Day 2 of R and R weekend:
We checked out the Riverfront Heritage Trail of Kansas City MO/KS
There's our little meep-meep car and there's the cool warehouse/loft building that we parked beside.
And a little outside living area for the tenants.....
As is fitting for a trail with the word "Heritage" in its name,
there are dozens of informational signs all along the trail.
The Town of Kansas bridge
Getting his history fix......
Overlooking the Missouri River......
Once you get to this point on the bridge, the actual trail is 3 stories below
and you have two choices of how to get down there:
Carry your bike down three flights of stairs....... or take the elevator.
Yes, that is an elevator door that he is standing in front of.
And here it is from the bottom.
It was sketchy and questionable, but it got us up and down without incident.
Once at river level, there were plaques marking
the high water lines from 3 major floods.
Interesting that they were all in July. But maybe that's major flood season.
Really, what do I know?
And we began our bike ride on the trail
Almost immediately, we encountered this interesting thing.
We theorize it was likely either a platform that a crane sat on to load barges with
....... or the mothership landing pad.
Some cool bicycle art
The downtown KC skyline from Berkley Riverfront Park
(which has a parking lot for trail access)
It was brisk and more than a little breezy out there that morning.
There's my sweetie, mimicking a bridge.
Look at those counterweights on that railroad bridge.
Human ingenuity and engineering is amazing.
This ended this leg of the trail for us. This trail is a mixture of off-street bike path and on-street riding. We are not on-street riders, so we loaded our bikes back up in the car and followed the well-marked bike route signs until we found where it once again turned into some off-street path, which ended up being on the Kansas side where the trail crosses over the Kansas River. Again, we parked on-street, this time near the Strawberry Hill Museum, and picked up the path from there.
See that bridge behind him?
This guy has a story about that bridge from three decades ago or so.
I'm just glad he's here today to tell me about it.
This leg of the trail pretty much lives in the shadow of I-70 traveling over your head.
At least the graffiti artist apparently love bikes (and chickens) :)
We ran out of off-street path at this point on this leg of the trail.
According to this sign, it is a trailhead, too.
It had a pretty little garden
with a sign explaining the significance of the art.
And a caboose....
... with a sign explaining the history of the railroad in KC
The bridge had tons of neat art
But make no mistake. This entire trail is urban, old big city downtown urban, and gritty -- very gritty. I never, NEVER would have felt comfortable riding this trail alone. All told, with the two separate legs that we rode, it was only right at 8 miles.
After our ride, we had a late mid-afternoon lunch at Mi Ranchito.
His: Some sort of chimichanga thing
Hers: A veggie burrito covered in chipotle cheese.