Great group rides in the NYC area
This spot is known as a place to view the hawks, eagles, kestrels and falcons soaring over the Hu... more
This spot is known as a place to view the hawks, eagles, kestrels and falcons soaring over the Hudson. This is one of our region's special places. You cannot believe you've pedaled from the city and will return in hours. On a clear day you can see several cities in Westchester plus Stamford in Connecticut and parts of Long Island.
Author: Carol Waaser
cw 11/26/23
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/6790816 (less)
This spot is known as a place to view the hawks, eagles, kestrels and falcons soaring over the Hudson. This is one of our region's special places. You cannot believe you've pedaled from the city and will re...more
This spot is known as a place to view the hawks, eagles, kestrels and falcons soaring over the Hudson. This is one of our region's special places. You cannot believe you've pedaled from the city and will return in hours. On a clear day you can see several cities in Westchester plus Stamford in Connecticut and parts of Long Island.
Author: Carol Waaser
cw 11/26/23
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/6790816 (less)
Great group rides in the NYC area
Go over the Brooklyn Bridge, wind your way through Brooklyn, and cross a number of bridges to rea... more
Go over the Brooklyn Bridge, wind your way through Brooklyn, and cross a number of bridges to reach Long Beach and ultimately Point Lookout. Ride along the board walk in Long Beach for the fun of it, pick up lunch and eat in the shade on picnic tables on the beach at Point Lookout. The way back goes through Sheepshead Bay and Prospect Park. Or you can shorten the ride by 23 miles if you take the A train back from the Rockaways.
Author: Adrienne Browning
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/7844074 (less)
Go over the Brooklyn Bridge, wind your way through Brooklyn, and cross a number of bridges to reach Long Beach and ultimately Point Lookout. Ride along the board walk in Long Beach for the fun of it, pick u...more
Go over the Brooklyn Bridge, wind your way through Brooklyn, and cross a number of bridges to reach Long Beach and ultimately Point Lookout. Ride along the board walk in Long Beach for the fun of it, pick up lunch and eat in the shade on picnic tables on the beach at Point Lookout. The way back goes through Sheepshead Bay and Prospect Park. Or you can shorten the ride by 23 miles if you take the A train back from the Rockaways.
Author: Adrienne Browning
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/7844074 (less)
Great group rides in the NYC area
This is a gorgeous route through wooded countryside, past reservoirs. There are lots of hills (th... more
This is a gorgeous route through wooded countryside, past reservoirs. There are lots of hills (though no real climbs), but also lots of bailouts on Metro North. The ride begins with a train from Grand Central Terminal to White Plains.
White Plains train station has restrooms and a magazine stand with cold drinks & candy. The first pit stop is in 13.5 miles but has no food, so bring pocket food with you from home. You'll be in traffic for the first mile and a half, but then it eases off. Much of the route is ex-urban, with wooded areas, reservoirs and expansive homes (some visible, some not)
Nine miles into the ride you cross into Connecticut and ride through wooded rolling hills to the Audubon Society, where you find the first opportunity for a pit stop. Enter the grounds and ride down the drive to the building. Restrooms are to the right upon entering. Check out the exhibits and gift shop if you've a mind.
John Street and Round Hill Road lead you back into New York State past low stone walls that define the Greenwich estates and white board fences separating the horse pastures. Deeper woods and more stone walls line Bedford-Banksville Road, four miles of rollers - let your momentum carry you from one hill to the next into the village of Bedford. There you'll find a couple of delis. If the weather's nice, eat out on the Village Green. Restrooms are in the Public Library (leave a donation in the box) or downstairs in the movie theatre.
Continue riding through more idylic countryside as you pass through Pound Ridge and partially circle the Ward Pound Ridge Reservation. A gas station on the right as you turn onto NY-35 will be your only opportunity for a pit stop for another 12 miles.
Four-tenths of a mile after you turn onto Mead Street, you'll see a lovely stone chapel on the left. Gear down! Mead makes a righthand curve onto a sharp little hill. It's a "gotcha" if you're in the wrong gear.
NY-116/Titcus Road takes you past the Titicus Reservoir in North Salem. Your eyes will be on the gorgeous scenery, but beware of some rough road. There's no shoulder and there will be some cars, so be careful if you're swinging out around a rough patch.
At mile 41.9, you'll find the Purdys Metro North train station, if you want to shorten the ride. You'll see the road down to the station just after you cross over I-684. On weekends trains leave for Manhattan every hour (currently at 23 minutes past the hour).
After Purdys, you'll bear left on NY-100; then make a right into the Somerstown Shopping Center where you'll find a Bagel shop. This is your last opportunity for food, water and restrooms for the next 24 miles. For the next 10 miles you'll be on busy Rte. 100. There's a wide shoulder for most of this, but the last mile has no shoulder.
When you make the right onto Hardscrabble, be prepared to gear down. In very short order you'll be on a steep section of a 0.7-mile hill. (The RWGPS profile doesn't show it, but many a Garmin has read 10% at the beginning of the hill.) Hardscrabble is a lovely 4-mile long rollercoaster...have fun!
In another 12 miles, you'll be in Tarrytown. Mrs. Green's Market is a nice place to pick up some food & drink. Restrooms are downstairs past the coffee bar. You can catch the train back to Manhattan at the Tarrytown Metro North Station.
The final 25 miles still hold some interest, in particular the nice views over the Hudson River. But you're getting back into traffic, suburbs and eventually city riding. Broadway (US-9) coming south from Tarrytown is busy and has some rough road. There isn't a real shoulder, but the lane is wide so the cars shouldn't feel right on top of you. Warburton has some lovely sections. Watch for pedestrians as you pass through Hastings. Yonkers, where it turns into Riverdale Ave. will feel busy, and soon enough you'll be back in the Bronx, where you can pick up the subway or ride all the way back into Midtown.
Important Reminders
You'll take the train from Grand Central to White Plains at the start, and you may want to shorten the ride by taking the train home from Purdys or Tarrytown.
Bring pocket food and fluids - there are longer stretches without stops.
Author: Carol Waaser
rs 11/25/23
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/7587389 (less)
This is a gorgeous route through wooded countryside, past reservoirs. There are lots of hills (though no real climbs), but also lots of bailouts on Metro North. The ride begins with a train from Grand Centra...more
This is a gorgeous route through wooded countryside, past reservoirs. There are lots of hills (though no real climbs), but also lots of bailouts on Metro North. The ride begins with a train from Grand Central Terminal to White Plains.
White Plains train station has restrooms and a magazine stand with cold drinks & candy. The first pit stop is in 13.5 miles but has no food, so bring pocket food with you from home. You'll be in traffic for the first mile and a half, but then it eases off. Much of the route is ex-urban, with wooded areas, reservoirs and expansive homes (some visible, some not)
Nine miles into the ride you cross into Connecticut and ride through wooded rolling hills to the Audubon Society, where you find the first opportunity for a pit stop. Enter the grounds and ride down the drive to the building. Restrooms are to the right upon entering. Check out the exhibits and gift shop if you've a mind.
John Street and Round Hill Road lead you back into New York State past low stone walls that define the Greenwich estates and white board fences separating the horse pastures. Deeper woods and more stone walls line Bedford-Banksville Road, four miles of rollers - let your momentum carry you from one hill to the next into the village of Bedford. There you'll find a couple of delis. If the weather's nice, eat out on the Village Green. Restrooms are in the Public Library (leave a donation in the box) or downstairs in the movie theatre.
Continue riding through more idylic countryside as you pass through Pound Ridge and partially circle the Ward Pound Ridge Reservation. A gas station on the right as you turn onto NY-35 will be your only opportunity for a pit stop for another 12 miles.
Four-tenths of a mile after you turn onto Mead Street, you'll see a lovely stone chapel on the left. Gear down! Mead makes a righthand curve onto a sharp little hill. It's a "gotcha" if you're in the wrong gear.
NY-116/Titcus Road takes you past the Titicus Reservoir in North Salem. Your eyes will be on the gorgeous scenery, but beware of some rough road. There's no shoulder and there will be some cars, so be careful if you're swinging out around a rough patch.
At mile 41.9, you'll find the Purdys Metro North train station, if you want to shorten the ride. You'll see the road down to the station just after you cross over I-684. On weekends trains leave for Manhattan every hour (currently at 23 minutes past the hour).
After Purdys, you'll bear left on NY-100; then make a right into the Somerstown Shopping Center where you'll find a Bagel shop. This is your last opportunity for food, water and restrooms for the next 24 miles. For the next 10 miles you'll be on busy Rte. 100. There's a wide shoulder for most of this, but the last mile has no shoulder.
When you make the right onto Hardscrabble, be prepared to gear down. In very short order you'll be on a steep section of a 0.7-mile hill. (The RWGPS profile doesn't show it, but many a Garmin has read 10% at the beginning of the hill.) Hardscrabble is a lovely 4-mile long rollercoaster...have fun!
In another 12 miles, you'll be in Tarrytown. Mrs. Green's Market is a nice place to pick up some food & drink. Restrooms are downstairs past the coffee bar. You can catch the train back to Manhattan at the Tarrytown Metro North Station.
The final 25 miles still hold some interest, in particular the nice views over the Hudson River. But you're getting back into traffic, suburbs and eventually city riding. Broadway (US-9) coming south from Tarrytown is busy and has some rough road. There isn't a real shoulder, but the lane is wide so the cars shouldn't feel right on top of you. Warburton has some lovely sections. Watch for pedestrians as you pass through Hastings. Yonkers, where it turns into Riverdale Ave. will feel busy, and soon enough you'll be back in the Bronx, where you can pick up the subway or ride all the way back into Midtown.
Important Reminders
You'll take the train from Grand Central to White Plains at the start, and you may want to shorten the ride by taking the train home from Purdys or Tarrytown.
Bring pocket food and fluids - there are longer stretches without stops.
Author: Carol Waaser
rs 11/25/23
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/7587389 (less)
Great group rides in the NYC area
Do you like climbs and spectacular views? This ride's for you. It's 90 miles with about 7,000 ve... more
Do you like climbs and spectacular views? This ride's for you. It's 90 miles with about 7,000 vertical feet, with rock ledges and dwarf pitch pine forests.
The "triple rhubarb." Mohonk, Clove Valley-Minnewaska, and Craigsmoor out of Ellenville, with the heinie kicker Oregon Trail, as Zorba would say: the whole castastrophe. But a meal fit for a king. We wouldn't have it any other way.
92 mile (or abreviated 81 miler) NYCC Labor Day A ride classic. Features long climbs and descents with spectacular views of the Shwangunk and Catskill mountains. 5000’– 6000’+/- vertical depending on route. Shorter, 81 mile option splits from the main route after 20 miles, ascending Rt 44/55 up the hairpin, then rejoins in Kerhonksen. The longer (93 miles) route climbs Mohonk, then Clove Valley Road to rejoin shorter route on Rt 44/55. Lunch in Kerhonkson. The ride climbs Rt 52 out of Ellenville /w optional Cragsmoor climb (S. Gully Rd, on second cue sheet (left on Rt 52 from Berme, Ellenville in 0.7 miles onto Mt Meenahga Rd) to Cragsmoor, which is one of the toughest ascents in our purview). If the weather is clear, don't miss the view north to the high Catskills from the Old Stone Church at Cragsmoor!
Note: the Mohonk/ Rt 52 ascent from Ellenville is the original, classic route.
Author: Fred Steinberg
HS 11/15/2023
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/7166333 (less)
Do you like climbs and spectacular views? This ride's for you. It's 90 miles with about 7,000 vertical feet, with rock ledges and dwarf pitch pine forests. The "triple rhubarb." Mohonk, Clove Valley-Minnew...more
Do you like climbs and spectacular views? This ride's for you. It's 90 miles with about 7,000 vertical feet, with rock ledges and dwarf pitch pine forests.
The "triple rhubarb." Mohonk, Clove Valley-Minnewaska, and Craigsmoor out of Ellenville, with the heinie kicker Oregon Trail, as Zorba would say: the whole castastrophe. But a meal fit for a king. We wouldn't have it any other way.
92 mile (or abreviated 81 miler) NYCC Labor Day A ride classic. Features long climbs and descents with spectacular views of the Shwangunk and Catskill mountains. 5000’– 6000’+/- vertical depending on route. Shorter, 81 mile option splits from the main route after 20 miles, ascending Rt 44/55 up the hairpin, then rejoins in Kerhonksen. The longer (93 miles) route climbs Mohonk, then Clove Valley Road to rejoin shorter route on Rt 44/55. Lunch in Kerhonkson. The ride climbs Rt 52 out of Ellenville /w optional Cragsmoor climb (S. Gully Rd, on second cue sheet (left on Rt 52 from Berme, Ellenville in 0.7 miles onto Mt Meenahga Rd) to Cragsmoor, which is one of the toughest ascents in our purview). If the weather is clear, don't miss the view north to the high Catskills from the Old Stone Church at Cragsmoor!
Note: the Mohonk/ Rt 52 ascent from Ellenville is the original, classic route.
Author: Fred Steinberg
HS 11/15/2023
Roboviva Cue Sheet: http://snuggl.es/roboviva/routes/7166333 (less)
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