Tuesday, March 24, 2015

No Siesta on this Bike Ride

Quick American history buffs, what is America’s oldest settlement?  Plymouth right?  No.  Well then it must be Jamestown?  Um, no.   Try moving farther south down the east coast.  Founded in 1565, St. Augustine, Florida is the “oldest continuously occupied settlement of European origin in the United States” and we have the Spanish to thank.  If you are doing the math, St. Augustine was settled 42 years before Jamestown.  And to make the Pilgrims looks like a bunch of pikers, it was 55 years before those black and white clad pious troopers landed at Plymouth Rock.    

The town’s street design was introduced by the early Spanish settlers and dates to the late 16th century.   Today, St. Augustine’s Historic Colonial District preserves 36 structures dating back to this very early colonial period.  No other city in the United States can make such a claim.  It's also the only city in America with the dominant architecture being Spanish in origin.   

It’s lucky that those buildings remain considering St. Augustine’s busy past.  In an effort to flood the town with Spaniards the country sent six expeditions to America in an effort to colonize all of Florida.  They all were disastrous failures.  This then opened the door to the French who thought Florida would be a good spot for their Protestant population (the Huguenots).  While not exactly overrunning the state, the French did find some success in settling a small port city to the north, what is today Jacksonville.  Spain, seeing this incursion, sent men and munitions to garrison St. Augustine.  From their base in town they were able to move the French out of Jacksonville.  Following the French came the English, then pirates, statehood in 1845, and finally the Confederacy.  Much like Austin at times seems out of place in Texas, St. Augustine is also somewhat different.  During the Civil War the town was maintained by soldiers who remained loyal to the Union. 

The Ponce de Leon Hotel, now Flagler College
Following Reconstruction enter Henry Flagler, a partner in JD Rockefeller’s Standard Oil.  Flagler was a railroad man and his new rails into and out of St. Augustine brought wealthy snow birds from up north.  He built three large and ornate hotels.  They all still stand just repurposed now for other uses.  When the automobile was perfected the tourists came in even larger droves.  They still do.  And for the locals, an important anniversary is approaching this year.  It will be St. Augustine’s 450th birthday.

A good way to celebrate is on the saddle.  There are a number of rides you could take.  To the north of town lies Vilano Beach.  It’s a spit of land between the Tolomato River and the Atlantic Ocean.  St. Augustine Beach is another spit of land nestled between the Matanzas Rivera and the ocean.  Both offer good rides.  Just Google where you want to go, more often than not the first hits will be suggested rides from MapMyRide or a similar app.   Take a cool drive too, the A1A highway has been designated a scenic and historic highway. 

The city’s website has some great maps and info for where to park your car for your bike ride: http://www.staugustinegovernment.com/the-city/maps-libraries/maps-library.cfm


Friday, March 20, 2015

Take a Ride with Otis, my man

Earlier this week we all celebrated St. Patrick’s Day.  We’re not sure what to think about the day that celebrates the driving out of Ireland’s snakes.  The claim is dubious at best.  Our feeling is that Ireland never had any snakes in the first place.  It’s almost like saying the SBT drove all of the kangaroos out of Canada.  Anyway, the day before St. Paddy’s, March 16 is also day of distinction of sorts.  The day is noted as the first day of a four week run in the number one spot for the Otis Redding hit “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay.”   Redding wrote the song with help from guitarist Steve Cropper while he lounged on a houseboat off Waldo Point in Sausalito, California.  Redding had come off an acclaimed set at the summer Monterrey Pop Festival, not far from Sausalito. 

The festival, held in 1967 and never again to date, also featured blistering sets by Jimi Hendrix, an ascendant The Who, and an up and coming Janis Joplin.  The black, soulful Redding may have seemed out of place but he hit the stage backed by Booker T and the MGs and did an inspired version of “Satisfaction” among some of the standards his black audience knew and already appreciated.  The young, white audience cheered Redding when left the stage. 

“Dock of the Bay” had been flowing in Redding’s mind the entire summer of ’67.  By December of that year the song was written and recorded.  The album was set for release in the spring of 1968.  He never got to hear the final mix of the song nor see the album’s release.  Redding was killed in a plane crash near Madison, Wisconsin while touring.  He was just 26 years old. 
  
It’s possible to ride with the spirit of the “Big O.”  If you ever find yourself in Sausalito take a ride in the morning sun or when the evening comes.  Watch the tide roll in.  Watch it roll away again.  It just sounds like a nice time.  The houseboats are still there.  At last count, the floating homes were approaching 500 in number.  At roughly eight miles north of San Francisco a bike ride leaving Sausalito should lead every avid and erstwhile cyclist to the Golden Gate Bridge.  You will have to slow down and weave your way past and through some pedestrians but the views while on the bridge are worth the trip.  One of the greatest and most romanticized bridges in the world, the Golden Gate will not disappoint.  While your there check out Fisherman’s Wharf.  The area is so interesting and noteworthy is it fodder for future blogs, stay tuned…  In the meantime follow the link for Redding’s classic.


Here is a cool SF biking site: http://bikethegoldengate.com/.