May 23 2010

Let’s Do the Numbers

Kate Murr
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If you like numbers, you’ll get a kick out of this one! Here is a look at our milage and time spent on the bikes to date. The calorie count is pretty ridiculous, considering our computers assume we’re working harder at quicker speeds instead of burning entire cheeseburger meals per minute whilst hauling our loads uphill at 4.5 miles per hour! Note, our average speed to date is a blazing 10.4 mph and our average distance per day is 37.61 miles.

MAA Mileage Chart
Date Hours on Wheels Miles per Day Avg. Speed Max. Speed Calories Burned
4/21 4:08 39.67 9.5 21.2 664
4/22 2:42 26.47 9.7 24.4 474
4/23 3:57 38.18 9.6 24.4 691
4/24 3:05 35.99 11.6 27.1 765
4/25 1:54 21.57 11.2 19.7 437
4/26 4:40 46.13 9.8 21.6 784
4/27 3:46 35.15 9.2 20 557
4/28 4:30 46.42 10.2 27.1 889
4/29 2:46 29.7 10.6 28.6 655
5/1 5:18 52.41 9.8 31.5 1125
5/2 3:28 34.13 9.7 31.6 679
5/3 2:39 25.97 10 25.6 497
5/4 4:06 47.32 11.5 29.5 1050
5/5 3:45 44.09 11.7 27.8 966
5/6 2:47 27.37 9.7 31.1 507
5/8 5:35 54.85 9.7 25 940
5/9 1:57 12.54 6.3 24.2 177
5/10 2:59 36.34 12.1 32.4 914
5/12 4:34 48.96 10.6 38.5 1245
5/13 2:34 29.08 11 33.9 717
5/14 3:57 46.74 11.8 31.4 1092
5/15 3:32 43 12.1 29.6 980
5/17 3:48 44.42 11.6 27.8 930
5/18 3:49 42.22 11.4 29 883
5/19 4:52 51.27 10.4 27.1 1015
5/20 1:54 19.79 10.3 26 445
5/21 3:38 35.65 9.7 31.1 890
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May 21 2010

May 19, 2010- Leapfrog Idea

Kate Murr
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I write by moon, star and firefly light beside the lake at Tishamingo State Park at the end of a satisfying day when the sun felt nourishing and enlightening and made my skin a happy color.

We biked nearly 52 miles today on the Natchez Trace, stopping to play and snack at Twentymile Bottom and Jourdan Creek. I missed my friend Shauna horribly at these and other spots, including Witch Dance and Black Belt: we’ve developed an unparalleled school of interpretive dance for interpretive signs.

I spent the day thinking about motion and soaking in colors. I thought up a few lines of poetry and about some directions to take my work.

I thought of a way friends could join us on our journey without being slowed down by our pace and a way that we might be able to get some support for all our weight for a while: leapfrogging. Say you’re a friend who wants to trek across, I don’t know, maybe North Dakota or Nebraska or the Columbia River Valley. You’ve got this burning desire to do it, but not a whole lot of time, and maybe you’ve not ridden long distances before and you’re a little apprehensive. Perhaps you want to do it solo, perhaps with your buddy, or maybe with your family. Either way, if you drive your vehicle to a spot on our route, we could rally, you could drive 45 miles up the road, ditch the car, then pedal your heart out for the day. We would pick up your car where you ditched it and drive to meet you, enjoy dinner together and sleeps, then repeat the process the next day. This could be a great long weekend adventure, one for the books. You would have to drive a vehicle that could fit in at least two bikes at once, and our Burleys. So far we’ve packed everything into/on a Tahoe and a short bed truck with a toolbox; we are very creative packers. Just an idea, anyway. If you’re interested in working something out, please leave a comment.

We cruised into Tishamingo and raided the Sunflower grocery store. All restaurants were closed for the evening, but we assembled a lovely dinner of rotisserie chicken and ham, spinach salad with cherry tomatoes and kidney beans, pasta salad, and a quart of milk for a tasty pudding desert, all of which we consumed less than twenty minutes after arriving at our campsite.

The simplicity of being able to wash our four dishes, four utensils, our pot, waterbottles, and nearly all of our clothing in the time it takes to set up camp and clean our bodies is brilliant. At home I have a perpetually whirring dishwasher and Mt. Laundry, which is every bit as omnipresent and hulking as my memory of Hemmingway’s Kilimanjaro description. On the road, I lack conveniences and usually stink, but am noticing that all the less yields the aforementioned satisfaction of a day very, very well lived.

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May 19 2010

May 18, 2010- Catch Up Lists

Kate Murr
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I’m rather behind in posting. Perhaps you’ll understand. I’ve decided to include here my notes for missing days in attempt to catch up to where we are tonight in Tupelo, Mississippi, birthplace of Elvis and home of Bicycle Pacelines and hospitable southern gentlemen like Steve Carter. I do intend to write relevant posts based on these notes later.

Everywhere we go, we’re talking with people about our aim to promote family engagement, health, and environmental mindfulness. While people seem to be interested in our message, they’re also especially interested in our story, and they generously reciprocate with stories of their own. After four weeks on the road, I feel like through the slow, gentle pulse to the telling and the living of these stories, a new landscape–one mingling our shared journeys–is emerging. The stories and the people are more vibrant and seem more extensively connected from our  800+ miles of bicycle travel. My hope is to share some of this unfolding topography  this with you.

May 9, 2010

  • Terry and Linda teach parenthood extend graciousness
  • Mother’s day Brunch-boats, music, and vodka
  • Sidewalk stress- unrelated to vodka
  • Alligator Alley
  • Sculpture for Barbie at Beef O’Brady’s
  • Doug Bean the Good Samaritan
  • Presbyterian Campground

May 10

  • Doug Bean rocks
  • Preschool- Jane misses friends, crafts and structure
  • Dillon and Jeff breakfast, dishes, marketing discussion
  • Construction of skirt for Barbie: notebook paper, glue, markers, sprinkles
  • Ride, tired Brady
  • Lunch behind Tom Thumb under small live oak, tired Brady
  • Quick! To Bay Minette for new flag and fast flip flops
  • Gas station meeting of Lori and Trampas
  • Red Doors and Mason, a young southern gentleman
  • New house, new start
  • Stu eats three bbq sandwiches and two other dinners
  • Visiting, stories, and a guitar lesson

May 11, 2010

  • Big breakfast
  • Pack, Drive, Drop, Cry
  • Lunch warnings
  • Ride attempt fails: Kate senses danger, halts progress
  • Driveway
  • Cold Drinks with boys digging a hole to China
  • Lori and Taylor, rescuers
  • Dairy Bar in Coffeeville
  • “I can’t wait to read the blog”
  • Camp set up
  • Goodbye again

May 12, 2010

  • Last of the oatmeal
  • Poop and green flies
  • 10 miles to town, bad road, Burly breakage
  • Picnic, friendly assembly
  • JP, super mechanic/gentle spirit
  • Hills
  • Ezell’s- MaryAnn, Janice, Sherry, Kim and friend, Bronco’s been married 51 years.
  • TomBiggby River camping with moose

May 13 Thursday

  • River
  • MaryAnn’s swimming tub
  • Hot
  • Rest
  • Hot
  • Linden
  • The Whistle Stop Café
  • Kevin the hospitable team roper
  • Tea Failure
  • News is depressing

May 14, 2010

  • Left Kevin’s, no cleaning allowed
  • Grocery Store
  • Vote Demos Jones for 5th district Commissioner, Coatopa, AL!
  • Epes and the lady in the red dress at her mailbox
  • Epes store, Bonnie and Andre, friendly hosts.
  • Kate cooks a semi-real meal
  • The Sandlot and The Great Fear

May 15, 2010

  • Highlight of the ride: stopping to throw rocks at a Bud Light can
  • Aliceville’s Bermuda Triangle and meeting new friends, Sarah and Phil
  • Storms
  • The organic farm at Starkville
  • Blackberry shortcakes

May 16, 2010

  • Resting
  • Farm tour
  • Arts and Crafts
  • Sarah sews Barbi a real skirt!
  • Kate prepares large Indian feast
  • House edits
  • Storms

May 17, 2010

  • Pheba One Stop and Bobbie McKee
  • The Natchez Trace
  • Matthew the philosopher biker
  • Witch Dance
  • Headaches
  • The Great Fear in a Hole with a frog
  • Seeds

May 18, 2010

  • 2 a.m. storm
  • Crunchy coffee
  • Pilot/ Potty training mayhem
  • Ladies on Spokes
  • First emergency fast food devoured
  • Bike store Brian
  • Tour de Tupelo with Steve
  • Dragging Stu from hardware store
  • Johnnie Burgers
  • Second dinner
  • Beds are for sleeping in, not for jumping on.
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May 14 2010

May 8, 2010 Count to Ten, Mommy.

Kate Murr
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Audie left us in a parking lot at Perdido Key. While it was probably a little nerve racking for him, this drop off seemed not nearly so scary to us as when Christopher left us in St. Augustine. We simply put our gear and bikes together and headed west. There is a fantastic bike lane along this stretch of road until Orange Beach, Alabama where the route turns north and scary.

We stopped for a picnic lunch on the beach of leftover Chicken Marengo and Publix treasures including cashews and fresh veggies. After lunch we chased crabs and spent a long time watching bivalves burrow in the sand. We had wanted to volunteer with oil spill clean-up efforts while we were in town, and though I contacted several organizations, most required training, and I didn’t find any that just wanted helpers for a day or two. We had heard beach-cleaning crews had already pre-cleared the local beaches of debris, and as we picnicked, a group of Navy cadets shoveled sand off walkways.

The ride afforded us views of the highly developed shoreline and a great bridge view of the bay.  We posed by the Welcome to Alabama sign, happy that we had traversed our first state.

As we turned north on Highway 59, though, the good feeling, at least for me, disappeared amid three lanes of traffic and no real shoulder to speak of, save a foot-wide aggressive rumble strip. After a few miles of literal nerve jolting travel, we sought the air-conditioned shelter of a Publix where we bought ice and a box of popsicles, which we shared with grocery store patrons. Clearly, we were procrastinating.

When we did leave the store, we cautiously made our way to a point where a bike trail magically appeared along the road. Fortunately the East Shore Trail is straight and smooth along the Point Clear shoreline, which features stately, well-kept and well-sighted second and third homes nestled in woods behind signs boasting family names and puns.

We met officer Fred along the trail, who said we were welcome to camp behind the Fair Hope police station. Knowing we had a safe spot for the evening, we decided to stop for dinner at Tamara’s Steamers where we met one of the most lovely couples on the planet, Terry and Linda.

Before we had exchanged names, the pair had invited us to stay at their home. Even though they were finished with their dinner, they stuck around and chatted with us, picked up our dinner bill, and gave us solid directions to their house, just a little ways past the police station. The roughly four miles in the dark was a bit much for me after the jostling, stressful, and long ride we’d already put in. We stuck to sidewalks after hearing horror stories of the way locals disregarded bikers, which was additionally agonizing for me, since the weight distribution of my packed Burly pushes my bike around on curbs and uneven surfaces. At one point, we were poised at the top of a sidewalk hill and I froze. Jane told me to count to 10 and come on, so I did, and Stuart kindly rerouted us to hilly neighborhood streets.

Our hosts met us outside to guide us in to their driveway, then led us to their bedroom, where they had a futon mattress waiting for the kids, and a big king-size bed waiting for us. After tucking in the wee, the adults visited and enjoyed good tunes and Southern Comfort served from an heirloom green glass eagle poured into small barrel glasses.

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May 14 2010

May 7, 2010- Strawberry Shortcake

Kate Murr
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We Skyped this morning with Springield’s KOLR 10. We rested and played, visiting first the National Naval Aviation Museum and then the beach. We made Audie and Vicki one of our favorite dinners and after the clean-children-that-I-love-most-in-the-world went to bed, I made oatmeal walnut shortcakes and we had those with strawberries and homemade whipped cream. Rest days rock.

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