Tours

Great Allegheny Passage & C&O Canal

This ten day ride from a suburb of Pittsburgh Pa. to Georgetown in Washington, DC is a unforgettable experience. We travel through tunnels, over bridges and viaducts, including the Salisbury Viaduct 1908 feet long, through the Savage Tunnel, 3294 feet long on a easy stone dust surface. We will take a morning off to visit Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater house. (included in the tour) We have a rest day in Cumberland Maryland before we continue our journey on the C&O Canal. This trail surface is a little rougher and requires a hybrid bike. Another tunnel awaits us, the Paw Paw tunnel, 3,118 foot brick lined tunnel, an engineering feat which took fourteen years to complete from 1828 to 1850. We will stop for a visit at Ft. Frederick state Park, the site of Marylands frontier defense during the French and Indian war (1754-17863). Unique because of it large size and stone walls. Ft. Frederick was also used during the American revolutionary war as a prison for German and British soldiers. We will take an afternoon to visit historic Harpers Ferry and ride the General Jubal Early ferry into Leesburg for our overnight stay there. Ten days later we arrive in Georgetown, Wash., DC.
315 miles nine days of riding

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Maximum number of riders: 12. Meals: 5 breakfast, 6 lunch, 3 dinner.  Support: Sweep rider/Sag Wagon provided.


Florida Keys 2

Our introduction to the Florida Keys is a glass bottom boat ride to Americas only living coral reef at John Pennekamp State Park. We will bike right from their parking lot to start our tour of the Keys. On the ride we will cross 42 bridges including the 7 mile bridge. We will have the opportunity to feed the pelicans at the Wild Bird center, see Humphrey Bogart’s boat the “African Queen”, visit the Hurricane memorial erected in memory of the 1935 hurricane that destroyed Mr. Flagler’s railroad, visit the Dolphin Research center, picnic in Bahia Honda St. Park, maybe visit the turtle hospital and even stop in at the no name pub for a cold beer on its own no name key. Then we arrive in the unique city of Key West. Here we spent two days and you are on your own with the possibility of visiting the “Little White House”, Truman’s vacation home, the Hemmingway House, sunset at Mallary Square (a most), or maybe a half day fishing or a snorkel trip or a day trip to the Dry Tortugas Nalt. Park. What ever you do it will be a memorable time in the Sun. Switch off the cell phones and beepers, don’t check your email, this change is latitude will definitely be a change in attitude. This is half bike path and half road riding. Intermediate level
100 miles – Four days of riding – Meals included 5B/1L/2D

Florida Rail Trails

This is a very special bike tour where you can see that Florida is not just beaches. We bike the West Orange Trail from Apopka Fl. to Oakland, Fl. (This trail won Rail to Trails trail of the year award in 1994.) Then we van over to the James Van Fleet trail, 29 miles of paved, flat, straight swamp and wilderness trail. If we are lucky, many birds, turtles and even a possible alligator may be seen. The third day we van to the Withlacoochee trail, the longest paved rail trail in Florida. We are in the country now, horse farms, small towns, ranches and wooded areas. We spend the night in Inverness, Florida and continue our tour on this trail the next day. The final day we start our ride in Tarpon Springs, Fl., which is now the sponge capital of the United States. We follow the Pinellas Trail for 35 miles through Palm Harbor, Dunedin, Clearwater, Seminole to St. Petersburg. Five days of riding all on flat, paved, bike paths. Beginner level    Sold Out
130 miles – five days riding Meals included 4B/4L

Bike the Florida Keys 1

Our introduction to the Florida Keys is a glass bottom boat ride to Americas only living coral reef at John Pennekamp State Park. We will bike right from their parking lot to start our tour of the Keys. On the ride we will cross 42 bridges including the 7 mile bridge. We will have the opportunity to feed the pelicans at the Wild Bird center, see Humphrey Bogart’s boat the “African Queen”, visit the Hurricane memorial erected in memory of the 1935 hurricane that destroyed Mr. Flagler’s railroad, visit the Dolphin Research center, picnic in Bahia Honda St. Park, maybe visit the turtle hospital and even stop in at the no name pub for a cold beer on its own no name key. Then we arrive in the unique city of Key West. Here we spent two days and you are on your own with the possibility of visiting the “Little White House”, Truman’s vacation home, the Hemmingway House, sunset at Mallary Square (a most), or maybe a half day fishing or a snorkel trip or a day trip to the Dry Tortugas Nalt. Park. What ever you do it will be a memorable time in the Sun. Switch off the cell phones and beepers, don’t check your email, this change in latitude will definitely be a change in attitude. This is half bike path and half road riding. Intermediate level
100 miles – Four days of riding – Meals included 5B/1L/2D

Northern Neck of VA.

A scenic peaceful bike tour of the Northern Neck of Virginia. We bike the back country roads of Northumberland and Mathews county. Barely a hill in sight and in Fall the weather is perfect.

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Maximum number of riders: 12. Meals: 1 breakfasts, 2 lunches. Support: Sweep rider/Sag Wagon provided. Local hotel accommodations.

Date   Oct. 2012   TBA

Le P’tit Train Du Nord, Laurentian Mtns, Quebec

 The original train track built between 1891 and 1909 between St. Jerome and Mount Laurier.  The last freight train ran in 1989 and by 1996 the P’tit Train du Nord Linear Park was completed.  We ride along lakes, Lac Nominingue for one and through forests and a series of small towns as we work our way from Mont Laurier through Labelle, Mont Tremblant, Ste-Agathe, Val David, Val Morin, Ste Adele to St Jerome. Many of the towns have the old train stations restored. one of our favorite guest houses is  www.alacroiseedeschemins.com     Check it out.  We ride along the Rouge river in the North and along the Riviere du Nord in the South. This path is 50% paved and 50% stone dust.  Smooth enough even for a road bike.   125 miles, four days of riding.

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Maximum number of riders :12. Meals  4B-3L-4D  4 night accommodations.   Support: sweep rider and sag wagon provided

Lake Champlain Area, VT.

We ride on the Vermont and New York sides of the lake and on the Champlain islands with many ferry crossing. We start out of Burlington, Vt. on the Island Line trail. We continue on beautiful low traffic roads on the Champlain Islands. We visit the site of Fort St. Anne, Vermont’s oldest settlement. The statue of Samuel De Champlain, sculpted at the Expo ’67. With a little bit of luck we arrive in Plattsburgh, NY for a re-enactment of battles of the War of 1812.   200 miles

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Maximum number of riders: 12. Meals: 4 breakfast, 4 lunches, 2 dinner.  Support: Sweep rider/Sag Wagon provided.

Le P’tit Train Du Nord, Laurentian Mts, Quebec

The original train track built between 1891 and 1909 between St. Jerome and Mount Laurier.  The last freight train ran in 1989 and by 1996 the P’tit Train du Nord Linear Park was completed.  We ride along lakes, Lac Nominingue for one and through forests and a series of small towns as we work our way from Mont Laurier through Labelle, Mont Tremblant, Ste-Agathe, Val David, Val Morin, Ste Adele to St Jerome. Many of the towns have the old train stations restored. We ride along the Rouge river in the North and along the Riviere du Nord in the South. This path is 50% paved and 50% stone dust.  Smooth enough even for a road bike.   125 miles, four days of riding.

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Maximum number of riders :12. Meals  4B-3L-4D  4 night accommodations.   Support: sweep rider and sag wagon provided

Great Allegheny Passage, PA

This 4 day ride from Boston, a suburb of Pittsburgh Pa. to Cumberland, MD is an unforgettable experience. We travel through tunnels, over bridges and viaducts, including the Salisbury Viaduct 1908 feet long, through the Savage Tunnel, 3294 feet long on a easy stone dust surface. We will take a morning off to visit Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater house on the third day.  (included in the tour).  The final day is a treat with the last 22 miles down hill to Cumberland.

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Max 12   Meals 2 breakfast, 3 lunch, 1 dinner   Support: Sweep rider/Sag wagon provided

Outer Banks, North Carolina

From a fixed base we will take day rides in the Duck, Kitty Hawk, Mateo and Nags Head area.

Minimum number of riders: 8 / Maximum number of riders: 12. Meals: 4 breakfasts, 4 lunches, 2 dinners. Support: Sweep rider/Sag Wagon provided. Local motel accommodations 4 nights.

Our 2012-13 schedule is now posted

Upcoming  Bike Tours

Outer Banks, NC     May 20/25th

Great Allegheny Passage   June 5/8th

Le P’tit train du Nord, Quebec   Aug. 28th

Please register early

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