Recent build and ride…
posted by admin ~ February 17thLast of the 09 Cinelli’s…
I had heard via Faster Mustache and Fresh Loaf about some of the Beltline trail being “opened up” (physically not officially)…No matter how technically advanced the eventual execution(if it ever happens) of the project it’s a trail at best right now.
I knew that a good bit of it has been sucessfully mountain biked recently, and I figured with the recent snow maybe a good bit of trail would be rideable on my cross bike. That idea being a good enough reason for me, I checked out some online maps. The beltline peoples website is super helpfull in that regard so I got a pretty good feel for likely easy access points of which there are plenty. My three points of interest were Glenwood, MLK, and behind piedmont park.
Somebody else can review it from a mountain or 29er or pugsley perspective and I bet they’d see it in a whole different light.
My first intersection point was the derelict sand/gravel hoppers on Glenwood. I picked this one first because it was the closest and I had a feeling that it wasn’t going to work out so well and I like setting the bar low to start. Sure enough it was only rideable for maybe an eigth of a mile, and then turned into a beach. At that point it didn’t look like it would even be fun on a mountain bike, and I bailed off onto a muddy side street that was pretty fun.
Rode on out MLK, I basically knew that there was a foot bridge over MLK that in pictures online looked like it had good looking trail going at least one way from that point. I went south first. The trail is mostly dirt with a bunch of dead/smashed down kudzu vine on top of it with sections of railroad ballast. It made for bumpy medium paced travel and immediately made me start wondering how big a tire I can fit on this thing 40’s maybe bigger possibly…I hadn’t put air in my tires for a few weeks so didn’t really want to let much more out. Rode that for a good distance until the trail underpasses a road and intersects with what appears to be bikepath in construction, all the melted snow and loose clay formed an ankle to schin deep bog and I didn’t feel like wading through to get to the other side of the trail which continued on….how far? well I turned back so that’s a mystery for another day. I doubled back and went north from MLK, a short little section with maybe more ballast than the other that deadends at active Marta line. I’m sure that the beltline plans to build a bridge or tunnel over it and join up with the trail somewhere on the other side, I just turned around and put my big hopes on Piedmont.
Piedmont was last, and it had my highest hopes. Destinations at both ends Highlander/Astoria, Midtown/Reynoldstown, Piedmont park/Grant Park. It’s a section that I could see myself incorporating into a longer “recreational ride” or a fun diversion on what would otherwise be boring old “transportation”. Mixing the recreational and the transportational is the usual goal for me. Look for the big piles of railroad tracks everywhere on Monroe south of Intown Bikes. I didn’t bother going north but they were ripped up in that direction too so there could be more to ride over that way. As I got on I saw some guy on a lefty urbanish hucking machine he was eyeing me down hopefully maybe he had just ridden it and thought I didn’t have a chance or maybe once he saw me dissapear he gave it a shot… The trail didn’t dissapoint lots of mud, a little bit of ballast but generally awash in packed dirt/mud, some of the same kudzu vine over dirt/ballast but not enough to really annoy me. You basically just pick your way down the trail through the ruts of the trucks they used to transport the machinery and work crews who ripped up all the railroad ties. You have to think a little avoiding big ruts/loose ballast piles, sharp metal, and stacks of railroad ties that the trail kind of winds in around and through. The bridge over ponce is a tad sketch, I just portaged the bike and looked where I was stepping. You wouldn’t want to fall all the way through… There are a few road crossings and a bridge over north avenue that is pretty cool and rideable. Once I was over ponce I got to the point where I was keeping up a good bit of speeed, and the trail stays well paced and rideable until it dumps you out at Dekalb and Airline. All in all maybe two miles of off road riding in the middle of the city not too bad.
I will try to do regularly for as long as it lasts. Now the only question is what kind of tires to try out next. Something bigger than a 35… good on the street dirt and gravel. Lots of choices from Panaracer, Schwalbe, and Conti, or maybe just go with the biggest tire we have in stock.
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