Naturally we decided on a bike ride.
There are several bicycle rental shops over on Denman Street, we checked out three of them before settling on one. We headed back to the hotel to optimize gear choices and committed to the ride.
We stopped at the running gear store on the corner to try to buy a cheap pair of gloves for the Guest Rider as 5 promised to be a bit chilly on exposed fingers even at the reduced speeds that our rental comfort bikes were going to allow. It wasn't as easy as buying cotton gloves in Hibbing I will tell you. They had some running gloves but no cheap ones. The cheapest was $20 and they had one pair which didn't fit GRider. They had several choices at the $30 level but the most choices seemed to be $49. I like gear as much as the next guy, but . . .
We were trying to devise a strategy, like perhaps she wearing my gloves and me buying the $19 gloves which looked like they might be an OK fit for me. The sales guy noticed our plight. He commented that he thought they had some $10 gloves but an inspection revealed that that particular item was sold out. He said, "Let me check the free box," which I am pretty sure in this case means the lost and found. The phone rang and he had to answer it but he tossed a pair of used gloves to GRider which she found to be a good enough fit to allow riding comfort.
That's today's gear story.
So off we went.
I had only walked as far as the point of the island park visible from out hotel room (Brockton Point) but on bicycles we quickly zoomed around the corner and into uncharted territory. The one way bicycle path at sea wall level is about 9 km, a distance we judged too far to walk but a very, very easy ride, even on fat tired rented by the hour bicycles.
This one is called "Girl in a Wetsuit".
I suspect that yellow stuff in the background is yesterday's referenced sulfur.
Here's a view of Lion's Gate Bridge, the passage over the narrowest point on the entryway into Burrard Inlet and Vancouver Harbor. The lions reference is to pair of mountains on the north side of the narrows.
Here's the lighthouse at Prospect Point, beneath the Lion's Gate Bridge. The book says that the narrows have tricky currents with aggressive tides running at times over 6 knots. There are also shallows and very little maneuvering room at this point. In such a place a light house is a much needed aid to navigation.
It is Vancouver but I do love Paris so we had lunch here, right next door to our bike rental place.
4 comments:
I'm enjoying being an armchair tourist. Excellent travelogue -- though you do seem to have gone Canadian on us. Millimeters?
My favorite outdoor piece is The Drop, for sure. I'm torn for second place. The Bergers are fun, but the girl in a wetsuit is hilarious, and less obviously meant to be funny.
It looks like lots of fun, and a pretty place to explore. That Giant might be a decent bike, for it's kind. Better than most rental bikes at most places.
There's so much content in your travel posts that I have to read them a couple of times to absorb it all. Good story telling.
I love a good gear story, especially when it references one of my own experiences -- cotton gloves riding out of Hibbing. (And happy to have them, as I recall. Could have sold them that morning for real money, but they so were not for sale.)
Nice lighthouse.
Those look like totally decent rental comfort bikes. Well done. And the bistro! What did you have?
I just did a little google-ing - it appears that Le Parisien place has only been open for a very short time, since April 10th or so. You lucked out!
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