Breakfast at Sedalia started at 6:30, so it was on the trail by 7:15 at least. Today's run of the Katy was smoother than yesterday in my opinion, but Mike said it was equally rough, so maybe I just got more comfortable with the gravel? My Salsa Vaya was meant to ride on these roads, it handles amazingly, and any challenges I had were strictly because of me learning to ride a new terrain, not the bike. Mike's Surly is not designed to be off pavement for long, so he was at that disadvantage, but made it through.
This may alter my route for Kansas- I was looking forward to riding more rail trails on the Flint Hills nature trail, but we may default to more on-road riding.
At Windsor, we took the Rock Island spur to head more of an true east direction. There's grand plans to develop more of the Rock Island spur to make a big loop with the St. Charles end of the Katy, which could be very cool. Logistically, a loop could solve some problems for a lot of people who travel to get to the trail.
We saw one person jogging on the Rock Island spur for all of our 40 miles. It could be because the trail is relatively new- the "towns" kiosks were still under construction, or it could be that today had a heat index of 103 and it's Monday. And the towns on the spur are not much at all. We had a good lunch at Chilhowee, but we probably lingered a little too long in the air conditioning. We had 30 more miles to go after lunch.
Once we left the trail, the roads themselves were fine, not a lot of cars the first two hours, but large, rolling hills to get into Harrisonville via the cemetery road. Long climbs in the late afternoon heat after 70 miles was not fun. The "going home from work" traffic started to build, and the asphalt baked. But we got into town safely, and did a load of laundry. Now it's off to find some dinner.
Tomorrow will be Kansas, the weather should be cooler, the miles will be shorter, and we'll get an early start.
Reflections on the Katy trail:
1. There's no wrong way to do it. We saw people of every age, size, and bike type, going various distances and lengths of time.
2. Assume there's no water. This is kind of a good rule regardless of where you're riding, but some "stations" just had pit toilets without drinking fountains, or we'd arrive before the store or restaurant was open.
3. Trail bathrooms are amazing. I have no problems using a bush in the middle of Nevada, but I'm getting to the point where I'd just rather not. And, there's poison ivy everywhere in the bushes.
4. The main trail is very social. People coming the opposite direction will always say hi or good morning and wave. People want to chat at the kiosks. Sometimes I'd prefer to take a break at the shady benches so I didn't have to socialize as much.
5. The kiosk information is good! The history was fun to read and really well put together.
6. The scenery did eventually change a bit. Once we got away from the river, the cliffs and different trees, today was more prarie flowers.
7. Watch for box turtles, and snakes that look like sticks. Squirrels dart in front of you, one deer ran across the trail pretty close (this is why headphones while riding is a bad idea!), and today I saw 4 woodchucks.