Monday, December 6, 2010

...And Exactly What the Heck Have YOU Been Doing the Past Seven Months?

Hmm... March 1st, 2010, the last time I checked into the NARRAGANSETT BAY BIKE RIDES blog? Seems like quite a while ago. Turns out riding the bike and chewing gum, err, "blogging-about-riding-a-bike-around-Narragansett-Bay," isn't quite as easy as I thought it was going to be. But, come to think of it, what the heck is ever as "easy" as I think its going to be?
In my limited defense I've got only this: between May 1st, when I got on the Miyata this spring, and November 23rd, when the really cold New England weather set in and daylight hours seemed to become ridiculously compressed, a few miles did go on the bike. As it turns out, in 2010 not a single one of those miles involved riding around Narragansett Bay. YO! What is wrong with that picture? A TON is wrong with that picture, which I will try to rectify in 2011.
But it turns out over 1500 miles that DID go on the bike, and while those did not involve going around Narragansett Bay, they may have had some small impact on Narragansett Bay. Before the cold weather forced me to surrender (being not quite ready for David's Colorado-"lobster-mitts" level of bike rider commitment) I managed fifty-five (55) bike commuter round trips, offsetting nearly 3/4 of a ton of carbon dioxide. That's using a bike to offset, in some small way, the impact of global warming impact. More specifically: using a bike v. continuing to use a car to travel back and forth to the Bay Center.
YO! Dat BIKE be better on every freakin' level!
In 2010, what it ultimately came down to was, on 55 separate occasions, pedal power actually carried me to Narragansett Bay, if not so much around Narragansett Bay. The preferred mode would combine bike commuting with an on-going and never-ending search for the most interesting sources of local grub, i.e., clam cakes, ice cream, etc., as well as photographically documenting scenic vistas around Narragansett Bay.
Oh, do stay tuned on all fronts...
OK, so working for Save the Bay, at the Bay Center, is to be never very far from Narragansett Bay or STB's mission of preserving this incredible resource. For that I remain extremely thankful. Of not being able to quite make enough time for actual recreational bike riding, well, that would be the part of the overall program that still needs a little work...
Given all of that, here are my renewed "goals" for this "blog" between now and when the three-season-bike-semi-fanatic hops on the two wheeler again in the spring:
1) Come up with additional potentially interesting bike rides that may or may not revolve around consuming local food stuffs;
2) Inspire more people to brave the roads of Rhode Island on two wheels in search of the little wonders presented by the beauty of Narragansett Bay;
3) Finally, continue to shamelessly dip into Bill Strickland's excellent The Quotable CYCLIST and share his words and the gems he has culled from a life on a bike that continue to inspire me, sort of like the following:
The First Ride
First we are floaters, swimmers in what William Kotzwinkle calls the "secret sea." Then we are bound to the ground, unable to even turn over. By degrees we gain mobility, strengthening our muscles and out coordination until we can sit up, then clamber to our hands and knees, then rock back and forth, then put those motions together into forward movement, and finally we grope our way to our feet and walk and it is wonderful but it is a battle against gravity the whole time.
We swim again, of course, but not the way we did before. the crawl and the dog-paddle so precisely describe our progress, the butterfly a laughable antonym of how we actually proceed through water.
It is not until we find the bicycle that we rediscover flight, the unrestrained weightlessness we knew in the womb, the easy, lofting movements and sweeping curves possible with a subtle tilt of our bodies. The bicycle ride is something we remember from before we had memory, plus more. It is wind, it is a world of color to rush over and by and below, it is a world of friction yet freedom.
Humans were meant to ride bicycles, or else we could never accomplish the feat. Scientists cannot explain how a bicycle stays upright. There are too many forces and variables. We can shoot a metal can across our solar system but there are not enough mathematical formulas to explain how a six-year-old child rides a bike. The explanation is simple. The explanation is this: We already know how to ride a bike. We just need to remember it.
We never stop remembering how to ride a bike. There is always more to remember. There are finer and finer movements to make, the tiniest shifts of weight, imperceptible leans. There are tricks, ways to pedal or hold the handlebar, a stance for your knees as you ride over a log, an elbow movement that sucks up the impact of landing after a hop. When you become older and slower you can sometimes go faster than ever if you use everything you know about riding a bike.
It is always sweet for that reason, but never like the first time. Remember that first time. Remember how to ride. And remember, of course, how true it really is that we never forget how to ride a bicycle.
- The Quotable CYCLIST: Great Moments of Bicycling Wisdom, Inspiration and Humor, pp 172-3, Edited by Bill Strickland, Published by BREAKAWAY BOOKS, Revised and updated 2001
That's it from one person hoping this year's Winter Solstice settles gently upon the land, and Spring does not take its sweet time melting the accumulated snow and ice. Between now and then I'll be "test riding," from the comfort of a computer, new rides around our wonderful Narragansett Bay, and very much looking forward to that 2011 moment when circular rubber will again meet the road!

Monday, March 1, 2010

No. 8 - Aquidneck Island - 54 Miles - 22 Scenic Sites, and Whole Lot More...

YO! It is entirely possible that forcing myself to route these rides is the healthiest thing I've done this winter... Today was especially ironic, as my mind got to wander all-hell-and-gone around Aquidneck Island. Newport has always seemed like a pretty amazing place, but my natural inclination in the summer has always been to leave-it-to-the-tourists and their innumerable vehicles. But once I began to think about experiencing the place on a bike, well, just perhaps, it might not be totally untenable. Make no mistake: there must be no allusions that riding a bicycle around Newport in the "high" season is going to be a picnic. But dodging traffic on Cranston's Park Avenue during my three-season bike commute isn't a cake walk either. But so far, so good. It is all of-a-piece, this being on two wheels stuff. You have to triple your defensive riding quotient, just to make it a far fight. Make no mistake about it: these are not bike paths out there. We are talking about that full immersion "Share the Road" experience, and sometimes with fellow citizens who can scarcely be bothered. That much acknowledged, let's defer to the immortal words of our expensive-footwear friends: Just Do It! Just get on the bike and slowly ramp-up to whatever level of riding you'd like to do. There is a training program that preps mere mortals like me to go out and clock a hundred miles in a day and actually want to come back for more the next day. Who knew? And it starts with 45 minutes on that thing sitting there in your garage.
But enough from me. More of the good stuff from that Bill Strickland character, the guy who pulled together all those "Great Moments of Bicycling Wisdom, Inspiration and Humor," aka The Quotable Cyclist:
When I go biking, I repeat a mantra of the day's sensations: bright sun, blue sky, warm breeze, blue jay's call, ice melting and so on. This helps me transcend the traffic, ignore the clamorings of work, leave all the mind theaters behind and focus on nature instead. I still must abide by the rules of the road, of biking, of gravity. But I am mentally far far away from civilization. the world is breaking some else's heart.
-- Diane Ackerman, literary writer, poet, author of
A Natural history of the Senses,among other works
The Quotable Cyclist, at page 20

Better to ride than not. -- I said that...

Sunday, February 28, 2010

No. 7 - Tiverton/Little Compton Loop - 66 Miles - 14 Scenic Sites & Ice Cream!

So how DO you feel about 66 miles on a warm day in July? This one starts at the Park & Ride lot off Fish Road, just north of Route 24. Before you know it the Sakonnet River Bridge is passing over head, with Grinnell's Beach and Nannaquaket Bridge on the horizon. Emily Ruecker Wildlife Refuge and Seapowet Marsh slip by on the way to one of the last scenic sites in Tiverton: Fogland Beach. Then, just-like-that, Little Compton delivers Town Way and Taylor's Lane, two classic Rights of Way on the way to Sakonnet Harbor and all the the activity down there. Scenic views abound along the southern Rhode Island coastline, but one of the greatest is South Shore Beach. A short walk along the beach, across a shallow tidal creek, and Goosewing Beach appears. The Beach is owned by the Nature Conservancy, who is doing everything it can to protect the piping plovers that nest there. Then it's a do-not-stop-at-GO cruise up to Gray's Ice Cream at Tiverton Four Corners.
Given the opportunity to go on a such a bike ride, in our little Ocean State, there is quite simply nothing else to say, save this:
When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments. Here was a machine of precision and balance for the convenience of man. And (unlike subsequent inventions for man's convenience) the more he used it, the fitter his body became. Here, for once, was a product of man's brain that was entirely beneficial to those who used it, and of no harm or irritation to others. Progress should have stopped when when man invented the bicycle.
-- Elizabeth West, Hovel in the Hills p. 19
The Quotable Cyclist, by Bill Strickland, 1997


Monday, February 22, 2010

No. 6 - Conanicut Island, aka Jamestown, aka "The Jackpot!" = 37.5 Miles + 22 Scenic Sites + A "Feed Zone" on Steroids

Truth in Advertising Disclaimer: My Miyata's bicycle tires have never done a single rotation on Conanicut Island. The car, a few... But from everything I can gather as I pulled together information for this ride, this could be one of The Best Places on the Planet to roll bicycle wheels... This summer I intend to fully test that theory when I roll about 37 miles out there one fine day. Of course there's always the getting there part. From the west, on a good day, the Jamestown Bridge allows this to be accomplished on two wheels. From the east the only option is the Pell Bridge and four wheels. However you transport your bike and yourself over there, plan to park at Fort Wetherill State Park and set out. The MapMyRide route shown below describes the specific meanderings, but suffice to say any place that presents this much coastline in such a compact setting has got to be something pretty special. As usual, my "bible" was Public Access to the Rhode Island Coast. It was initially published in 1993, updated in 2004, by our great friends at Rhode Island Sea Grant. Copies are available for downloading off the Internet or from the Sea Grant Communications Office, URI Bay Campus, Narragansett, RI 02882-1197 (Order P1696).

The route identifies twenty-two scenic Right of Ways to the RI coastline on the 37.5 miles route it travels. And that's not even counting the numerous "Feed Zone" locations along Narragansett Avenue. Running from East Ferry (#11) to West Ferry (#20), these are the Narragansett Avenue addresses that jumped out at me as I researched the area:
14 - Tricia's Tropi-Grille (www.triciastropigrille.com)
23 - House of Pizza
25 - Narragansett Cafe (www.narragansettcafe.com
32 - Slice of Heaven (www.sliceofheavenri.com)
34 - Peking Garden
35 - Xtra Mart
40 - Chopmist Charlie's (www.chopmistcharlies.com)
Hey, Bon Appetit! If I've somehow missed any of your favorites or you discover something particularly remarkable on your travels, don't be shy!

If the scenic vistas live up to their billing, the whole 37.5 miles, from beginning to end, will probably take a lot more than a day. Hey, track down a B&B and soak the place up! At least that's what I'm think today, months away from actually heading over there. The route exists as a "draft" of an idealized set of points, heading up the east side of the island to Conanicut Point, then down the west coast to Beavertail State Park. This is one ride that will definitely need to be fleshed out by actually rolling across the landscape and it is one I am especially looking forward to...

Monday, February 8, 2010

No. 5 - Chafee Nature Preserve to Aunt Carrie's Restaurant and/or Iggy's Chower House - 31 Miles

OK, admittedly a long title and, at 30+ miles, not all that short a ride either. But at the end of this particular ride a choice can be made: Aunt Carrie's or Iggy's? For my money they are both awesome, especially after four hours on the bike, and perhaps you'll need both places.
But I digress.
Today it's more about the following quote from The Quotable Cyclist: Great Moments of Bicycling Wisdom, Inspiration and Humor, by Bill Strickland (www.breakawaybooks.com, $13):

"I ride a bicycle -- not because I hate General Motors but haven't the courage to bomb the plant. I don't do it as a gesture of great stoicism and personal sacrifice....You ride a bicycle because it feels good. The air feels good on your body; even the rain feels good. The blood starts moving around your body, and pretty soon it gets to your head, and, glory be, your head feels good. You start noticing things. You look until you really see. You hear things, and smell things you never knew were there. You start whistling nice little original tunes to suit the moment. Words start getting caught in the web of poetry in your mind. And there's a nice feeling, too, in knowing you're doing a fundamental life thing for yourself: transportation."
-- Nicholas Johnson, Journalist, at page 315

And today it's also about the numerous scenic stops and right-of-ways you'll discover as you make your way down the Narragansett Bay coastline, from Chafee Nature Preserve in North Kingstown to the "twin" sea food destinations in Narragansett. So why not tick them off:
#61 - South Ferry Road
#58 - Route 1A Overlook
#54 - Old Sprague Bridge Overlook
#53 - Narrow River Inlet
#52 - Canonchet Farm
#51 - Narragansett Town Beach
#50 - Casino Park
#49 - Ocean Road
#48 - State Pier #5 (Tucker's Dock)
#47 - Hazard Avenue
#46 - Newton Avenue
#45 - Bass Rock Road
#44 - Black Point
#43 - Scarborough State Beach

Public Access to the Rhode Island Coast www.crc.uri.edu/download/GB_AccessGuide.pdf has excellent descriptions of everything you can expect to find as you roll up on these Narragansett Bay landmarks. This is what the route looks like:



This route is certainly not all that complicated. But as cool as these MapMyRide map are, to print out a barpack-able copy of the specific map "cues" you may need to grab a minimal membership to MapMyRide for about $30/year. Their capacity to allow people to crank out these things more than justifies that kind of expense, so I've just signed on for a year to see what comes of it. Now that I am on-their-bus, I'm also considering printing out copies of the various Narragansett Bay bike riding routes that will ultimately find there way into this "blogging" exercise. The concept of sharing said printouts with people in the biking community who are interested in such a thing ought not be alien to me...
Just get the through this freakin' winter and out the other side into some warm weather. At this point all I know for sure it that I'm really looking forward to hitting these routes in 2010!

Monday, February 1, 2010

No. 4 - Quonset Point (Compass Rose Beach) to Chafee Nature Preserve

Now for something completely different...
Let's just say someone found themselves on Quonset Point, maybe even at Compass Rose Beach. And let's also assume they had some time on their hands and wanted to go for a bike ride that would keep them near Narragansett Bay and also would deliver them to the Chafee Nature Preserve. There's a 26.63 mile route that would do the "trick" and this is what it likes like, as immortalized by my new friends at MapMyRide, complete with "Route Notes/Cue Sheets." OK, so it's still just a bit early in the "season" for me to have test-ridden this thing. But I'm still thinking it wouldn't be a bad way to spend a day, once it finally warms up out there. Just finding out exactly what awaits someone on a bike when they arrive at the Chafee Nature Preserve is reason enough to do this thing, so I will...
_______________

Monday, January 25, 2010

No. 3 - Iggy's at Oakland Beach to Quonset Point

AGAIN with the good-weather-for-ducks!  We will probably get more than three inches before this one is over, and that's not even taking into account the winds howling.  Might as well call it what it feels like: a low grade winter hurricane, and avoid it if at all possible...
And me, in my mind's eye, I'm just heading out from Iggy's in Oakland Beach, down the coast toward Quonset Point, in my "unhurried" way.  Why would anyone be hurrying anyway?  In my mind's eye it's actually sometime in June; there are 75 balmy degrees out there; the sky is clear and there isn't anything else to do but bike down the coast of Narragansett Bay.
Hmm...  There is one thing missing though, so let's take care of that right off: http://seagrant.gso.uri.edu/daytrip/north_kingstown
What you have if you've got one of these in your bike bag is the part of A Daytripper's Guide to Rhode Island that would be extremely useful on a 15 mile trip from Iggy's Doughboy's and Chowder House to Quonset Point in North Kingstown.  And this relevant why?  Because, in addition to the cue sheets that will eventually attempt to provide the most scenic routes from here to there along Narragansett Bay, it would be a nice idea to have something showing-and-telling everything about public access to the coast.  The Daytripper's Guide is a handy way to locate the dozen and a half sites between Iggy's and Compass Rose Beach, off the south east coast of Quonset Point, where, if you were inclined, you could get off your bike and work some Rhode Island sand between your toes.  Hey, I'm just saying, check them out...
The most impressive sites literally jump off the page, like the year-round facilities of Goddard State Park (#2) and Sandy Point Beach at the end of Potowomut Neck (#1).  Within the Quonset Point Industrial Park there are public amenities (bathrooms/picnic benches) at the Allen Harbor Complex (#34) to the north and the 800-linear-foot sandy-and-swimmable Compass Rose Beach (#33) to the south.
I wish I could say when I will get around to cranking out those cue sheets.  But if this winter keeps on keeping on like it has so far, it won't be that long.  It can't be that long!  There are just too many places out there along the Narragansett Bay shoreline to explore by bike, and anything that can be done to advance that ball needs to get done now, while staying inside still makes some sense.
Finally, while on the subject of public access, Rhode Island Sea Grant, Narragansett, R.I. has put out a truly extraordinary 75 page "cousin" to the Daytripper's Guide noted herein.  It is entitled Public Access to the Rhode Island Coast and can be downloaded at:
www.crc.uri.edu/download/GB_AccessGuide.pdf
Between these two publications anyone interested in visiting any of the 344 parks, wildlife refuges, beaches, fishing sites, boat ramps, pathways and views along the Rhode Island's magnificent shoreline can find their way to the best sites that our RI coast has to offer.  The very best part is that these wonderful sites belong to all of us and are just waiting for us appreciate them...