Hi John,

I am in future updates via email directly from the Yelm City Planner in 
their development and progress of this particular trail. The City of Yelm 
is working with the City of Roy in connecting this trail from both sides of 
the Nisqually River, of which is a dividing boundary between the two 
counties, Thurston and Pierce. See attached file for location and the 
direction of the old railroad line. 

The stretch of railroad bed that I ventured on yesterday is about one and a 
half miles long ?  I live less than a mile from this trail.

The RR ties remain in place upon the RR bridge all the way to Roy 
currently.  I am sure that there are some ponds or creeks that are nearby 
along the trail on other side of the Nisqually River. 

I wish the developers would leave the trail unpaved and in a natural state. 
It would be more appealing for me as well as other cyclists, as well as 
equestrians. Every trail in Thurston County is paved that I have rode on. 
The trails in Pierce County I do not have a full report on those. 

Kim Hetzel.
 


On Wednesday, December 27, 2023 at 12:04:32 PM UTC-8 John Rinker wrote:

Randy, I'm of the very same mind when it comes to riding- open to the deep 
exploration of my immediate surroundings. This is probably why I like 
climbing so much; the slow pace (for me) reminds me to look around and 
enjoy what it is I am riding through. 

Kim, You'll certainly have a golden trail there when the ties are pulled 
and the path is smoothed. Hopefully, all ready for Spring and Summer! Does 
this beautiful-looking trail pass along water (ponds, lakes, rivers) at any 
point?

Cheers, John


On Wednesday, December 27, 2023 at 10:41:05 AM UTC-8 [email protected] 
wrote:

More often on rides I worry less about traveling far, but emphasize deep 
travel and exploration, often close to home. Your ride definitely qualifies 
as deep travel and your bike looks well-suited for exploration.
Randy

On Wed, Dec 27, 2023 at 11:05 AM Kim H. <[email protected]> wrote:

[image: 20231226_145002.jpg]

Kim Hetzel.
On Wednesday, December 27, 2023 at 9:04:05 AM UTC-8 Kim H. wrote:

Hi Randy,

I thank-you for you positive and encouraging words of my bicycle adventure 
yesterday. I appreciate them. 
Here are a couple more pictures from yesterday's adventure.

Kim Hetzel.[image: 20231226_144433_HDR.jpg]

On Wednesday, December 27, 2023 at 6:14:35 AM UTC-8 [email protected] 
wrote:

Great story and pictures Kim! The bicycle is the perfect vehicle to take us 
to new places and explore the world around us.
Thanks for the contribution,
Randy in WI

On Wednesday, December 27, 2023 at 12:42:13 AM UTC-6 [email protected] 
wrote:

[image: IMG_2011.JPG]

On Tuesday, December 26, 2023 at 10:40:50 PM UTC-8 Kim H. wrote:

Yesterday, I decided to see if the city workers were out on their 
continuation of pulling up the railroad ties for the preparation of the new 
bicycle pedestrian trail from Yelm to Roy, WA. To my surprise, they were 
not here today. I took advantage of this situation and decided to have my 
private own adventure and explore where the city workers stopped pulling up 
the ties. The child in me was so excited to venture out on my blue 52cm 
Clem to see how it handled off road.

The weather was cool with a lot of fog with no sight of blue sky.   The 
ground surface was compacted from all the heavy and repetitive machine 
traffic. There was long sections of imprinted tires tracks from a very 
large loader. For the most part, I managed well. 

When I reached to the old railroad bridge over the Nisqually River, I found 
about 75 feet ? of railroad bed, where the ties were not pulled up. I 
decided not to or over the bridge. I was just here to take pictures and 
satisfy my curiosity.

Here are some pictures.
[image: IMG_1999.JPG]

On Monday, October 30, 2023 at 10:11:06 PM UTC-7 Kim H. wrote:

[image: thumbnail_20231030_162233_HDRuuu.jpg][image: 
thumbnail_20231030_164024_HDRvvv.jpg]

On Monday, October 30, 2023 at 10:03:43 PM UTC-7 Kim H. wrote:

[image: thumbnail_20231030_161253_HDR.jpg][image: 
thumbnail_20231030_161920_HDR.jpg]

On Monday, October 30, 2023 at 10:00:40 PM UTC-7 Kim H. wrote:

[image: thumbnail_20231030_161003_HDR.jpg]

On Monday, October 30, 2023 at 9:59:04 PM UTC-7 Kim H. wrote:

This afternoon, I decided to go on my second adventure to find out exactly 
where the end of the railroad rails were pulled up about a month ago ended 
for a future bicycle/pedestrian/equestrian trail near my home. It is within 
fifteen minutes from my house.  It was a very sunny day about 56 degrees. I 
took my Clem and set off by myself.

I rode on a trail along the Nisqually River as far as I could. I found a 
steep very short trail that lead up to the railroad bed and ties. It took 
awhile for me to maneuver myself with my Clem up this steep small incline, 
applying my brakes in slow steps. I made it alright. 

I did not feel safe enough to ride my bike along side of the old railroad 
bed, because the ground was uneven and to the right of me the ground 
dropped off below me. I walked my bike all the way to the railroad bridge 
taking in all the wonderful colored golden fallen maple leaves on the 
ground. There was no one else around. I must have walked about more than a 
quarter of a mile and then some. 

The railroad bridge finally came into my view. It has been many years since 
I was back here on foot. There had been a chain-link fence across the 
entrance of the bridge crossing to not allow people to cross it.  However, 
this time, there was no fence on my side nor there was none across on the 
other side. It was all open to my surprise. In fulfilling my curiosity, the 
railroad rails ended to the entrance of the railroad bridge. 

My phone rang. My wife was asking me, if I was alright. I replied, "Yes". I 
told her that I would call her, when I was heading back. 

I maneuvered my Clem in and around several railroad ties in preparation to 
walk across the railroad bridge. This will be an exciting memory I told 
myself. I was very cautious in walking my Clem over and onto each railroad 
tie to reach the other side.  I paused occasionally to take pictures, 
holding my cellphone very carefully not to drop it down through the cracks 
of the railroad ties into the river. Each time after taking a picture, I 
would carefully place my phone back into my vest pocket and zip it up not 
to lose it. 

About half way, I scared an adult blue heron into flight swooping out over 
my head, as he called out. After that, I decided to take a 180 degree video 
with great care. I proceeded on and make it to the other side into the next 
county. From there, my eyes noticed that the railroad rails and ties 
continued on through the forest. I paused and took more pictures looking 
back and the river below me. The sun was slowly going down behind the 
trees. It was most definitely time to head back in this late afternoon.

I made it safely back across the railroad bridge. It was a long walk back 
to the spot, where I had came up from that steep embankment down to the 
trail, where I could ride my Clem back home. At some point, whilst I was 
walking, I almost twisted my left angle under soft soil. Thank goodness 
that I did not. 

I made it home safe and happy in going out on my personal adventure in the 
sunny fall weather. Soon after arriving home, I very quickly, I felt my 
hips and muscles hurting from my journey. I took some acetaminophen to help 
reduce the pain.  I am not as young as I used to be. However, my heart 
remains younger than my body in riding my bicycle and going on adventures. 

Kim Hetzel.

.[image: thumbnail_20231030_160518_HDR.jpg]




On Friday, October 27, 2023 at 11:34:12 PM UTC-7 Kim H. wrote:

@Richard,
That Potawatomi MTB trail in Pinkney, Michigan looks pretty gnarly. I am 
glad that tried out your Gus on that trail as an introduction to mountain 
biking.  I'm looking forward to your upcoming upgrades to your Gus and ride 
reports, as well. 
I went out on a fairly long bike ride today. It was mostly pavement on a 
bike/pedestrian trail near my home. Towards the end, I decided to venture 
off road along a very long stretch of newly pulled RR rails with RR ties 
left from the excavation to see how far down the hired company pulled the 
ties. I decided to go all the way to the RR bridge that goes over the 
Nisqually River perhaps another time.  The future plan is in the making of 
extending the bicycle/pedestrian trail over the river into a town called 
Roy. This is apart of a greater plan to connect to other trails in the next 
county. 

The next phase will be for the city to hire a company to clean up the RR 
ties.

I had fun going off road with my Clem. It is more adventurous and handles 
very well. 

Kim Hetzel.

[image: 20231026_143115_HDR.jpg][image: 20231026_143133_HDR.jpg]

On Wednesday, October 25, 2023 at 7:40:14 AM UTC-7 [email protected] wrote:

[image: image0.jpeg]
This pic is from the Potawatomi MTB trail in Pinkney, Michigan - The “Poto” 
for short. This is the quintessential SE Michigan trail, and a place that 
has shaped my life as a cyclist. I don’t recommend it but this place was my 
introduction to mountain biking. Some of the very best times I’ve had on a 
bike happened here. This particular ride was my first time giving it a go 
on the Gus.  It was pretty great but is also the reason I am currently 
working on cockpit changes & installing a rapid rise rear derailleur.:)
It’s a destination type trail & every trip there is like visiting an old 
friend.
Sent from my iPhone

On Oct 25, 2023, at 8:51 AM, [email protected] <[email protected]> 
wrote:

One of my (and probably many of you) main motivations for riding my bikes 
is to get to a special place. This may be a place of natural beauty, a 
quiet place to get away from the hustle of daily life or a place that has 
special meaning to us. Post a picture of a special place your bike has 
taken you, and why this place is special.


This is my Appaloosa at the mouth of the Huron River in the Upper Peninsula 
of Michigan. The Huron Islands are visible in Lake Superior. This place is 
remote feeling and beautiful, and I was there recently  many years after my 
first visit.

Randy in WI
<Appaloosa Huron River BeachBWWEB.jpg>

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