We offer ride support and shuttle service on several regional bike paths, as well as custom rides off-the-beaten path.
Ohio to Erie Trail (OTET)
The OTET spans 230 miles from Cincinnati to Cleveland.
The average rider takes 6 days to complete the entire route. We offer full route support as well as logistical support on shorter sections of the trail, or “flip flops” (starting at a central point and biking to the northern or southern terminus, then going back to the central point and completing the remaining segment).
The OTET follows a series of old canal towpaths and multi-use bikeways, with 20 miles of pavement in the northern section. Riders will go through cities, metro parks, rolling farmland, and Cuyahoga National Park. It’s possible to plan a route to catch a Guardians game, a Reds game, or both.

Great Allegheny Passage (GAP) and C&O Canal
330 miles from Pittsburgh, PA to Washington, D.C.
The Great Allegheny Passage (GAP) is 150 miles from Pittsburgh, PA to Cumberland, MD. The GAP starts at Point Park in Pittsburgh and traverses through old steel mill infrastructure, through several tunnels, across the Eastern Continental Divide, and along the whitewater of the Youghiogheny.
The C&O Canal is 184.5 miles designated as a National Park. The C&O Canal trail follows the historic towpath used for hauling barges and canal boats upriver from Washington, D.C. to the Queen City of Cumberland, MD in the late 1800s. An astonishing amount of wildlife and some of the best sandwiches of your life are along this route.

Adventures in the Monongahela
The Monongahela National Forest is one of the most beautiful regions of the United States. About 9% of the population in the U.S. can attribute their drinking water to the pristine headwaters high in the Monongahela. High elevation bogs, crystal-clear streams, and gravel routes abound.

Michigan
Michigan gravel and mountain biking
