Springfield to Shirlington.
Our Community › Forums › Where to ride? › Springfield to Shirlington.
- This topic has 8 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 1 month ago by
mstone.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 10, 2013 at 3:51 pm #964223
ctankcycles
ParticipantThe difficult part here is getting over to the other side of the Beltway, but at least you have one option. You have to get down Franconia which isn’t ideal but there’s a trail that goes under the Beltway just off of Oakwood Rd, which runs next to S Van Dorn St. From there you can take the trail along Eisenhower heading east until you reach the Holmes Run Trail. Head northwest along Holmes Run and then hang a right towards N Howard Rd., which you can take all the way to W Braddock Rd. Take a right on W Braddock, left on N Early St, right on Menokin Dr, right onto King St service road, left on Wakefield Dr into Fairlington, left on 34th St S crossing over 395, right on 31st St S and down the hill into Shirlington.
March 14, 2013 at 10:39 pm #964724cephas
ParticipantIf the distance matters to you at all, I wonder if you might be interested in a shorter, more direct route to the W&OD: through Lake Accotink Park and up through Vienna. I have limited personal experience on this route, except on Nutley St, (which I don’t advise if you want to avoid traffic), but I imagine something like this: http://goo.gl/maps/GgWO6
March 14, 2013 at 11:06 pm #964730mstone
Participant@cephas 46367 wrote:
If the distance matters to you at all, I wonder if you might be interested in a shorter, more direct route to the W&OD: through Lake Accotink Park and up through Vienna. I have limited personal experience on this route, except on Nutley St, (which I don’t advise if you want to avoid traffic), but I imagine something like this: http://goo.gl/maps/GgWO6
That’s the cross county trail. Decent route, not suitable for skinny tires, and you’d want to be careful in inclement weather. (There are some spots where you need to ford streams, which is dangerous when there’s a flood potential.) That said, it’s the most conflict-free north/south route in the county. I’d certainly advise taking a look; if you like nature, it’s a much nicer ride than the various sidepaths you’ll find in fairfax.
March 15, 2013 at 2:45 pm #964834cephas
Participant@mstone 46373 wrote:
That’s the cross county trail.
That’s it?! I’ve heard about it, and I have wondered what the cross county trail was, but I always figured it would trace the county parkway more. Ah well. Knowledge is power. and with great knowledge comes great disappointment. as someone once may have said.
March 15, 2013 at 3:06 pm #964839mstone
Participant@cephas 46478 wrote:
That’s it?! I’ve heard about it, and I have wondered what the cross county trail was, but I always figured it would trace the county parkway more. Ah well. Knowledge is power. and with great knowledge comes great disappointment. as someone once may have said.
CCT is tied together from bits and pieces of existing stream valley parks. In some places it’s suitable for slicks, some places for suspended mountain bikes, but mostly in between. There are a few spots where the connections between different parts is awkward, and it’s still a work in progress. Note that this CCT is not to be confused with the capital crescent trail on the other side of the river.
March 15, 2013 at 3:48 pm #964864GuyContinental
Participant@cephas 46478 wrote:
That’s it?! I’ve heard about it, and I have wondered what the cross county trail was, but I always figured it would trace the county parkway more. Ah well. Knowledge is power. and with great knowledge comes great disappointment. as someone once may have said.
Looks like someone needs a CX… Add on THIS: http://goo.gl/maps/475Yi for even more single track fun
A dirt commute presents some interesting challenges with filth, time and inclement weather but can be really awesome. I had a few “I can’t believe this is how I get to work” moments this summer in LFP…
March 15, 2013 at 3:49 pm #964865americancyclo
ParticipantIf you do end up going this way, keep in mind that those river crossings, even at low water levels, can be ridden through, but often get very slick with algae. I took a fall two weeks ago at a similar crossing on Holmes Run, the tires just slid right out, and if you use too much torque to get up the ramps, you can easily spin out. But then again, I was on 25c road slicks.
March 15, 2013 at 3:59 pm #964869mstone
Participant@americancyclo 46510 wrote:
If you do end up going this way, keep in mind that those river crossings, even at low water levels, can be ridden through, but often get very slick with algae. I took a fall two weeks ago at a similar crossing on Holmes Run, the tires just slid right out, and if you use too much torque to get up the ramps, you can easily spin out. But then again, I was on 25c road slicks.
I don’t think big tires help with that, you just get more sideways pressure. I just point it straight, don’t try to turn, and coast. Definitely take it easy at any time. My concern from a commuting perspective is more that you will definitely need an alternate for summer storm days, etc, because the streams will flood and are too dangerous to cross at all when the water is up.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.