We have been on this trip from Seaside, Oregon to Bar Harbor, Maine for 78 days; counting the day of travel to Seaside and the 4 days spent in Bar Harbor. We have traveled 4330 miles, fixed 8 flats, replaced 3 tires, worn out 1 wheel rim, 2 chains, and some brake pads. We had some close calls, but only had 2 crashes with blood (both mine, both low speed). Our next challenge is the logistics of getting home; us, bikes, Bob trailers, and equipment
. Arrangements must be made during business hours and on bicycle, until the bike too is shipped away, or on foot. Luckily, the Island of Desert (pronounced as something sweet to eat) has a wonderful bike friendly public transportation system. The buses have been available for 12 years connecting Acadia National Park, the small villages on the Island, and the Bar Harbor airport across the bridge in Trenton. We need a work day to manage logistics for getting home, so since we arrived on a Friday evening, it will be Tuesday before we can return home. Saturday we devote to getting oriented to Bar Harbor, Acadia National Park, and particulaly the bus system. Sunday we plan on riding bicycles to the top of Cadillac Mountain or along the Acadia Park carriage roads which are closed to motor vehicles. When we wake Sunday to rain though, we opt instead to explore the Desert Island’s other villages and to take the ferry to Cranberry Island. Being on the bus, in businesses, or in the ferry is good because It rains hard all day and well into the night. By Monday morning it has cleared and we have great weather for disassembling the trailers, taking them to the UPS office, and shipping them home. After arranging for the Bob trailers, we take the bus back to the campground, get the bikes, take them on the bus to the Green, ride to the bicycle shop, and arrange to have the bikes shipped. With all the bus travel and arrangements it actually takes us until 3:00 to get everything done. We stay at the Green in the center of Bar Harbor and have dinner. The Green is about a square block of park in the center of town. The bustransfer station is on one corner across from the Fire and Police stations. The Green is surrounded by restaurants and shops and is a natural gathering place and central location for people. On Tuesday morning we break camp, finish packing, and walk to the office of the Woodland KOA where we have been staying the last 4 nights. We talk to one of the KOA employees who is an avid bicycle rider and has toured herself. She is working to develop some ride-in camp sites specifically for bicycle riders, and asks our opinion on amenities. She talks about an electrical port, and a lock box for valuables and the bicycles. The 9:30 bus arrives, we ride to the airport for our flight home. Check-in, take off shoes, security check. The flight home seems in some way to be the opposite of how we have been traveling the last few weeks; from 30,000 feet the only mountains and hills I can see are the clouds floating above a perfectly flat landscape. We’ll be home by bed time.
— Sent from my Palm Pre