Sasquatch always has the right of way |
Today has been a bit cooler so I got out early for one of my favorite summer brunch rides, from Ferndale to Blaine, with a lunch break at the Mexican Grill. This time I did my usual route in reverse, going clockwise. Usually I head out of town on Enterprise Road and ride the fairly flat farm roads to Blaine then take the water-side route coming home.
Today I started with a stiff one-mile climb up Vista Drive to Church Road. After that comes some not-too-hard rolling hills and flat roads to Birch Bay. I rode the scenic route by the beach, then on to the hillier, wooded road over the bluff, past some pricey view houses and the Semiahmoo golf course development. Then there's a big, kind of scary downhill just before the turn-off to Blaine via Peace Portal Drive. It was 24 miles to the Mexican Grill where I ordered my favorite fish tacos, after stopping in at Starbucks for a 16oz iced americano. After the hilly start I was very hungry and glad to enjoy a favorite treat.
The Blaine Music Festival is going on this weekend, and the town is still decked out for the 4th of July. While I was in town I stopped at the Visitor's Center to ask about bicycling across the border. Google Maps said cyclists have to use the truck crossing now, but the nice lady at the desk said we can still just walk/ride through Peace Arch Park to the Canadian Border offices. (I'm planning ahead for another excursion.)
Retracing my usual route backwards was a little tricky and I was pretty hot and tired by the time I got close to Ferndale. In the last few miles I got that painful sensation of having a large rock in my right shoe just at the base of my toes but I stretched my leg out and straightened my back on the bike, which helped enough to get me back home. It was a 45-mile round-trip.
This weekend the Ragnar relay race is on, with runners on the road starting at the border, passing through Bellingham, and ending 200 miles later, on Whidbey Island. It's billed as a Northwest Passage event, one of those things that any Pacific Northwesterner who wants to call themselves a runner/biker has to do once. Kind of like the Seattle-to-Portland bike ride, except that Ragnar looks like much more of a painful ordeal, to be running on paved roads in the heat.
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