Distance: 97 miles
Average Speed: 18.8 mph
Terrain: Hilly for first 80%. Dead flat on the floodplain. 3400 feet of climbing.
Winds: Light tail to cross
Land of Lincoln! Out of Missouri! Crossing the Mighty Miss!
Question: To look at the old mansions in the center of Quincy, this place was once flush for real. I was expecting a beat to shit rustbelt town on the river, but it’s definitely not that. What was the source of the largesse? Anybody know? Post a comment.
It was kind of a weird riding day today. First, we had to improvise a route across the river because the ferry we intended to use was busted. So for the second half of the day we had a SAG van running around ahead of the group painting arrows on the road. Second, I was the only one that felt like going hard today. After yesterday there were some dead legs, and we’ve got a rest day coming up after tomorrow’s ride into Springfield. I think folks were taking it easy today to recover for going hard tomorrow and then recover from that over the rest day. Whatever the case, I had the creeping sensation over the second half of the day that I had outrun the SAG van and was about to do a Huck Finn down the river and double the distance getting back.
Anyway, I didn’t. It was tough terrain for most of the day. The Great Plains are a ripoff. They’re more like the Barely Plains.
Second question: Why do the people of Missouri have a Southern accent? Fakers! I was going to call a waitress on it, but then I thought, “What if she’s an alien? What if they’re all aliens working with bad information?” I decided not to trifle.
Going scattershot here. So, I finished off Missouri and found myself on a bridge going across the Mississippi. Now you got to understand this is a big river, and this bridge has no shoulder and only two lanes heading east, and it’s pretty darn busy. I couldn’t wait for the rest of the group or the SAG van. They were like an hour behind me. I understand this is no club ride and we’re riding roads one doesn’t usually ride, but I was looking at this thing going, “Huh. Really?” What you do is you gobble a gel and sprint for it. The problem is you’ve got 90 miles in some beat legs and that sprint isn’t going to be so sprint-like. This is an instance where you rely on adrenalized terror with which I’m richly supplied and gun it. I swear I hit the midpoint doing like 26 mph. The problem is this mother doesn’t have the arch of a regular bridge. It just keeps going up until you’re in Quincy. I don’t really know why I hadn’t sussed that out before I started this foolish venture, but on the other hand I can’t imagine that any of you are all that surprised that I didn’t. By the time I hit the end of the bridge all of the adrenaline had dribbled out of my terror, and I was out of the saddle pumping out a brisk 13 mph and wondering who the hell had run off with all of Sexybike’s low gears. Anyway, I guess in Illinois they’re used to dealing with the weirdness of the Missouri aliens because nobody ran my ass down and here I am clacking away.
Hannah’s got her junior prom tomorrow. I feel pretty bad about not being there. I would feel worse if I had any doubt at all that she can beat the shit out of her date. By such small favors….
Night all. Tornado warning here. It should have been in Kansas.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
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Andy. Congrats on crossing the Mississippi and passing the halfway point of your eastward trek. Your prompt to find out the source of Qincy's wealth led me to Wikipedia, where I found the following.
ReplyDelete--Quincy is known as the Gem city. While that suggests a possible source of its wealth, no mention was made of why it is thus named
--Quincy is the seat of Adams County, both of which were named for John Quincy Adams
--Quincy was a stop on the Underground Railroad
--Quincy earned a warm spot in the hearts of Mormons for taking in thousands of them who were chased out of Missouri on their westward trek
--a massive railroad bridge across the Mississippi makes Quincy an important trade center, a possible cause of its economic vitality
--Quincy was first settled by migrating Yankees who were followed by German immigrants. The German immigrants were a huge influence on the architecture, that is considered one of the highlights of the city and explains the many beautiful structures your saw
--Quincy is located on bluffs, which explains the archless bridge across the Mississippi
--two new words for me popped up in the Wikipedia article. Qincy is considered a "micropolis," ergo the Quincy "micropolitan" area
More than you wanted to know, but thanks for sending me on an information-gathering trip.
Ron
P.S. This is the second time to write this comment. The first one did not appear overnight, but in case two turn up . . . .
Maybe the southern accent was part of the Missouri. compromise"
ReplyDeleteOji
Andy - A little dose of terror in bike riding is always healthy - I will never forget by sprint down Patterson Ave (Rt 6) to pick up my car in the shop - nuts with all those dump trucks! Congrats on making it so far!
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