#16
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Quote:
https://www.youtube.com/@NobleInventionBikeTouring
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#17
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Quote:
A 35mm tire is a good choice, but anything in the 30-40mm and being flat there's no real penalty for a slightly larger tire. Camping options are a little bit more limited on the GAP and probably require reservations - Ohiopyle State Park is a good choice, its ~75 miles from Pittsburgh - if you can, get a hiker/biker campsite rather than the drive-in state park style campsites, they'll be quieter. Camping on the C&O is super easy - there are campsites every 5-8 miles all along the route (until the last 40 miles) and no reservations required. Depending on when you roll up and how you plan to camp (tent/hammock/etc) you may need to keep options open for where you plan to stop - if you roll in at 8-9pm to a smaller site it may be full. I like to be done with plenty of daylight to put my feet up, eat dinner and read a book so its rarely a problem for me. At each C&O campsite there is a water pump but they are no longer treated, so you will need to either pack in water for dinner/breakfast or treat/filter the water as it comes out of the pump. |
#18
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#19
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And next time I'd like to allow more times to lightly explore some of the towns that you go through. |
#20
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We camped in ohiopyle a few times and I swear that climb from the trail hits like 30%. I feel your pain
Sucks even more with a 12 pack from ramcat beverage strapped to my bike Quote:
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#21
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I did it a few years ago from Pittsburgh to DC and I highly recommend doing it. The map they put out is extremely good and highlights where you can get food, water, camp for free, landmarks and the like. The GAP has a lot more infrastructure on the path than the C and O which is something to note. The amenities on the C and O are sometimes a mile or so off the path in town. Not a big deal but just something to keep in mind when picking camp sites. I have many recommendations for restaurants and camp sites if you're interested. Feel free to dm me if you want more info on it.
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#22
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True story. Better to go up the hiking path off the Gap trail than down to the river and up the road though.
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#23
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That's a bear of a climb and bedlam traffic on the weekend. A lot further than you would think
There is now a bike-centric cluster of DCNR campsites at the base of the climb to the campground. Toilet, workstation and maybe some water...no climb Genius |
#24
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I live in Pittsburgh and ride parts of the GAP often, but never went further than Dead Man's Hollow past Mckeesport. I know plenty of people who have done this ride and it is pretty smooth and flat from what Ive heard. I think there are some sections of smooth gravel but plenty of people have done it on road bikes.
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#25
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Gap
Hey All,
thanks for all the replies and apologies for a delayed response! These all seem like sound advice and based on what you all said, seem to confirm what my gut had been telling me--that a trip all the way to DC is probably not necessary and likely easier to simply extend my travel dates in Pittsburgh by a few days and adjust the bike ride around that time line, rather than fly in and out of different places and book rides back in addition to bike rental which i already feel a bit weird about. TBH the prospect of a straight, traffic-less 1% grade where I am NOT trespassing but ALSO includes the occasional town in which to refuel sounds amazing and would likely scratch every itch that I have right now to ride east of the Mississippi .. cheers |
Tags |
gap, gravel adventure, great allegheny passage, rails to trails, touring |
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