After a fun PG-13 bachelor party in the Indiana Dunes (hikes, homemade pizza, guitars, soft drug use by my companions, hot tub) I’m leaving Beverly Shores for West Lafayette today, home of Purdue, then on to the closest #WaffleHouse to Chicago in Avon, outside Indy, tomorrow.
I rode 70 miles to the dunes from Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood on Friday night. On a clear day you can see the Chicago skyline from here. 104 miles to go to my motel in West Lafayette. This will be my longest ride in a day for about a decade. Let’s see how I do...
Here’s the vintage station for the @southshoreline in Beverly Shores. Service is suspended on the east leg of the route, replaced by bus shuttles, for a double tracking project. 103 miles to go today. chi.streetsblog.org/2021/05/14/goo…
The temperature is just about ideal at 64F, and the scenery is pretty. 97 miles to go.
On County Road 450 E., for some reason there are a bunch of giant Christmas ornaments hung from the trees.
Trump 2024?! 91 miles to go to West Lafayette.
Stopping at a gas station by the Porter County airport, outside Valparaiso, for a coffee and donut break, and pick up supplies for lunch, since I’m mostly riding through unpopulated areas today. 83 miles to go.
As I traveled further south of the lake, the scenery has flattened out it looks pretty similar to a typical Illinois setting. 73 miles to go.
Stopped for lunch by Dunn’s bridge on the Kankakee River, reportedly constructed from steel beams salvaged from the very first Ferris wheel from the 1893 worlds fair in Chicago. 64 miles to go.
There’s a light rain, but it’s not unpleasant. After a few miles of riding on gravel in Jasper Pulaski nature area, I’m at a shooting range. “Respect other shooters.“ 58 miles to go.
I’m in Medaryville now, sort of an interesting place. Google maps is taking me on several gravel farm roads, which is not ideal but I’ve got 28 mm tires that can handle it reasonably well. Meet these friendly dogs on the way. (Actually they were pretty gruff.)
I like the mascot for Pizza King in Medaryville. Note that the pizza is cut in a grid, Chicago-style. 50 miles to go out of 104, so I’m more than halfway there.
Rainy baseball game in Francesville. 43 miles to go.
The Whistle Stop restaurant in Monon, IN, is surrounded by vintage trains. Unfortunately, it closed a few hours before I arrived, but the daily special of ham steak with au gratin potatoes sounds pretty good right now. 36 miles to go, which means I’m about 2/3 done. @stevevance
Monon, IN.
I like this mural.
Aargh, the farm road Google maps sent me on as an alternative to 421 turned into coarse gravel, and I’ve already done enough gravel riding today. I’m gonna go back to 421, which should be fine. Anyone know a hack for a voiding gravel roads when using the Google maps app?
And appetizing restaurant name in Reynolds, Indiana.
And of course it wouldn’t be Indiana without a fireworks store. I’m in Brookston, 14 miles to go.
Hmm, still not too late to go home...
Five more miles to go tonight.
All right made it to the city limits. Just climbed a huge mountain like hill, Soldier’s Home Road. Sort of fun. 3.7 more miles.
Made it! Well, that was a long day, but it’s good to know I can still do more than a century. And I feel pretty good. Time to get a good night’s rest and then get up and do it again. But there are waffles in my future…
Thanks for following and have a good night.
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Some news: Tracy Baim, far left, publisher of The Reader just called to say they're going to pay me for last 2/6 branded features she hired me to write, but the series is cancelled and they don't want me pitch again. The timing suggests this is due to my Hideout reporting.
Here's my Medium post about the closure of the The Hideout music venue after an IG post by ex-booker Mykele Deville w/ accusations that it was a racist, workplace. One of Deville's Black coworkers reportedly said Deville's allegations may be exaggerated. medium.com/@johngreenfiel…
No hard feelings against Tracy, who is a heroic figure in the Chicago media landscape. She recently helped save @Chicago_Reader from going out of business, and she's been very supportive of my work in the past, including getting me this 6-part series. I wish her all the best
Day 3 of my ride from Chicago to the nearest Waffle House in Avon, IN, outside of Indianapolis. After a good night’s sleep at this cheap motel in northeast West Lafayette, home of Purdue, I’ve got 69 miles to WH, 82 to my hotel near the circle in downtown Indy.
Downtown West Lafayette.
A nice concrete protected bike lane on State Street by Von’s Books. West Lafayette is a @BikeLeague-designated Bike Friendly Community.
I’m leaving Chicago’s Uptown nabe to bike to the closest #WaffleHouse in Avon, Indiana, outside Indianapolis. 70 miles to ride tonight to a bachelor party in the Indiana Dunes, where I’ll spend the weekend. It’s going to be a long night, but it’s a familiar route on trails.
That last place was Jake’s Pup in the Ruf, specializing in broasted (pressure-fried) chicken.
Chicago’s Lakefront Trail is super busy today thanks to the gorgeous weather. Good to see that the separate pedestrian path south of Fullerton Avenue is repaired and re-opened.
It's wild that for the past 24+ hours right-wing columnist @John_Kass's pinned tweet has been one throwing shade on me via a quote from Irish writer and gay icon #OscarWilde.
While I appreciate the exposure, here's why Kass should probably keep Wilde's name out of his mouth.
Here's the Kass tweet, still pinned to the top of his Twitter profile two days after I first critiqued his glowing eulogy for Rush Limbaugh, the radio host who was notorious for his hateful comments about LGBTQ people, and just about every other marginalized group.
This is my tweet that started this latest exchange, noting that, rather than taking a clear-eyed look at Rush Limbaugh's legacy, including his outspoken homophobia, Kass's eulogy was nearly all hagiography.
THREAD: Last week right-wing @chicagotribune columnist @John_Kass ran a column blaming rising crime and civil unrest in big cities like Chicago on "left-wing billionaire George Soros [spending] millions of dollars to help elect liberal social justice warriors as prosecutors."
"[Soros] remakes the justice system in urban America, flying under the radar," Kass wrote. "The Soros-funded prosecutors... are the ones who help release the violent on little or no bond." The piece ran with a photo of Soros a frequent target of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.
There was quite a backlash to Kass' Soros column. Some argued that while the Trib is laying off lots of actual reporters, Kass is getting paid 6 figures to spout off "anti-Semitic garbage," with terrible writing to boot.
Thread: An argument I've been hearing about the high U.S. scooter fatality rate (2X as many deaths as U.S. bike-share in 1/10 the time) is "Scooters aren't the problem, cars & car-centric streets are." I think that's half right. Our car-centric system IS dangerous for everyone.
Obviously, to reduce overall traffic fatality and injury rates, we need to encourage alternatives to driving, and better enforce laws against reckless, intoxicated, and distracted driving. That's a lot of what I advocate for on Streetsblog.
And a big potential positive about scooters is that they appeal to people who aren't interested in biking. They don't want to exercise or risk getting sweaty while commuting. By attracting these people, scooters can help build political support for more protected car-free lanes.