Your bike rides this week

Saturday June 29. Lori and Brenda:

Sunday June 30. Maria and Tony:

Dani and Kathy:

Monday July 1. Lori and Brenda:

Dani and Kathy:

Tuesday July 2. Lori and Brenda:

Wednesday July 3. Brenda and Lori:

Kathy:

Thursday July 4. Brenda and Lori:

Paul and Jim:

Friday July 5. Brenda and Lori:

Saturday July 6. Lori and Brenda:

Kathy:

Monday July 8. Dani and Kathy:

Friday July 12. Laurie, Lori, and Brenda:

Dani and Kathy:

Saturday July 13. Jibe ride:

Sunday July 14. Maria and Tony:

Hula

I missed one Saturday when the “sparkling stars” movement was added. Today we finished all the movements for Lahaina Luna. Much more practice is needed.

Homing signal

On Wednesday morning in Wenatchee WA, it was 75 degrees at 7 am. I decided not to ride and drove to Bend OR, a 6-hour drive. This morning, I was up early and on the road again. Home – that’s where I wanted to be. It was a fun road trip. I rode 180 miles on 8 new trails. The Myra Canyon Trestles was the top trail – I want to ride it again – so glad Terry lives nearby.

Okanagan Rail Trail

This morning, we went on one of Terry’s favorite rides – around the airport – which included riding the Oaknagan Rail Trail.

A side branch of the trail goes to the University of British Columbia – Kelowna.

We continued straight:

We stopped at a favorite farm stand so Terry could buy more fresh peas.

Understandable. Over the past two days, we have shelled and eaten a lot of peas. Such a delicious treat.

Miles = 18. Thank you Terry for your generous hospitality. After our ride, I packed up and drove to Wenatchee WA.

Myra Canyon Trestles

Terry and I left early, it was going to be a hot day (as hot as Sacramento).

This part of the Kettle Valley Trail runs along a steep-walled canyon and (surprise) is quite flat.

In a 7-mile stretch, there are 18 trestles and 2 tunnels. The scenery is spectacular.

Fantastic ride. Miles = 17.

Vedder Rotary Trail

Up early to avoid the heat. This was not a long ride, but it sure was beautiful. There were lots of people (many with dogs) walking and riding the trail, even a group of 5 young men in full military gear marching single file.

After 7 miles, the trail ended but you could continue riding a road

until reaching the Keith Wilson Bridge.

I crossed over to continue riding on the other side of the Vedder River.

At the end of the ride, I crossed over the Vedder Bridge.

This must have been a great place to fly fish. There were 25 fishermen in the small section, more standing on the rocks on the shoreline. I watched for a while because I was sure some of those fishing lines would get tangled but none did.

Miles = 15. Finishing early meant I had plenty of time to shower and pack before leaving Chilliwack and driving eastward to Kelowna.

To Chilliwack

I left in time to have breakfast at Fox & Monocle, a bakery/cafe at a marina very close to the Swartz Bay Ferry Terminal. I took the 12 noon ferry to Tsawassan.

Galliano Island:

1 1/2 hours on the ferry and a 2-hour drive to Chilliwack. Canadian speed limits are much lower than in the US. On freeways. 100km/hour = 60 mph on the Trans-Canada Highway which I stuck to, but I was easily the slowest driver on the road.

The Butchart Gardens

After the bike ride, it was just a 30 minute drive to Butchart Gardens. The sunken garden (once a rock quarry):

Walkway to the rose garden:

The scent of roses was strong.

Path in the Japanese garden:

I had a late lunch at the Blue Poppy Restaurant – the best seafood chowder I’ve ever had.

Walkway to/from the parking lot.

Another 30-minute drive to tonight’s VRBO in N Saanich. This one was special.

Galloping Goose Trail

I was able to leave my packed-up car in the driveway while I went for a ride. I headed east first.

The paved trail ended, but it was still rideable.

No trucks on the bumpy wooden bridge – good idea!

I turned around after 9 miles and headed back but continued on to get more miles. At a fork in the trail, a sign pointed to downtown Victoria. and the Empress Hotel and Inner Harbor were just 3 miles away. Let’s go!

A bicycle counter! At 11:30 am, 1180 bicycles had already passed by.

Cycle tracks made riding in the city so safe.

No high tea for me. Time to ride back, load the bike, and drive to The Butchart Gardens.

To Victoria BC

Last night I made myself anxious about getting to Victoria today. I wanted to go through Port Angeles, a 2 1/2 hour drive from Lacey WA, but there were no ferry departure times in mid-afternoon. There was a ferry at 5:15, but there were no reserved spaces left. The alternate choice was to drive to the Tsawassan Ferry Terminal, the ferries left every hour and reservations were available. Tsawassan was a 3 1/2 hour drive, through the Seattle/Tacoma corridor, and you must arrive one hour before the ferry leaves even if you have a reservation. The solution to all this was to NOT ride this morning and leave early. As I was checking out, the person behind the desk was also an Arlete (with 2 t’s), she was born in Mexico. I asked how she pronounced in Spanish, but there was no difference from how I pronounce my name.

5 mph traffic for an hour through Everett WA made me glad I left early. I arrived more than an hour ahead of time. Many people lock their vehicles and walk to the food/shopping building:

Passenger vehicles on Deck 2. Big trucks on Deck 1.

The ferry to Swartz Bay took 1 1/2 hours and wound between many scattered islands

A very nice newly-built AirBnB tonight. My little apartment was on the left side of the house and just perfect.