Most everyone in these parts knows of Ride the Rockies, a
week-long bicycle tour in the high country that has been around since the 80s.
You have to be lucky in the lottery to get into that ride these days.
Not so with Pedal the Plains, a three-day bike tour in the
high plains of eastern Colorado where fewer than 800 riders just completed the
fourth annual ride.
As a five-time survivor of RAGBRAI, the ride across Iowa
that attracts 15 to 20,000 cyclists, I was so happy to be part of a smaller
group where you never waited more that a few moments to use a porta potty or
get a meal, there were plenty of spaces to put up a tent and you didn’t take
your life in your hands to mount your bike or stop along the road.
Pedal the Plains is special because it goes through the vast
agricultural countryside that is the eastern third of our state. It is set up
to include “educational” stops at historic farms, museums in tiny towns, car
collections and shows and displays of everything from wind power to enormous
farm machinery.
And all along the way, there are informative signs
explaining what Colorado produces, how it rates among other states and its
various claims to agricultural fame. I now know that there are more than 36,000
farms and ranches in the state with an average size of 881 acres. And I’d know
a whole lot more if I could read faster or pedal more slowly as the signs
showed up on the side of the road.
The ride is billed as “a celebration of Colorado’s cycling
culture” and is put on by the Denver Post
and the state of Colorado. Proceeds benefit the communities who host the
event, and the Denver Post Community
Foundation to support Future Farmers of America and Colorado 4-H.
I rode with my younger daughter, Jeni Arndt. We’ve done a
good bit of biking together over the years, but little to none lately. It was
like old times loading bikes a bit haphazardly onto the car, setting up our
tent at the end of the day, enduring a few freezing moments in the morning and
spending the whole day outdoors, riding, soaking up the sun, confronting the
wind, a nearly constant visitor to the plains, and visiting with strangers and
friends on the road. It was great to be out there!
The ride is held the third week of September every year and
the route varies, always including three communities. This year we began in
Julesburg, population 1225 rode to Holyoke, with 2300 residents, then to
Sterling, the largest town on the plains with more than 14,000 souls, and back
to Julesburg on the final day, pausing in Nebraska just long enough to take a
photo. The host towns benefit from an explosion of people for a few short hours
and are a well-kept secret until registration opens for the ride.
I’m a fan. I’ll back next year.
1 comment:
LOVED hearing about this adventure and hope to be able to join you next year. RAGBRAI just got too big and crazy!!!
Post a Comment