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No bumpy spots for Cabot tour
Bike tour stops in Fredericksburg

 Tour members, Boy Scouts and Fredericksburg Cyclists Club members took part in the ride along Lee Drive.
REZA MARVASHTI/THE FREE LANCE-STAR
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Date published: 6/10/2012

BY SCOTT SHENK

Myron Skott had been feeling the itch to repeat the bike trip he took in 2004 as part of the inaugural East Coast Greenway ride.

When he found out he could do it as part of Cabot Creamery Cooperative's community tour, the Georgia man figured it was time for a second trip--2,300 miles up the East Coast from Florida to Maine.

"Cabot is a good bunch of folks," Skott said of the farmer-owned Vermont business that is sponsoring the tour, which includes the bike ride and free events in mostly small communities like Fredericksburg.

"They're a community-oriented company," he said, adding that cooperatives and volunteerism are important to him and his wife, Cathy, who is taking the tour alongside him.

Fredericksburg was one of eight stops during the bike tour. The free segment was held at Old Mill Park Saturday and included numerous events, live music and booths manned by Cabot employees as well as local groups such as the Rappahannock Electric Cooperative, historical societies, artists and several nonprofits.

"The idea was to really celebrate communities," said Cabot's Diana Meehan at Old Mill Park on the hot Saturday afternoon.

She noted that 2012 is the year of the cooperative and explained that Cabot's events are geared to promote cooperatives, communities and volunteerism.

Saturday was a "day off" of the bike tour for the 63-year-old Skott, his wife and their friend Basil Campbell, who is along for part of the tour. So far they have logged 1,314 miles on the Greenway.

But they still had to take a short ride from the Town Place Suites in Spotsylvania to Old Mill Park.

They were joined by several area Boy Scouts and members of the Fredericksburg Cyclists Club.

At about 10:30 a.m., Myron Skott hopped onto his low-riding recumbent bicycle and led the group out of the hotel parking lot.

En route to Old Mill Park, the cyclists rode along Lee Drive through the Fredericksburg battlefield, the subject of a recent uproar after the National Park Service covered the smooth pavement with gravel.

The gravel was an attempt to slow drivers in cars, but local bicyclists claimed that it was unsafe.

The park service has since swept away much of the loose gravel, so the trip wasn't too bad, the riders said.


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The Greenway is a 3,000-mile trail system from the Maine-Canada border to Key West.

The East Coast Greenway Alliance was formed in 1991. To date, about 25 percent of the trail has been completed.

Riders who travel the Greenway take a combination of the trail and mostly secondary roads.

According to the alliance website, when the "traffic free" pathway is completed it will link major cities along the East Coast, "incorporating waterfront esplanades, park paths, abandoned railroad corridors, canal towpaths and pathways along highway corridors."