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Courtesy of Vermont
Bicycle Touring |
A cyclist stops to
admire the view from Vermont of the Adirondacks.
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2 states on 2 wheels
Champlain Valley super for cycling
By Phil Brown
It was a day of perfect late-summer colors:
blue sky, green grass, gold-tinged leaves and fluorescent purple
shirts. Well, not all of them were wearing purple shirts.
As I watched the stream of Day-Glo hues and
skin-tight shorts pour off the ferry at Essex and zip up Route 22,
I wondered what it is about cycling that compels people to dress
up like insects. Do they do it to cut wind resistance and go just
a tad faster? If so, I was happy to be wearing khaki shorts and
a T-shirt.
You don’t want to rush through the Champlain
Valley on a day such as this.
Most of the cyclists were participating in
a two-day tour organized by Lake Champlain Bikeways, a non-profit
group that has been working hard to publicize the joys of biking
in the valley. Since 1994, the organization has mapped out more
than 40 cycling routes, totaling 1,200 miles, in New York, Vermont
and Quebec, including a 350-mile loop around the country’s
sixth-largest lake. Often, the routes wind along back roads or through
quaint hamlets, offering wonderful views of the water, mountains
and fields. Nowhere else in the Adirondacks will you find such a
diversity of scenery.
The cyclists began their 150-mile circuit
in Burlington on Saturday morning and headed south to Charlotte
to catch the ferry. From Essex on the New York side, where I joined
them, they pedaled north to Plattsburgh to dine and spend the night.
On the next day, they continued north, crossed the Rouses Point
Bridge into Vermont and returned to Burlington.
Bike Champlain 2000, as the tour was called,
attracted about 40 participants, mostly from other states. “It
worked out great,” said Maja Smith, a spokeswoman for Lake
Champlain Bikeways. “The riders loved it. They said they’d
be back this year.”
The sponsor has changed the name of this year’s
event to the Tour de Champ, added fun stuff such as lectures and
field trips, and moved the circuit north. The cyclists will start
in St. Jean-sur-Richelieu in Quebec, ride south to Plattsburgh,
cross the lake and return to Quebec Province. Although this route
skips the Adirondacks, Smith said the organizers hope to expand
the tour in future years to circle the entire lake.
The Tour de Champ takes place on a weekend
in Sept. The $155 fee covers meals, entertainment and road support.
For paupers and cheapskates, there are plenty
of other options. One
is the two-state loop I did on that September day. From Essex, I
followed the crowd north to Willsboro and took a series of rural
roads to Ausable Chasm. There we parted company, as I turned east
to catch the ferry to Burlington at Port Kent. Once on the Vermont
side, I cycled through the city on a bike path and eventually found
myself on bucolic byways that led to the Charlotte-to-Essex ferry.
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
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This two-way boat trip costs only $6.25 for
a “combination ticket” that lets you return on the Charlotte
ferry. If you feel flush, you might want to buy a hot dog or other
treats on the ferry to Burlington. Whether you buy or bring your
lunch, though, it makes sense to eat on the boat, since the Port
Kent-Burlington crossing takes about an hour.
Altogether, you will pedal about 45 miles.
Expect lots of gentle ups and downs and a few steep hills. As far
as scenery, expect a lot of everything: woods, farms, orchards,
historic homes, city streets. From New York, you can look across
the lake to the Green Mountains; from Vermont, you look across the
lake to the Adirondacks; and from the ferry you can see both mountain
ranges by turning your head.
If you start your trip in Essex, park your
car in a public lot across the road from the ferry dock. There’s
no need to hop on your bike right away. Instead, take a stroll down
Main Street. Essex has so many fine old buildings that the entire
hamlet has been put on the National Register of Historic Places.
When you do climb into the saddle and begin pedaling north on Route
22, you’ll immediately pass a stately specimen of 19th-century
Greek Revival architecture: Grey-stone House and Gardens, which
is now a museum with period furnishings.
FORMER FARMS NOW WOODS
The road to Willsboro is fairly level and offers several views of
Lake Champlain. Often you’ll pass woods bordered by stone
walls; my guess is that those woods were once farmsteads. Willsboro,
founded by William Gilliland in 1765, is a village of modest houses.
On the day I passed through, several people were selling homegrown
tomatoes from stands on their lawns. The Boquet River (pronounced
Bo-KET, Bo-KWET or Bo-KAY, depending on who’s doing the pronouncing)
flows through the settlement on its way to the lake. If you’re
cycling in the fall, stop at the Willsboro Fish Ladder to see if
Atlantic salmon are migrating upriver. They swim up the Boquet to
spawn anywhere from early September to mid-November, but the busiest
time usually is early October to early November.
Soon after crossing the river, you face a
long, arduous climb. As you coast down the other side of the hill,
be on the lookout for the Highland Road on the right, a woodsy lane
of hard-packed dirt. At the start, the trees form a canopy over
the road, but later the views open up. At the road’s highest
point, reached after a few climbs, you will enjoy marvelous vistas
of Lake Champlain, Four Brothers Islands and the Green Mountains.
At the end of Highland Road, you turn left
and follow country roads past orchards and farms to Ausable Chasm,
one of the natural wonders of the Adirondack Park. The Ausable River
has carved out a 150-foot-high gorge through sandstone that was
formed from deposits by the Potsdam Sea more than 500 million years
ago. You can pay to walk a trail along the chasm’s rim or
just peer down into the dizzying depths from the Route 9 bridge.
Either way, don’t miss it.
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Photo by Gary Randorf |
| Peaks of barns are also part of the Champlain
Valley landscape. |
From the chasm, it’s a short ride down
Route 373 to Port Kent. The ferry will leave here 13 times a day
from June 21 to Aug. 26 and will follow a somewhat abbreviated schedule
before and after that period. The views from the boat of the lake
and the mountains on both sides are spectacular. On the New York
side, Whiteface Mountain stands out. On the Vermont side, you can
see Camel’s Hump and Mount Mansfield. If you’re feeling
especially flush, you can drop a few quarters in the coin-operated
binoculars on deck. It can get windy out on the water, but you can
always duck inside to look at the souvenirs or buy a snack.
In Burlington, the ferry docks at a city park
that’s made the lakefront a popular attraction. Get on the
bike path—which you’ll share with rollerbladers, joggers
and baby carriages—to get out of town. As you cycle along
the shore, the Adirondacks are visible across the lake. Eventually,
the bike route takes you over a few city streets to Farrell Park
and thence up to Overlook Park. Here is your chance to stop and
contemplate the whole of the sweeping vista: the lake, the islands,
the valley, the Adirondack foothills and the High Peaks.
Leaving Overlook Park, you head south on Spear
Road. Although this road is fairly busy, it has a wide shoulder
and offers nice views of Vermont and New York. You’ll take
less-traveled roads through Shelburne Falls and cross Route 7 near
the Shelburne Museum. If you have time, you might want to visit
this sprawling complex. The 23 buildings include a blacksmith’s
shop, an apothecary’s shop and general store.
On the last leg of the bike tour, you feel
part of a pastoral postcard, pedaling down quiet roads past cornfields,
pastures and red barns. At one point, you pass through a covered
wooden bridge. When you reach Ferry Road, turn right to catch the
Charlotte ferry to Essex. Until Sept. 3, it will leave every half-hour
from 6 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. but will follow a curtailed schedule after
that date. Since the lake is narrower here than at Burlington, the
ride back to New York takes only 30 minutes. Upon returning to Essex,
treat yourself to a cone at the ice-cream shop on Main Street. You
deserve it.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Lake Champlain Bikeways can
provide information on bike routes, bike shops and lodging in New
York, Vermont and Quebec. Those interested in cycling in the Park
should also request the brochure Adirondack Coast Bicycling. (518)597-4646.
www.champlainbikeways.org
Lake Champlain Transportation
Co. operates three ferries. Contact the company for a schedule and
rates. (802) 864-9804.
www.ferries.com |