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Allegheny National Forest, PA
A few of us heading down May long weekend to the Allegheny National forest and surrounding area. Any recommendations on some great places to stay/camp? :cool:
Any input on roads would be much appreciated as well although we have a decent route via motorcycleroads.com
cheers,
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
In the forest itself it's quite scenic but we found the roads marginal in terms of repair compared to some of the superb roads outside the forest proper.
There is lots of fracking about so be aware of trucks and it stinks in many areas there.
There are lots of PA threads on here and in my view better riding areas.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
I was on a KLR when I went through it last year, and it's no racetrack, but a wonderful area to tour through in the fall.
I'd do it again.
Sorry, we stayed overnight in Renovo at Yesterdays.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
This is right by the forest area.....there is a Huge Dam / reservoir there...neat place to see...
http://i40.photobucket.com/albums/e2...PICTURE2-2.jpg
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Have a look to the southwest for route 666 PA. Booya said it was brilliant in another thread.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
I have ridden this state from top to bottom east to west and my recomendation would be buy an old fashioned Rand and Mcnally road atlas. Must be a Rand and Mcnally, they are extremely accurate and will show what roads are twisty, interesting etc. Once south of NY you really don't have to worry about road conditions that much, so pick the most interesting paved roads for you and let it rip. Sometimes the old fashioned way isn't the sexiest but the most accurate. Get the atlas and put your feet up and spend sometime just relaxing and viewing the roads available. There is however one potential fly in the ointment, as a previous poster mentioned, there is a great deal of "fracking" in north central Penn. this leads to a lot of truck traffic sometimes in places you wouldn't expect it. As an example along Hwy #6 in the north central areas. usually you can avoid it but keep an eye open for it, but the real downer is that a lot of these "frackers" are from outside the state Texas,Oklahoma etc. and they stay in motels, so a lot of your typical Super 8 style motels may be full up with these guys, just phone ahead to confirm if there is any vacancy at a motel you might want to stay at. Typically there will be room, but just not as many available rooms because of these out of state "frackers". Have fun, I'll be down there a few times this year as well.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Try the white deer motel outside williamsport fairly cheap but as mentioned fracking boys are booking alot of motels so i would call ahead.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Rotten_Ronnie
Have a look to the southwest for route 666 PA. Booya said it was brilliant in another thread.
The Devil you say!
http://i474.photobucket.com/albums/r...0/IMG_0115.jpg
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
666 is a cool road, if you don't mind poor road surface. It's really nice on my KTM.
While you are in the area, drop into the Kinzua area, ride Longhouse Scenic Drive. Very nice road.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Quote:
Originally Posted by
omnivore
666 is a cool road, if you don't mind poor road surface. It's really nice on my KTM.
While you are in the area, drop into the Kinzua area, ride Longhouse Scenic Drive. Very nice road.
Road 666 last summer on a ss bike. Would do it anytime. Like this summer again.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
First time I did 666 was on an 05 GSXR 1000 in a rainstorm (Huriicane Ike actually).
While riding normally, it was fine, but it wasn't a road you could go bonkers on, because the asphalt is in crappy shape, and many of the bad spots are on blind turns. However, last summer I rode it again, on the KTM< and I was much more comfortable riding at an "elevated pace" , lets say,LOL
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Are any of these roads doable for a long day trip? I don't mind doing a 900km day, but anything more then that is pushing it.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
I leave home at 8 am...in the USA by 9:30.
80-90 mins to Ellicottville/Olean area. Another half hr puts you in the Kinzua Dam area. Ride any roads in any direction till 3-4pm......then head for home. You'll beback in the GTA by 10-11 pm ish, with 800-1100 kms under your belt.
I have done this exact thing many times when I don't have more than a day to ride.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Folks... 666 is just ... umm, maybe ok. I went there a few years ago expecting the road to reveal the "devil's dirties!" I mean, route 666 in a bible thumping area of Pennsylvania. have you had a look at the names of the towns from 219 east to 15?
Anyway, I was extremely disappointed. Stayed in Tionesta on route 62 at the Eagle Rock (don't miss it - free use of their boats, canoes on the river - but not during weekends!! Sorry weekends are more expensive - but the place is *CHEAP*
From route 62 to 666... (yawn) Finally 948 will get you to Ridgeway and then head south to 555!! (take 948 to 255 and then east on 555)
It's a much nicer road - road surface is excellent - gas stop at Benezette - or if you don't need gas - make sure you have some pie and ice cream!! Mmmmmmm. You can continue to 120 and chose to go north (Emporium - boring or south to Renovo)
Benezette is nothing to shrug at. Want to see some mating Elk? September and October in the evenings here. Great place to stay - a nice hotel (plain Jane - but good food - ELK Burgers!)
Anyway - summary - going through the park from Tionesta to Ridgeway - try Dutch Hill road before you get to 666.
You can ride these roads for a week and never be on the same road twice. Lots of rives and water - great toe dipping country - beware of black bears who think they have the rights to the rivers. (They do!)
And in August/September? Bears apparently have developed a taste for corn! (Who knew?)
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Quote:
Originally Posted by
omnivore
I leave home at 8 am...in the USA by 9:30.
80-90 mins to Ellicottville/Olean area. Another half hr puts you in the Kinzua Dam area. Ride any roads in any direction till 3-4pm......then head for home. You'll beback in the GTA by 10-11 pm ish, with 800-1100 kms under your belt.
I have done this exact thing many times when I don't have more than a day to ride.
Thanks for the info. So it's just south on 219 right into PA?
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
219's the easy way to PA...but it's not the way I go.
I prefer to ride for a minimum of a day, or I just don't ride. This often leaves my bike lonely in the garage for a month or two.......but if I am stuck riding roads here, I'd rather take the truck. I've been riding for 29 yrs, and can't be bothered "droning" along boring roads on my bike anymore......so I ride in PA often, I am now trying to find backroads that both add interest to the trip AND save time (safe spots for elevated pace riding, know what I mean?)
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Omni - if you want a riding partner for that kind of 1 or 2 nights trip into PA - I'm good -
I like the non-standard routes and I'm pretty flexible on short notice - don't mind some "elevated pace" riding up to about 140 in good pavement twisties but also enjoy back country roads at tourist pace when the pavement or mood dictates.
I like to photograph and see what I'm riding through and even the occasional dirt track is fine.
43 years riding - can go my own way quite happily but also enjoy a riding partner.
•••
OP - listen to Mototrek.
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
LOL...that's actually right about where my limits lies too (140kmhish) Especially with the KTM (feels like I am gonna blow right off it)
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Re: Allegheny National Forest, PA
Oh hadn't realized - how much dirt are you doing on these rides???.....I've had so much fun here I'm seriously considering a dual sport but I do like my comfort as well and the KLR just hurts after a few hours.
Our best PA ride for thrills was racing the dusk and deer fear on a gorgeous stretch of smooth twistie. Damn brakes were just howling - much fun.
I like the way the roads change elevation in PA - keeps you on your toes.
Are you running street rubber or DS?