Bikes build bridges
I was commissioned by Max to write about this bridge. Five of us walked across the “truss” bridge in Damascus, VA, the place called “trail town USA” since it sits as midpoint town on the Creeper trail, a 34-mile long rails-to-trails path.
I would say bridges are part of the landscape of all cycling pursuits. Sections of roadway or trail are determined and named at the start and end of a bridge (or tunnel). The bridge means less than the roadway leading to the bridge—don’t they serve as end punctuation or launch points of where, more importantly, the road will take you? So perhaps the most interesting bridges are those that have been repurposed into something other their original design, like the truss bridge in Damascus. The truss bridges and majestic trestles (2nd bridge) are super overbuilt by cycling standards. Therefore, Creeper trail bridges become a destination rather than a thoroughfare, monuments rather than crossings. They bring us closer to a way of life that pivoted around the railroad 100 years ago, one that newer technologies have taken from us, only to be returned through the simplicity of cycling. (All Creeper bridges pictured here.)
Photos from the trip.
Iron Mountain 100k Race Information. Sweet race!
(Pictured left is Bethany's prized Crosscheck Surly).
1 comment:
I felt myself riding gentle path through soft green and brown woods as I read this. Except I was a little nervous about the Lions and Tigers and Bears. Thank you again for sharing a slice of your heaven.
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