Author Topic: Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.  (Read 2560 times)

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Westinghouse

Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.
« on: December 16, 2024, 01:40:52 am »
You can cycle many miles of interstate highways. You can expect many multiples of punctures in your tubes. They are punctured by radial wires. You will suffer far fewer flats on the mapped bicycle routes.

Mapped routes could ensnare you in the convenience-store trap. Multiple dinky little towns where cafes are closed, where only health-altering junk foods are available are irresistable to energy-hungry bicycle tourists.  Going your way gives freedom to chart a course where real nutrition is available

Using unknown roads could get you into a jam, e.g., extreme noise, pollution, fast and furious insane traffic, grueling long climbs, crumbling deteriorated road-surfaces, unanticipated complications. The ACA mapped routes are very well known. Those problems are solved for you before you spin your first revolution.

Using mapped bike routes, you are just another cyclist passing through. Same old, different day. Adventuring your way could take you to places where cyclists never travel, and here you are the talk-of-the-town. I cycled through a foreign country that showed on television secretly-recorded videos of me cycling there. I have no idea how they got those pictures. I had no idea until I cycled into these villages. People approached me in the streets. "American, American. You are on TV television."

Five times for me from Florida to California. Twice from FL to El Paso, Texas. Mostly I free-camped. Quite a few motels. Van Horn was my favorite. Used designated campgrounds only a few times. I took many routes not on the ACA maps. I took many that are on the maps. On a broad scale of equalities, I say using the mapped routes is the best way to go. But not always because of variables.
« Last Edit: December 24, 2024, 12:35:17 pm by Westinghouse »

Online davidbonn

Re: Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.
« Reply #1 on: December 17, 2024, 04:48:12 pm »
I think a lot of the adventure in bicycle travel comes from planning your own adventure and discovering stuff along the way.  Some of my very favorite places to tour aren't on any "official" routes.

Yes, sometimes the Route Gods smile upon you.  Sometimes They smirk.  Sometimes They sneer, and sometimes They snarl.  But if you remain flexible, patient, and keep a positive mental outlook you can get through most any challenge.

You can also go a long way on route planning with judicious use of ridewithgps heatmaps (or any cycling apps' heatmaps) and Google Street View.  I also like to block out some time every few days on tour so I can call around and do some research.  I've been burned often enough by a campground or local store being closed.  Worse, when a city park has its water shut off so I can't jug up or use the loo.

I think a lot of ACA routes were laid out decades ago in a country with far fewer people and far less traffic.

Offline Westinghouse

Re: Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.
« Reply #2 on: December 19, 2024, 08:56:46 am »
People change, populations change, towns change, roads change, businesses change, conditions change, prices change. Routing maps for cyclists should flex and change with the times and the unstable conditions. If they do not change, they risk obsolescence.

Offline Westinghouse

Re: Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.
« Reply #3 on: March 18, 2025, 09:26:33 pm »
Using the bicycle option in Google maps, I wrote down a route from southeast coastal Florida to Ocotillo, California. And if you cannot get from Ocotillo to San Diego on dead reckoning, there is no way you could have gotten to Ocotillo. It is that very small settlement just where you begin to climb to over 3000 feet elevation going west on Interstate 8. Restaurant, small motel, small store, small population and many white wind-turbine towers marring the land.

It is written out in detail, double and triple checked. It is not offered to anyone for using. Well, maybe for getting through a large city. Anyone planning bicycling the southern tier, as I have done five crossings, ----Use maps from Adventure Cycling Association. It takes a lot of the guess-work out of it. My route looks good, and I was careful to choose roads with shoulders and side-lanes, however, it is unknown. The pre-mapped routes from ACA are well known. The popular ones seem to have developed a bicycling infrastructure. On these routes you are very likely to meet others going your direction, and the other way. If you want pre-mapped bicycle routes, get them from ACA.

Offline ray b

Re: Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.
« Reply #4 on: March 19, 2025, 06:39:20 pm »
If adventure comes from meeting the unexpected, then the choice comes down to how much adventure one wants (or can tolerate).
“A good man always knows his limitations.”

Offline Westinghouse

Re: Contrasting the ACA route and any way you want to go.
« Reply #5 on: April 11, 2025, 11:37:31 pm »
If adventure comes from meeting the unexpected, then the choice comes down to how much adventure one wants (or can tolerate).

Some unexpecteds were as light as a feather. Others were weightier than Mount Tai.