It's a friggin' heat wave around here!
Yeah, the temps are supposed to rise above 20 at some point today. That's Fahrenheit, for y'all metric folks north of me...that's -6degC for you. Oh, don't get me wrong, it's been -6 here lately...but that'd be negative-about-a-hundred in Canadian degrees, right? That's what "degC" means, right? Degrees Canadian?
Again with the "I so miss riding my bike" belly-aching. Because you know what? I
so miss riding my bike. I want this post to be a ride-log, so as follows:
Woke up this morning, wife and kids were all at grandma's for the day, and it was already sunny and 65 degrees -- at 8am, no less. Looked like a perfect day to pull out the XS and go for a ride up the peninsula. I bolted down my Lucky Charms and coffee, pulled on my scruffy leather jacket and some boots, grabbed my Shoei and gloves and out to the garage I went. Wheeled the bike out...choke...switch on...tried the starter, but not enough juice in the old battery, as usual. Two kicks and it roared to life, anyway. It kinda hurts to hear the motor rev to 4,000 rpm first thing in the morning, but it's been doing it like that since 1993 so it's kinda
de rigeur.
Bike warmed up, gear all strapped on, choke off and idle successfully achieved...up goes the kickstand and off I go. Details omitted until I reach Co633 and turn north. (don't want any Canadian stalkers finding my house to settle that whole "degrees Canadian" crack I made) It's kinda chilly yet -- 8:30a.m. and 65 degrees, after all, but it's definitely gonna warm up and probably hit 80 this afternoon. It's a nice chilly, though, bracing and clean-smelling and enough to sharpen the senses....much more and it'd just be cold.
633 north is a nice gentle start to the ride. Some ups/downs and sweeping curves in and out of some trees and fields. The road straightens out after a couple of miles and bores due north toward Traverse City. There's a nice hill-top overlook where I can see as far as the hills by Honor to my left, then it's down, down to Grawn, (called "Groin" by residents) and to the intersection of 633 and US31 -- 2-lane highway, not freeway. I stay on 633, though it's just "Silver Lake Road" now.
Silver Lake road is a windy 2-lane that zips past the homes on the little inland Silver Lake -- a not-very-pretty lake basically notable for having lots of homes around it that are really expensive because they're a)on water and b) 5min. from Traverse City. Traffic is heavy for this time of the morning, and annoying -- nobody here ever breaks the 45 barrier, and you all know how I feel about
that.
But, the road is still more entertaining than boring into town on M37, and it finishes up by passing the high school and ending in a traffic light -- another name change, now Co633 has become Silver Lake Road, has become 14th street in town. The traffic light is the intersection with M37/US31/Division St, and I turn left. It's 15 blocks or so to Lake Michigan -- or at least West Grand Traverse Bay -- and it's spent around 35mph, nice trees and kinda historical homes for scenery. At last -- it's been about a half-hour since my Lucky Charms -- I'm at the traffic light by the bay. It's a Tee intersection where the road-names split. Division St. ends. US31 goes right and heads through town, as does M-37...joining with the new number: M72. Left is Grandview Parkway as well as M72 west.
I turn left, but immediately veer off right into the parking lot for the West End Beach, and have my pick of parking spots -- nobody's swimming at 9am on a spring morning -- the air is 70 degrees, but the water's still just barely not frozen. Kill the motor, pull off the helmet and inhale the heady mixture of fresh water, sand, dead fish, car exhaust and spring morning. The fish and exhaust actually serve to counterpoint the lake, beach and air and highlight their freshness, and I only spend a couple minutes here, but they're refreshing, and I always enjoy this view from the very base of the bay, with land stretching away on left and right, Power Island in the right foreground, and nothing but open water in view directly north.
Back on the bike -- fired up on the first kick, back on M72 west. It's a 4-lane divided in-town road that follows the beach, but only for a half-mile or so, then M72 cuts due west at the light, and yet another road-number comes into play: M22. This time we're on the crossbar of the tee, and the base points west, but I head north on M22, a 2-lane highway that hugs the west shore of Grand Traverse Bay and winds its way up to Suttons Bay -- cutesy little tourist town -- thence through Peshawbestown ("Shawbie-Town" to the locals) and past the indian (Native American, Sorry) gambling. Still heading north -- lake on my right, hills on my left -- and things are getting more sparse and more rugged. The gambling is where most traffic stops, honestly. It's the American Way, I guess -- fark the scenery, where can I spend some dough-re-mi?
So, the road reaches Omena, which is little more than a couple of sharp bends in the road and a defunct store...and of course my favorite local winery...Leelanau Cellars. There's a bustling wine industry up here on the Leelanau Peninsula, actually -- it's rocky, cold, windy, and it stresses the grapes in just the perfect way for wine. The wineries up here put out some Rieslings that are every bit as wonderful as those from the Mosel region of Germany where the grape was born. This particular winery makes some fortified port wines that are simply delectable -- cherry, raspberry and blueberry ports to die for.
However, I'm on the bike, and can't chance having a tasting session -- need someone to wheel me out and drive me away after one of those.
Time to go to work. More of my imaginary ride later, maybe...