Category: biking


Bay Trail in Hayward Regional Shoreline Park

June 11th, 2009 — 11:38pm

Last weekend, I went for a short ride on the Bay Trail in Hayward Regional Shoreline Park.

I started at the Winton Street parking lot and drove south first (very close to 92 – San Mateo Bridge) and then rode some way north. I rode only about 10 miles which you can see at cyclogz.

The road is unpaved. But the ride is very very scenic. It is possible to ride this trail all the way to San Lorenzo and even further North.

bay trail in hayward shoreline regional park

Who knew that I would even see Golden Gate Bridge and whales…

Whales in Hayward Shoreline Regional Park

And last, the self-portrait.

krishna2 in hayward shoreline regional park

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Bay View Trail in Coyote Hills Regional Park

June 2nd, 2009 — 7:10pm

The Bay View Trail is in Coyote Hills Regional Park in Fremont, CA (East Bay). You can get very beautiful views of the bay. There are many hiking trails as well.

I went around the Bay View Trails twice with small detours each time. This Trail connects to the Alameda Creek Trail (the connecting path though only 0.5 mile is very steep). There is also a path (Apay Way) to get to Dumbarton Bridge from here – although this path seems to be just as long and as windy and as unpaved as just going all the way on Alameda Creek Trail and the Shoreline Trail.

Bay View Trail, Coyote HIlls Regional Park

This Park/Trail has also been written about in detail here and here.

My full ride detail is at Cyclogz.

Bay View Trail Ride Info at Cyclogz

And lastly, the self portrait:

Self Portrait of krishna2 in Bay View Trail

There is a $5 fee to park but you can avoid the fee if you park outside the Park near Patterson Ranch and Paseo Padre. There is a paved bicycle path that parallels Patterson Ranch into the Park.

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Bike to work month

May 29th, 2009 — 6:16pm

Now that Bike to work month (May) is almost over, here is the report about bike riding at Blekko. Six riders – 1300+ miles. Blekko did okay in the standings.

Bike to work day at Blekko

The Blekko Bikers:

Al – who got us the maximum points since he commuted the most days.
Bob – Weekend Warrior – See his long rides here.
Bryn – The other Weekend Warrior who had 450+ miles. See his writeup here.
KeithRides from San Francisco.
Rob – Also riding from San Francisco (with Keith).

And finally,
Krishna – yours truly. I log my rides here.

I am the newest rider at Blekko and since I didn’t even have a bike when Bay Area Bicycle Coalition announced the Bike to Work challenge, I wasn’t part of the team. And I wrote about my bike to work day experience some time back.

All said, I am really enjoying biking. Looking forward to lots of it this Summer.

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A month and 191 miles later

May 27th, 2009 — 6:52pm

Wow, it is already a month since I got the “t(o)uring machine“.

It has been nothing but wonderful since then that I look forward to biking.

Some memorable bike trips :
- Biked to work on Bike to work day
- Round-trip to work (48 miles)
- Full Alameda Creek Trail ride (30 miles)

My Cyclogz page says that I have about 107 miles but my cycle-odometer says 191 miles (since it has been there since the beginning).

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Full Alameda Creek Trail

May 27th, 2009 — 6:43pm

On Memorial day, got around to doing the full Alameda Creek Trail.

Cyclogz details here : http://cyclogz.com/activity/3642

I had written about this trail before as well.

Alameda Creek Trail Bike Route

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Round trip from East bay to Blekko

May 27th, 2009 — 6:39pm

So on Friday (5/22), I decided to do the full round-trip.

The morning ride : http://cyclogz.com/activity/3589

The evening ride : http://cyclogz.com/activity/3588

East Bay to Blekko Bike Route

The evening ride was damn windy. At times, on Shoreline trail, I was barely biking at 4-5mph.

All said, it was a personal daily high of 48 mile round-trip.

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Cyclogz – track your bike rides

May 20th, 2009 — 10:12pm

I recently got a Garmin Edge 305 Bike GPS. And I wanted to track the data.

Garmin comes with a Training Center which works okay as a desktop software but to upload online and to share there are certain limits.

I tried a few sites but I settled on Cyclogz.

MapMyRide – The whole site looked very crowded – there was just too much portal stuff around. I just wanted to load a route, view the route and get out – so very simple usage plus look-and-feel would be my preference.

Bikely – The site looks clean and simple but wants only a GPX file. The Garmin spits out a TCX file. And there are free utilities to convert it to GPX – but it’s one _more_ step for me to do. Come on, Bikely, why can’t you use one of those conversion scripts and accept my TCX file ?

Garmin Connect – As very good and sleek and well-designed the GPS device itself is, the web application is not as sleek. There are lots of inter-links, suggestions. Often times, you are left wondering if you are signing up for the right service. They have motionbased.com and then they have Garmin Connect – one is supposed to become the other (I forgot which is which).

Cyclogz – A very cool site. The site itself is written by a passionate biker. Cyclogz was recommended to me by Anand. The home page is very clean and simple.

Sign up process is simple. Your own page is also clean. For example, here is my profile page. Cyclogz uses Garmin’s Communicator Plugin – so the device is directly identified by the website itself and the data can be uploaded. Very cool. Kudos to Garmin for enabling such a feature (and not locking everyone to use only their software to get things out of the device).

Here is an example activity of mine – a ride from Redwood Shores to Union City. All you can consume data porn. Just plain awesome.

You can embed your activity too (although watch out since it does take a long time to load).

I recommended Cyclogz to a couple of my friends and they are happy as well. There is also provision to automatically post to twitter and to wordpress. Also, very cool.

Two nitpicks :

1. When you sign in, you click on the user input box and type your name. The password field has a bunch of dots. Now, I don’t know if the dots are the default ones or did my firefox auto-password-remember-fill do that ?

2. The activity page loads a bit slowly. It is understandable that the Google Maps is a third-party service plus the other charts are very intensive – in any case, it takes more than 5 seconds to load and that is a lot. Hopefully once the alpha phase is over, things will get better and faster.

Overall, I am a fan of Cyclogz and just love it. Give it a try.

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EB2B – Biking From East Bay To Blekko On Bike To Work Day

May 20th, 2009 — 7:21pm

Summary: I got a bike three weeks back and biked 28 miles to work (from Union City to Redwood Shores) on bike to work day. You can check out the route here.

It all started about three weeks ago when I finally got a bike.

Will I be able to BTW (Bike To Work) on BTWD (Bike To Work Day) ?

Ride history: On the first day, I biked about 6 miles. A few days later, 11 miles. Then a week later 16 miles. But so far, I had been just biking inside my residential community – very clean paved roads. So the week after, I tried to try a real road/trail biking. I biked the Alameda Creek Trail for a round-trip of about 22 miles. Details about my bike ride on Alameda Creek Trail.

Four more days to BTWD and I was entertaining the idea that I could actually BTW. I started looking around for bike routes. First I tried on 511.org Bicycle Maps. Next, I tried MapMyRide. Then on Bikely. Then I tried Google Maps with “walking direction” option – got this - not for now, I thought.

If you are masochistic, please feel free to try drawing a route on a map.
It is like hand-writing XML, not meant for humans – better left to machines.

Would it be possible to BTW on BTWD ?

The closest to a good bike direction was from bikely, where there was a route plotted between Union City and Foster City. I could start to piece together bits here and there and make a route out of it. But just one day before the day, Keith (@monkeynova) pointed out about the awesome site sf2g.com. I was also chatting with Bryn (@bauxring) and Bob (@bobtruel) who gave me some helpful pointers and route suggestions. Lucky to be amongst these hardcore bikers. Part of me was thinking that by openly making all this ambitious route plans, I was maybe setting myself up for a big fail. I figured, what the heck, it is going to be a fun story anyway and I would know that I had tried.

Four of my colleagues were going to BTW on BTWD.

By the way, sf2g.com is a very inspiring as well as a very informational site. If you want some cool routes, this is a very good place to look. The home page had a ride, called the Bay Way which had a path from Dumbarton and University avenue all the way North to the city. But at the point where it met Holly Street was all I had to get to.

Bay Way : SF to Google

So I thought if I took the Union City Blvd and continue to go South, then it becomes Ardenwood Blvd which would eventually get me to Dumbarton Bridge. Then I had to just cross the bridge to the other side to University Ave intersection and I was all set. There was light at the end of the tunnel route after Dumbarton bridge.

Maybe I could after all BTW on BTWD.

This is where a divine intervention plays a part. Clicking around on the sf2g site, I find their blog and also an article posted just four days back about a few folks who had biked from East bay to Google.

East Bay to Google

Update : After the ride, I found one more nice blog post on another trip from East Bay to Google.

I think I am going to BTW on BTWD.

I saw all their flickr and picasa photos. If not for their mention that it is okay to ignore the “Danger – No Crossing” sign and the photo that shows it is now safe to do so, I would have given up on this route. The peninsula part of the ride looks okay after all – it was much better than I expected it to be. There were more dedicated bike paths / lanes and seemed very little traffic on the few places where there was no exclusive bike path.

I read the article a couple of times, saw the route and couldn’t believe my luck. They had done the route passing as close as possible to my home and all the way to Dumbarton and University Avenue. I just had to piece the two routes together and voila, I have my own route-mashup.

I decided I will BTW on BTWD.

My Mash Up Route : East Bay to Blekko

Finally, the big day arrives. I had set up an alarm for 6 am and woke up without hearing a sound. I thought, hey, I beat the alarm, after all – so much for my stupid fears. And then I look at the clock to note that it was already 7.10 am and I had just slept in spite of the alarm. Next, I couldn’t fit my bottle cage properly. So I just threw the water bottle into my bag. I had meant to watch the satellite map of the full path just one last time – but alas, no time. So I just dotted down couple of street names (turns) and got off to a not-like-this start. I never take breakfast, just coffee – so even though I am going to be in need of lot of energy, I didn’t want to disturb the usual rhythm and hence just had the usual coffee – and finally, no guilt on that extra spoon of sugar. And off I started.

Hurray, I am about to BTW on BTWD.

I was merrily humming a tune like “I like to Bike on Bike to work day”. Which should be no new-tune for Seinfeld-fans who have heard George and Kramer singing “I like to stop at the duty free shop” on their way to pick up Jerry and Elaine from the Airport.

As I turned on to Union City Blvd, I noticed that a fellow biker was just standing there and not crossing the intersection even though we got the signal – turns out, he had fallen down, had a scratched hand and was just resting a bit. I felt sorry and asked him to be careful. Good thing, he was only going to Fremont – so not that far away.

Four miles of road plus pavement went by fast and I was on the Alameda Creek Trail. I was hoping that the parking lot there would be almost full and there would be stream of bikers. Boy, I was in for a surprise. I was the only biker on the entire trail the entire time – just saw three joggers at various points – that’s it. It was a such a quiet and serene ride. The only nagging fear in the back way back of my mind was that should I get a flat tire, I would have to walk about 2-3 miles before I could get to a road (and maybe cellphone signal) and call my home for help. (1) I haven’t done before and don’t know to patch a flat tire (on my to be learned very soon list) and (2) the only tool/equipment I had to handle such a situation was my iphone. (and of course a snickers candy bar).

I had biked a few miles when I first saw the bridge. It was big, it was far and it was very blurry. Hmm..is it that far away. And then I realized that it was the San Mateo Bridge. Sigh of relief, pedaling on.

I take a quick look at the bike computer to see 12 M. Nice, I think to myself, 12 miles..that’s cool, I am almost half way done. And then in a second, I see that it is actually 12 MPH and I had only traveled about 7 M. Damn you, PH…I have biked only 7 miles and then I realize, ah hah PH 7, maybe I do need some water to clear me up. For some reason, I found the ph7/water thought very funny and was laughing out loud for a moment. Now, as I type, nah..not funny.

I see lots of water around now. Murky water. sometimes smelly water. I am almost tempted to take a sample of that for a ph measurement, like in the movie Erin Brokovich.

I reach the end of Alameda Creek Trail. As expected there was the big sign that said “Danger, Don’t cross, Soft mud, Levee broken” warning sign. Ah..silly, I just walk my bike for a few feet and am back on what is now Shoreline Trail.

Alameda Creek Trail

I could see the Dumbarton. This trail is not a paved one though – it is a dirt road – but a road bike supposedly will do okay. I had a road bike but with a slightly wider tire and it also had some treads. That was a little bit comforting.

Details about my bike ride on Shoreline Trail.

I couldn’t but help think that if those creatures from Tremors were to appear in Bay Area that this route would be a perfect ground zero. By the way, Tremors is an awesome movie and one of my all-time favorites, only next to Star Wars, Star Trek, Back to the Future, Spiderman…I am sorry, I got carried away. Tremors2 is cool as well. I don’t recommend Tremors3 – and haven’t watched Tremors4.

Another thought : What if Jack Bauer had to do BTWD ? I am sure he would do it in 10 minutes no matter where he starts from or where he has to go to. After all, the man goes from anywhere to anywhere in L.A. in 10 minutes – all while getting shot at, poisoned, immobilized and electrocuted.

Also if you check out the Shoreline Trail link above, you will see the birds picture. I bet if you see that many birds and you are alone on the route, you will also think about The Birds, Hitchcock movie.

‘How do you know I’m mad?’ said Alice.

‘You must be,’ said the Cat, ‘or you wouldn’t have come here.’

- From “Alice’s adventures in the wonderland” by Lewis Carroll

Finally, I reach Dumbarton Bridge, only to see that there are two big gates on either side of the way and fences. I get a bit worried that I had biked 13 miles only to go back home. And then I start getting closer to the gates and looking around, only to realize that in those vast fence / gates, there is an opening about the size of a door (no kidding). First timers, watch out. So yes, you can pass through that to the other side of Dumbarton bridge.

Dumbarton Bridge

I first take the smaller side bridge to check out the view from there and see what’s up there. It is a place for fishing. So I turn back and take a moment’s rest, gulp half a bottle of Gatorade and started climbing the bridge. Surprisingly, it wasn’t as difficult as I had imagined it to be. It was hard, it was windy, but I had thought about falling off or getting down and walking the bike and such scenarios that riding (even though at times at only about 7mph) was still comforting. I got to the top and had good fun doing the down ride.

What a journey, I think to myself, even if I stop right now, at least I am on the other side of the bay and I had also biked the Dumbarton – so there, something accomplished, now let’s just get on with the rest of the route to work.

At the bottom of Dumbarton bridge, near University Avenue, was the Energizer Station. Very kind folks greeted all the bikers. I was offered a bunch of choices but being a Seinfeld fan couldn’t resist Snapple iced tea – it was very sweet indeed. I bid farewell to the nice folks and cross University Avenue.

Now, at this point, there is a road inside the Sun campus and there is also a trail. So I asked a biker standing nearby about how to get to Bayshore. He said “you can take the campus route or this trail”. I thought maybe the trail will lead me to more bike paths/trails better than the road. Wrong. Both lead to the same point. The trail is just a loop around the Sun campus. Anyways, had fun while I was at it. Bayshore express way was very straight-forward. Separate bike lanes. I had to continue on, pass Marsh Road, take Haven Avenue and get to Bayfront Road.

The following two detailed paragraph of write up is probably for the two souls who will read this blog and try this route. I hope they don’t get lost. Feel free to hit the space-bar. [Who am I kidding, who the hell did really get this far].

And you end up hitting Seaport Blvd (at Redwood City). So based on the map, I decided to continue to go straight on Bloomquist. (on the way, you would pass the Malibu Gokart, Mini-golf place – this is one of those places which you can easily see from the highway (101), but would find it not so obvious getting to it.). Now, I hit a T-junction on to Maple Street. On the right, the sign says, “Not a through street”. So I decided to take the left since I remembered that I had to take a turn from Maple street. Before I realize, I am on a small bridge and I have crossed 101 to the other (west) side. I remembered from the map that I didn’t have to cross the 101 at all. So I pull over and check my paper direction which says, “right on maple, then turn on bair island”. I am confused a bit – so if I have to go the other way, which is not a through street, how can it lead to another street ? Anyways, I ride the bridge back and can see the sign “Holly Street 2 miles” on 101 – I am so close, yet so far. So I continue on to the other side of Maple steet (not through street). Sure enough it just takes makes you take two left turns and you keep going straight and I end up near a building that says “Women’s Correctional Facility”. I trace the full route back to see if I had missed any road signs or anything. Nada. So I check my iphone maps and find that Maple street leads to a dead end. Some where half a mile or so North, is where Bair Island Road is and the bayfront road continues. I don’t have the plotted bike route. [In retrospect, I should have gone back to sf2g.com site, pulled the map with the route plotting and checked it again with the map mode and the satellite mode. If I had done so, I would have realized that near the second turn in the Maple street, there is a small dirt path to an extended parking lot. From this parking lot, there is a small dirt road to a very small bridge (walk/bike only) which leads to the other side of this small creek and I would have been able to join the Bair Island road and then on to Bayfront road.]

‘Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?’

‘That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,’ said the Cat.

‘I don’t much care where–’ said Alice.

‘Then it doesn’t matter which way you go,’ said the Cat.

- From “Alice’s adventures in the wonderland” by Lewis Carroll

Since I found the Redwood City Police Station right near by and there was an officer standing outside, I bike over there and ask him for directions. He advised me to cross Maple St again, take Veteran’s Blvd all the way to Whipple and then right on Whipple to get to the other side of 101 (again) and then take the bike path from there. So I ended up doing that. It was lot of traffic and no bike lanes. Had to watch out for cars coming out of parking lots. Then came the awful Whipple Road turn. Seriously, people will try to kill you here. It has a two lane right turn – and the rightmost exclusively taking you to 101-South. So you have to cross this, compete with drivers now wanting to take 101-North and then move past. I wondered if I had used up all my life lines on this one intersection. It was later that Bob (@bobtruel) told me the trick to cross Whipple. The way to do is to stay on the left of the two lanes turning right. And then, stay on the small middle yellow lines (which is wide enough for a biker) and cross without having to cross the path to highway ramps.

But once past that, there is a dedicated bike path which just parallels 101. The same 101 scenery, billboards but in much slow motion. Nothing new. I finally reach San Carlos Airport, then past the Airport museum, flight schools and then on to Redwood Shores parkway (the other side of Holly). From there a left on to Twin Dolphin Drive and I finally arrive at 100 Marine Parkway (Blekko). I was almost tempted to do a victory lap around the building. But it was already getting late. So I just called home to convey that I have arrived safely and not worry about my crazy idea to btw on btwd and got in to work.

Five of us had biked to work that day with three doing round-trips. We lost the sixth rider to Disneyland. :) I for one decided to take alternate transport back and then do the return bike trip on some other day.

I BTW on BTWD. Cool.

All said, it was about 28 miles and took me about 3 hours and 15 minutes. How fitting, I rode exactly a perfect number of miles. If I had known the full route clearly, it would probably be close to 25 miles and I think I might have done that in less than 2.5 hours.

UPDATE: I did the route another time and it was only 24 miles and it took me about 2:25 (but that was including a few stops for photos – so I guess, I can probably cover the route in 2:10 or less).

‘Why,’ said the Dodo, ‘the best way to explain is to do it. (And as you might like to try the thing yourself, some winter day, I will tell you how the Dodo managed it.)

- From “Alice’s adventures in the wonderland” by Lewis Carroll

I figured I should create a better East Bay to Blekko map. In hindsight, this intense process of creating the map path would have been good to do at the beginning. But anyways, here it is for the future riders. I took the two kml files from the sf2g.com site – the bay way and the east bay routes. I wrote a script to strip out all the coordinates and print them line by line and also in five equal groups. Then, I created a very simple KML file copied the coordinates and opened them up on Google Earth – Sure enough, it shows the full route. I started with the East Bay route first. Now comes some trial and error with some intuition and guesses and binary search with some lat/long number gazing and I removed all the points that weren’t part of my route. Now, I repeated this with the second file – I had to reverse the coordinates here (since the original route is from SF to G). Again, the same process to remove all the unwanted points. Now, I could put the two sets of coordinates together on one file and get a single route.

But for the extensive route, articles and photos on the sf2g.com site, I would have probably taken much inefficient routes and maybe would have lost the way more often. Thanks to the nice folks there.

I don’t have a GPS – but I think it would be cool to have a model like the Garmin Edge 305 or something similar. More data to play with. I might get one soon.

Now that BTWD is over successfully, time to move on to more. Next up, Tour De France Fremont. And more East Bay Trails.

the Mock Turtle sang this, very slowly and sadly: –

Will you, won’t you, will you, won’t you, will you join the dance?

- From “Alice’s adventures in the wonderland” by Lewis Carroll

If any one would like to do a repeat of this path or in general, east bay rides, I am all for it.

8 comments » | biking

Bike ride on Shoreline Trail

May 20th, 2009 — 7:02pm

At the Bay side of the Alameda Creek Trail is the Shoreline Trail. You can see the details about my bike ride on Alameda Creek Trail. This is temporarily closed due to a small dangerous section of soft mud due to a broken levee. And it certainly applies during rainy season. But this is not a big problem anymore. But now, the path is usable. You will have to walk the bike for a few feet and you are all set on to the Shoreline Trail.

Alameda Creek Trail

The Shoreline trail is a dirt path. But I have read that it is okay for a road bike. I personally have a road bike as well but I have slightly wider tires.

‘Well, in OUR country,’ said Alice, still panting a little, ‘you’d generally get to somewhere else–if you ran very fast for a long time, as we’ve been doing.’

‘A slow sort of country!’ said the Queen. ‘Now, HERE, you see, it takes all the running YOU can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!’.

- From “Through the Looking Glass” by Lewis Carroll

Watch out – it is very windy. Another thing that a friend warned me of is about broken glasses or thorns (from nearby plants) that could cause flats.

Here are a few images of the Shoreline Trail.

Shoreline Trail Shoreline Trail

At the end of Shoreline Trail is the Dumbarton Bridge. It will look as though there is no way to get to the bridge and there will be steel fences – but do get closer and look carefully, there is a small door like opening to the other side of the bridge from where you can either go to the side of the Dumbarton Bridge (fishing piers) or get on to climb the Dumbarton Bridge.

Dumbarton Bridge

The Shoreline Trail is a very nice ride – you will almost be in the middle of the bay waters.

You can see nice reflections of light on the water.

Shoreline Trail

Ahem..ahem..here is my self portrait.

Shoreline Trail

And of course, lots of birds.

Shoreline Trail

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Bike ride on Alameda Creek Trail

May 20th, 2009 — 7:02pm

I had heard aplenty about Alameda Creek Trail from Anand (@obelix74) who has himself gotten into running a lot, recently. More information here, here and a lot more here about the awesome Alameda Creek Trail.

So after a 4 mile ride on Union City Blvd – I reached Alameda Creek Trail. This is the bridge (over the creek) where the border between Union City and Fremont is. Right or left, right or left…and I turned left and biked East towards Fremont. I biked for about 7 miles. Just by luck, I had chosen the North side of the creek which is the paved path (suitable for running and biking). The south side of Alameda Creek Trail is the unpaved dirt road – more suitable for horse rides. At this point I realized, hmm…it is another 11 miles back home – so I biked back. From what I read on the East Bay Park pages, the best views on the Alameda Creek Trail is on either ends. So was a bit bummed that I couldn’t make it to the Niles Canyon Valley. Another day. I had biked a personal best of 22 miles. Hurray.

Here are the views from near and far.

Alameda Creek Trail Alameda Creek Trail

UPDATE: I did the other side of Alameda Creek Trail on my biking from home-to-work-to-home. The other side is a short ride to the bay. There are no more roads (or bridges) to get on to from this side.

Here is the view from Union City Blvd to Alameda Creek Trail. This is the border of Union City and Fremont.

Alameda Creek Trail

At the end of the Alameda Creek Trail is the Coyote Hill. Then there is also the Shoreline Trail. This will lead all the way to Dumbarton Bridge. You can read about my bike ride on Shoreline Trail.

Here is the view at the beginning (or the end) of the Alameda Creek Trail.

Alameda Creek Trail Alameda Creek Trail

End to end is definitely a very fun leisurely ride with not much climbing but scenic views. There are a few some water / toilet facilities along the Trail (I think at least once every four miles, I would guess). There are many parks along the way as well as option to get on to a main road.

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The T(o)uring Machine

May 20th, 2009 — 7:01pm

After a long time, I finally took the plunge and got a bike. I had been researching for a while and decided instead of shopping for the “bang for the buck” bike, I would rather pay a bit more but get professional advice. So I went to Bicycle Garage in Fremont and talked to a passionate biker there. He listened and suggested that I get a road bike. The one particular option I was insistent on was to have slightly wider tires.

Update: Here is an awesome write up at the jwz collected bicycle wisdom page.

I got the 2009 Trek 7.2 FX road bike. It is one awesome bike. The nice thing with getting it in a pro-bike-shop is that you get certain perks. In the case of Bicycle Garage, I get lifetime free tune-ups. How cool is that!

The T(o)uring Machine - 2009 Trek 7.2 FX Road Bike

I had never thought about naming it but then when I registered for an account in cyclogz.com, it prompted me to give a name to the bike and describe it. I was reminded of the movie Monsters Inc in which Sully (when he names the little girl, Boo) is told by Mike Wazowski that once somebody names something, they get very attached to it. I thought why not – I do like my bike. I thought of many names.

But in the end, with not much originality, but with lot of geek humor and pride and utmost respect for two great computer scientists, I christened my bike, “The T(o)uring Machine”.

Edsger Dijkstra called his Volkswagen bus “The Touring Machine”.

It did not escape me that as a biker I am looking to take the shortest path. ;)

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