GWB to Bear Mountain Bridge Loop Trip Reports
KenR, May 2007:
Sharon and I rode south down the East side of the river on a weekend day -- after using sections A + B of the NYC to Bear Mountain Adventure to ride up the West side. We mostly rode the main East side route, except with these variations: A-1 and B-3.
We enjoyed it more than ever. I think being stronger on hill-climbing and eating + drinking enough on the first half coming up the west side helped us feel fresh for the whole second half. Looks like building lots of new stuff in Tarrytown, and we found a new coffee shop on Beekman between Sleepy Hollow + Tarrytown.
When we got to the east end of the George Washington Bridge, we saw another rider coming from the north side of the bridge, so we knew the South sidewalk must be closed, so we took our tandem across the North sidewalk of the bridge, which includes going up and down some steep stairways (not fun but it worked), and met other bicyclists who confirmed that the South sidewalk was temporarily closed.
Avi, July 2006:
Rt. 6 south from Bear Mountain - Not having looked at your cue sheets until today, I rode this route both times. I agree that there are treacherous curves. I found myself having to take the entire road on portions of the downhill to avoid being sideswiped by cars. Of course, when I'm going downhill at 30 mph, the cars can't go any faster than me anyway . . . One important feature of the road to point out - near the bottom of the hill, right before the entrance the the US military facility, there is a MASSIVE pothole in the shoulder. It gave me a nasty flat.
wk, June 2004 on NYC.bicycles:
with some friends, i did a ride from ues manhattan all the way up to bear mountain, across the bear mountain bridge, and returned via metro north from the manitou station. a sweet 60 mile ride, and highly recommended. we followed the first half of this route (except for the part from bear mountain to manitou) . . . but i know for sure i don't want to ride my road bike over the unpaved terrain on that 2 mile dirt path again [ Jones Point - Dunderberg bypass path ]
Greg, June 2004:
[ regarding East side Section A and the "possible off-road path going toward the water on the east side of Peekskill Bay starting from Rt 9 / Rt 6 just south from the bridge over the Bay." ]
I noticed this too a couple of few ago and decided to check it out. The path descends quickly and empties onto a gravely road/path that runs next to the rail corridor for maybe 1/4 mile, after which it joins a paved road that takes you right to the intersection just north of the train station. I much preferred it to the climb and traffic of the main road.
Ken May 2004:
East side Section A: I drove Rt 6 / Rt 202 southeast from the Bear Mt Bridge for 3.5 miles to its intersection with Rt 9 at Peekskill Bay a couple of times in a car. [ This road has since been added to the route directions Cue Sheet as Variation A-1 ]. This is the obvious alternate to the main route over South Mountain Pass in the cue sheet. I'm starting to feel like it might be within my risk profile to ride it in the southeast direction away from the Bridge. But not in the northwest direction toward the Bear Mt Bridge.
Seems like some questionable-visibility curves in both directions. But now it's looking to me like in the southeast direction away from the Bridge, most of those questionable visibility sections come either in the midst of a downhill, or shortly after a downhill -- so I could carry some speed thru them. I think this implies that: (a) I spend less time in each questionable section; (b) the speed difference between me bicycling and the cars in my lane is not as large, so the car drivers have more time to react to seeing me.
But in the northwest direction going toward the Bear Mt Bridge, some of the questionable-visibility curves come in the midst of substantial uphill sections, so I would be going much slower on my bicycle. So going that direction does not fit my risk profile.
Also, I notice a possible off-road path going toward the water on the east side of Peekskill Bay starting from Rt 9 / Rt 6 just south from the bridge over the Bay. It was paved at that point, but I don't know what happened with it or where it goes after it left the main road.
On Water St, I saw a sign for "Annville" path, but I don't know where the path was.
September 2003, Ken:
On a perfect weather day, Sharon and I rode the big loop on our tandem. It was pretty and fun and an adventure -- very worthwhile.
We followed the main route in the cue sheets except:
We just took Rt 9W from Palisades Ave to the Sparkill exit for Piermont (it was early in the morning with little traffic)
We skipped the section of 9W from Nyack to Haverstraw.
We stayed on Rt 9A thru Crugers (variation B-3)
We stayed on Rt 9 thru Sleepy Hollow (variation D-2)
We took Variation E-3 thru Tarrytown.
We stayed on Rt 9 from Irvington thru Dobbs Ferry to Warburton Ave (because of an event in Dobbs Ferry).
No problems with road conditions. We had no problem getting thru the dirt sections, but Sharon didn't like going over the bumps riding on the back of the tandem.
But one problem with a bridge: the South sidewalk on the George Washington Bridge was closed, so we had to take the North sidewalk. This required carrying our tandem bicycle up and down several steep stairways on both sides of the Hudson river.
We liked variations B-3, D-2, and E-3. Variation E-3 worked out nicely for us as a way to get thru Tarrytown while avoiding both the heaviest traffic and the toughest hills.
Things that struck us fresh this time:
Many river views going up the West side, especially thru Haverstraw and Stony Point.
The view from the waterfront park in Peekskill.
Pleasant food stop at Tarrytown (and Nyack).
Greg's comment on East side Section A, July 2003:
. . . about the Route 6 option east of Bear Mountain bridge. I've ridden this a number of times (not having heard of South Mountain Pass until reading your site yesterday). I've done it on weekends with considerable traffic and it's been ok. It's a good little climb and the road is narrow but it goes quickly and i've had no problems with inconsiderate drivers. And yes the view at the top is pretty spectacular. I suppose though, I'd have to qualify myself as being on the experienced/advanced traffic handling side of ridership with a fairly high tolerance of traffic.
May 2003, Ken:
On the spur of the moment, Sharon and Tony and I decided to try a loop from Manhattan up to Tarrytown on a Saturday morning, using the South County Trailway going up, and coming back on sections F, G, H, J of this route.
For the first half going up from Manhattan to Tarrytown, see the May 2003 report linked from reports on riding that combines use of both Roads and the County Trailways. Because of problems connecting from South County to North County Trailway in this direction, next time we'd rather do the part between Eastview and Yonkers in the north-to-south direction (unless we get definite word that the trailway connection has been improved).
F section : We rode on Rt 9 south from Tarrytown, and took the Variation on the Old Croton Aqueduct trail a short ways into the Lyndhurst estate, enjoyed the beautiful (but not over-large) house and the river view, but then immediately exited to rejoin the main route on Rt 9 south (instead of continuing on the OCA).
We turned west onto the Main St of Irvington, and took the Variation down the hill into Irvington, then visited the Scenic Hudson Park -- nice but short paved path beside the river and nice view of river and Tappan Zee Bridge, and a tapas bar nearby. But have to ask if that's worth climbing back up the big hill -- Sharon and I were surprised that we were able to keep riding on our tandem the whole way up, but the way they've laid out the parking on that street, there's not much room for a car to get past a slow-climbing bike, so a couple of times we moved off the road so we didn't slow down too many cars.
We turned off Main St and rode south on the Old Croton Aqueduct trail. The dirt was mostly in good condition, and then Sharon and I got off and walked our tandem up the last thirty feet into Dobbs Ferry.
We had a pleasant lunch at the Settepani bakery further down on Main St -- some creative soups and sandwiches, then some Italian cookies for dessert.
G section : the sign for Warburton was obscured by leaves, so fortunately I remembered it would come at a traffic light just up a little rise. Nice views across the Hudson from Warburton, but it started to rain a little. Then Tony got a flat tire, but the rain was light while he fixed it. No problem riding into Yonkers. We checked out construction on the waterfront -- looks promising, but still a long ways from finished.
H section : We rode slowly thru a pleasant afternoon block party on Buena Vista, and Hawthorne, Valentine, Riverdale were in good shape. It really started to pour rain after Yonkers, and we didn't consult cue sheet directions so I guessed wrong, missed the 249th St turn-off, and took 246th instead, then Left on Independence. Worked out OK, but we missed most of Palisades Ave -- except we rejoined the route for the south section underneath the Henry Hudson Bridge, which was fine, and continued to the Broadway Bridge.
J section : We discovered that the west sidewalk of the Broadway Bridge was closed, so we walked our bikes across to the east sidewalk -- which brought us out onto the wrong side of Broadway with lots of traffic. So we turned left onto 9th Ave, then right onto 218th St, and took that east across Broadway to rejoin the main route. Seaman was fine (a couple of broad speed bumps that didn't cause us any problem on our bikes). At Dyckman we made a Variation and turned west and visited the park out on the river beside the Tubby Hook Cafe, then returned to the main route. Bennett Ave was a nice way to do the necessary uphill work without so many cars whizzing by -- and the cliffs above at its beginning are dramatic.
No problem riding the south sidewalk across the George Washington Bridge.
November 2002, Ken:
Here's some thoughts about how I'm thinking about choosing variations and alternate routes for each Section of this loop:
West side of the River:
A -- ? the River Rd (main route)? When riding the whole loop, I find myself skipping the River road with its hills, and instead taking something like Variation B of the GWB to Nyack route. It's amazing that there's such interesting riding through the woods right next to Manhattan island -- but I've ridden it lots of times -- and there's so much else to see and so many other hills to climb.
B -- ? the Nyack Beach - Haverstraw path (variation)? Although taking the path saves climbing a sizable hill, and it's quiet and pretty -- it's a lot of miles on dirt of sometimes questionable status due to washouts. On the climb up Rt 9W north from Nyack, I find that the road is wide enough for me to feel comfortable -- and then I do enjoy the downhill run going north-bound past Rockland Lake State Park.
B -- ? taking the streets through Haverstraw to Grassy Point and Stony Point (main route)? In the last few years I've always taken this alternative to Rt 9W, and I've always been glad I did. Too many miles on Rt 9W without a break gets boring for me, and around Haverstraw is one of my least favorite parts of 9W. To me it's hardly worth doing this loop at all if I'm don't feel like I have time to visit Grassy Point.
East side of the River:
A -- ? Rt 6 / Rt 202 southeast to Peekskill from the east end of the Bear Mt Bridge (not on cue sheet)?
Obviously this alternate is more direct than South Mountain Pass Rd. But the times I've driven my car on this section it has seemed very curvy and hilly -- with questionable visibility around some curves in spots where the road is not wide, on uphills where I would not be going fast enough to get quickly through a questionable spot. Since it is clearly a major road vehicle traffic, it falls outside my zone of risk-tolerance and traffic-interaction-comfort -- so I've never ridden it.
Taking South Mountain Pass does not add much distance or climbing, the dirt surface has been in good condition, and it puts me on a nice approach to Peekskill. So that's what I choose to ride -- provided the road is dry.
I have heard that some experienced riders actually enjoy this section of Rt 6 / Rt 202, because of the views over the river. My comment is that those are expert riders with strong hill-climbing legs -- who don't need my advice about where to ride.
B -- ? riding to Verplanck and Crugers (main route) ? The side trips are mostly pleasant and have some nice river views, but they do add some distance. But I find Rt 9A through here mostly pretty enjoyable (since most of the high-speed vehicle traffic here chooses to drive on nearby Rt 9). I've already gotten a nice river view at the park by the Peekskill train station, and the nuclear power facilities are better viewed from the other side of the River. So I might do one of the two side trips just to break up the miles on Rt 9A, but not both.
C -- ? taking the streets thru Ossining and Scarborough (main route) ? Though not real spectacular I somehow like these side trips. Especially the first one does not add much distance or climbing (versus Variation C-3 on Rt 9), so it makes a nice break from a less-enjoyed segment of Rt 9.
D -- ? riding quiet streets through Sleepy Hollow (main route)? The time I did this it was pleasant enough, but added hills without much pretty views of the river. So my likely preference here would be to take Variation D-2 and ride on Rt 9 -- and if I want a break, take a look into the Sleepy Hollow cemetery.
E -- ? taking the streets thru Tarrytown (main route) ? I like the sweeping view riding on Beekman St west to the river, and the view of the Tappan Zee Bridge from Pierson Park. And I do not much like riding Rt 9 thru Tarrytown (Variation E-2), since I have memories of lots of parked cars and cross traffic. So even if I didn't feel like taking on the climb back up Franklin St, I'd probably try Variation E-3 on Washington St instead.
F -- ? Old Croton Aqueduct trail ? With too many continuous miles on Broadway / Rt 9, I get bored and weary of the vehicle-traffic-interaction. So even though the OCA trail is dirt, I still welcome it as an interesting break. But I've found the OCA from the Thruway to Irvington to be a bit rough, so unless I want to spend some time on the Lyndhurst estate, I'm willing to put in some miles on Broadway until Irvington. I've found Broadway to have less favorable sections between Irvington and Dobbs Ferry (something like not wide, curves, hills -- I forget which) -- so switching over to the OCA trail through there feels about right to me (and the trail through there is so gentle and straight that it actually saves a little on hill-climbing and distance)
G -- ? Main St, Dobbs Ferry (main route) ? I hate the south-bound climb on Rt 9 south from the traffic-light at the intersection with Cedar St. Riding Main St and Livingston seems obviously superior -- and I found a nice bakery there.
G -- ? Warburton Ave (main route) ? Warburton Ave from Hastings to Yonkers is clearly superior to Rt 9 for traffic, and superior to the Old Croton Aqueduct trail for views and speed.
H -- ? Palisade Ave (main route) ? I really like Palisade Ave because it's usually quiet and it's so interesting how it loops around underneath the Henry Hudson Bridge. But staying on Riverdale Ave (Variation H-3) is also interesting riding -- especially if I'm looking for an opportunity to save some time.
September 2002, Ken:
I spent some time one day exploring possible routes from Rt 9 or Rt 9A in Croton or Ossining to the North County Trailway. My goal was to find some way to avoid all those miles riding on Route 9 from Ossining to Hastings. Here's my notes on some possibilities, from North to South:
Croton-on-Hudson streets to Rt 129 East to Batten Rd (to bypass some narrower parts) to Rt 129 along the north side of the Croton Reservoir to Rt 118 to North County Trailway : : I didn't see any "showstoppers". Gets more traffic than some of the other possibilities. Goes a long way East away from the river, considering that it's supposed to be part of a "river" route. Note that the "Gatehouse Bridge" (name ?) was currently closed for construction.
Croton-on-Hudson streets to Rt 129 East to Croton Gorge Park, cross a bridge inside the park over the Croton River, then climb an unpaved park road of moderate grade with switchbacks up to the south side of the Croton Reservoir Dam. Then Applebee Farm Rd, Blinn Rd, Spring Valley Rd, Rt 134 to a NCT access point just west of Rt 100 : : Interesting, lots of quiet narrow roads through the woods, some with rough pavement. Nice view of the Croton Dam. But note that the bridge across the top of the dam is now closed.
A section of Rt 129 which is west of the Croton Gorge Park gets narrower in a couple of places where I might feel uncomfortable with the car traffic interaction. But using Batten Rd as an alternative is not so attractive because it bypasses the park, and the bridge across top of the dam is closed. And this route goes a long way East away from the river, considering that it's supposed to be part of a "river" route.
Ossining streets (Ellis to Wolden to Macy to Orchard) to Pleasantville Rd to Briarcliff Manor : : a couple of places of Pleasantville Rd are narrow and curvy in ways that make me uncomfortable. Turning off onto Chappaqua Rd avoids one of those places, but doesn't make me feel fully comfortable either.
Ossining streets -- Ellis / Wolden / Holbrook to Scarborough Rd, then turn north onto Dalmeny, which becomes Poplar as it comes into Briarcliff Manor : mostly pleasant surroundings, but one of two points of questionable visibility on Scarborough or Pine Rd, some complex traffic getting onto Ellis, and some sustained climbs on Holbrook and Scarborough. Perhaps better in the opposite (counter-clockwise) direction.
south end of Sleepy Hollow Rd to Long Hill Rd to Beech Hill to Rt 117 : : I did this on my first ride -- Long Hill and Beech Hill are (guess what?) too hilly, and without compensating rewards.
south end of Sleepy Hollow Rd to Old Sleepy Hollow Rd to Rt 448 North to Rt 117 East : : Possible, perhaps some extra hills. Not unpleasant, except for the 0.3 mile segment of Rt 117 to North County Trailway has no shoulder and includes an exit ramp. A related alternative is to bypass North County Trailway and continue south on Rt 448 (interesting farm) to Lake Rd to Tarrytown Lake and the south end of NCT at Eastview, then go to South County Trailway.
Rt 9 South to Rt 117 East to North County Trailway : : Rt 117 has very wide shoulders in good condition -- except there is no shoulder on the 0.3 miles from Rt 448 to the NCT access point by Rt 9A / Rt 100, and part of that section includes an exit ramp. Perhaps the smoothest grade and simplest concept of any of the routes, but also the most miles on Rt 9.
I also investigated some ways to get from South County Trailway west over to Warburton Ave:
Lawrence Ave : : I did not check this. (estimate from software topo: total 160 vertical feet of climbing, perhaps including about 100 ft at steepness around 7% grade, or perhaps 60 ft around 9% grade -- and removes about 2 miles on South County Trailway and adds 2 miles on Ashford and Rt 9). Backtracks some.
Farragut Ave or Farragut Parkway (or Ravensdale and/or Rosedale) : I did not check this. Backtracks some.
Tompkins Ave : : Looks attractive on the Hagstom map, but: Going west-bound, it does not connect with Pinecrest Dr. There are one or two points of questionable visibility going up the hill on Tompkins from Nepperhan. (In the opposite direction, Pinecrest Dr is a steep sustained climb, with some curves.)
Executive Blvd : : Full lane width, sometimes more, in the west-bound direction for the sustained climb on a curve. But lots of traffic because it connects to a Saw Mill River Parkway entrance/exit. (In the opposite direction, Odell Ave up from Greystone station is a very steep sustained climb, with some curves.)
Nepperhan Ave to Yonkers center : : I've ridden it twice, and it's worked for me twice. But it offers zero miles on Warburton.
August 2002, Ken:
I started riding the loop (clockwise direction) from the GWB and rode an earlier version of the NYC to Bear Mountain Adventure to the Bear Mountain Bridge -- for that half, see other Trip Report.
From the Bear Mt Bridge, I repeated my previous route to Peekskill across South Mountain Pass, and still liked it -- since the dirt was fully dry. I was thinking there's a couple of short steep downhill sections that I would not want to ride east-bound if they were wet.
In Peekskill I went down Central Ave to Water St and a waterfront park and the train station, then continued south on South St to Route 9A -- I liked that, and better than my previous route. Then I went a long ways on Rt 9A, which I mostly liked, all the way to Croton (this time I skipped all the parks and river views, because I was short on time from exploring on the West side).
In Ossining I turned off Rt 9 onto Aqueduct, then (after going under what I assume was the Old Croton Aqueduct), turned Left onto an unsigned street opposite Ann St, and took this into the center of town. Then I headed south on State St, and then down by river to Scarborough station, then climbed moderately around the far south loop back to Rt 9.
As I looked closed at my special "Old Croton Aqueduct" map, it did not seem like the remaining open sections would help me much between Ossining and Hastings, so I just rode south on Route 9 the whole way to Warburton. My feeling was that the hills weren't as steep this way as going north-bound. The car and truck traffic seemed mostly tolerable to me -- but it felt wearing to keep going so many miles always conscious of so many fast cars nearby and traffic lights and side streets.
One place I disliked was just south of Ashford -- it narrowed to a single lane up a steep-ish with parked cars on my side. But it was hard to wait extra at the traffic light for the line of cars to go up ahead of me, because there was also a right-turn lane at the traffic light. Maybe it could be bypassed by just taking the right turn into Dobbs Ferry. Or perhaps this is one of the places that works better in the other direction (doing the route counter-clockwise).
Soon after that I turned off onto Warburton, and again that was enjoyable. After a side-move on Hawthorne and Valentime, this time I rode most of the way to the Broadway Bridge on Riverdale Ave, which felt mostly OK -- and some kind of interesting.
In Manhattan, I again rode on Broadway to about 178th St and the George Washington Bridge. Broadway felt more tricky and complex this time (but also very interesting) -- I'd like to find some quieter nalternate streets in Manhattan. Then across the GWB and I was done.
August 2002 -- Ken's notes:
Here is what I rode on Tuesday from the Bear Mt Bridge to Peekskill, with some approximate distance and hill sizes that I calculated using DeLorme TopoUSA 3.0.
From the East end of the Bear Mountain Bridge:
North 1.3 mile on Route 9D (I found the shoulder reasonable, but not wide) (initial climb up from bridge is about 160 vertical feet, average steepness about 4% grade)
Right 0.2 mile on Manitou Rd (dirt, up hill) (A sign said something like No Thru Traffic, but I ignored it on my bike. If that's a problem for public "official" route directions, there's a simple but slightly longer way to reach South Mountain Pass Rd)
Right 2.1 mile on South Mountain Pass Rd (dirt, up hill for 1.0 mile, then down hill for 1.1 mile -- Total climb after leaving Rt 9D is about 400 vertical feet, average steepness about 6% grade -- but several steeper sections with gentler in between).
Right 1.1 mile on Route 9 South (I found the shoulder pretty comfortable)
Exit Left 1.6 mile on Highland Ave (exit requires crossing a lane of high-speed car traffic) (Highland Ave includes a climb of about 170 vertical feet, much of it at a steepness around 6%)
Finish -- Peekskill at intersection Highland and Main.
Total distance around 6.3 miles. Total uphill climbing around 850-900 vertical feet. I would rate that as "very hilly" compared to most (longer) routes in the Hudson Valley. But if the rest of the way to Croton Point Park is more gentle, the overall hilliness could average out to something more reasonable.
Alternatives:
- - the hill climb on Highland Ave could be largely avoided by continuing south on Route 9, but I don't know what the road width and shoulder and traffic interaction risks are like.
- - I hold firm to my opinion that I will not ride that section of Rt 6 / Rt 202 between the Bear Mt Bridge and Rt 9 -- and I will advise against anyone else doing it.
- - Rt 403 further north is paved, but it adds 5 miles to my South Mountain Pass route, and includes a sustained climb of 1.5 miles on a curvy road with little or no shoulder much of the way.
August 2002 -- Ken on NYC.bicycles newsgroup:
On Tuesday I rode a loop of the Bear Mountain Bridge, down the East side of the Hudson River thru Westchester to Manhattan, across the George Washington Bridge, and up the West side thru New Jersey and Rockland county back to Bear Mountain (clockwise direction).
It was very interesting with lots of enjoyable parts, though I still do not feel like I've found a good route all the way through the east side of Westchester.
I was glad to find a way to avoid that curvy high-speed high-traffic section of Rt 6 / Rt 202 southeast from the Bear Mt Bridge.
Here's more details:
For me the route-finding puzzles were in northern Westchester, so I parked at Bear Mountain State Park and started by riding across the Bear Mt Bridge -- so I could get into those first and re-plan the rest of the tour depending on how that part went.
My first problem was to avoid that curvy high-speed high-traffic section of Rt 6 / Rt 202 southeast from the Bear Mt Bridge. What I did instead at the east end of the Bridge was to ride about 1.3 mile North on Rt 9D. Then I turned right onto Manitou Rd, which soon met South Mountain Pass, and climbed East on that, and then a long descent to Rt 9 -- almost all on dirt (which was in good enough condition for my 700x23C tires to handle). I calculate the climb as about 400 vertical feet, average grade 6%, but much was steeper with rests in between. (Compare with 300 vertical feet, at least 6% grade on Rt 6 / Rt 202).
Nice lane width and shoulder on Rt 9 South, then I turned left onto Highland Ave, and that worked nicely to take me into Peekskill. I liked the river views at Charles Point and Verplanck. I took Sunset to Rt 9A, and then visited the river again at Crugers. Then I got on Rt 9A, and found that pleasant to take me south all the way to Croton-Harmon, where I decided to visit Croton Point Park.
Then I took the bike path across the Croton River into Ossining. Then I really got into the hills. My second time thru Ossining I only managed to find a different set of hills. I then decided to try Sleepy Hollow Rd and the Pocantico Hills, which was interesting at least once, but I'm not convinced I'd want to make it my regular route. (For the future, I'm getting intrigued with seeing how the Old Croton Aqueduct could help get me thru Ossining and Tarrytown).
Having done all that hill work to get inland, I decided I might as well ride South County Trailway (a little scary that day with fallen tree branches from the wind, hidden in the shadows). I looked at my watch and discovered that all my exploratory sightseeing had left me with too little time to finish my loop -- so I simply took Nepperhan and Broadway to the GWB. I enjoyed the excitement of riding in traffic south-bound on Broadway.
From the GWB, I headed back North up the West side of the river by my usual route on the Bike Hudson Valley (except that I skipped "river road"). I found I still enjoy making the side trip to the Stony Point beaches.
Dunderberg bypass path / Jones Point was pretty well repaired from the storm damage three years ago. A bit sandy, but except for walking the first 50 feet, I was able to make it all the way north-bound riding on my 700x23C tires.
I think I'll do it again.
June 2002, Ken:
After riding south into Manhattan from Yorktown Heights on the North County and South County Trailways, Nepperhan Ave and Broadway, Sharon and I headed back north through the Bronx by going underneath the Henry Hudson Bridge, then on Riverdale Ave -- which we thought was at least OK. When we reached Yonkers, we took Valentine to Hawthorne. Then we went a long ways on Warburton, which we thought was great -- lots of glimpses of the Hudson river, light traffic.
We continued north on Route 9, which seemed OK at first, but as we came into Ossining the hills really got to us, and the traffic seemed heavier. We took some quieter streets through Ossining, seemed OK. Then crossed the Croton River and road north a ways on the Route 9 shoulder (some rumble strips, and of course crossings of exit and entrance ramps) -- Ken thought that was OK, but Sharon did not. We finally headed back inland, east-ward to Yorktown Heights, which was hilly.