I think I need  to go west! Indiana has some beautiful rides, particularly
in the Fall, but between this and Patrick's Fall Aspen report I am ready to
travel. Thanks for the write up.


On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 1:41 AM, Manuel Acosta
<manueljohnaco...@hotmail.com>wrote:

> As always Anne lovely write-up. Planet of the Apes is amazing. Apparently
> there used to be an old boy scout troop camp complete with bmx jumps and
> rope swings that dirges off of Planet of the Apes road!
>
> More to check out next time I guess.
>
> On Thursday, October 3, 2013 8:06:11 PM UTC-7, Anne Paulson wrote:
>>
>> Just got back from a Pacific Coast tour, Klamath Falls to Los Altos.
>> My friend and I had planned to do the Lost Coast, the dirt part of the
>> northern California Coast from Honeydew south to Usal Road. Sadly, we
>> had a lot of rain, and we decided that the Lost Coast, which would
>> have been a challenge for us in dry weather, would be too difficult in
>> the wet with our smooth tires, so we had to go around it on the often
>> unpleasant section of Highway 1 from Scotia to Leggett.
>>
>> But we got through the unpleasant section, and made it further south.
>> The last THREE times I crossed the Golden Gate Bridge, I vowed I'd
>> crossed for the last time-- it's awful. So this time we routed around
>> it. From Point Reyes, we crossed over to China Camp, and camped there.
>> On a Monday night in late September, or was it early October, the
>> campground at China Camp is gloriously empty.
>>
>> We expected China Camp to Half Moon Bay would be a long day, and even
>> though I live nearby, we'd be riding  city streets unfamiliar to me,
>> with a lot of navigation all morning, so we got an early start,
>> leaving just at sunup. As we circled along the quiet morning shoreline
>> of San Pablo Bay, we saw joggers,  some turkeys looking for breakfast,
>> but no cars. As we got to San Rafael, more and more commute traffic
>> showed up, but we managed to get through it and, with some help from a
>> kind truck passenger on his way to a construction job, we found the
>> new bike path to the Larkspur ferry.
>>
>> By luck, we arrived just in time to get our tickets and get on the
>> ferry. Oh, and guys-- if you see a 57-year-old woman struggling to
>> carry a loaded touring bike up a steep flight of stairs, it is OK to
>> offer to give a hand. My friend did get some help, from a nice young
>> woman, but the hordes of young men remained glued to their
>> smartphones.
>>
>> One of the best things about the Larkspur ferry is that it takes you
>> to the San Francisco Ferry Building, foodie heaven, a place that
>> overwhelms me with deliciousness. After a stop at Peets Coffee, and a
>> visit to the Cowgirl Cantina for sandwiches for later (Ham and Tam,
>> yum) we crossed San Francisco. The City by the Bay was showing itself
>> off for us, as we rode through Chinatown and past colorful Victorian
>> rowhouses in brilliant sunshine.
>>
>> The route from Lake Merced to Pacifica is tedious, but then we got to
>> the excitement of the day: Planet of the Apes, otherwise known as Old
>> San Pedro Mountain Road, a Manny favorite. Manny showed us a photo
>> essay of the misery of riding Planet of the Apes in the dark and the
>> rain, but we were riding in sunshine.
>>
>> Planet of the Apes the old Highway 1, before they built the road
>> across Devils Slide, that famous road that kept sliding into the ocean
>> every three or four years. My friend and I had done a similar tour a
>> few years ago, and ridden Devils Slide at rush hour. Both of us are
>> very experienced tourists, and he is also a randonneur who has ridden
>> PBP twice, so we're not novices, but we literally thought we were
>> going to die. Never again. Now there is a tunnel through Devils Slide,
>> with a bike lane, so it's reportedly much less dangerous, but
>> nevertheless we were excited at routing around it. Planet of the Apes
>> is AWESOME. It was a road, but it's now a trail, with remnants of
>> asphalt, that winds up and around chaparral-covered hills. In the
>> early afternoon, with plenty of time to enjoy the ride, we picked our
>> way through the potholes, the dirt, and the washouts. Every time we
>> thought we'd reach the top, we discovered we had to climb the next
>> ridge. But eventually it was down, down, down to the ocean.
>>
>> Somehow we had still air on Planet of the Apes but when we got back to
>> Highway 1 a stiff tailwind was blowing, something we had been sorely
>> missing for the previous days of the tour. We barely had to pedal to
>> get to our campsite at Half Moon Bay.
>>
>> Gorgeous day, wonderful trip. My Atlantis performed flawlessly as usual.
>>
>> P.S. China Camp will make a great Jamboree location.
>>
>> --
>> -- Anne Paulson
>>
>> It isn't a contest. Enjoy the ride.
>>
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