Lockeport, NS

Wheel full 70px What a beautiful spot for Saturday breakfast!

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Wheel full 70px Behind me appears to be- and smells like, but that’s not a bad thing- a still operating fish cannery.  I hope so, because I’ve been through one community after another here where the working boats are all gone, replaced by quarter-million dollar sailboats and such.  Still pretty, but you know those boats aren’t owned by many local folks.

Wheel full 70px Times do change; I get that.  I don’t necessarily like it, but that’s the way it is.  I’ll have been privileged to to have visited Nova Scotia twice in my life.  Once 40 years ago, and again right now.    Few places I’ve been leave memories as deep and lasting.

Wheel full 70px I love it here, change and all.

Weigh-in #8 – Three Two Six!

…and he seeketh for a scale, and he looketh and looketh, and lo, he findeth one…

Wheel full 70px I found a medical clinic in Chester, Nova Scotia about 15 minutes into my ride this morning. The kind lady at reception, when I said I was weighing once a week, stopped me there and said she’d show me where the scale was.

Wheel full 70px It was an older beam and sliding weight scale. When I was over 350, which was all of the last ten years plus, I couldn’t use these because they max out there.

Wheel full 70px Not today!

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Wheel full 70px It was a little awkward.  I forgot my iPhone, which was charging at the Subway a few doors down, so had to use the Canon.  Trying to position the shot shook the scale and everything started bouncing up and down.  I couldn’t get an angle that included me.  But with everything settled down, I weighed 326 pounds/~148 kg.  Wow!

Wheel full 70px Next week should be interesting.

Day Two – Made It

Wheel full 70px Here I am at Hubbard’s Beach Campgroud after an almost 29 mile/47 km ride yesterday that was surprisingly challenging around St. Margaret’s Bay.

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Wheel full 70px The RidewithGPS link is here [linkie].

Wheel full 70px I guess I should note that this was after a 5 mile/8 km round trip early in the morning into the village of Peggy’s Cove, so that bumps my mileage up a little bit.  The Peggy’s Cove ride will be the subject of a separate post probably tonight.

Wheel full 70px The total elevation gain yesterday turned out to be significantly more that it was a day one of the ride. So much for trusting the RidewithGPS estimate that it makes when you plan out the route.   Or, it could be that the altimeter readings as I’m riding along are not accurate, I don’t know.  What it certainly is in any event is that where the rubber meets the road there were a ton of PUDS (pointless ups and downs)  the first half of the ride up the east side of the bay.  A crest of 100 feet/30 meters might look like a little bump on the elevation profile,  but it’s like riding your bike to the top of the 10 story building. Think about that. Now think about doing it over and over again maybe four or five times in an hour.  Uggggggh!

Wheel full 70px When I reached Provincial Route 3 at Upper Tantallon both the grades and hills leveled out significantly.   The lanes were no wider, but there were better site distances. Today, though, I’ll return to the local roads and so will lose that advantage.

Wheel full 70px Strava was still crapped out yesterday.

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I deleted and reinstalled the app last night and we’ll try it again today.  We’ll see.

Wheel full 70px Oh, and I almost forgot a teaser.

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Wheel full 70px Have a great Sunday, wherever you are.

Day 1 – Made it

Wheel full 70px Just a short post without photos or much description to let you know I made it on the first day of my ride to my goal: King Neptune Campground in Indian Cove, Nova Scotia.  I plan to write a detailed post with pictures and description for each day when I have some leisure time. Here’s the RidewithGPS information for yesterday.

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Wheel full 70px The RidewithGPS link is here [linkie].

Wheel full 70px A couple of things from yesterday.   I was out the door and checked out of my room by 10, cleared the grocery store  where I bought some supplies for the day by 11 and was out of Halifax proper by about noon. All in all, I rode about three hours out of the eight I was on the road, averaging just under 10 miles an hour.  My overall average speed has improved about a mile an hour since I started riding with gear just a few short days ago.

Wheel full 70px I spent another two hour’s stop at Shaw’s Restaurant in West Dover  about 10 miles from my final destination eating an amazing dinner and sitting on a deck looking at even more amazing scenery.  Shaw’s will get a post of its own coming up.

Wheel full 70px By the time I left Shaw’s the sun was getting fairly low in the sky’s. Because some clouds have moved in it was getting darker  then I cared that it would be on a fairly busy road, so I skipped Peggy’s Cove and rolled onto the campground. This morning I backtracked about 2 miles leaving my gear at the campground to ride through this amazing village.   It will also get a post of its own.

Wheel full 70px While RidewithGPS hung in there, a couple of things didn’t work yesterday.   Strava crapped out and completely reset itself about 5 miles into the ride. I tried for a little bit, but nothing I had done was recoverable. I now feel rewarded for using both Strava and RidewithGPS even though it is kind of a “belt and suspenders” approach.  My Scosche heart rate monitor also appears to have died.  I had fully charged it the night before I left, but I was unable to ever synch it and it appears to be kaput.  I’ll look at it more carefully when I have some time, but I don’t have a lot of hope.

Wheel full 70px I said no pictures? Well, I can’t leave you without this teaser.   It just wouldn’t be fair.

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Wheel full 70px Day 2 awaits!

Halifax!

Wheel full 70px For various reasons I won’t take the time to go into here I didn’t get my bike out and on the road ’til late yesterday afternoon with only a couple of daylight hours left.

Wheel full 70px But I did get going and wound up taking a very nice 9+ mile/15 km ride along the waterfront of Halifax, an old port city that is Nova Scotia’s largest metropolis at just under 300,000 residents.  That makes it just about the same size as Anchorage, Alaska- a very comfortable size as far as I’m concerned.

Wheel full 70px Here’s the Strava map of the ride.

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Wheel full 70px The entire loop took me about an hour and thirty minutes, but stopping to take photos accounted for about 40 minutes worth of that.  Per RidewithGPS I averaged 10.8 miles/~18 km per hour.  The steepest grade on the ride was 7.8 percent and I believe that.  Along the waterfront the ride was a rolling one, up and down small hills.  As soon as you left that area, though, you immediately had to climb up the long ridge that the city straddles.  I climbed 150 feet/45 meter in elevation in about a quarter mile/475 meter meters, and then another 50 feet/15 meters at a lesser grade.  No parking lot rides here.

Wheel full 70px I am unashamedly an infrastructure geek.  A lot of times I’ll miss taking a picture of a historic building because I am busy looking at a bridge or an interesting freeway interchange.  I’ll also admit to being a big advocate for building high capacity roads where they are needed, period.  I am not particularly sympathetic to NIMBY opposition to these facilities, so if you catch me complaining about missing freeway links as we travel down the coast, keep that in mind.  I’m otherwise harmless, and am also a big advocate of building dedicated bicycle facilities.  I do not believe that urban governments discharge their obligation to the cycling community by painting some lines and bicycle outlines on a few unconnected busy streets, either.  But I’ll revisit that rant on another day.

Wheel full 70px Here’s some pics, taken in sequential order as I ride along.

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Wheel full 70px Along Bedford Road at the base of the hill where my accomodations are located.  Halifax’s once busy railyards are located here, rusting tracks overgrown with weeds.  A great place for a new divided highway paralleled by a bike trail.

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Wheel full 70px And suddenly I am on a freeway!  Halifax has a number of unconnected freeway segments that come up on the unwary bicyclist without warning.  I’ll note that I have the latest bike map prepared by the local government and there is no way around this stretch.

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Wheel full 70px It really got pretty bad.  There appears to be plenty of room to build a bike trail here.

I will say that the drivers here appear, almost without exception, to be patient and courteous.  That really helps.

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Wheel full 70px The first of the two big suspension bridges- the two “Macs”- across the Halifax Narrows comes into view.  This is the Mackay Bridge.

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Wheel full 70px It’s big pretty bridge, very easy on the eyes.

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Wheel full 70px It could use a paint job though.  As a great Canadian once said, “Rust never sleeps,” folks.

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Wheel full 70px The municipal power plant is right on this busy industrial waterway.

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Wheel full 70px Is that a ship or a circus?  You decide.

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Wheel full 70px I’m guessing that this is the shipyard area.

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Wheel full 70px The waterfront road approaches the downtown. Little did I know this turns into another freeway segment without any warning.

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Wheel full 70px The second Mac comes into view- the Angus MacDonald bridge.  This structure is much older that the Mackay bridge, but that is not apparent until you get up fairly close.

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Wheel full 70px Even while being, for all intents and purposes, rebuilt, the MacDonald is another magnificent piece of the built environment.  To me, a big bridge is a symbol of the human desire to not be bound in and restrained by barriers, whether manmade or natural.  We always want to be able to get to the other side, whatever the other side might be.  Bridges let us do that, and it is just gravy that they can be beautiful while performing that function for us.

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Wheel full 70px This is major construction.  Probably, given the state of the rest of the freeway and road infrastructure here, the result of years of deferred maintenance.  A lot of the transportation infrastructure in Halifax looks, without intention to be mean, like it was imported in bits and pieces from Mexico after it became worn out there and then was not very skillfully reassembled.  To give credit where credit is due, though, the new stuff looks pretty good.  There’s just not very much of it.

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Wheel full 70px I bet it’ll look great when it’s done.  A parallel bridge is needed, though, as the MacDonald only carries three lanes of traffic, and there is no room to divide them.  On the bus ride from the airport I crossed this bridge and it was bumper to bumper both ways from the approaches all the way across.

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Wheel full 70px Lighting on the MacDonald.  God love our neighbors to the north- they are so civilized.

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Wheel full 70px Once under the second of the Macs, the downtown looms.

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Wheel full 70px A bike trail appears, which as I found out, goes around a depressed below grade freeway section of the waterfront road.

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Wheel full 70px The bike path suddenly disappears dumping me onto a sidewalk. It is very poorly signed.  If you don’t know where it is, you wouldn’t find it.  So I decide to head up the hill into the center of Halifax.

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Wheel full 70px Looking down from just a short way up- and I mean UP- I notice that it’s getting dark and I have as far to go back as I have come.

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Wheel full 70px The road passes a hill marked on the map as “Citadel” so I turn and ride around its base.  The structure on the right side of the road is the city clock tower.

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Wheel full 70px A closer view.  You get a good sense here of the extreme grade up the hill to the Citadel area.

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Wheel full 70px The clock tower perches at the bottom of the hill.  I was not tempted in the least to walk my bike up the path and see the top.

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Wheel full 70px A last photo on the way back, which I pretty much zoomed through without stopping.  There are dedicated bike lanes in Halifax.  Like the freeways, though, they do not connect up into a holistically conceived system.  As such, they are nice for where they are at, but pretty worthless from the standpoint of safely bicycling in the city.

Wheel full 70px If my meds aren’t here Monday, we may do this again with an earlier start.

It’s ALIVE!

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Wheel full 70px Well, no.  Really it’s just a box.  With a bike in it.  My bike!

Wheel full 70px I’m, as you have probably guessed, in Halifax, Nova Scotia.  Nobody told me it would take an hour and a half to get to where I’m staying from the airport, or that I’d have to change buses three times, or that my checked baggage- the two rear panniers- would have not shown up on the carousel.

Wheel full 70px But none of that matters right now.  I’m here.  The bike is here.  And all the rest will work out.

Wheel full 70px Right?

Wheel full 70px I’m exhausted.  Time for bed- catch you in the morning.  We have a bike to put back together.

Whee Boy Howdy!

Wheel full 70px If the Delta departure counter area at Tampa International Airport is any indication…

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I was at the end of this line over an hour ago

…you might want to delay your travel plans or choose another carrier.  My experience once at the counter to rebook and check my panniers was that Delta’s computer system is still not all the way back up.  Many Delta flights out of this airport this morning were showing as cancelled.  I have now been rescheduled for the fourth time and leave here late this afternoon.  Not complaining, mind you.  Lots of people were inconvenienced far worse than I was.