By Lindsay J. Westley Special to the Washington Post
A mid-ride beep from my neon-colored GPS watch usually signals a moment of weakness: a stop for a gulp of water or to rest quivering calves after climbing one of Vermont's many mountains. Today, as I wheel my bike around the potholes in a farm lane, it's signaling a more important item on the agenda: maple creemees.
The rest of the country calls the frozen treat twisting into my cone "soft serve," but in Vermont, it's a creemee. Made with farm-fresh milk and real maple syrup, it's a delicious start to the weekend — and the official guarantee that no cycling speed records will be broken over the next two days. But we will eat well. And often.
After all, we have the home-court advantage on this vacation. My husband and I have been living on the southernmost tip of Vermont's Lake Champlain Islands for nearly two years.
We've enjoyed getting to know the series of islands that hopscotch their way through Lake Champlain until they dead-end at the Canadian border 30 miles to the north. Framed by the Adirondack Mountains to the west and the Green Mountains to the east and surrounded by the waters of the lake, the islands enjoy a temperate climate that has earned them the nickname of "the banana belt of Vermont."
Flat roads and warmer temps make them ideal for cycling, so we'll be playing tourist with plenty of like-minded visitors this weekend — with the added benefit of knowing where to find the best strawberries and the most gratifying views. And even though Lake Champlain is only inches from flood level at the moment, the sun is shining today. Primary goal of the day: replace depleted stores of vitamin D. But first we have friends to meet.
Traversing 'the Cut'
It's not a long boat ride across "the Cut" — just 200 feet — but it's the crucial link between Burlington, Colchester and South Hero, where my husband and I are waiting for our friends Matt and Emma.
When the trail was first built in 1899 as part of the Rutland-Canadian railroad, a drawbridge spanned the gap. That bridge is long gone, but until two years ago, Local Motion's weekend bike ferry shuttled cyclists across the 200-foot stretch. In 2011, flooding damaged the causeway on both sides of the Cut, effectively closing that section of the trail. Repairing the damaged stretch of trail took two years and $1.5 million, but on June 11, the Island Line Trail reopened, and the bike ferry resumed service.