B
Bgaudet0801
Guest
"zeldabee" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
> "bgaudet0801" <[email protected]> wrote:
[...]
> > Granted my experience is quaintly provincial but I've never seen a park-posted as off-limits to
> > bikes. Some hiking trails or wildlife preservation areas, yes - but not urban parks.
>
> Actually, your question puzzles me. Larger parks, like Central and
Prospect
> Parks, have bike paths. Why would you want to ride around in a dinky, crowded little park? It
> would take about 30 seconds to get from one end to the other...assuming you didn't run down a ped
> on the way. Little
children,
> I can see...
That explains why one wouldn't want to ride that park as a _ride_. I use small parks, parkettes and
linking trails as transit corridors. It works pretty well for this small city. The idea that a
particular part might be legally off-limits is surprising to me.
> "bgaudet0801" <[email protected]> wrote:
[...]
> > Granted my experience is quaintly provincial but I've never seen a park-posted as off-limits to
> > bikes. Some hiking trails or wildlife preservation areas, yes - but not urban parks.
>
> Actually, your question puzzles me. Larger parks, like Central and
Prospect
> Parks, have bike paths. Why would you want to ride around in a dinky, crowded little park? It
> would take about 30 seconds to get from one end to the other...assuming you didn't run down a ped
> on the way. Little
children,
> I can see...
That explains why one wouldn't want to ride that park as a _ride_. I use small parks, parkettes and
linking trails as transit corridors. It works pretty well for this small city. The idea that a
particular part might be legally off-limits is surprising to me.