June 8, 2020
The Jefferson Ride
A shortish post for a longish ride. With several wet days ahead, we wanted to fit in a longer ride today while we can. The weather app says we should stay dry, but the skies indicate otherwise. We step out the door at ten, but quickly return to our room when we find that it’s lightly raining. Twenty minutes later we try again, happy to see that it’s dry now and the cloud cover has broken up a bit.
We leave town bound for the Buena Vista Ferry, riding through its northern suburbs of Crescent Valley and then east to Lewisburg. This is the traditional route we always followed when riding back to Salem from Corvallis. I’ll bet we haven’t come this way in 20 years, but it’s instantly familiar. It’s satisfying to find that the ridge between downtown and Crescent Valley isn’t as steep as we remembered.
East of Lewisburg we leave the urban boundary and follow pretty Pettigrove Road for a few miles to its end at the Independence-Corvallis Highway. I’ve always liked Pettigrove Road, a quiet lane that slithers along the base of a low, wooded ridge, just high enough off the valley floor to give you a view.
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The Corvallis-Independence Highway is hardly that. It’s really just a narrow two lane country road, but it does carry a fair amount of traffic and considerably more than we remember from the past. It’s not bad, but we’re happy to leave it behind when we come to Springhill Road and the turnoff toward the ferry.
As we’re riding it today, I enjoy being reminded of one of those proud/embarrassed moments from my past. Probably 30 years ago now Rachael and I were biking home along this road on a lovely summer day when a red-tailed hawk soared across the field and directly above my head. I was tracking him with my eyes, and looked straight up at him as he flew past - until I suddenly came back to earth, realizing that I had left the road and was dropping into about a six foot deep, gravel-sided irrigation ditch. Embarrassing, but I always think back with pride on the fact that I somehow stuck the landing, keeping control of the bike and bringing it to a smooth stop in the bottom of the ditch.
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Off the ferry, we turn southeast and cross Ankeny Flats on Talbot Road, another familiar old ride we probably haven’t covered for 20 years. It doesn’t look like much has changed over the last twenty years. When we come to Jefferson at roughly the midpoint of the ride, we stop for lunch at a picnic bench in front of a closed cafe.
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4 years ago
We cross the Santiam River just outside of Jefferson, and follow busy Jefferson Highway for about a mile until we come to Scravel Hill Road and turn off. I’ve only biked this way two or three times in my life, and have avoided it because I’ve always stayed on the highway all the way past Millersburg to Albany. It’s an unpleasant ride, but it’s much better the way we went today. It adds a mile and a few hundred feet of climbing, but it’s easily worth the extra effort. And you might see baby turkeys!
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4 years ago
4 years ago
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4 years ago
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The remainder of the ride from Albany to Jefferson is great, and in places spectacular. For the first five miles it follows parklike Byers Way as it weaves through a narrow strip of flatland sandwiched between the Calapooia and Willamette Rivers. I’m sure we’ll see this stretch of road again, maybe including a stop for lunch or an early dinner at Gamboretti’s in Albany. It’s the sort of flat, easy, safe ride you could really enjoy at the end of an Italian meal at the end of the day.
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4 years ago
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Video sound track: You are So Rare, and Flippin’ Over You, by the Three Haircuts.
Video sound track: Feels Like Home, by Randy Newman
Ride stats today: 51 miles, 1,200’
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4 years ago