Clearwater Hudson River Revival
Bike Parking at the Great Hudson River Clearwater Festival
Ride your bike up the Hudson River to the region's premier music and environmental festival! Free valet parking and bike information will be provided by TIME'S UP!
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The Clearwater Bike Center (left) welcomes scores of cyclists and prevents hundreds of pounds of pollution each year. For details, read about our first year: Clearwater 2002 Wrap-up
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Festival founder Pete Seeger likes bikes!
To help you get there by bike, further down on this page are some
to the Revival. If you would like to organize a ride or contribute a cue sheet, or have any questions, us.
Here's more information about the Clearwater Revival, including advance ticket sales. We'll see you there (and we'll park your bike!)
Rides to the Clearwater Revival
| Date |
Time |
Meeting Location |
Description |
| Saturday, June 20, 2009 |
7:30 a.m. |
Grand Central Terminal |
The 5BBC's 21st annual day-long summer retreat to this classic folk music festival returns with rides both days of the festival! Come celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Sloop Clearwater's launch plus Pete's 90th birthday! We'll board Metro North for a jump start to White Plains, then cycle to Croton Park (with return trip to NYC via train). Special Note: because of Clearwater fundraising efforts, prices for festival tickets have almost doubled; ride participants are strongly urged to purchase their own tickets in advance; see www.clearwater.org for details. A very limited number of tickets ($50) may be available via leader. Festival and bike ride are rain or shine! Bring $20 for train fare plus Metro North permits, sunscreen. Leaders: Ted M. Kushner and Brian Hoberman Cue Sheet |
| Sunday, June 21, 2009 |
8:30 a.m. |
Grand Central Terminal |
The 5BBC will once again "retreat" to this classic folk music festival, but with a later start/return time! We'll board Metro North for a jump start to White Plains, then cycle to Croton Park (with late evening return to NYC via train); see above for more details. Festival and bike ride are rain or shine! Bring $20 for train fare plus Metro North permits, sunscreen. Leaders: Ted M. Kushner, Brian Hoberman and Phil Goldberg
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Biking Directions to the Clearwater Revival
Choose a route, click on the cue sheet, print it up, and follow it!
Ride your bike to park right by the
festival entrance (photo from 2005)
- Direct route from New York City via Yonkers, Hastings, Tarrytown, etc.
- Partially carfree route from NYC via Manhattan Waterfront Greenway, South County Trail, and North County Trail, and roads through Briarcliff and Ossining
- Scenic route from NYC via White Plains
- Another scenic route from NYC via Bronxville and Tarrytown
- Scenic route from White Plains via Valhalla, Thornwood, Pleasantville, Ossining, etc.
- Yorktown Heights to Croton Point passing Teatown, Mohansic Lake, and Croton Dam
- Katonah to Croton Point (Two options: easy or challenging.)
- Peekskill to Croton Point passing Blue Mountain, Indian Point, and Crugers
- Carfree along the Old Croton Aqueduct from Van Cortlandt Park via Yonkers, Hastings, and Tarrytown: HTML or PDF
At the end of the day, you can even take your bike home on the train! Here's some bike permit and train info, and:
Reasons to Ride to the Clearwater Revival
(And Everywhere)
- You'll see, hear, and smell all sorts of wonderful things that you would never notice while in a car or on a train.
- TIME'S UP! will be at the Revival to welcome you and look after your wheels.
- You'll get to park right by the main entrance, you won't have to wait in line for the shuttle bus, and you won't get stuck in traffic waiting to leave the park.
- Bicycling doesn't pollute. A four-mile round trip by bike instead of by car keeps about 15 pounds of pollutants out of the air.
- Cycling is economically efficient: The cost of a typical adult bicycle in the U.S. amounts to less than a week's average pay, while the cost of buying and maintaining a typical automobile consumer over two months' worth of average income per year.
- Bikes are resource-efficient:
- 100 bicycles can be produced for the same energy and resources it takes to build one medium-sized automobile.
- A cyclist can travel approximately 1,000 miles on the food energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline.
- Bike riders consume 1/50 of the oxygen consumed by a motor vehicle and expel no pollutants.
- Cycling uses 1/3 the energy of walking, 1/25 the energy of public transport, and 1/50 the energy of the average car.
- Up to 20 bikes can be stored in the space required for one car.
- Bicycling is healthy: Regular cycling (i.e., 20 miles per week) reduces the risk of heart disease by half.
- Bicycling is clean: Motorists breath up to 10 times more exhaust inside cars than bicyclists do outside cars.
- Bicycling reduces traffic congestion. 40% of all trips Americans make are less than 2 miles long. By bike that same trip would take 10 minutes or less.

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Valet bike parking is such a hit that now the Monmouth County Clearwater Festival has it too! Photo courtesy of the Bike Church.
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