Sweetie had been off her bicycle for the better part of a year, battling knee 
issues and other stuff. This spring she began a walking and stretching regimen, 
and got some new walking shoes which have helped her knee issues. Last weekend, 
she asked if we could go for a ride. We enjoyed a meandering 8.5 miles around 
inner Northeast Portland.
Last night, we rode into town for the StarlightParade, the event that 
officially kicks the civic mayhem we call Rose Festival. 
It was in the mid-60's and cloudy when we left the house, riding aong 
residential streets designated as Bike Boulevards and down North Vancouver 
Avenue's bike lane. Late-spring irises bloomed in every shade from bright 
yellow to whorish eggplant. Starlings, resplendent in their summer speckles, 
swarmed in yards; cats yawned lazily from porches as we rolled past. Sweetie 
pointed out beautiful yards, raised beds and fancy front doors (we dream of 
remodeling way out in that vast realm of Someday), and we noted with delight 
the appearance of a new Indian food cart at Commercial Street. 
The sky overhead swirled with rapidly changing cloud formations, and the sun 
broke through at times with long rays that we said looked like the "fingers of 
God". There was a delightful, gentle breeze as we crossed the Willamette River 
over the Broadway Bridge. The water was still pretty high from all the spring 
rains, but the sun broke through long enough for me to see the pale green of 
the St Johns Bridge way off in the distance. 
We wound our way into downtown, locked up the bikes near the art school and 
walked the eight blocks to our agreed-upon perch. Bike Buckets from Citybikes 
(http://www.citybikes.coop/parts/buckets/) carried our dinner and cushions; 
they made decent seats from which to watch the festivities. We laughed and 
clapped at the marching bands and electric-light festooned floats that passed 
by while little kids in front of us slapped high-fives with the policemen and 
Royal Rosarians walking along the route. 
Wanting to get out of downtown just ahead of the crowds, we ducked out a few 
entries before the end of the parade, making sure to stick around for the entry 
from my alma mater; Portland State University's entry was a flotilla of 
bicycles, including students, alumni, the President of the University, and 
several members of the collegiate bicycle team clad in their green-and-black 
kit (go Vikings!). 
We enjoyed the ride home under partly cloudy skies and cooler temperatures in 
the high 50s. The moon peeked out a corner here and there from behind the 
clouds and we pedaled home on a gorgeous summer night. As we pulled into the 
driveway, the moon shot out long beams from behind a cloud and lit up the sky 
with a soft glow. A perfect ride on a beautiful evening. Sweetie commented that 
her knee only twinged once, on a hill; and when she shifted down it stopped 
hurting. A good sign for future rides together.
RBW Content: Sweetie rode her '94 B'Stone XO-5 with Wald upright bars and a 
Barley bag; I rode my '99 All-Rounder with Brooks Flyer, Dove handlebar, Nelson 
bag and Bike Buckets.
Beth "NOW it's summer" Hamon in PDX

http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon

http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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