We rode for about 2.5 hours on Sunday. We started from a parking lot at Route 20 in East Granby (Turkey Hills Road between Newgate and Canal Roads) and rode north on the Farmington Canal Heritage Trail (map 36 and map 38). This is multi-use trail that runs along abandoned rail corridors. The Farmington Valley Trails Council offers a sensational map of this route.
We continued to pedal on the paved asphalt trail as it made its way into Massachusetts as the Southwick Rail Trail. Further along, it turned into the Columbia Greenway Rail Trail (see google map).
We stopped a few times to regroup. When the trail ended in Westfield, about seven miles from the Connecticut border, we ate a snack and turned around.
This was an especially easy ride, but the pace was tediously slow. Average speed was ten miles per hour. At one point I broke into a mad dash just to get some exercise. When we reached the cars on the return trip, we still needed to pedal a few more miles to reach the 25-mile mark, so we continued south, crossing Route 189 and Salmon Brook before returning to the parking lot.
It was a gorgeous day, sunny, with temperatures in the upper-70s. Many pedestrians and cyclists were also enjoying the trail. Our group was large with 15 or more cyclists. The youngest scouts did well, but I wonder if a few will be able to complete the 50-mile ride in a few weeks.
Keeping track of mileage was easy, thanks to my new Bontrager Trip 2 computer. Somewhat a chore to install (perhaps I should have purchased the more expensive, wireless version), it was a welcome companion on this trip.
NOTE: Convenient, trailhead parking is available at several spots elsewhere along the route:
- Copper Hill Road
- Phelps Road (just south of the Mass. border)
- Miller and Congamond Roads in Southwick
- Shaker Road (at Shaker Farms Country Club)