Showing posts with label Waterloo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waterloo. Show all posts

Friday, June 23, 2023

In Which the City Shows New Trails

 

Bike at Ellis Park
June 10--My bike parked at pool at Ellis Park, start of city ride. Another biker (below) arrives.

Biker arrives Ellis Park

“New” is a bit of a theme to my June rides.

Although I got a flat tyre on it yesterday and need to fix it, I have a new wheel on my road bike. I had slightly dented the rim getting a flat a few weeks ago, and it had a bit of a wobble my sister noted on one of our training rides. So I took it to the shop and bought a new wheel.

It won’t take me long to fix the flat, I already have the tube. A job for tomorrow.

Ill health cost me biking one day during this hot, dry month—vertigo. I checked the videos and did the head movements, and it seems to have cleared up that problem.

June has been mixed. My goal was to go on a 60-plus-mile ride each week, and due to various other things cropping up, I have not met that goal. But I’ve ridden over 470 miles in June, more miles than most whole weeks of RAGBRAI, so while I need to do more long rides, enough medium rides are giving me many miles.

One of those rides, June 10, was a “Ride the Districts” 15-mile ride where the city of Cedar Rapids showed off some new bicycle infrastructure south of the Cedar River. The ride started at Ellis Park, which I’ve cycled to in the past but avoided this year because construction projects are between me and it and I have not found an alternative route. For this ride, I drove there along a busy street I would not bike on. Still, we, me and dozens of others on this ride, headed out of the park, turned south and then west and reached the Cherokee Trail.

Using that trail, which was new to me, and some streets and roundabouts, we reached Morgan Creek County Park, one of the nicest parks in the Cedar Rapids area. It was both exciting to learn one can cycle there, and a little sad.

On my own, with my poor navigation skills, I doubt I could repeat that route. Maybe after Ellis Park finally becomes a viable destination I can experiment and figure it out—I hope so. Morgan Creek Park would be a nice new bike ride destination.

Shirt
June 10--I signed up online and got one of these shirts, route on the back, not great to check during ride.

Speaker at first start
Above and below, speaker at first stop in the ride covers new developments along Cherokee Trail.

Speaker

In June, summer is for sure here. Iowa this year feels like “high summer” in June. In a normal year, the state dries out and heats up in late July and August—but this year the heat and dry time has arrive early.

Well, at least that means more sunny days for biking, but careful biking, an old man like me needs to stay well hydrated in this heat.

Anyway, back to the ride. We received some updates from city staff, and I sadly didn’t take any notes, so I don’t recall a lot, except that work continues to expand the Grant Wood Trail, which is good news in my neighborhood.

Bike
Third stop, near the end of the ride.

Riders
Riders.
Ride speaker
Ride organizer speaking at first stop.

Morgan Creek
Shelter at Morgan Creek Park was snack stop, which was nice. Whole ride was about 15 miles.

County speaker
County speaker at Morgan Creek Park.

And, as the equinox came on later in the month, summer flowers, lilies and coneflowers and milkweed, are suddenly everywhere. The grass is dry, although mature trees still look OK. If it continues to be extremely hot and dry, eventually they’ll start to look sad and drop leaves early, but fortunately we’re not at that point.

Anyway, on June 23 I had a meeting at the University of Northern Iowa. It gave me a chance, in the afternoon, to ride 10 miles along some trails that were new to me. If I had more time, more water and less heat, I would have ridden farther, but at least I was able to ride some new routes in Wateloo. I’ve been using familiar trails a lot this month, so some tastes of new have been good.

Longest ride so far in June: 60.7 miles on the 9th. Year-to-date, 1.591.42 miles. Not quite halfway to the 3,300-mile goal, but there is still a week left in June, and I should get even more miles in July, what with RAGBRAI and all.

Many images from this summer month:

June 1-9:

Near Solon
Sunny, hot day June 9, riding trail south to Solon.

Cottage Grove
June 9--Ride to north end of Sac and Fox Trail. Nice to see bike lines added on Cottage Grove Road.

Sky
June 9--Stormy looking clouds on C Avenue.

Lowe Park
Hybrid bike at Lowe Park, going for short morning rides while granddaughters have music lessons.

Sunset
June 10--Sunset on Lindale Trail, hazy sky thanks to forest fires in Canada.

Blue Jay
June 4--Blue Jay on commercial building next to Lindale Trail.

Hazy sky on Grant Wood Trail
Sky colors June 1 on Grant Wood Trail.

June 11-17

Blackbird
June 11--Blackbird at Lowe Park.

Grant Wood Trail
June 12--Pretty summer sky on Grant Wood Trail.

Lowe Park
June 12--Clouds at Lowe Park Trail.

Trumpet Vine
June 15--Trumpet Vine blooming along Cedar River Trail in Hiawatha.

Butterfly Flower
June 16--Butterfly Flower in bloom at Noelridge Park.

Common Milkweed
June 16--Common Milkweed in bloom, Noelridge Park.

Milkweed flower
June 16--Milkweed in bloom Noelridge Park.

Lafayette
June 16--Parked at Lafayette along Cedar Valley Nature Trail.

Bird at Lafayette
June 16--Watching bird at Lafayette.

Trail north of Robins
June 16--CVNT north, pretty blue sky.

Sunset
June 17--Sunset on Lindale Trail.

 June 21-23:

Deer on creek trail
June 21--Deer on creek trail off of Boyson Trail.

Bridge on trail
June 21--View of bridge on creek trail.

Lowe Park
June 21--Sunset at Lowe Park.

Deer by trail
June 22-Saw lots of deer on late ride this day.

Winking deer
June 22--It looked like this one winked at me. I rode on quickly.

Waterloo elephant
June 22--Elephant in park along trail in Waterloo.

State park
June 23--George Wyth State Park in Waterloo, shady trail.

Cedar River
June 23--Trail along top of levee along Cedar River.

Sunday, July 8, 2018

In Which We Travel Beyond the Universe’s Edge

Friday morning, the bikers who rode for more than a century. And maybe felt like they had been hit with this thing.
We rather boldly went where no biker (on Team Joe) has gone before—on beyond Brandon, the known edge of the universe on the Cedar Valley Nature Trail, all the way to a sports bar in a suburb of Waterloo. And, like an Apollo mission, we came back, too.

Between Friday and Saturday of this week, CR Biker pedaled his “second” bike, the hybrid Clarence, about 120 miles. Six of the miles were Saturday, going with my wife to take a young grandson to several parks. But 114 of those miles (no, not a hallucination, as someone on my sister’s Facebook note suggested) were on Friday.

She posted a Map My Ride image on her Facebook news feed showing 109 miles. On joint rides, CR Biker will typically have more miles simply because I ride to and from my house—but in this case, I can’t post my own Map My Ride image to verify in the distance. My phone survived until 97 miles Friday, and then died. I am happy to report that, while my body lost power at about the same time my cell phone expired, my capacity to keep going in a bonking state apparently exceeds that of my cell phone.

Anyway, my sister once, several years ago, rode as far north as Brandon. Before this year, I had never gone far north of Urbana on the Cedar Valley Nature Trail. My sister has also started at the north end of the trail and ridden as far south as La Porte City—but there are miles between those towns she has never seen at all. We’ve taken to calling our new rides north of Urbana as “going beyond the known universe,” and Friday was the first day either of us did the whole trail—twice, both coming and going.

We’ve talked about a bike ride to Waterloo before. When I mentioned it to my wife in the past, because I wanted someone to then come get us, her reaction was always: “If you rode your bike to Waterloo, you can turn around and ride it back;” and my counter reaction was: “But honey, that means we would be biking into the night.”

We were both right. Cate and I were running rather slowly with lights on the gathering night by the time we returned from our grand ride, but we did indeed turn around and ride our bikes back. We were also both wrong, because just as the trail begins in Hiawatha, a suburb of Cedar Rapids, it ends in Evansdale, which I presume is a suburb of Waterloo although I’m a stranger in those parts. So it’s not really a Cedar Rapids to Waterloo ride—but at least it was, for those of us who started in Cedar Rapids, a CR to Evansdale ride.

Along the way, beyond the known universe, we encountered many strange sights:

  • Several places were the trail was “closed,” but like Elizabeth Warren, nonetheless we persisted.
  • The largest fry pan in Iowa. What a slightly odd claim to fame.
  • Blood-sucking moths that lurk in the pretty but perilous Mosquito Coast.
  • Actual remnants of railroad visible at a few street crossings at the trail’s north end—evidence that they didn’t lie to us when they claimed that this whole trail used to be a rail line. Perhaps the Earth is round, too.
  • The known universe’s largest serving of onion rings, a marvel that far outshined a non-functioning decorative piece of cookery.
  • Unexpectedly good plumbing. Center Point keeps its prize for having the best restrooms along the trail, but every little town—Center Point, Urbana, Brandon, La Porte City—has biker-friendly indoor plumbing and watering facilities.
Anyway, we began our expedition around 7 a.m. We headed north, casting longer than usual shadows on a cooler than usual trail. Neither of us is often to be found on a bike trail at 7 a.m. We chose this Friday to do the ride because a bridge project will close the trial north of Center Point as of Monday, so if you are planning to recreate our feat, you may have to act very quickly or wait some time.

Morning shadow on the trail.

I had coffee. We stopped in Lafayette.

Morning light at depot in Center Point.

Shadow on limestone trail north of Center Point.

Shadows get bumpier as trail gets a bit more primitive.
The morning was quite pleasant, and the first few miles passed uneventfully. Pretty birds were becoming active and we spied a few orioles. Cate saw a feral cat that I missed. We were doing splits of 11 and 12 mph on the miles heading north to Center Point, but that would soon change.

We knew from experience that our bikes are slower on limestone. More energy is consumed tossing up little rocks and sliding about just a bit, so as we headed north of Center Point, our miles became slower, around 9 mph.

About 2 miles north of Urbana, the trail does a sharp turn (which makes we wonder, a little, about the whole rail line thing—did this early 20th century rail line have this odd kink in it?). We call that change in direction “Half-Dead Man’s Turn” for reasons described in a previous blog post.

Approaching Half-Dead Man's Curve. Thankfully, devoid of the heart-broken bikers.
Luckily, no unexpected lovelorn travelers awaited us around the bend, neither when we were headed north nor south.

We continued on past the farm fields to the region where Linn County conservation signs gave way to Black Hawk County conservation signs. Although the trail goes through more counties, these two conservation boards seem to be the ones that sign the trail. And kudos to both. Black Hawk, by the way, gets the prize for the better scenery—the trail is just prettier and more interesting north of its mid point. Linn can be proud, too, however—trail maintenance is clearly superior in Linn land.

We got to Brandon, just a few miles beyond the far northern reaches we had explored before. A couple were breaking camp at a small park there, and a local was with them. I asked about the one distinction Brandon has—a giant fry pan—and the local kindly gave us clear directions, so we headed through town to the community center, and there we saw it.

Anything that bills itself as the “biggest X in Iowa” may be worth seeing, if it’s not too far out of your way, but don’t make a special trip. Sure, go see this giant impractical piece of public art representing the shape of something that is cooked with, if you’re in the area.

Brandon, if you’re fry pan proud, you might want to stick a sign on your bike trail, too. We met a rider from Cedar Falls at said pan, and got some interesting intelligence on the ride north.

Biggest fry pan in Iowa, but one that has never been cooked in.


Beyond Brandon, in the unknown regions, lies the Mosquito Coast, which Cate aptly named. The trail runs, for a time, along bottom lands of the Cedar River—marshy water and river to one side, low wooded bluffs on the other. Very pretty—and very buggy, and we were both glad we had made liberal use of insect repellent.

Eventually, the trail pulls away from the river and runs through pleasant, still woody, countryside until it hits La Porte City. There, we faced a choice. You cross a new, very nice bridge, over the Cedar River, enter town, and come to a fence where the trial is closed. You could do the official detour, which the native biker in Brandon had told us was a 9-mile, hilly ride on county roads. You could take a shorter route on nearby Highway 218. Not exactly a bike-friendly back road. Or, you could take the legally dubious action of putting your bike on the other side of the barrier, scaling the fence, and walk your bike 40 yards or so beyond the dip that caused the bridge over a creek to be closed several years ago.

I won’t say which choice we made. There is a Fifth Amendment.

The fallen tree just north of Brandon. Most minor barrier on trail that we encountered.

Crossing the Cedar River.

On the final bridge.

Passing under the interstate at north end of trail.

We carried on. As we neared the Waterloo end, we began to comment on the paucity of trail traffic. We were riding on the perfect Iowa summer day, sunny, in the 80s, much nicer than most of this summer has been. If you are 13 miles north of Hiawatha—that is where the Center Point depot is—you would see a fair number of other bikers on a day like this. But about that many miles out of Evansdale, it was quiet, too quiet.

And we passed a “trail closed ahead” sign. Oh dear. But a few bikers from the north did pass us, and we asked if the trial was indeed closed. One of them shouted out as she passed something like “they will let you through.”

They? What?

The trail ends, but we walk through. Then the trail continues.
And then we came upon it. A 30-yard gap where the trail simply disappears into nothing—a hole that construction equipment was moving about in. We edged off the pavement onto bare dirt, and a man in an earth mover gave was a weary look.

“Is it some kind of utility work?” I asked.

“Yesterday, this wasn’t here,” he answered. I only assume that part of the trail must have been destroyed or damaged by something—an asteroid strike or dynamite explosion, or something.

Anyway, we went through the hole where there is no trail and made it to the second Cedar River bridge at Evansdale. We had had made it, and then went on beyond the trail into town. It was well after noon, we had bicycled well over 50 miles, and we were hungry.

A yard sale attracted our eye. We stopped and had a chat with the natives, who directed us up the street two blocks to a sports bar.

Now, I am not a sports bar person. But this was mid-afternoon, the bar was fairly quiet, and it turned out to be a culinary wonderland. I ordered a grinder sandwich with coleslaw, while Cate opted for tacos. We both ordered an appetizer to share—me, onion rings; her, mozzarella sticks.

Our waiter was chatty and friendly and helpful. Perhaps he has encountered bikers before, because when he saw us and our water bottles, he not only brought us ice cold water, but an extra cup of ice for our bottles. He also kept a watchful eye and refilled us whenever the H2O containers got low.

His tip was good, and he deserved it.

The food was perfect for a long ride—tasty, filling and plentiful. Cate said she had never seen such a large serving of onion rings, and I agreed—it was way beyond what I had expected.

Lunch stop. Product placement.




Somewhat heavier, we stumbled into the warm Iowa afternoon sun. I had ridden almost 58 miles to get to lunch, and it was time to head home.

The homeward journey was everything in reverse. Quite stretch of trail near the Waterloo end. Hole in the trail where the worker gave us a sad look but did not object to our tromping through where temporarily there is no trail. Fence blocking the trial where we faced a legal choice (and made the same choice we had earlier).

One of the more northern road crossings--signs of the old rail line.
We stopped at each town and verified their plumbing was still in order, but we were sagging a bit at each stop. We had ridden one RAGBRAI day by miles and were well into our second. And when we got to the beautiful Mosquito Coast, Cate had another strange encounter. Two of what appeared to be moths landed on her arm and gave her painful bites.

Well, according to my internet research, they were probably large flies known as “deer flies” that can be mistaken for moths in shady light. Anyway, I’m glad the encounter was brief and with few insects, and I can’t say I regret that they appear to prefer a taste of Cate. Memo to self: Always dip in Bug Soother before braving the Mosquito Coast.

As we neared home, my store of energy seemed to give out. Cate eventually had me take the lead, as she was so outpacing me, which was nice of her. We weren’t moving fast, although we were moving with lights on, by the time we got back to Hiawatha.

Well, we did it. We also agree that it’s not likely we’ll do the 100-mile day this year on RAGBRAI—that’s a bucket list punch we both aren’t lacking anyway, and we have nothing to prove.

We can ride more than 100 miles. It takes a while, there may be giant bugs and misdemeanors involved, but we did it. And the next day, I took my grandson for a ride on my bike.


Late afternoon, headed south. Old grain storage, north of Brandon, I think.

My bike bag bangs in my spokes, forcing a quick stop. I shoot pretty image. We are between Brandon and Urbana, on return trip and growing very tired.

Beyond Urbana. Bike shadows growing long.

Almost to Center Point on return trip, the bridge that they are closing the trail to replace.

Last pit stop in Center Point. I am at nearly 100 miles, but my phone will die before I make the century which is too bad, I wanted to hear that robotic Map My Ride voice reel off triple digits.
Note: Post updated July 8 to correct name and spelling of Evansdale as well as location of bridge that is causing trail closing. My sister is a good copy editor. In my lame defense, I wrote this at 1 a.m. or so after putting a young grandchild to sleep.