One for the Road: Fun on Foot in New England

The Fun on Foot series is an independently published collection of guides to the best places to run, job and walk. The newest title in the series is Fun on Foot in New England, which highlights the best trails and pathways in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. There are detailed route suggestions for Cape Cod and Nantucket, and cities like Hartford, CT, Burlington, VT, Providence, RI and Boston, MA, which features expanded coverage.

The foot-focused team behind this series of guides is Warwick and Nola Ford, Australian-raised Canadian-Americans with a passion for running, skiing, and travel. While working as an executive, Warwick traveled frequently, and found that his biggest challenge at that time was identifying easy options for fitness in between countless cross-country flights. That led to the Fun on Foot project. Now, Warwick and Nola spend their time researching and documenting enjoyable on-foot routes in cities throughout the US.

A Canadian in Beijing: Pedestrian Police in Shanghai

Walking in Shanghai is a completely different experience to walking in Beijing. Unlike the latter that includes constant sidestepping and a forced alertness to mopeds on sidewalks or enormous bicycles catching my heels, Shanghai is tame.

After checking out the Bund, my friend Sarah and I took to the underground walkways that help pedestrians cross the wide busy streets (oh, how civilized!) and emerged again onto Nanjing Rd East, known in all the guide books as a shopping mecca for tourists. What this means, usually, is “expensive” shopping. And, yes, that’s what we discovered.

(But, then again, we’re from Beijing.)

We wandered farther and found cheaper markets about ten minutes north. These were full of people — swarming in fact — and I came to appreciate a particular employment here in Beijing:

Pedestrian Police.

I was charmed by their official whistle that – not once, not twice, but three times – beckoned me into obedience and stopped my Beijing-borne desire to jaywalk.

These men and women stand at major intersections and don fluorescent vests, whistles on strings around their necks and ropes that actually tie in the pedestrians when the crowds start to misbehave. They literally draw the rope across the waists of those who are in front of the crowd and about to spill into the roadway. It most certainly has a damming effect on the flow of feet.

In Beijing, I have joked with fellow students about the best way to cross the street being to “attach yourself” to a group of others and to cross at the same time. This is the clue that it’s possible: others are doing it! That theory, as you may have noticed, mentions nothing about traffic lights.

Here in Shanghai, the traffic police will wave you back with annoyance as though you’re not sophisticated enough to understand the simplicity of those very same traffic lights. It’s amazing that after only one month, I have come to regard traffic lights as just part of the décor and not an indication of how I ought to conduct myself as a pedestrian! In my Canadian style, when I was yelled at by the first “officer,” I felt sheepish and immediately apologized.

He eyed me with curiosity.

Most people do.

Oh Shanghai, where’s your anarchy?

Final pic by Sarah Keenan. All the rest by Ember Swift.

All Roads Lead to Rome

Czech couple from northeast of Prague, near Mlada Boleslav (home of the famed Skoda auto), decided they’d go for a walk…to Rome. The couple just reached their destination, completing the 1500 km (932 mile) trip entirely on foot.

The couple, the Koziskas, have three adult children, and the husband, an avid travel book reader, got the idea reading the story of a similar trek by Moravian priests last decade. Mrs. Koziskova, who works at the Skoda plant, suffers from back pain and wasn’t quite sure she’d make it. Further, they were forced to sleep outside a few times along the way, coming in close contact with some foraging wild boar and even a curious badger.

However, now she says, she “can’t imagine spending [their] next holiday lazing around.” Nothing like good travel writing to inspire a trip!

Get Inspired – Walk Across a Country

The best way to see anything and everything while traveling is by foot. Not a single person I know can dispute that point either. Buildings, people and market stalls all become rainbow like blurs when traveling by car and even when we’re off cruising the land by bike we still don’t pick up half of what we see when going by foot. Nothing escapes your sight. I had the chance of a lifetime to walk across America earlier this year and it has left me wanting to walk the span of several other destinations. In this Travel + Leisure piece, George Butterfield interviews Shane Mitchell about a recent walk across the island nation of Iceland and how he got inspired to pick up and go. Iceland has always been on my top places to visit list and from the brief Q&A I think I’ve heard enough to want to do it by foot as well. If you’re in need of a little inspiration to do anything, not just walk across the planet, do check out this small read and perhaps you’ll be ready to take your first baby step into the wilderness.

Update from the Road: Walk Across America Complete

6,710,099 steps later, 3,177 miles covered and our mission is complete! As I may have mentioned here on various occasions I have been on the road walking, stepping and counting my steps across this magnificent and diverse country with a program called Steps Across America. When we started our question sounded a lot like that of the Tootsie Roll Pop Owl and his friend pondering the number of licks to finish a Tootsie Roll Pop. While the world may never know the answer to that question they now know how many steps it takes to trek America via the route found at the SAA site. Thanks to Sportline and all our amazing sponsors I was able to share the experience with 11 other individuals. With our final walk to the Santa Monica pier there were tears and cheers, but most of all the rewarding feeling of knowing you really did something to affect the masses.

Thanks to Kodak I’ve managed to take over 1,200 photos on this journey and will be searching for the best way to catalogue them for you guys to see. It may take me some time, but never fear – you’ll see them before the end of the year. Right now I’m going to go rest my feet.