Interactive Map of Proposed Intercontinental Bike Trail

Gonna need a cross bike to do the Iowa section. That trail from slater to collins is pea gravel. It is excellent on a gravel or cross bike.
 
So basically Wyoming is screwing this up for everyone.

It'll be interesting to see how much traffic this will get. There's a lot of cities through Iowa that could benefit if this thing really takes off.
 
So basically Wyoming is screwing this up for everyone.

It'll be interesting to see how much traffic this will get. There's a lot of cities through Iowa that could benefit if this thing really takes off.
basing the trip off of ragbrai being a week I’d say this journey would take maybe 3 months? I could see this becoming a thing similar to the Appalachian trail or PCT hikes. How many people attempt one of those two a year?
Imagine all the things you would see crossing the country on a bike.
 
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basing the trip off of ragbrai being a week I’d say this journey would take maybe 3 months? I could see this becoming a thing similar to the Appalachian trail or PCT hikes. How many people attempt one of those two a year?
Imagine all the things you would see crossing the country on a bike.

I'm getting pretty into hiking and going to do 7 day High Sierra trail in Sept.

The time involved with AT, PCT or CD is a killer to me although I think it might be fun to break it into parts. I hike parts of PCT all the time and run into section hikers who have been doing sections at a time over many years. Guessing this bike path could be the same way where people do a different 1/4 of it four years or something.
 
- That section between LaPorte City and just southeast of Center Point is in very poor condition when last I checked (yup, more than a season ago).
- I doubt that any section where a lot of unnecessary N/S travel is included will survive (see links from Marshalltown to Waterloo then back through Cedar Rapids).
- The section south out of Cedar Rapids toward West Branch only exists to Ely Iowa. At Ely, one must choose either a gravel road, or a very narrow county road that has no shoulders. A death trap is you ask me.
- I certainly agree that the trail must travel to a latitude that is generally south of Chicago by the time it gets to the Mississippi River (to avoid the 'all roads go to Chicago' issue).
- I would like it to include Boone and Ames, then continue westward perhaps toward Blair Nebraska, where people could choose to visit the mess that is Omaha/Lincoln, or bypass it heading toward Fremont and Norfolk in Nebraska.

The American Discovery Trail seems to have a more logical western terminus.
 
basing the trip off of ragbrai being a week I’d say this journey would take maybe 3 months? I could see this becoming a thing similar to the Appalachian trail or PCT hikes. How many people attempt one of those two a year?
Imagine all the things you would see crossing the country on a bike.
There are a reasonable number of people that will bike from San Diego to the Atlantic Coast somewhere in Florida, Georgia, or South Carolina. I have a friend that did it a few years ago, a couple months worth of riding.
 
I'm getting pretty into hiking and going to do 7 day High Sierra trail in Sept.

The time involved with AT, PCT or CD is a killer to me although I think it might be fun to break it into parts. I hike parts of PCT all the time and run into section hikers who have been doing sections at a time over many years. Guessing this bike path could be the same way where people do a different 1/4 of it four years or something.

My sister in-law is a travel nurse, and can take 6 months off at a time she's completed the AT, PCT, Arizona trail, and started the CDT at the start of April. We will be joining her for a week to do a section in Colorado.

Before doing the AT, she was very reclusive, and not an outdoor person at all. Those things can be life changing.

I would definitely consider spending my summers doing a cross country rail trail.
 
basing the trip off of ragbrai being a week I’d say this journey would take maybe 3 months? I could see this becoming a thing similar to the Appalachian trail or PCT hikes. How many people attempt one of those two a year?
Imagine all the things you would see crossing the country on a bike.

RAGBRAI is also a slower paced ride for most and averages under 80mi a day. most people who might attempt this would maybe be in the 120mi+ a day range. Id say maybe 2 months time for an average avid biker.

https://www.raceacrossamerica.org/about.html
professional racers take 8-12 days to cross the US on a bike. and the race is grueling to, I helped a friend attempt the Race Across the West portion a few years ago.
 
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RAGBRAI is also a slower paced ride for most and averages under 80mi a day average. most people who might attempt this would maybe be in the 120mi+ a day range. Id say maybe 2 months time for an average avid biker.

https://www.raceacrossamerica.org/about.html
professional racers take 8-12 days to cross the US on a bike. and the race is grueling to, I helped a friend attempt the Race Across the West portion a few years ago.
You might be right. I was estimating on the high side due to slower paced adventure bikes, gear and the fact that mountains must be crossed. I think a good portion would be gravel too.
 

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