Angie, Leisa, Bill and Eric

Saturday, May 28, 2022

Day 11 May 28 Meadowville to Council, Va

 Fewer miles but more hills.  Again the views were terrrific.  We left Meadowview after
coffee that Pastor Clay made for us.  The first hill was all switchbacks. We went up it slow and steady. We met Tim from Netherlands at the top of the hill.  He is doing the TransAmerica also. He is spending 89 days in the US as at 90 you have to apply for another visa.  He has toured extensively in Europe.

Our lunch in Honaker at the Tiger Stop, recommended by a shopper at the local Family Dollar Store, was fresh, fried chicken.  Delicious.  This got us up the second hill and into Council, VA.


We got a dip in the local pool and a great campsite in the park. In the picture it looks like we have taken over the whole picnic area. We know how to spread out!   Thanks to Bill visiting with the prior occupants of this area, we got their leftovers:  fried chicken, baked beans and Pecan pie.  So far life on the road is going good.  Tomorrow we head to Elk Horn to have barbeque with the Mayor!




















Friday, May 27, 2022

Day 10 May 27 Troutdale to Meadowville, VA

We dropped southwest of the TransAmerica route to ride the Virgina Creeper Trail. 16 miles on a railroad grade. Did I mention we had to climb up to the start so we could coast down all 16 miles.  The trail was muddy from all the rain and the creek was overflowing in places.  From the pictures you can see why it was so great.  So lush and beautiful the whole way, with hugh tressel bridges across the creek.  At the end just before Damascus  VA  we got caught in a big downpour.  With others we spent a few minutes under an overpass. After the storm passed we made it in to Damacus to eat and dry out.  We ended the day in Meadowview.  We are camped at a church pavillion where our host was Clay, the youth minister.  We used their youth building to eat, stay warm and charge our phones. A nice stay.





 

Thursday, May 26, 2022

Day 9 May 26 Max Meadows to Troutdale, VA

Max Meadows was our night stay....nice but loud road noise

Got a 8 am start

Met Bill and Cassey along the way. They were heading east so a great source on what was ahead for us going west. We shared what was ahead for them.

2nd breakfast at Wytheville, very good, also hit food city 

Began raining light for rest of the day

Staying at Sufi lodge in Troutdale good stop with great dinner and AT hikers to add to the fun.

Eric



Day 7 and 8 May 24 and 25 Blacksburg + 54 miles and 3800 ft of climbing


The route into Blacksburg included two options at the finish and both were long and steep hills. We all made it and treated ourselves to a night at a relatively new Home2 Suites hotel. The hotel was adjacent to a Kroger food store so we ended up shopping for dinner at Kroger and eating back at the hotel. 

Blacksburg is home to Virginia Tech and a town with a rich history and lovely preserved old homes. 

The next morning we devoured the free breakfast and packed some food to-go! Yep, we get our monies worth at the buffet!!!

We then found a bike/walking path called the Huckleberry Trail and rode this to Christiansburg. Such a lovely trail of mixed forests and rail trail. Apparently there had been some coal mining so some interpretive stations were along the trail.


From Christiansburg onwards included rolling hills with a few steep climbs sprinkled in.

A highlight of the route was a tiny town called Newbern which had a historic building converted into a museum. This turned out to be a great stop for lunch and a leisurely visit to the museum. The museum was chock filled with interesting objects, letters, furnishings, etc and included a museum volunteer full of fun stories. Across from the museum was the old jail. Just a fun visit.

From there we pedaled another 18 miles to a super nice campground which gave us an RV site for $15! The site was adjacent to some super clean showers and bathrooms. We feasted on some innovative ramen dishes. It’s hilarious how good some basic ramen tastes after a long day in the saddle!





Wednesday, May 25, 2022

From Eric: Trans ride Day 1 through Day 7

The first 2 days we were showered by goodness from our warm shower hosts, Debra and Camilla. They live on the James river and close to Williamsburg and Jamestown both great stops.

Then on to parkway trail with no traffic but lots of heat and humidity. We met a very nice biker who bought us coffee. On to Richmond where we stayed at a holiday inn.

At Monticello and Charlottesville we had snacks and a beer and went to a library to cool down. Blue Whale Bike shop was a great find. We stayed in the back yard of a warm showers host.  We hit a store in morning and had big day of the Blue Ridge mountains and the cookie lady place.

On to Lexington and another library. Weather has cooled but still plenty of hills 

Misty day into Blackburg, a nice college town with a Kroger store and great hotel stay

-Eric Erickson


Some Thoughts on Virginia So Far


We are in Blacksburg VA a bustling college town home of Virginia Tech (and the 2007 mass shooting on campus). It has a quaint Main Street founded in 1798. So far we have cycled 382 miles. Thats an average of 64 miles a day. Not too shabby considering all the hills!

Verdant: Our TransAmerica Route has thoughtfully taken us on quiet country roads, rolling past pastures, forests and farms mostly. Where the vegetation hasn’t been tamed away there is lush foliage. Dewy, licheny, viney, so lush and green. I wish I could tell you the taxonomy of the trees. All I can say is we aren’t in Washington anymore. Some evergreen trees but many more deciduous. It is so sublime to pedal along in the embrace of so much greenery and the serenade of birdsong, and sounds of frogs and insects.

Courteous Drivers: It blows my mind how patient the motorists are with cyclists. We are mostly on single lane roads and when a car comes up from behind us, they slow down and give us a wide berth before passing. Odder still, they will patiently pace behind us forever until they can safely and slowly pass. Many won’t pass until they receive a signal from us, waving them through. 

Historic: We have been pedaling past the ghosts of Revolutionary and Civil War battle casualties. The landscape makes it easy to imagine the misery of tromping through dense wet forest, a la Vietnam; and the  coordinated battles engaged by thousands of men at a time in a huge clearing a la Spartacus. There are historic markers all over the place where a battle happened. It’s all a bit impersonal and I wish I knew more details but I can tell you its overwhelming to think of all the warfare and loss. I know I enjoy the freedoms and privileges of a more perfect union they fought for and for that I am truly grateful. But its just sad. The architecture is very colonial; lots of brick and Ionic and Doric columns. 

Colleges: So many! We have ridden through the campuses of William and Mary (the oldest in the US), Washington and Lee, VMI, Virginia Tech to name a few. We hit it right during graduation week. So sweet to see the kids in their caps and gowns. This state seems to place a high value on education.

Hilly: All the blogs and descriptions say that the most pedaling elevation to be had is in Virginia…not even Colorado! We are feeling it. Climbing up and over the Blue Ridge Mountains, especially in the 90-102F heat was brutal. Now we are in the rolling hills of the Appalachia. Mercifully, it is cooler with light rain and overcast. 

Nice People: Their motto is “Virginia is for Lovers”. We have met the nicest people. Our Warmshowers hosts have been amazing! Feeding and sheltering us, inspiring us with the generous way they live, and just getting to know people that are different than us yet ultimately are the same in our humanity. People want to help us in our journey; bottles of water on the roadside, a round of coffee at a coffee shop, a lift up the hill (No thanks! Our first Warmshowers host that have done several trips across America introduced us to the acronym EFI…Every F@$king Inch)

Churches and Dollar Stores: The bastions of rural America, they are prolific in each small town.

White Privilege: I’d be remiss to not share my observation. We have pedaled past the properties and plantations of several of our founding fathers. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, James Madison, John Tyler, James Monroe, Patrick Henry, Robert E Lee to name a few. Our government by the people and for the people, where women, indigenous people and Blacks where excluded was crafted by wealthy landowners. While the dream of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and the basis of the Constitution are nothing short of civil works of art let’s not forget that white male privilege was the basis of this country and the legacy of that abundance manifests an imbalance we still see today. 


Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Day 7 May 24 Natural Bridges to Blackburg, VA



We travelled 70 miles today in misty rain and mild temperature of 60.  Bill is our pack mule as he carries the big load.  We headed into the Appalacians as Bill and Eric look at a map.  I am pointing out the overflowing creek we followed. The area got 3 inches of rain in the night before.  This was one of our most pleasant riding days.  Rolling hills made it a treat. Blackburn was a last minute plan that had us end on a climb that seemed to go on forever. We sent Angie on an alternate route that we thought wouldn't have a hill but it turned out to be a famous hill called Nellie Cave. She aced it. Blackburg is the home of Virginia Tech,  It is remembered for a large shooting in 2007,  It is a beautiful campus in a nice town.  Dinner came from a Kroger store the size of a small stadium!









Day 6 May 23rd Vesuvius to Natural Bridges, VA

 We left our camp at the Baptist church in Vesuvius and pedaled 18 miles to Lexington for breakfast,  Rain was coming so we stopped at the local library to gear up and charge up.  We arrived at our Warm Showers stay in Natural Bridges 21 miles later very wet, but in good spirits.   Our hosts Michael and Wendy have a big home they built themselves on 250 acres that they share with their parents and brother. We had the basement area (along with a lot of stuff) all to ourselves and their adopted daughter, Nellie and an exchange student from Morocco, Selma, made us a great chicken and stir-fry dinner. The people along the way have added so much to our trip. Michael and Wendy's stories of adopting 2 children, running 2 businesses and farmiing 250 acres are so memorable.  They have 30 head of cattle and they grow the 300 bales of hay it takes to feed the cows. We felt honored to share time with them. 



Monday, May 23, 2022

Day 5 May 22 Croset to Vesuvius, VA

The hardest day so far.  The Blue Ridge parkway was beautiful and challenging.  Luckily, we had some shade and wind to cool us along a lot of up and down. Cookie Lady was worth the stop. A tribute to riders.  It was humbling to see what others have done on bikes. It was great to see the legacy we are adding to.  It felt like we went 70 miles today but turned out to be 54. At Vesuvius, our first church stay provided nice camp spots and a shelter.  The one spigot we found was a drinking water, shower and cooking water all in one!  How ingenious.  Towns have been lacking in stores, campgrounds and restaurants.  Grocery stores are a treat!  My camp cooking is expanding. Last night was Ramen noodles with frozen broccoli and a rice vegetable mix.  I have determined everything tastes delicious when you are hungry.























Day 4 May 21st Mineral to Croset, VA









98 degree day.  We went a long ways.  With a stop at Montecello it was a hot one again.  When we tried to make it shorter with a google alternate, we ended up in the middle of a construction site.  It was so hot that a fence and netting did not stop us.  Don't ask!  The 1/2 mile rough single track bike route almost did.  Bike repairs were in order after that.  The end was a warm showers home that seemed a little lacking, but we met our host Liz the next day and she was an amazing bike rider that hosts first time school age riders on a 230 mile ride over multiple nights.  She does it multiple times each year. I can barely cook for myself while camping. She does is for 20 kids.  It was a great home. Liz gave us all kinds of bike info and a great breakfast.














Day 3 May 20 Richmond to Mineral, VA





A hot day on the road. Coffee from a local rider, Joel, was a great time in Ashland.  Bob and Ilene let us cool off in Mill Pond lake from their dock. 
 Towels and drinks were also provided.  We just saw the water and asked!  People have been so nice.  At Mineral, the Fire Station let us move in and make ourselvers at home.Coffee and Ice cream were stocked!  Virginia is providing great riding views

Eric