March 15, 2023
Sculpture and Saguaros
Finding some joy on a cloudy day
We had a fun, photo-free mountain bike ride yesterday with the beginner group at the RV park. I haven't fussed with the camera on these group rides. We're just focused on learning as much as we can from people who are kind enough to show us the ropes. One of these days I'll take a few moments to grab some photos.
Today we're getting a leisurely start. I'm buried in the journal and Barry assures me he is in no rush to get started; he's happy to keep the ride short. We have a date for dinner with our friend Lorraine Glazar in the Catalina Foothills. That will get us closer to the beautiful swoopy eight-mile loop road through Saguaro East National Park. I had a longer ride in mind to get there from the Rillito River bike path but the dawdling this morning and light drizzle off and on this afternoon have reset our ambitions.
On the way to the Saguaro national park we stop by the sculpture park at Brandi Fenton Memorial Park. It's right on the Rillito River bike path, three miles east of the race track, and I only know about it because Lorraine suggested we stop by. I'm so happy she did. The park has a juried exhibit of 16 large-scale sculptures chosen to evoke joy. They are indeed joyful. We both feel a little lighter on this grey day, smiling as we wander among the art. Here are a few favorites that we kept circling, with a bit of the artists' statements.
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After this, a shot of exercise endorphins will be gravy. We drive on over to Saguaro East National Park, unload the bikes and pedal out on the eight mile one-way loop. The crowds are sparse mid-week and the drivers are in no hurry.
Right away the road drops sharply to a series of steep, fun rollers, then starts a gradual climb. I've heard some cyclists do laps on this park road; it's not a bad idea. A solitary blue patch of sky splits the clouds for a little while.
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At the end I'm eager to keep going. I had seen some advice from Kelly Iniguez to take the Old Spanish Trail west towards the Loop and I'm curious to see how what it's like. Barry cheerfully agrees to meet me a ways down the road. It turns out there's a bike path next to the Old Spanish Trail that goes six miles to Broadway. At 22nd Street by the Target they've built a tunnel for the path to get cyclists past a tricky intersection. I continue to be amazed by the investment in bike facilities here.
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I've bicycled to Saguaro Park twice this week. I always go up Old Spanish Trail, then come back on Valencia. Perhaps if I reverse directions, I would see the underpass? I tried riding on that bike path once. It had horrible heaves, with plants growing in the cracks. The roadway has a good shoulder, so I moved on over and never looked back.
Did you see any other riders on the path or the underpass? I frequently see riders on the road there. Never the path.
I've gone right now to the mapping feature on RWGPS to try and figure it out. I looked at your ride map. I can see it now. How about that.
1 year ago
1 year ago
We have a lovely dinner at Lorraine's home in the foothills, and I'm so engrossed in the conversation that I don't even think to capture a photo of us together. Looking forward to remedying that on our next visit here.
Today's ride: 15 miles (24 km)
Total: 683 miles (1,099 km)
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The last time I was there, a Backroads Bicycle Tours group was looping around. That's the most riders I've ever seen. I've never seen another recumbent, except the time that AD Carson organized a club ride.
1 year ago