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Editor's Blog - Buffoons On The Bike Trail

If you’re a cycling enthusiast, there’s a good chance you’ve tried several of the area’s bike trails. My own personal favorite is the Danvers/Topsfield/Wenham one, which rolls through about 8.5 miles from Route 114 up past the Topsfield Fairgrounds. I was delighted when that trail opened because I grew up on Pine Street in Danvers and it’s tremendously nostalgic to ride my bike through areas I remember well since early childhood. If you do the whole thing back and forth, it’s 17 miles or so. And since I’m getting ready to do the 28 mile Reid’s Ride next month, I’m probably not too far away from doing just that some Saturday morning.

But with that, I feel a big fat tangent coming on that may come dangerously close to turning into a satirical humor column - which I actually wrote every week for 8 years back in the 1990s for a long-ago political news website. Another incarnation of these sets of wacky musings would run from time to time in Sunday editions of the Laconia Citizen to the occasional chagrin of my former general manager. So here goes.

One trail I won’t bother riding this year is the Minuteman Bike Trail, which runs from Bedford to Cambridge – even though the back-and-forth length of that trail is an invigorating 21 miles. Here’s why – I did the whole thing last year and the closer you get to Cambridge (and perhaps Arlington), the stronger your likelihood of physically assaulting some urban hipster on a bike becomes.

I’ve never seen a bike trail where so many guys blithely roll down the wrong side of the path right toward you. I think they're out there mostly just to try to seek attention. At least that would explain some of the bike outfits they choose to wear. These are the guys who almost definitely took a shower this morning but still somehow manage to look like they smell horrible. They seem to be attempting to be Everyman and Holier Than Thou all at once. In fact, I might have seen two or three of them in an American Apparel catalog once.

After a few annoyingly close calls on my ride on the Minuteman Bike Trail, I saw yet another one of these guys barreling toward me in my lane. Suddenly it dawned on me – maybe the latest hipster fad involves Renaissance Fairs (I swear to God, I actually walked into a bar/eatery in Salem one night this year and like 100 of them were walking around in fake mustaches). So, like any good Renaissance jouster, I reared up in my seat like the dark knight, extended my arm out in a clothesline position, and started riding more quickly toward the culprit. About 1.8 seconds later he was back in his own lane and passed me looking like I had just belched loudly at a funeral while threatening his puppy or something.  I mean, in all honesty a guy like that will give you an even worse look if he catches you eating a food he doesn't approve of or listening to a band he doesn't approve of, so I thought little of it.

Later that night after this random encounter I bet he complained dismissively (and simperingly) about the Neanderthal from the North Shore on the bike trail who probably won't use the word "bro" and who definitely doesn't appreciate musicians who wear skinny pants or pork pie hats. (I could devote an entire separate posting to roasting the pork pie hat, shall we say).

Really, it’s too bad that anything called “Minuteman” has to endure folks like these. The differences couldn’t be starker. Most notably, Minutemen had courage, were individuals, and worked for a living. The closest some of these guys get to a hard days' work is trying to be "ironic" by drinking a blue collar beer like Pabst (often with a Parliament cigarette, which is my former coffin nail of choice too).

This nuisance only replays itself in various forms the closer you get to Cambridge - it's really not as common back toward the Bedford side. I suppose a more diplomatic way of clearing the lane of wrong-coming bike traffic out there would have simply been to yell, “Hey look! A food truck! And I think it has Pad Thai and cupcakes!”  If that combination is too unappetizing to think of, I suppose one could also shout, "Hey, buddy did you drop a pair of black '50s glasses over there?"

Seriously, there’s a certain element out there you meet that, shall we say, provides ample fodder for fun columns. You know what I mean. Some of these folks I write of seem to think that everyone else is just a corporate tool – while actually being the ones who stampede to sleep outside of a mall in order to get the latest piece of i-HooHa to hit the market. Good God, at least when previous generations did that sort of thing, they’d come out with Zeppelin or Beatles tickets, not some shiny toy that’s just like everything else they already use.

Having just done a little bit of freestyling up there, let me note that little, if any, of this element seems to haunt the Danvers trail. It's a pretty, open expanse running through some areas of beautiful wetlands - and even better, there's a semi-hidden trail (email me if you want to know where, I'll go off on yet another tangent if I try to explain now) that leads to a long, open canal with flat, grassy land that makes for a great side trek.

I still have yet to try the Peabody trail. Another favorite cycling option of mine is to ride late at night through the streets of Salem to places like the lighthouse at Pickering Wharf, the Salem Willows area, and this very old part of town back behind the Witch House. Riding in much of that city during the day feels about as safe as joining the French Foreign Legion - although for some reason the streets of nearby Danvers actually somehow manage to feel even less safe.

It hit me last night at the gym that I'm not working out as hard as I did last year for the ride, but I also at least know what I'm getting into this year, and I have been stepping it up a bit. Either way, this thing isn't some great feat of endurance, it's just a fun thing to do at your own pace and for a good cause. If biking is your thing, consider getting involved. There's even some nice free food at the finish line.

Don

9:22 am on Friday, June 15, 2012

Wow Bill, I know what you're saying. Don't really have that experience, as a racewalker moving as quickly, or rythmically as I can, bicylists usually clear out of the way. When walking, I usually have headphones on and am rocking out to my favorite music. This to me, is heaven and you may recall my past writings. Sometimes they go by quickly and schock me, but never do they double back like that, probably because I might be the type of athlete you don't try to intimidate. I am not like that at all, I would be the first to aid someone. Well, I use the Peabody trail all the time. The best part is off Russell St past the Hannafords. There is parking for about 20 cars at the trailhead. You could also park in Hannafords as the trail is right behind it. This part I use is 1.8 miles of uninterrupeted, no cars, nature, beautiful. Down and back equals 3.6 and for a racewalker, plenty of exercise. Every tenth is clearly marked, so you can do "pickups" then rest. Pickups are go as hard as you can, then go back to normal. 3 times down, 3 times back. The trail is paved, just like a road way with a center line. It is a slice of heaven for me Bill and when they connect our Lynnfield Wakefield trails to it, I will be there as much as possible. I also will still be wondering why our town is not re-using those plans and saving $500K of engineering work already done in Peabody. That money could be applied to construction. Oh well, politics ya know.

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William Laforme

11:04 am on Friday, June 15, 2012

Good morning Don - I am meaning to check out the Peabody trail at some point, it does seem to go through some nice areas. It's funny how that trail ride sort of set the stage for a column to run a year later, it blended well with other more recent observations about some very silly things and people in our popular culture right now.

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Don

12:34 pm on Friday, June 15, 2012

I think about the attacks on some of the ladies as reported by the Wakefield Patch, this place is more isolated. Some of those eagles fly overhead too, way up there. There also was the bobcat sighting, well, it is pretty populated. Hope to see you there someday, I would be a guy with nice Bose headphones off in another world. Take care.

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KlassySalem

4:56 pm on Friday, June 15, 2012

It's refreshing to see a Patch editor expressing an opinion.

I found the Danvers-Topsfield trail to be a very nice ride. Check out the Marblehead rail trail at some point, as well. Start on 114 at the edge of the harbor as the road enters Marblehead, up to the National Grid substation, and around the substation, all the way to the Swampscott line. Crushed stone and gravel surface. Great fun.

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William Legault

9:52 pm on Saturday, June 16, 2012

Methinks Mr. LaForme that you may have wandered into the Gulu-Gulu March-stache competition. Next year perhaps you will come prepared.

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William Laforme

10:20 pm on Saturday, June 16, 2012

LOL, I think that's exactly what it was. I'll have to try growing one next year on my own. It could only look better than the Serpico beard I tried out one year...

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