Scott sets the pace
Trail #1 Panhandle Trail,Pa. \240 10 miles as warm up.
Driving across Ohio we decided to take a break and found a trail close to the highway.
We rode about 10 miles
A perfect day 81 degrees and a beautiful summer day.
Flat trail with lots of shade.
Happy 4th!!! \240 Today we rode the Tanglefoot trail. Ecru Mississippi to New Albany \240Mississippi and back
We biked the Louisiana Trails. We started in \240Castor and ended up doing mostly road riding \240once we saw the trail conditions.
Texas bonus \240trail #2 \240Reno Rail Trail and the Prairiland Trail
Oaklahoma City, Oaklahoma river walk trail both side s. We got a little wet
Pecos New Mexico
We bike on the Santa Fe trail and along \240Route 66 \240New Mexico! \240We only did 15 miles today as the increased elevation was not easy on Scott!
Bakersfield California . We ride the Kern River greenway. But much to our disappointment there is no water in the Kern river.
Biking in Pasco Washington at the Sacajawea River Trsil along the Columbia River
Washington/Idaho riding \240with our Nephew \240Bryce \240and his son Sawyer we rode 20 miles on the Centenial trail
Hiawatha Trail Idaho/Montana
Glacier National Park! We came we hiked we absorbed!!! \240It was too smoky to ride
Rode the longest ride yet! North Dakota to Montana across the \240Fairview \240Cartwright bridge tunnel. \2401 mile with both an Iron \240lift bridge and \240rode with a new friend \240Larry Christner( and his son is 2021 graduate of Susquehanna University , small world)
Some interesting facts:
The Fairview Bridge also has another claim to fame-it adjoins the only tunnel in North Dakota. The 1,456 foot long tunnel was built in 1912 and 1913. Most of the digging was done by hand, although horse and mule-drawn scrapers and blasting powder were used in building the approaches. Both the Fairview Bridge and Cartwright Tunnel have been developed into a walking trail by the Fairview Chamber. The only time the 'lift' span on the Fairview Bridge over the Yellowstone River was raised was in 1914, shortly after it was constructed as part of an ambitious plan by the Great Northern Railroad for its never-completed Montana Eastern Railway. After all these years, it's still there, the powerful lifting machinery still in place atop 108-foot-high steel towers.
Also Scott and I only have one more state to achieve \240all 50…
Rode the entire island \240and explored the cross roads! \240Streets very crowded.
Took the \240ferry to the island where no motorized \240transportation is allowed
@#mimilee33 Blessings for safe rides across the US!