Morning ride
My vest chatters as I zip it up all the way to my chin and keep pedaling. The cold is intense. I may have made a mistake…
A street light near a little Swiss bakery looks inviting. My rain jacket is along on the ride, just in case… and it seems this is the case where every layer matters. I adjust the jacket, and peer at the bakery. Is it Swiss, or German? I can’t tell. Doesn’t matter. It’s not open yet. I’m out before the bakers this morning.
The GPS tells me to keep riding on this narrow road through this little town. Somewhere out ahead in the dark, my path jogs to the right, then keeps going north, climbing slowly but steadily… My tires chatter along on the cobbles as I start up again.
The little town fades away behind me. The bike path follows a stream, flanks a field and then - wow! I’ve never seen this before on a bike path! - it takes me past a country border sign. “Deutschland.” That answers my question…
Shivers overtake my arms. My fingers are going numb. I want to ride harder to warm up, but then the pre-dawn air would get even colder… plus I’ve no idea where this road goes.. so I ride cautiously. And keep shivering. There’s no going back to the city at this point, so I refuse to check the temperature. I just don’t want to know.
This route is genius, though. Whoever created it seems to know every bike path, every quiet road, every hack to avoid intersections. The unknown rider leads me along a river for a mile or two, through a tunnel under a highway, then up the valley on a one-lane road, heading toward who-knows-what. I send a mental note of thanks to that rider, the demigods of the Internet, and the gang behind RideWithGPS… without them, I’d probably be trying to find my way out of Basel on the dull, busy roads… or maybe I’d still be sleeping peacefully in my hotel room.
An industrial zone takes the land back from the farms. Folks in blue coveralls are at work inside brightly lit factories, reminding me to be happy I’m on a bike. Even if I’m freeking cold.
Whoa! Route failure… I’ve missed a key turn, somehow. All of a sudden, I’m riding on an overpass, with no shoulder, being passed by trucks moving at 80kph. Huge mistake, and there’s no going back. Click, bigger gear, crank, go go go… whew… off the overpass now… I do a little cyclocross maneuver and cut across the fields in the dark, working my way toward the GPS track way off the right. Amazingly, I don’t ride into a ditch. I find the little path I should have been on. Phew.. quiet again. The miles pass.
Now I’m in a tiny little village. Town square. Frozen fountain. Clock tower. Crazy steep hill. Need .. smaller.. gears… wrong bike for this hill… ohmygod… ow ow no please, not cobbles… does it crest up there by the church? … AUGH, NO… keeping going… ok, I’m warm now… tiny road to the left takes me to the top of this little mountain hamlet. A farm that’s been here for hundreds of years covers the top of the hill.. the route goes through dirt, past hay bales, around the sheep pens, then climbs again into a forest.
Finally, the top. I stop to take in a gel and the view. Wow… just gorgeous. Mist rises from the hills and forests in every direction. The sky says that the sun is near. Going to be a stellar day. Enough waiting. Clicking into fast gears, I hit the first downhill of the day. The farm road is paved, so I max it out… then a huge tractor, bigger than the path, rounds the corner below, heading right at me. I brake in time and roll off into the grass. Holy moly. Pause, breathe, wait… It’s quiet again… I get back to speed, carving through the hills on this thin asphalt line, drinking in the forests and the fields of the high valley as they go rushing by.
Too soon, I’m back on real roads. Still descending, moving at the speed of the occasional car, I fly through small town after small town. So cold again. Can barely steer, but I’m having a blast.
The road ends in a busy town. The smell of fresh bread…. mmm….. too bad I have to rush back to make it to work in time. Now others are awake, commuting, and the traffic is slow. The route thankfully takes me off the main drag onto a tiny side street. Suddenly I’m navigating a construction zone. Uhoh… this is where I should be crossing the Rhine. Is the bridge closed? Looks like it….? Not good. A woman yells something at me in German, gesturing wildly. Am I trespassing? Or maybe she thinks my kit looks fantastic? No wait… she’s pointing at this narrow gap in the fence. Ah.. I can ride my bike through there and under all sorts of heavy machinery to a little walkway they’ve kept open over the dam. Amazing. In the US, we’d just say “screw the pedestrians while we rebuild this thing”…
Back into forest. Dirt roads. It’s finally getting a bit warmer. I crank up the pace and merge onto busier roads again. Hmm. The road sign font has changed. Apparently I’m back in Switzerland. So that dam back there was also a border. Cool.
The trip back into Basel follows the Rhine. The villages turn into little towns. A bike path appears on the side of the busy road at just the right time. The bike commuters eat my dust. So do a few folks on motorized scooters. BwaHAHAHA!
Too soon, I’m back in the city. I follow familiar routes through the maze of ancient buildings, one-way streets, and tram tracks. Within minutes, I’m back to my hotel, marveling quietly that have the opportunity to do these sorts of road, and to learn my way around this particularly pleasant corner of the world.
Ahh. Awesome ride. Exploring new places, finding new experiences, … that’s one of the best things about cycling. And I’m back with just enough time to drink an espresso, eat a croissant, and thaw my feet. Perfect.