Glenn Jackson Bridge - Seven and Seven: 2025 - CycleBlaze

June 10, 2025

Glenn Jackson Bridge

The sky looks promising when I wake up around five this morning.  I take my shot, close the curtain on the window so the morning sun won't bother Rachael when it breaks the horizon, and head back to bed myself for awhile.

Looks like a fair day to ride.
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This is so much better.  It's not too darn hot today - it's a full ten degrees cooler than yesterday, and almost cool enough to need a layer when we leave the apartment around 9:30.  So refreshing!  We really do need to get out earlier.

We're taking one of our favorite rides today, one we've done hundreds of times perhaps: across the Broadway Bridge, up Greeley to Willamette Bluff and follow it past the University of Portland, north to the Columbia River, and then east up the river to the I-205 bridge or however far we feel like going on the day - sometimes we'll add another dozen miles by looping the Troutdale Airport and stopping for a break on the way back at Chinook Landing - but today the out and back to the bridge feels just right, and the first ride of any real length Rachael's taken for a while.  And at the end her primary complaint isn't about her feet or wrists or breathing for a change - it's her aching triceps, from holding her weight up.  They don't get the same kind of workout on her walks.

We're just here for the ride and to enjoy sharing the experience, so I leave the Canon behind and just take shots with my phone at a few places where we're stopped anyway.  The first is at a train crossing that occasionally holds us up.  Today's is amazingly long - there must be a couple hundred cars in my estimation, noticing one identical car after another passing us every three seconds.  I'm puzzled about what this is, with every car exactly the same, all tightly lidded and labeled Canpotex (Canada potash export, I assume).  I'll read up on this later and see that this is part of an export system for distributing potash from Saskatchewan to the world.  The system consists of these immense trains - typically about 200 cars, according to the Canpotex website - delivering product to international ports.  One is here at the mouth of the Willamette, just south of Kelley Point.  The train is apparently on its return run, racing back to Saskatchewan for another load.

I told Rachael we shouldn't have to wait long because so much of the train had already passed, and cars were rolling past at about three seconds each.
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CJ HornI can’t believe sometimes how much I learn from keeping up with this journal! I never kbew any of this.

“How much does the U.S. rely on Canada's potash? The U.S imports 90 per cent of the potash its farmers need annually and 85 per cent of it comes from Canada.“

So wouldn’t you think we would want to play nice with our closest neighbors?
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2 days ago
Scott AndersonTo CJ HornI was really surprised to learn this, and thought about our relationship with Canada too. I wonder if there's a chance that they'll shut down this run at some point, or if tarrifs will affect it. They also export through Vancouver.
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2 days ago
And then I looked the other direction. I should have timed how long we waited so I could estimate the length of the train, but we must have been there between five and ten minutes.
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Finally the last car comes into sight around the bend, and soon we're crossing this Columbia Slough and then heading east upriver.i don't make another stop with the phone until we reach our end point at the Glenn Jackson Bridge and Rachael stops for a snack break before we turn back.

Crossing the Columbia Slough. I've got my eye out for bird life - today there's a heron on the water and cliff swallows zipping around, but I've also seen an osprey and an eagle on a nearby snag, enduring harassment from some agitated crows.
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That's our bridge.
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Snack break.
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We're stopped anyway, so I can afford a shot. Hood on the right, Larch Mountain on the left.
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Sound track: Caravan, by Thelonius Monk

Later, we celebrate with lunch at probably our favorite local restaurant, Gallo Nero.  We enjoy a terrific meal and walk out telling each other we should put it into our regular rotation over the next seven weeks before we leave for London.

I like this place! Serving a pilsner from Go Brewing in Chicago, this might be the best NA beer I've had yet.
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Got the blues.
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CJ HornSo Portland!
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2 days ago
Somehow we don't have a photo of Rachael's pesce spada skewer she was so enthusiastic about - it unfortunately had a fat thumb masking part of it; but we did well enough with this excellent chicken cacciatore.
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Jonathan HechtFirst, welcome home.

Secondly, your 25 mile marker is literally a stone's throw from my place. So if you ever need a pit stop while you’re out this way…

Anyway, glad to see your riding and I’m sure you’re pleased with your plan to head back to Europe. Hopefully we can connect for coffee before you leave.

Jonathan
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4 days ago
Scott AndersonTo Jonathan HechtOh, good. I was about to drop a line to see if you're back in town. We'll be in touch.
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4 days ago

Today's ride: 37 miles (60 km)
Total: 1,152 miles (1,854 km)

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