000 miles and Jenn helped it grow to almost 50,000 miles. She worked on the transition from pen and ink to computer to data distribution to a mobile app. She estimates that by the time she left the org in 2019 to return to Oregon, she had probably worked on every map section in our catalog at least once.
When not biking, Jenn loves to get messy and creative with color, paper, glue and/or fiber, knitting, listening to podcasts or reading a good story.
Favorite bike adventure: “I resisted the call to take on a longer distance trip for a long time. In 2016, the bug finally bit and at the 40th Anniversary, in front of Wally [Werner] I declared I was going to ride cross country. June of 2017 I set off from Cape Elizabeth, ME on a solo, self-contained trip mostly on the Northern Tier Route and made it as far as the headwaters of the Mississippi River where I ended the trip due to the excessive wildfire season in the West that summer. 
“Two of my learnings from my trip: 1. reassurance that most people, most of the time, are generally kind and want to be helpful and 2. even a vegan can find enough food in a rural convenience store for a meal!”

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An Introduction to Bike Overnights Ambassador Roxy Robles! https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/roxy-robles-introduction/ Mon, 23 Aug 2021 12:14:09 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/roxy-robles-introduction/ Roxy is a cyclist, urban planner, seamstress, and Filipinx food enthusiast living on the ancestral lands of the Duwamish (Seattle, Washington). She started bike touring in 2017 after realizing that […]

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Roxy is a cyclist, urban planner, seamstress, and Filipinx food enthusiast living on the ancestral lands of the Duwamish (Seattle, Washington). She started bike touring in 2017 after realizing that bike touring was not that different than hauling 30 pounds of groceries up and down Seattle hills. She organizes with Friends on Bikes, and volunteers with The Bikery & Outdoors for All. Roxy is passionate about supporting new cyclists and spreading her love of bikes and bike touring. She uses her Capricorn powers for good by planning summer bike trips months in advance. She thinks tarot cards are an essential item on any packing list, and loves to talk about feelings.

Tell us a little about yourself!

I grew up in the suburban Bay Area and always wanted to bike to school, but my parents were freaked out because our town had really small windy roads and no bike lanes. They assumed I would get hit by a car in the mile to my elementary school, so they drove me or I took the bus every day instead. I really got into cycling as a form of fun and transportation in college since I didn’t have a car. I didn’t know what panniers were at the time, but my roommate was a bike mechanic and he got me a huge bike basket wholesale. I mounted it on this big beach cruiser I had, and I used that basket for errands, dumpster diving, and taking my pet rabbit to class! Bikes were mostly about transportation for me until I was no longer a student in 2017. I started bike touring that summer because I didn’t have a car and I was tired of using car share or pestering my friends with cars to get me to the mountains. I figured if I could haul my groceries up Fremont Avenue in Seattle (it’s pretty steep), I could probably handle riding with camping gear. 

After a few years of learning and building community on my own, I got a little fed up with the bro-centric tone and focus of bike blogs and media and decided to develop my own resources. I started writing a book about bike touring in early 2019, and self-published it in e-book form on my blog in May 2020. I also worked with a friend of mine from grad school to develop a Spanish-language version which I released in September 2020. Now I am really excited to offer the book in paperback! 

What’s your favorite type of riding to do?

I really love riding the gravel fire and forest roads that are so plentiful outside of Seattle. The westside ones are pretty accessible by ferry, and the foothills of the Cascades are chock full, too!

Roxy riding in winter gear

Tooling around on Snoqualmie lands
Courtesy Roxy Robles

What’s your favorite bike you’ve ever owned or ridden?

I’m very obsessed with my 2015 Kona Sutra that has been my main rig for the last few years (steel is real), but I think my favorite bike was my commuter in college. It was an old-school red Nishiki, and was a little too small for me, but I kitted it out with bubblegum-pink handlebar grips, bottle cage, and those deep-V wheels that were so trendy in the early aughts.

Right now I have the Kona and I traded a friend an espresso machine for a 90s GT mountain bike that I use for short trips around town.

Roxy's Kona touring bike
Steel is Real
Roxy Robles

What’s one of the hardest bike touring experiences you’ve had? 

When I first started touring I didn’t know a lot of femmes or queer people that were into it, so I was riding with a lot of tech bro types because that’s who I knew. It was difficult not feeling safe being vulnerable or asking for help from the people you are touring with, which is why I started to plan trans, women, intersex, and gender nonconforming (TWIG)-only trips and invite strangers from social media and random corners of my life. Now that I’ve spent so many years building it, I feel really lucky to have a deep community of like minded people with whom to ride.
 
In a physical sense, a friend of mine invited me to do the southern tier of the Odyssey of the VOG and it really kicked my butt, but it was so much fun and a great challenge. It was my first multi-day backcountry trip and I can’t wait to do more!

What’s one of your favorite experiences on a bike adventure?

A few years ago a friend of mine organized a tour through the Willamette Valley wine country. I found a donkey farm that was open to the public and made an appointment for all 15 of us to go hang out with donkeys for an afternoon, and it was a really fun and goofy time.

Roxy and a small donkey friend

Me and my donkey friend
Courtesy Roxy Robles

Where are your favorite places to bike on Duwamish ancestral lands (Seattle)?

The Burke Gilman Trail and Lake Washington Boulevard both have great spots to take a break and swim in the lake, and I love water.

What’s the best bike snack? What’s your favorite bike touring meal?

I am a salt fiend (not the biggest fan of sweet snacks) so I LOVE corn nuts on a sweaty day. It’s also one of the few snacks you can get at a gas station that doesn’t have a ton of preservatives and other junk in it.

A friend of mine got me into taking a head of cabbage on longer trips — It keeps really well and it’s so nice to have a crunchy vegetable on hand when you’re eating camp food and granola bars for days on end. I like to wrap salami and cheese, or hummus and some kind of grain in a big ol’ cabbage leaf and chow down.

Do your bikes have names?

Nope… Should they?

What are things you like to do when you’re not on a bike adventure?

When I’m not on my bike I love making big meals for my friends. My sister and I visited our extended family in the Philippines in the fall of 2019 and I was inspired to learn more about Filipinx cooking. I am perfecting my adobo, and can make a really great bibingka and fresh lumpia! I also volunteer for too many things in Seattle including The Bikery, a donation-funded and volunteer-run community bike shop, and Friends on Bikes, a community for TWIG BIPOC folks.

Roxy's Filipinix family enjoys a meal together

Filipinos do hospitality like nobody else
Courtesy Roxy Robles

Where are some places you’d like to visit on a bike?

The Japanese island of Hokkaido, it has 95% of the country’s natural areas and 5% of the population, it’s supposed to be sublime. I would also really love to see South Korea by bike; I got to do a little bit of hiking when I was there in 2018, but it’s such a big and beautiful country I can’t wait to go back.

Lightning Round:

Flat Bars or Drop Bars
Drops

Disc Brakes or Rim Brakes
Disc! Seattle is wet.

Gels/Gummies or Energy Bars
Ugh neither… Corn nuts or dried mango.

#coffeeoutside or post-ride beers
Both

Shoulder Season: Spring or Fall
Fall! This may be controversial but I think Spring sucks… It’s unpredictable and violent.

Maps or Bike Computer
Does Ride with GPS count as a bike computer?

Dogs or Cats
Rabbits!

Roxy stands on a hill
Roxy, gloriously
Courtesy Roxy Robles

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Bike Travel Weekend Attracts Cyclists Where They’re at and Beyond! https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/bike-travel-weekend-attracts-cyclists-where-theyre-at-and-beyond/ Tue, 06 Jul 2021 14:08:29 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/bike-travel-weekend-attracts-cyclists-where-theyre-at-and-beyond/ Thousands of cyclists from around the world eagerly sought adventure during Adventure Cycling’s 6th Annual Bike Travel Weekend. This year proved to be particularly exciting with the big weekend aligning […]

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Thousands of cyclists from around the world eagerly sought adventure during Adventure Cycling’s 6th Annual Bike Travel Weekend. This year proved to be particularly exciting with the big weekend aligning with National Trails Day (June 5). The energy around Bike Travel Weekend was high as each participant planned, packed, and pedaled into the weekend in search of adventure and renewal after 18 months of living in isolation.

This year’s adventures involved careful planning for COVID-19 considerations as loosening restrictions and new CDC guidelines emerged. While many rides stayed local and kept things simple, others were more adventurous with ride leaders and participants eagerly looking forward to a life-changing adventure.

“I had a positive experience this year. It was my first time camping and my first time bike traveling.” –Whitney Theis

Growing the Community

As riders got online to connect to one another, the Bike Travel Weekend Facebook Group grew by nearly 300 members in the weeks leading up to the event. Riders from around the world shared ideas, photographs, and encouraged one another to participate in Bike Travel Weekend. The group’s timeline is now filled with pictures and stories from ride leaders and participants.

We hosted two informational events via Zoom. The first, held on May 13, focused on the registration process and was primarily meant for first-time participants and those who hadn’t yet registered. The event was well attended by nearly 25 people with lots of information exchanged. Devin Cowens and Corinna Wollman shared their experiences with registering a trip and joining an existing ride as first-time participants.

See the recorded session on Adventure Cycling Association’s YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1DGtmySNzI 

The second of the two virtual events was a lot of fun too. We posted a poll on the Bike Travel Weekend Facebook page and asked members of the group which topic they’d like to learn more about. The winning topic was how to select gear for a bike overnight adventure. In a follow-up webinar, Devin provided her expertise in leading group overnight rides for people of color and LGBTQ+ groups. Nearly 40 participants tuned in and asked questions and talked about the gear that they use on their own bike overnights!

See the recording of this session here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TI_6fJPqYkY 

Kurstin Graham Bike Travel Weekend bike overnights
Riders take a break during their Ione Valley trip through Northern Nevada.
Kurstin Graham

Bike Travel Weekend By the Numbers

Bike Travel Weekend 2021 included 713 trips with more than 5,651 participants in both public and private rides. That’s an average of eight cyclists per trip! The event had trips in all 50 U.S. states, six Canadian provinces, and 15 countries across the globe! Everyone who registered to lead a ride or who joined an existing ride was entered to win a Co-Motion Americano bike. The first 250 people who registered to lead a trip also received a Bike Travel Weekend patch and sticker in the mail!

Wanderlust was clearly alive and well within the cycling community as thousands of cyclists all over the world actively sought out adventure by bicycle the first week of June. Many riders took to the road with destinations ranging from rustic campsites to boutique bed and breakfasts across the country. Other bike adventures included off-road trail excursions and gravel road adventures that gave participants an opportunity to truly immerse themselves in the outdoors. All of the stories, feedback, and photos Adventure Cycling has received point to this year’s Bike Travel Weekend as being one to remember!

Roxy Robles Bike Travel Weekend bike overnights
Roxy tests out a hammock at Kitsap Memorial State Park in Washington state.
Roxy Robles

“It is such an amazing way to introduce others to something that I love. Being there for someone’s first trip and seeing them find the joys of things they see, hear, and smell as they ride along is so fulfilling.” –Gary Davis, Ride Leader

Bike Travel Weekend and Our New Bike Overnights Initiative

If you haven’t heard yet, Bike Travel Weekend is now a part of our new Bike Overnights Initiative, aimed at creating shorter and more accessible routes for cyclists to enjoy. The initiative will focus on creating short routes and a network of supportive Ambassadors in eight metro areas (Boston, Washington D.C., Atlanta, Austin, Minneapolis, Seattle, San Francisco, and Los Angeles).

Bike Overnights has already found associations in Bike Travel Weekend with 83 of the registered rides taking place in and around these eight metro areas. Seattle offered 17 rides, Minneapolis 15 rides, and San Francisco 10 rides this year. These rides provided numerous opportunities for hundreds of cyclists.

“Just keep it going!” –Mike Ciesielski
 

Albert Bohemier Bike Travel Weekend
Albert Bohemier went on a bike overnight along the Rum Runners Trail in Nova Scotia.
Albert Bohemier

Looking Ahead

Didn’t get enough cycling adventure during Bike Travel Weekend? Explore by bicycle on September 25, 2021, for Bike Your Park Day! Along with thousands around the globe, you can ride to and through parks and public lands on the same day. Ride however long you like on roads, bike paths, or singletrack. Stop and enjoy a spectacular view, your favorite ice cream, or a cooling lake, and learn something new at a historical site. Share your joy and journey with friends and community while adventuring on your public lands by bicycle. 

Thanks again to the volunteers and participants that made Bike Travel Weekend 2021 such a success! This year’s Bike Travel Weekend may be behind us with all those panniers unloaded and seat bags unpacked but we are already looking ahead to next year’s adventure!  

Save the date for next year’s Bike Travel Weekend held June 3–5, 2022!

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Introducing Carmen, Bike Overnights Event Coordinator https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/https-www-adventurecycling-org-members-news-carmen-aiken-bike-overnights/ Fri, 02 Jul 2021 16:20:54 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/https-www-adventurecycling-org-members-news-carmen-aiken-bike-overnights/ Coming in #campandgoslow to Adventure Cycling is Carmen Aiken. As the new Bike Overnights Initiative (formerly Short Trips) Events Coordinator, they’ll be working on encouraging, supporting, and ensuring riders from […]

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Coming in #campandgoslow to Adventure Cycling is Carmen Aiken. As the new Bike Overnights Initiative (formerly Short Trips) Events Coordinator, they’ll be working on encouraging, supporting, and ensuring riders from all backgrounds and experiences can access bike travel. Carmen especially cares about access to cycling and the outdoors for marginalized and disenfranchised communities and wants Bike Overnights to provide safe and joyful spaces for anyone to enjoy a one- to three-day trip on a bike. 

Tell us about your background.

I grew up in the Chicago area and returned after graduating from Mills College in Oakland, CA. My dad is from Venezuela and my mom is from Oklahoma. I rode bikes as a kid and then got back into it on a single speed Schwinn Varsity in Chicago. Riding my bike gave me an understanding of my massive city because I could see it as I passed — the feeling of being able to ride to the Indiana Dunes or go as fast as I could through rush hour traffic in the shadow of the Sears Tower was something I needed to share. After working for the Active Transportation Alliance, I moved to Minneapolis where I crushed it on a forklift (sometimes literally). My former jobs also include: short order cook, men’s magazine intern, bike shop receiver, yacht club bartender, startup content writer, and pizza farmhand. 

Carmen in a bandanna and apron in front of a pizza oven.
Carmen Aiken at A to Z Produce and Bakery, Stockholm, WI. 
Carmen AIken

How did you find out about Adventure Cycling? Why did you want to work here?

I used to lurk on the bike travel subreddits looking to see if people were selling Adventure Cycling maps! I love Adventure Cyclist’s print journalism and am excited to see more diverse voices given more space. Knowing Adventure Cycling is working to call people in, make bike travel accessible, and create the Bike Overnights Initiative made me feel like this could be an organization I wanted to support through my work. It also made me feel like it could be an organization I would actually feel “a part of” (I’m a member, too!). 

Tell us about your experience bicycle touring.

Bicycle touring + mode share is my perfect pair. Me, a bike, and a train or bus is my favorite combination. I started my bike adventuring with a trip from Chicago to the farm I worked on, near Eau Claire, WI. I still have my hand-written cue sheets! I’ve also ridden the Blue Ridge Parkway in a blizzard and enjoyed a couple out-and-backs in Minneapolis in the summer months. I finally took my bike on an airplane (scary!) to ride down the Pacific Coast to attend my 10-year college reunion. I rode from Portland to San Francisco to Big Sur and returned to Oakland using Amtrak and regional buses and my bike. I never wanted it to end.

Carmen carrying a bike over a kiddie pool at a bike race
Fording the ball pit at All-City’s SSCX Championships in Minneapolis.
All-City Cycles

Tell us about your interest in bicycle advocacy.

I will tell anyone who listens: I am not a cyclist. I am a person who rides a bike. And I think there are many, many people who ride and like riding bikes in this country and around the globe. Riding a bike (or cycling) does not have to involve special clothes, special bags, special materials, special anything. I’ve had many conversations with my dad where I bring up, say, a dynamo hub, and he goes, “You mean the lights we used in Venezuela?” 

I began my bike work wanting bike, pedestrian, and transit infrastructure to be safe and accessible for EVERYONE in Chicagoland. I believe everyone deserves access to open spaces and affordable, accessible transit. I do not believe cars are coffins nor that bike lanes are the end all be all of advocacy. Riding a bike can be a way to connect to the world we live in. It was a way for me to see and meet my neighbors, to try and comprehend the realities of where I lived. It was also cheap and fun and fast. We have so many ways to improve riding a bike for many! We need to stop gatekeeping and pretending biking looks one way or belongs to one group. 

What do you like to do outside of work?

I’ve written essays, articles, and poetry for a few publications; during COVID I organized an online poetry club, and it was terrific. I read fiction, comics and graphic novels. I love music and going to shows — my last three concerts were Janelle Monae, Noname, and a local ska  Halloween show. And dancing! I taught myself the Hustle during the first summer of COVID.

Carmen in sunglasses and tiara at Tour De Fat in Chicago
Getting ready for The Roots and supporting West Town Bikes at Tour De Fat.
Lauren Crabtree

How many bikes do you have? Tell us about them.

Oh boy. I have a bike I can commute and put bags on, and a bike I like to mountain bike on. I am not a very good mountain biker but I really like it. 

Here are the top three bikes that have passed through my life:

  1. At 31, I found out I liked BMX biking and a hot pink WTP Nova came into my life. It was so cool and now lives with the next generation of rad Black child shredders. 
  2. In Chicago I always wanted a Bianchi Eros and found one on craigslist the week after one of my other bikes was half-stolen outside my apartment (long story). It was set up fixed, and it rode like LIGHTNING. It was the coolest.
  3. I had a garage sale Schwinn Stingray when I was eight, and my pa and I painted it blue and upholstered the banana seat with some old blue jeans. I spent a lot of time carrying gals on the seat to the pool, or my little brother home, asleep. I’ll never be that cool again. 

Where did you ride for Bike Travel Weekend, June 4 – 6, 2021?

This year I went with a couple of friends out of Chicago to the Kankakee River State Park! It was SO hot; we ended up leaving on the Metra Rock Island Line train after work on Friday evening, and there was not a cloud in the sky. We arrived in Joliet with our bikes and made our way to the Wauponsee Glacial Trail which ran through beautiful farmland as well as the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie. I also got to order pizza to a campground to make sure we all got fed, which was pretty terrific. It was a great Bike Overnight, about 30 miles from the train station or 60 if you’d like to start in the city proper. 
 

Carmen racing cyclocross in Minneapolis
Snagging a handup in the 4/5’s in Minneapolis.
All-City Cycles

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Let the Youth Lead: Greg Siple Award Winner Introduces Bikepacking to High Schoolers https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/let-the-youth-lead-greg-siple-award-winner-introduces-bikepacking-to-high-schoolers/ Mon, 30 Mar 2020 15:13:08 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/let-the-youth-lead-greg-siple-award-winner-introduces-bikepacking-to-high-schoolers/ Mary McGowan, winner of the 2019 Greg Siple Award for Young Adult Bike Travel, taught bikepacking skills to high school students in Greenville, South Carolina, and let them lead, a skill she […]

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Mary McGowan, winner of the 2019 Greg Siple Award for Young Adult Bike Travel, taught bikepacking skills to high school students in Greenville, South Carolina, and let them lead, a skill she learned in Adventure Cycling’s Leadership Training Course. Mary hopes what she’s started, in partnership with Momentum Bike Clubs, will become an annual trip. 

The Greg Siple Award helps young adults get in the saddle and out on the road by providing the skills and the gear needed for a lifetime of bicycle travel adventure. In exchange, the winners perform an outreach project that will inspire youth and/or young adults in underrepresented communities to travel by bike. Mary took Adventure Cycling’s Leadership Training Course, which came with a travel stipend and a voucher from BikeFlights.com, to get her and her bike to and from the course. Mary also received Bedrock Sandals and a gift certificate from Cyclosource to update her gear.

Mary recently gave Adventure Cycling an update on her project.

My project for the Greg Siple Adventure Cycling Scholarship is centered around starting the tradition of an annual bicycle trip to my local cycling/mentoring club of high school students here in Greenville, South Carolina. This group already meets three times per month for cycling and life skills sessions with volunteer adult mentors. Most of our youth started this program in middle school and therefore have some bike riding experience; however, most rides have been centered around recreation and are less focused on travel. Through the Leadership Training Course that I took with Adventure Cycling last June in Denver, I now feel more equipped to introduce our youth to the joys of bicycle travel. From my own experiences with bike touring, I know how empowering it is to see the world via your own pedal strokes, and I am so thrilled to be able to share this with these students.

Mary snaps a photo of the students surrounded by tents and gear at the center.
Courtesy of Mary McGowan

Because most of our youth have limited or no prior experience with bicycle travel and camping, I decided to break my project into three separate opportunities to participate, with each experience building on the previous one. First, we would ride to a nearby facility to an indoor ‘lock-in’ overnight in February when the temperature in South Carolina are still pretty chilly. Second, with temperatures warming up by late April, we would ride with our gear to a nearby host house and camp in the backyard for an outdoor overnight experience. Finally, in early June once school here lets out, we had planned on a four day trip with a shuttle down to Georgia, riding approximately 120 miles out and back from Smyrna on the Silver Comet Trail. 

The bikes!
Courtesy of Mary McGowan

The skills development for our February overnight focused on campsite setup, gear, working as a group to stay on schedule, and riding in a group while carrying personal items. Based on previous trips we have taken with the youth, and the recommendations I learned in the Leadership Training Course, I knew that I wanted to focus on guiding the youth and letting them lead in individual roles instead of trying to micromanage or take over too many responsibilities.

"I knew that I wanted to focus on guiding the youth and letting them lead in individual roles instead of trying to micromanage or take over too many responsibilities."

For this ride, I had arranged for the tents and camping gear to be dropped off ahead of time at the center, since we are still in the process of installing racks and panniers to the youths’ bicycles. The youth brought their own personal items in backpacks, and they were responsible for setting up their ‘campsites’ indoors upon arrival with tents and sleeping gear. Following a brief demonstration of a fully loaded bicycle setup for a taste of what we would be doing in April and June on our self-supported rides, we gathered for a group dinner followed by a few rounds of capture the flag and other fun group games.

The next morning, the youth packed up their gear to be ready for the next outing, we had breakfast at a local diner within University Center, and after a debriefing we rolled back to the bike shed where the youth got rides home.

Mary McGowan (front row, far right) poses with her Leadership Training Course, including two other Greg Siple Award winners (Thea Garrett, front row, second to the left, and Rachel Horn, front row, center).
Rachel Horn

So far there has been a lot of enthusiasm about the group tours and we are really looking forward to taking the youth on outdoor overnights, hopefully to make it an annual tradition. Although it is truly disappointing to have to postpone our spring plans due to the coronavirus outbreak, it gives us an all new appreciation and anticipation for opportunities to participate in these events with our youth, and I am really looking forward to sending out an update with the results of the rest of our bike travel adventures! I am enormously grateful to the Adventure Cycling Association for the opportunity to bring the joys of bicycle travel to this group of remarkable youth, and to use this activity to strengthen bonds and relationships within our community. 

Students practice setting up the tents.
Courtesy of Mary McGowan

Adventure Cycling recently announced the winners of the 2020 Greg Siple Award. The 2021 application opens November 1. Thank you to the 2020 sponsors of the Greg Siple Award: New Belgium BrewingSurly BikesBikeFlights.comBig AgnesArkel, and Bedrock Sandals.

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Inspiring Women/Trans/Femme People to Travel by Bike https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/inspiring-women-trans-femme-people-to-travel-by-bike/ Mon, 16 Dec 2019 10:39:04 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/inspiring-women-trans-femme-people-to-travel-by-bike/ “I believe that bicycle travel has the potential to help achieve world peace,” 2018 Greg Siple Award winner Rachel Horn wrote in her application. “Throughout my travels, it has been my […]

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“I believe that bicycle travel has the potential to help achieve world peace,” 2018 Greg Siple Award winner Rachel Horn wrote in her application. “Throughout my travels, it has been my experience that most people are good, that the human body is incredible, and that the earth is a thrilling place to live. I am enthused to share this reality with the people around me as we travel on our bikes.”

Rachel did just that this fall at Bike!Bike!, a conference which gathers do-it-yourself cooperatives from around the world to align on empowering the world on two wheels. Rachel shared more about Bike!Bike!

Rachel Horn Greg Siple Award bike travel women trans femme
Rachel inspires other women/trans/femme to travel by bike.
Rachel Horn

This year’s conference was held in Tijuana, Mexico where I organized a speaker panel highlighting female ridership in bicycle travel. We sat in a circle with the speakers integrated among the audience to share experiences from the road. We talked tips and tricks as well as dreams and challenges in a valuable discussion that reinforced the strength in the room. It was particularly powerful because the young woman who inspired me to ride solo from Los Ángeles to Mexico City was one of the speakers; for me it took connecting with someone who had done it before to show me that I could do it, and now many more people know that it is possible! It is common for women/trans/femme riders to be discouraged from taking trips based on our gender; it was powerful to hear how participants overcame negative feedback to enjoy positive experiences. 

The Greg Siple Award helps young adults, ages 18 – 30-years old, get in the saddle and out on the road by providing the skills and the gear needed for a lifetime of bicycle travel adventure. A 2018 recipient of the Outdoor Leadership Award, Rachel took Adventure Cycling’s Leadership Training course in Colorado this summer. “The training cracked a shell of limitation I had grown for myself and reminded me that I have certain skills to offer,” she said. 

Leadership Training Course Adventure Cycling Rachel Horn bike travel
Rachel Horn (front row, center) poses with her Leadership Training Course, including two other Greg Siple Award winners (Thea Garrett, front row, second to the left, and Mary McGowan, front row, far right).
Rachel Horn

In exchange for the 2020 award, four winners will perform an outreach project to people in underrepresented communities such as but not limited to women, LBGTQI people, people of color, indigenous people, refugees, and people with disabilities. 

Rachel had this to say about her outreach project:

The most rewarding part of the project was facilitating a collective energy among 30 women/trans/femme people who support each other in bicycle travel. At the final go-around, people shared that they felt inspired and empowered to take on their bike travel dreams. We left the space continuing the conversation!

Rachel Horn Greg Siple Award bike travel women trans femme
Watermelon refreshes Rachel and friends after a ride.
Rachel Horn

The 2020 Greg Siple Award application is open until December 31. Sponsors of the Greg Siple Award include New Belgium Brewing, Surly Bikes, BikeFlights.com, Big Agnes, Arkel, and Bedrock Sandals.

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Cycling with Youth in Arctic Kotzebue https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/cycling-with-youth-in-arctic-kotzebue/ Fri, 22 Nov 2019 10:43:56 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/cycling-with-youth-in-arctic-kotzebue/ When Thea Garrett applied for the Greg Siple Award for Young Adult Bike Travel in 2017 she didn’t know where she’d be living the following year. As a seasonal National […]

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When Thea Garrett applied for the Greg Siple Award for Young Adult Bike Travel in 2017 she didn’t know where she’d be living the following year. As a seasonal National Park Service employee, she did know that she’d be able to complete a bicycle outreach project no matter where she was.

kotzebue greg siple award bike travel cycling youth national park service
Kids in Kotzebue spend a lot of unstructured time on bikes.  
Thea Garrett

Thea jumped at the chance to work in Kotzebue, Alaska, a village hub for the Northwest Arctic region, where youth make up nearly 40 percent of the population. Thea’s role with the NPS in Kotzebue was to teach science and history curriculum. She connected the dots to the Greg Siple Award and facilitated youth bike safety, instruction, and maintenance. Thea also organized a Bike Your Park Day ride. 

The Greg Siple Award helps young adults get in the saddle and out on the road by providing the skills and the gear needed for a lifetime of bicycle travel adventure. In exchange, the winners like Thea perform an outreach project that will inspire youth and/or young adults in marginalized communities to travel by bike.

kotzebue greg siple award bike travel cycling youth national park service
Thea interacts with a boy in Arctic Kotzebue. Youth make up nearly 40 percent of the population in Kotzebue.
Thea Garrett

The youth in Kotzebue spend a lot of unstructured time roaming around town by bicycle.   

While working for the National Park Service we did 3-hour weekly bicycle roves with a trailer, bringing educational props around town to do a lesson about natural and cultural history. Youth would frequently tag along forming a bicycle caravan throughout town over the course of the program. Average outreach for the weekly program was between 25-60 youth. 

kotzebue greg siple award bike travel cycling youth national park service
Bikes, including abandoned piles of bikes, are everywhere in Kotzebue. 
Thea Garrett

I scheduled, organized and facilitated a Bike Your Park Day event. Because all of the parks in our region are only accessible by snowmobile, boat, or plane it wasn’t feasible to bike within the park units, instead we scheduled a community bike ride. I recognized that most members of the community had never been on an organized ride, severe winds altered the course the day of the ride and we rerouted the ride throughout town to the local parks to do a clean up. With the long days, youth spend a lot of their free time at the parks throughout the summer months and without extensive trash disposal infrastructure in the remote community it can accumulate. We brought a scale to weigh in the trash, prizes, and snacks and hot beverages for the blustery day. Total participation was 34, with over 80 pounds of trash collected. 

It was exciting to see the amount of biking that happened in my community, particularly with youth. Biking gave young people a sense of independence and I would see kids as young as five wrenching on their bikes and doing wheelies. I loved being able to be responsive to the biking culture that already existed and adapting my project to the specific needs within the community. It gave me the perspective that community bike projects should be a reflection of local conditions and needs. There are a lot of opportunities for bike outreach in rural communities and that energizes me. 

kotzebue greg siple award bike travel cycling youth national park service
Thea taught science and history, and added bike safety, instruction, and maintenance to the curriculum.
Thea Garrett

“Getting people on bikes and strengthening the rapport between gateway communities and public land is something that I am passionate about. This kind of community outreach project has the potential to be scaled up or down and be replicated in other towns adjacent to public lands.” -Thea Garrett

The 2020 Greg Siple Award application is open until December 31. Four winners, ages 18 – 30 years old, take an Adventure Cycling educational course and get the gear they need for a lifetime of bike adventure. In exchange, they perform an outreach project to people in underrepresented communities such as but not limited to women, LBGTQI people, people of color, indigenous people, refugees, and people with disabilities. Sponsors of the Greg Siple Award include New Belgium Brewing, Surly Bikes, BikeFlights.com, Big Agnes, Arkel, and Bedrock Sandals.

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Bike Travel for People Who Are Blind https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/bike-travel-for-the-blind/ Mon, 14 Oct 2019 14:35:18 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/bike-travel-for-the-blind/ Briana Cohen gave over 70 people, including those who can’t see, the gift of bicycle travel with Fearless Tandem. It all came to fruition after Briana won the Greg Siple Award for Young […]

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Briana Cohen gave over 70 people, including those who can’t see, the gift of bicycle travel with Fearless Tandem. It all came to fruition after Briana won the Greg Siple Award for Young Adult Bike Travel. The award helps young adults get in the saddle and out on the road by providing the skills and the gear needed for a lifetime of bicycle travel adventure. In exchange, the winners perform an outreach project that will inspire youth and/or young adults in marginalized communities to travel by bike.

bike touring travel blind
Briana worked with the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired to make her project a reality.
Ali Mae

The award was created seven years ago, with support and urging from Adventure Cycling members and the bike industry, to encourage more young people travel by bike. As a recipient, Briana, 23, of Austin, Texas, received a Co-op Cycles touring bicycle, camping gear from Big Agnes, panniers from Arkel, Bedrock Sandals, a BikeFlights.com voucher, and a travel stipend to get to and from her Intro to Road Touring course.

bike touring travel blind intro to road touring adventure cycling oregon
Briana received a new bike and bike touring gear and gained valuable skills on the Intro to Road Touring course in Oregon.
Heather Andersen

Briana had this to say about the Intro to Road Touring course:

I enjoyed the stunning scenic routes and the endless bursts of nature. I was in awe– every mile was an explosion of green, lush trees. I enjoyed riding with some wonderful folks who were all discovering the freedom of bike touring and how we could "just keep going," as one person said on the last night. Whenever I’m on a bike, I find I am able to meet and connect with good-natured, fun, and present people. At the end of the week, there was a uniting commonality among the group which was that we were all individuals with an affinity for bicycle travel and taking in the moments. Other enjoyable aspects were the long stretches of no cars on the road, friendly tailwinds and park hosts, steady sunshine and breezes, the simpleness of having everything on my bike, the refreshing river at Salmonberry County Park, the gratification of reaching high peaks like Cape Perpetua and Alsea Falls, and the bits and stories the group shared during the course.  

bike touring travel blind
Briana gave people who are blind and visually impaired the gift of bike travel.
Ali Mae

Briana’s outreach project was a workshop and bike ride for students at the Texas School for the Blind. 

Students learned about tandem bikes basics, touring styles, cycling resources, parks and trails, and the principles of Leave No Trace. They shared their favorite memories spending time outside and also heard stories from a blind athlete and partner who discussed linking up with sighted guides to explore, stay in shape, and race tandems with Paracycling. They got to take home hammocks, re-usable water bottles, t-shirts, wooden camping spoons, Adventure Cycling memberships, stylish socks, granola bars, and other giveaways that both national and local businesses donated. It was awesome that I got to receive all the awesome gear through the Greg Siple Award, so I wanted them to receive prizes too. Afterwards, we joined with the Lend Your Legs ride and had the students pair with cyclists on tandem bicycles to ride. Over 70 people joined for the ride! It was so cool to have such a large group come together and you could tell that bike travel is accessible to anyone. Someone even sent me a direct message on Instagram saying he and his partner had a tandem we could use– and they brought it so another student could ride. 

bike touring travel blind
Over 70 people participated in the workshop and ride.
Ali Mae

The 2020 application for the Greg Siple Award is open November 1 through December 31 to people ages 18 – 30 years old with an interest in bike travel. Four winners get to take an Adventure Cycling educational course and are gifted the gear they need to get on the road. In exchange, they perform an outreach project to people in marginalized communities such as but not limited to women, LBGTQI people, people of color, indigenous people, refugees, people with disabilities. Sponsors of the Greg Siple Award include New Belgium BrewingSurly BikesBikeFlights.comBig AgnesArkel, and Bedrock Sandals.

Find out more about Briana’s outreach project at this link.

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How to See Glacier National Park By Bike & Train https://www.adventurecycling.org/member_news/how-to-see-glacier-national-park-by-bike-train/ Wed, 02 Oct 2019 16:16:06 +0000 https://advcycle.wpenginepowered.com/member_news/how-to-see-glacier-national-park-by-bike-train/ Pam Murray of Charlotte, North Carolina won an Amtrak train trip with roomette and bike fees for two to Glacier National Park—just for registering for Bike Your Park Day in […]

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Pam Murray of Charlotte, North Carolina won an Amtrak train trip with roomette and bike fees for two to Glacier National Park—just for registering for Bike Your Park Day in 2018. The Amtrak trip was part of the Bike Travel Weekend and Bike Your Park Day sweepstakes. Pam documented her trip, which included planes, trains, automobiles—and bikes. 

Thanks to Adventure Cycling and Amtrak for the train trip with roomette and bike fees for two to Glacier National Park. What a great trip! And I got to take my friend Geoff Fey who said he always wanted to go to Glacier. The scenery is so gorgeous that there really are no words to describe it well. I mean even things like majestic, stunning and awesome pale in comparison to the experience of being there. This was the first time I’ve taken my bike on the plane. And I was grateful to have a roomette and roll on bike service on Amtrak. Trains and bikes take longer but as the Tao saying goes "the journey is the reward."

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam started her trip by flying to Portland with her bike and riding across the river to Vancouver to see a friend.
Pam Murray

Day 1

Fly to PDX with bike. Thank goodness American Airlines changed the baggage fee to only $40 to fly with my bike. I was nervous about putting the bike in a box but Eric from Trips for Kids/Recyclery helped me and the bike made it unscathed. Homeland Security does open the box but the bike was okay. Can you tell I’m concerned about my bike? 

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam and sculptor Jennifer tour public art in Vancouver by bike.
Pam Murray

Day 2

Wow. The temperature is cool and the humidity is low. What a nice change from North Carolina. Rode across the river to Vancouver, Washington to visit my college roommate Jennifer Corio who is a public sculpture artist (Cobalt Designworks). I’m navigating the way I always do with a cue card written down from a route I’d planned on Ride with GPS. I’m glad I downloaded the offline maps and GPS generally works so I could see where I was relative to the route. Had to stop to ask for directions many times since paths, bikeways are not as well marked as streets.  In Vancouver, we took a bike tour to see all of her sculptures. Rode 22 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam and John, the owner of Rivelo and the namesake for John’s Irish Straps. 
Pam Murray

Day 3

Rode back to Portland. Went to a Rivelo, the Rivendell bike dealer and Chrome Industries. Grabbed lunch, tea, went to yoga class, dinner at Nong’s Khao Man Gai and ice cream at Fifty Licks. Back to pack the bags for Seattle and Glacier. Rode 27 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam enjoyed Ian’s Pizza in Seattle before boarding the train to Glacier National Park.
Pam Murray

Day 4

Rode to Portland Amtrak Station to go to Seattle. We had a four-hour layover so we met up with Colin of Wheeltalk Seattle (podcast) after we went to Ian’s Pizza where we got our Bike Benefits and thanked them for being on the Seattle Bike Benefits Bingo card this year. Colin met us and took us by the Space Needle to Pike Place Market where I picked up some nectarines and Rainier cherries. We got to the train station in plenty of time. I should’ve checked my bag so I wouldn’t have to ride around with it. I know for next time. I couldn’t pedal up Yesler, and had to get off and walk it. Too much weight! Glad to get 14 miles riding around in Seattle. The train ride was long– about 14 hours or something like that. We boarded the train, had dinner, took a shower, went to sleep, had breakfast, got our stuff together, then got to East Glacier Amtrak station at 9:44 am the next day. Lost wifi after Seattle. Rode 14 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam and Geoff explore Glacier National Park by bike.
Pam Murray

Day 5

Arrived at East Glacier, rode to the cabin and dropped off our bags. Headed to lunch at the diner then to the Lodge to figure out hikes, trailheads, shuttles. We decided to rent a car for the next day since the trailhead to Grinnell Glacier was 55 miles away. We got everything squared away then rode to Two Medicine to hike. Beautiful ride to the trailhead. We saw a bear crossing the road and later saw a mountain goat near the lake. Short hike at running Eagle Falls. Beautiful vistas. Then a nice ride back with a stop for provisions at the gas station. Rode 33 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam rides to Two Medicine in Glacier National Park.
Pam Murray

Day 6

Rode to pick up the rental car to go to Many Glacier to the Grinnell Glacier trailhead. We hiked most of the day. Come to find out it was a difficult hike. I was afraid I’d be sore and not able to ride the next day. Drove through Glacier National Park from east to west through Logan Pass on the Going to the Sun road through St. Mary’s and West Glacier. It was cloudy but there was a clearing so I blew up my air mattress and laid out under the stars. We could see the Milky Way, lots of stars and even saw a shooting star. Rode 6 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam and Geoff on their way to Grinnell Glacier.
Pam Murray

Day 7 

Got a ride for us and our bikes to Two Medicine to do a few more hikes before we had to leave. Saw a moose and a mountain goat and went to a Aster Falls. Amtrak was nice enough to let us drop our bags at the station during the day since we’d checked out of the cabin earlier in the day. The train was late so I rode to the playground at the school since I’d be on the train for a long time. We barely made it back to the train and hurriedly rolled our bikes on board. We had a late dinner, shower and went to bed, got up the next day for breakfast then arrived in Seattle. Rode 19 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Getting ready to board the train in East Glacier.
Pam Murray

Day 8

We only had a couple hours in Seattle but managed to grab Dim Sum. It was easier riding because I’d checked my bag for the next leg to Portland. You need to know in advance which bag and stuff you can check and what you want to take on the train. (I wanted my pjs and shower stuff and snacks.) We also had time to go by Peloton Cafe, another Bike Benefits business who was on the Seattle Bike Benefits Bingo card this year. Stopped at Pike Place Market again for more cherries. Dinner in Portland. Rode 11 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
Pam in Pike Place Market in Seattle.
Pam Murray

Day 9

I had a day to ride around Portland by myself. I went to the Community Cycling Center, got a piece of blackberry pie at Random Order Pie shop, back to Rivelo to get a Randi Jo feedbag. Then went to find North St. Bags to check them out. Picked up a couple reflective straps which can be worn as leg or wrist straps (good for signaling at night). I had to box my bike for the flight home and have dinner and pack before the red eye flight back. Good idea but I’ll never do that again. Bad in reality. My sleep got so messed up. Glad to be home but hard to leave the beautiful mountains of the west. Rode 20 miles.

Glacier National Park, bike travel, bike touring, Amtrak, Pam Murray
A mural at the Community Cycling Center in Portland.
Pam Murray


 

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