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Month: April 2022

Friday, April 29th: The Slowest Book Ever


Please be sure to check out the first post in this series and support A Ride for April. davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

It’s amazing what a difference elevation makes. Michigan does not have the extremes of elevation that your Virginias or your Colorados have but the first 3 days of this ride were subtly uphill most of the way. These last two have been subtly downhill and today’s 52 miles flew by, not even close to the slog I was expecting given my 61 mile day.

Only about of a third of the miles today were on trails but they were nice ones. That’s the Battle Creek Linear Park above and the Kalamazoo Valley Trail below.

In comparison to the long straight trails I’ve mostly been on, the KVT had some cool curvy spots so I could zoom through and pretend I was a racecar (yes, that’s the kind of thing you do when you’re biking all day).

I also had opportunities today to think about non-naturey topics. In downtown Battle Creek there was this impressive monument to the Underground Railroad.

And then as I got close to Kalamzoo, I passed this riverside encampment of folks who are apparently homeless. It wasn’t the first time I’d seen a discreet tent in an out of the way spot that was clearly where someone was living, but it was definitely the biggest grouping (the encampment goes on for like another 50 yards).

It made me think of the book I’ve been reading this trip called “Station Eleven.” It’s about a post apocalyptic society where a troupe of actors and musicians are traveling around Michigan. Those who remember the days before the collapse reflect on having things like electricity, flying in planes, being able to use the internet. Seeing those tents today it occurred to me that, if there was some apocalypse, there’d likely be a surprising number of people who wouldn’t know the difference.

On a lighter note, I also took notice when I saw signs for an upcoming historic marker. When I got there, it was a theater! The Barn Theatre is an equity house that’s been doing shows since 1954. Their sign declared hopefully “See you in June!” An equity house in rural central Michigan makes me very happy.

I had picked out “The Slowest Book Ever” to feature today because I thought I was going to be feeling it was the slowest day of the ride, given the mileage and knowing I’d be looking forward to a day off tomorrow. Even though it didn’t end up that way, this is a great book to talk about just because it’s quirky and fun. Here’s the warning April gives at the beginning:

“This is a S-L-O-W book. Do not read it while surfing, water skiing, or running to escape giant weasels…”

Thinking about reading while surfing is funny enough, even before the giant weasels. I went faster than I expected today. I’m looking forward to taking it S-L-O-W tomorrow!

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Thursday, April 28: One is a Snail, Ten is a Crab


Please be sure to check out the first post in this series and support A Ride for April. davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

This may have been the first time in 31 years Holly and I spent our anniversary apart. But sweetheart that she is, she sent me on my way with gifts and cards to open on my journey, so I’ve felt her with me the whole time. Love you, Mrs Timberline!

And even though I was wishing Holly was with me, it ended up being a pretty glorious day. For one, I made a friend. Well, maybe more of an acquaintance, but he was a cool guy. His name is Gary Mason and I chatted him up when I saw him taking trailside pictures.

Turns out that the birds I saw yesterday that I thought were herons are actually sand hill cranes! Gary was intently watching a breeding pair because one of their eggs had just hatched (you can see a bit of one of them in the pic above). He let me use his binoculars and it was amazing to see the little fluff ball on the nest.

Gary regularly posts on Facebook and I’ll include a link below to his shots from a couple weeks ago that show the cranes pre-fluff ball.

The first third of my day was spent on two pristine trails, the Inter-city Trail, that has recently been renamed for MLK (above), and the Falling Waters Trail where I met Gary (below).

Falling Waters has to be the best trail I’ve been on, definitely on this trip and possibly ever. As pictured, the trailheads not only feature nice landscapes, they also spotlight cool art. The trail surface was smooth as silk and the vistas beautiful. There was even actual falling water along the way (that’s a waterfall in the background below) and some real signs of spring.

I know I’ve already posted a lot of Michigan lakes but at one point the trail split between two large lovely lakes. It’s hard to capture how dramatic it is to be pedaling along through what is mostly woods and fields and then come upon a wide expansive of water. It can be pretty breathtaking.

The other two thirds of the ride were less picturesque but did have the benefit of some very welcome downhill stretches. I saw many acres of farmland which, this time of year, were clear and empty.

I’m now in a comfy motel in Marshall Michigan, resting up for tomorrow – my second longest day at almost 52 miles. Since I didn’t have much to share about today, I’ll relate something I forgot about yesterday. I stopped for a snack midway through yesterday’s marathon next to a dramatic looking tree. When I looked behind it, I saw it was next to a Biological Research Station (that’s what the sign says behind the tree below). For the next few miles as I road along the fenced area, I couldn’t help but think of “Stranger Things.” This place totally could have been the inspiration for that facility.

The book of April’s I thought of today was “One is a Snail, Ten is a Crab.” It’s one of those classic counting books but using the feet of animals to represent the numbers.

I thought this was appropriate because it’s a book April wrote with her husband Jeff and I love the idea of them hashing out ideas of how to get each number. I was also focused on a specific number all day (31). This was a book that was in regular rotation with our kids when they were little and thinking of it makes me very happy for the exposure my not-so-little-anymore kiddos got to a nature-centric way of thinking that runs through all of April’s books.

Finally, here’s a link to Gary Mason’s post that includes sand hill cranes. Enjoy!
m.facebook.com/gary.mason.3701/posts/pcb.10225739158017048/?photo_id=10225739142776667

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Wednesday, April 27: Feel the Fog


Please be sure to check out the first post in this series and support A Ride for April. davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

Exactly freezing. It was exactly 32 degrees when I set out this morning right before 10am. Weather reporter last night said it was 15-20 degrees below normal for this time of year. Well, I guess I can take some solace in that.

By 11am, it was 33. By noon, a balmy 34. The cold compelled me forward so I didn’t stop and take many pictures today.

But here’s the Walled Lake, that I passed just 2 miles into the ride. Central Michigan is chock full of beautiful lakes. Here’s another one.

Even as I was trudging on through the cold, I couldn’t help but feel grateful. I passed several construction crews and thought, I’m out here by choice, it’s not my job. I thought about how grateful I was that my panniers kept everything dry on that first rainy day, grateful that local and state governments had preserved the trails I was riding on (like the Huron Valley Trail, below), grateful I had the support of family and friends as I embarked on this ride.

Shortly after noon, small patches of blue skies appeared amidst the steel gray clouds. By two, I was actually riding in sunshine, a first for this trip. You can see shadows in the picture below.

This was my longest day: 61+ miles. For the first time, my body was seriously feeling it, particularly after mile 45. I spent most of the day on the Mike Levine Lakelands Trail. It is a lovely trail but also traverses horse country and farmland, pretty in its own way but not particularly photogenic. Here’s an example.

Right at the end of the trail there was a massive area of reedy wetland and herons were all over the place, and they weren’t so skittish so I got a couple good pics. The one below shows one prominent in the foreground and another one further back.

At the trail’s end, I was just 4 miles from my motel outside Jackson Michigan where mostly I collapsed. Sleeping in tomorrow before tackling a more rational 40 miles.

“Feel the Fog” is one of the books in April’s “Weather Walks” series, which is just a genius idea for something to focus a collection on. I picked it for today because, regardless of the weather, there are times when your mind gets a little foggy when you’re covering as much territory as I did today. There’s a great line in this book, “Fog limits what you can see, but it can expand what you imagine.” This book, like all the ones in the series, delivers answers to intriguing questions (e.g., “Why does fog feel cold?”) with lyrical language. April really was a one of kind talent.

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Tuesday, April 26: Endangered Birds of North America


Please be sure to check out the first post in this series and support A Ride for April. davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

It’s too early to tell but I think I may look back on today as one of the best days of this ride. It was the shortest mileage wise (just over 35) and most of it was on rail trails. Even though I was climbing all day, it was slow and steady. But most exciting: wildlife!

Back 35 years ago, when I worked for the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy, I regularly wrote marketing copy about how, among all their other benefits, rail trails were excellent wildlife corridors. I don’t think I really believed it back then but having spent chunks of two days on them, it’s no joke.

I spent the beginning of the day finishing up the Malcomb Orchard Trail (not Macon, an oops in yesterdays post). That’s me at the trail head in the first picture. I’ve seen about a thousand black squirrels and finally got a decent picture of one. Squirrels are mostly a nuisance at home, but the novelty of black ones makes their frequent appearances along the trails pretty charming.

The middle of the day was all Clinton River Trail. While it didn’t spend much time following a river and the surface was an often rough dirt or crushed rock, it regularly opened up into wide boggy wetlands full of cool birds. One little pond had trees dotted with nests, one of which had a Great Blue Heron in it.

I’ve seen a couple dozen red winged black birds which are delightful with their stuttering call and that flash of color as they zip by. (Sorry, they’re too skittish for me to have grabbed a good pic, but boy did I try!)

The day ended on the Michigan Air Line Trail, that was awesome both because of its smooth bike-friendly surface, but also some reedy marshy areas with big white birds I think might be egrets (???). I watched a pair for a while trying to get a good picture but they didn’t cooperate. Here’s a far away one of one of them flying away.

Today ends the first part of the trip I’ve been thinking of as “The Warm Up”: two relatively easy days. Tomorrow begins “The Trial”: three days with distances of 61, 40, and 51 miles. Oy. I’m a little sore just thinking about it.

I picked “Endangered Birds of North America” to feature today because birds were definitely on my mind all day. As April mentions in this book, the kinds of rural / suburban border areas that I was traveling through can be tricky for birds, and all wildlife really: natural oases surrounded by suburban hazards like cats, cars, and careless humans.

I read this book before I left on the trip and, even though it’s for middle schoolers, I learned a lot! One thing I appreciated about April was that she never talked down to her younger readers. This book doesn’t overwhelm you with science-talk but it delivers plenty of hard facts in April’s characteristically approachable way. https://www.amazon.com/Endangered-Birds-Scientific-American-Sourcebooks/dp/080504549X

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Monday, April 25: If You Should Hear a Honey Guide


Please be sure to check out the first post in this series and support A Ride for April. davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

Wow, that was a day! Beginnings can be rough and today kinda was.

First, I kinda downplayed my bike ride from the train station last night. It was only 3.5 miles but it was thru a steady rain. The cool part was the hotel was by a huge bridge heading over to Canada that looked super dramatic at night.

But the not so cool part was waking up with soaked shoes. After employing some small hotel garbage can liners over my socks, it was off to Lake Huron where a very nice lake-gazer relented to my picture request.

And then I was off! It was dreary but dry for the first half of the day. It enabled me to take in some local sights like this creepy mannequin on a roadside gate.

Then, perhaps ironically, as I pulled into Richmond Michigan is started pouring.

The semi-bright side of that was Richmond was the beginning of the Macon Orchard Rail Trail, a nice flat, peaceful ride, traffic free even if it was very damp.

A highlight of this trail was a bike bridge that had a barn facsimile on the top. Not sure why they chose that motif but it made for a cool bridge!

I eventually pulled into Romeo, quite a hopping little town. Sadly, I couldn’t find a nearby companion city named Juliet. 38 miles down – just 260 to go!

On this, my first day of biking, it seems fitting to feature “If You Should Hear a Honey Guide.” It was April’s first book so also a beginning for her. Written in the second person, April made this particularly appealing to children by writing it in the second person, essentially making the listener a character.

This was a favorite at our house when our girls were little and I think it gave us a little extra cache with the kids when we said we knew the person who wrote the book.

April has talked about how many times her first book was rejected, a hard thing to persevere through. I was thinking about that (and her) as I was trudging through the rain today.

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Sunday, April 24: It’s My City!


Please be sure to check out the first post in this series and support A Ride for April. davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

Today was a day of moving around: a tranquil couple hours spent in April’s backyard, then off to the airport, drive to Paw Paw, then to Kalamazoo, finally ending up in Port Huron. The only biking so far has been from the train station to my hotel.

But at least here’s a beautiful picture of my lovely wife by April’s backyard pond.

It seems like a good day to draw attention to April’s book, “It’s My City” with the subtitle “A Singing Map.”

It’s easy to pigeonhole April as someone who only wrote about nature but this book is a great reminder that she was an amazing, imaginative writer no matter what topic she turned her attention to. This book celebrates the urban environment and overflows with the sights and, even more so, the sounds that you only find in a city: clanking metal grates, noisy street vendors, whooshing trains, and more.

Tomorrow I’ll be hitting those streets for the beginning of this cross state adventure. Can’t wait!

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Saturday, April 23: Stars Beneath Your Bed


If you are new to this site, please read my initial post explaining my Ride4April: davidtimberline.com/a-ride-for-april/

Today was the celebration of April’s life and it was so many things: a moving tribute, an inspiring remembrance, a delightful display of her prodigious talents, an example of the enduring love between two humans, and much more. There was music, there was laughter, and there were a lot of tears.

I could try to capture the atmosphere but words wouldn’t do it justice. April was smart, funny, quirky, and productive (82 books!) and all of those aspects of her were on display. She influenced and connected with people from all over the world: talented, fun, eclectic people who, if they had anything in common besides April, shared a love of nature and a devotion to fostering creativity. It made the conversations struck up in the day’s transitions interesting and fun, and led to at least one exciting new connection that will continue into the future.

Among the dozens of books that could have been used as a centerpiece was “Stars Beneath Your Bed: The Surprising Story of Dust.” On a sign in the “Gallery of April” next to where the celebration was held, April is quoted as saying she thought it was probably her best writing. To me, it reflects her unique ability to explicate the extraordinary facets of even the most mundane aspects of life.

After the celebration, there was a reception & luncheon that had the most creative assemblage of food I have ever seen. April’s husband Jeff had consulted with a local chef, using April’s books as the inspiration for different dishes. The results were unbelievable, from a salad that looked like a garden of radishes and carrots to multilayered mousse tortes cradled in bowls of solid chocolate. Each dish had a themed “mocktail” that was equally surprising. In the midst of it all was an ice sculpture of a frog, one of April’s favorite subjects.

Holly and I both experienced too many feelings to enumerate, as did others who we talked to. But I think what all of us felt in various ways was extremely lucky to have known April, to have enjoyed her off-hand wit and unique blend of deep intelligence and genuine warmth. We are also lucky to have remnants of her beautiful life in her wonderful books. It will ensure that she will never really be gone, even after all us who loved her are no longer around.

Mental & Emotional Preparation

(If you are new to this site, please read my initial post explaining my Ride4April.)
As I have been getting ready for the memorial service for April beginning tomorrow, and for my bike ride afterwards, I’ve been reading through this great book that April wrote called, Unfold Your Brain.”
 
 
There are a lot of books about exploring creativity and releasing one’s artistic potential. This book provides a lot of specific tips and tricks. But the real joy in this book is the small peaks it gives into how April thought, how she worked, what inspired her and how she and her husband Jeff complemented each other in their creative endeavors.
 
 
If you don’t know April, other selling points about the book include the very small bite-sized chapters. Each delivers one bit of advice or example, usually supplemented with an activity, and then she moves on. She also has a completely original take on some aspects of creativity.
 
 
One chapter I particularly loved was called “The Shopping Urge, the Art Antidote” where she likens our desire to buy things with something she calls “blackberry greed.” She also throws in a Star Trek mention for the true nerds in the crowd.
 
 
Near the end, she digs into the economics of being an artist. She is blunt and honest and it’s great: encouraging aspiring artists without providing a sense of the challenges in store has always seemed unconscionable.
 
 
I’m hoping 300 miles on my bike will unfold my brains in new and interesting ways, and I’m in debt to April for giving me new tools for the journey.
 
 
Give her book a read — you won’t regret it!
 
 
And please support my Ride4April. Thanks!

Prep ride #2

Flat terrain and a flat tire looping around Emerald Isle

(If you’re new here, please see this post to learn what The Ride for April is all about or, if you already now, please click the button below and donate in support, please!)

My second preparatory ride for the 300 miles of the Ride For April was my most ambitious: almost 110 miles over 2 days. The big caveat: riding along the eastern coast of North Carolina is about the flattest terrain you can find.

Almost eight miles of the ride took almost two hours, navigating around 2-foot deep potholes.

That said, the ride wasn’t without its challenges. As pictured above, a big unpaved chunk of road was a big mess. I passed a pickup truck trying to navigate the same road; I was able to go at least a little faster than it could, dodging the worst bits of road.

Then on the second day, I got a flat tire just outside the lovely little town of Beaufort. Nice town but a flat still sucks, particularly when it’s the first time you’ve had to patch one on a relatively new bike. The remaining 25 miles of riding was a little anxious as I kept checking to see if my patch was holding.

But among the high points of the ride were two journeys on the Minnesott Beach ferry. On the first day, I was virtually by myself (top picture). On the way back, I shared the ride with an enormous construction vehicle. Just one of its tire was almost twice the size of my bike.

Also, on the first day, I started at a lovely coffee shop with a dragon in the adjacent pond and ended the day at the beach. Pretty sweet bookends to a long day!

Day one in red!

On the second day, I had to ride up and over some pretty steep bridges but the view from the top of them was gorgeous (sorry — couldn’t stop and snap a pic!) And even as I was feeling anxious post-flat on the second day, I rode by a house that reminded me that, all and all, my life is pretty fantastic!

Please tell your friends and family about The Ride for April and lend your support. Thanks!