Cycling Katy Trail – one sip at a time

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The Deaton family of Houston, Chris Deaton (left), wife Kimberly Deaton and children Brandon, 9, and Natalie, 11, enjoy the view and beverages under the shade of tree at Stone Hill Winery near the 239-mile-long Katy Trail in Herman, Mo. (The Associated Press)
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HERMANN, Mo. (AP) – The 19th century German settlers who saw visions of the Rhineland in the rolling Missouri hills likely didn’t anticipate the more modern voyagers who flock to these parts: Spandex-wearing, energy-bar-chowing cyclists lured by a 236-mile rails-to-trails path – the nation’s longest.

What they instead discovered was fertile farmland ideal for growing grapes while hardy enough to endure the extremes of Missouri weather.

For Katy Trail riders, the abundance of wineries in what before Prohibition was the nation’s second-largest wine-producing region makes for a memorable two-wheeled vacation.

A bonus for bicycling history buffs: much of the trail parallels the Missouri River and covers ground first explored more than 200 years ago by frontier pioneers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark.

The Katy (named for the old Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, or MKT for short) is actually a state park. Each summer, the Missouri Department of Natural Resources sponsors a weeklong ride for several hundred cyclists from across the country.

DNR employee and tour leader David Kelly called the event “an entry-level ride for folks interested in touring.” The youngest rider this year was 6; the oldest 80, with an average age of 52.

The cross-state trail is almost entirely flat, and daily rides don’t top 60 or 65 miles on the hard-packed gravel surface. With charming, history-drenched railroad towns every eight to 10 miles along the trail, the event is aptly named: Cruisin’ on the Katy.

“It’s not a race,” Kelly said. “Usually, we have to chase them out of shops and restaurants.”

Rather than a week’s ride, I opted for an abbreviated, 2-day tour that began in Hermann and concluded a mere 65 miles away in St. Charles.

Hermann is the heart of Missouri’s Germanic influence, a settlement founded in 1837 by those seeking religious freedom, cheap land and an escape from high taxes, crop failures, overpopulation and the ravages of the Napoleonic War.

By 1870, one-third of Missouri’s 1.7 million residents were German, with 11,000 others hailing from Austria and Switzerland. They settled in small towns such as Dutzow, Rhineland, Bernheimer, Berger and Holstein.

The state’s wine industry boomed with its German settlements. More than 60 wineries sprung up in the Missouri River valley. The largest was Hermann’s Stone Hill Winery, which opened in 1847, and claims to have once been one of the largest wineries in the world.

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