Hi, all,
I admit to not riding the upper keys from ~mm 60 up in to Key Largo at
mm 106 (one day soon I will)...but I have ridden extensively from NE of
Marathon down to Key West...a lot around Big Pine area between mm45 - mm15
near Sugar Loaf, all of it in the summer Jun-Jul-Aug.
Here's how to survive:
1 - run Kevlar 28+ mm on a road bike...flats are not an option on long
bridges with 55 mph traffic. (Carry TWO tubes, anyway.) But, you can still
easily cruise through anything like back country lime rock on Big Pine Key,
crumbling asphalt, etc...or still fly at 25+ mph on smooth concrete.
1a- ALWAYS pack TWO bottles...3 is even better...I've had to struggle
home in a changing headwind and a 1-2 hour ride turns in to 3+ hours...glad
I had the fluid...although there are plenty of places to stop for fluid...I
just like to be self sufficient.
1b - ALWAYS pack sun lotion and protect yourself from sunburn.
2 - when possible stay left near the painted line...the very right
edge of the bike lane is usually filled with sharp objects...limerock,
metal, beer bottle glass, etc. Be aware of where the approaching traffic is
though....don't get surprised in a headwind from behind-you traffic you
cannot hear.
3 - ride early on weekends to avoid heat (in summer) and heavy
traffic.. But frankly, I've never seen "heavy" traffic, not compared
to what I have ridden other places. Most speed limits on the islands
are 40 mph, often less, so I've never had a close call or felt
uncomfortable with the speed of normal traffic. Even on the 55 mph bridges,
the side lanes are so WIDE you have plenty of room to stay near the
wall...but mind the sharp objects.
3a- check out the side rides on Marathon, Big Pine and No Name, Sugar
Loaf...you can ride for many miles with nary a car, beautiful suburbs, cool
limerock roads, Key deer, amazing isolated beaches...I found the house and
bridge featured at the end of the Miami Vice remake movie...hint: it is nr
Sugar Loaf....while just cruising from Big Pine Key. You can't get
lost...just ride.
4 - on weekdays, you may as well wait till after 8-9 am to let
business commuters get to work...then be prepared to ride in increasing
heat. I warn you, you better be back home ~12 noon before afternoon rains
start...if not sooner. Or, just have a rain plan for wherever you may
be.
4a - ride after the rain in later afternoon/early evening...but be
aware of afternoon commuters ~4-6 pm and happy hour commuters from 6-8
pm
4b - riding on the strip islands between the mangroves is HOT...no
wind, sun beating down, 90+% humidity...be prepared for it.
5 - ride upwind first (usually eastward)...the wind in the keys over
the bridges can hit 15-25 mph on a "calm" day on an island down in the
mangroves. Then when you head home (westward), you can sit up and
hammer at 25-30 mph with that tail wind.
6 - The riding in Marathon is mostly slow...in places, you will have
to ride the sidewalks and be aware of crossing intersections. Just
sit up, enjoy the view, stop in somewhere for key lime pie or a fish
sandwich and a beer, then keep heading south. Completed trail is on the
north part of the island...do your homework.
7 - the 7 mile bridge ride is indeed awesome...with the wind pushing
me at 25+ mph it has been one of the most exciting 15-20 minute rides I
have ever done...going downhill in GA is the only comparable
experience...just no twists...all straight ahead pushing the speed to
whatever your guts can handle.
8 - Traffic as you go south always seems to thin out...yea, there are
pockets of heavier traffic (Big Pine, Sugar Loaf, near the Air Base)...but
riding to Key West is a smooth sometimes lonely ride...once you get to Key
West, heads up for combat heavy traffic riding. Do your homework for
alternate roads that start just past the Stock Island bridge and take you
down the middle of the island through KW 'hoods on wider &/or quieter
roads. There are cut-through alleys I'm not sure are on any
map. There are amazing places no average tourist ever sees.
Again, applying common sense and defensive riding, I've never had a problem
in Key West. Visit the light house, Ft Z Taylor, the southernmost
point, etc, etc.....by bike. I'd avoid Duval St/old town area...too much
crazy traffic for bicycles...walk that.
Maybe I will see you there this summer...Bob
Howland |
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