Warm Up Your Bike on Tucson’s Loop

Want to escape the cold and discover one of the nation’s hot spots for biking? Sue and I like Tucson, Arizona for January temperatures in the 60s and 70s and for the area’s hiking and biking trails. We sampled The Loop, a 60-mile-plus paved bike path around the city that took us through desert cactus scenery. We bought inexpensive Trek hybrids at a great shop here; road bikes would work well on The Loop, but we plan to ride unpaved paths later this year. (We walk the mountain paths around Tucson.)

Spectacular Seguaro cactus forests climb nearby mountains that offer hundreds of miles of hiking trails, many open to bikers. I will share more of Sue’s photos on future posts.

It was tough to give up our Giant 90s-era hybrids that Sue’s parents rode around Europe and the USA. But their weight and the pull of new technology finally drew us to updated bikes. We donated the Giants to Bicas, a Tucson warehouse and workshop that connects bikes to people in need. Mom and Dad would approve, I am sure.

Want to Go Remote? Try to Top This Adventure


You and three friends take two flights, including a small-plane charter deep inside America’s most remote and largest national park, within the Arctic Circle. You, your buddies, and your backpacks plan to travel back to civilization..

It is 1992. No cell phones. No GPS. Gates of the Arctic National Park has no trails. But there are grizzly bears and the river you follow and cross regularly starts out at three feet wide but changes character drastically.

Accompanied by photographs, J. Robert Harris narrates his story on a Parks Channel video. Check it out to meet an extraordinary man. He tells many more stories in Way Out There, one of the best adventure books I have been fortunate to read. I mention it again here in case you missed my review.