Black History + Conservation: Bike Ride with Pathways to Parks

Details
Sat, May 18, 2024
10:00 am - 2:00 pm
2024-05-18T10:00:00-04:00
2024-05-18T14:00:00-04:00
SAHC Community Farm
180 Mag Sluder Rd, Alexander, NC 28701, USA
free-rsvp
Contact
Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy
8282530095
Information

Difficulty:  Moderate (6/10) — 16 miles roundtrip, elevation gain: 1,109′
Total ride time is estimated to be 2-2.5 hours, not including stops.
Cost: FREE for all participants, but registration is required and space is limited

Join us and special guests from Pathways to Parks on a special countryside bicycle ride exploring farmland conservation and rural black history. This loop rolls over gentle hills through the Alexander/Leicester area with views of open farmland valleys and breathtaking vistas of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The vision of Pathways to Parks is to motivate Americans of color to get outdoors and enjoy the benefits of nature in our national, state and local parks and to help make it easy and accessible for them to do so.

The ride will begin at the SAHC Community Farm and then proceed to the historic Alexander Chapel Baptist Church, site of a historic African American church and cemetery. At this stop, riders will be joined by Annette Coleman, whose family was from this area. Annette will share information about the history of the church and preservation efforts to care for the site.  Annette is one of the members of ASCORE – the Asheville Student Committee on Racial Equity – which desegregated public spaces in Asheville in the 1960s.

The ride will then continue to another stop to learn about one of SAHC’s recent farmland conservation projects in the area. We will end by looping back to the SAHC Community Farm.

This ride is FREE and open to the public, but some road cycling experience and proper safety equipment is needed. Helmets are required, and we recommend water bottles as well as a snack for emergency energy. You may want to consider bringing a spare tube and pump.

Less experienced riders should feel comfortable on this route, however, riding in this region always involves some hill climbing and this route is no exception. There are three climbs with a 1-2% grade that will require low gears and moderate to high effort. We will be riding on rural roads with no bike lanes alongside some vehicle traffic. This is a no-drop ride, so nobody will be left behind!