Jacksonville, FL to St. Augustine, FL

39.4 mi / 11.8 mph / 151 ft. climbing
Home: Davis Retreat

It looks like there is a direct route out of the Hanna Park campground to the quiet coastal street that would take us south, but it’s solidly blocked by a fence (the heatmaps almost fool you until you zoom in and see that the bright line of cyclist traffic has a tiny gap). From the maps I assumed it was a fussy homeowners’ association that didn’t want people from the campground easily accessing “their” street, but now I know that it’s actually the reverse: because the park has admission fees, the entire thing is enclosed in secure fencing!

That unusual structure means that we needed to do a 2.5-mile loop-around to get out of the park and back heading south. But once we hit Ocean Boulevard/First Street, the bike-friendliness of Florida that we experienced yesterday immediately returned. This was another different form though: a Pacific Northwest-style neighborhood greenway, a residential street where cars took a clear backseat to bikes and pedestrians. But unlike the Pacific Northwest, there were no street markings, or curb treatments, or speed humps, and only the smallest possible signs to indicate its greenway status. Instead, the culture just seemed to be determined by the users! And we took our influence from observing them. In addition to slow-rolling cyclists, there were runners, and walkers, all just out in the middle of the street (even though there were sidewalks), giving zero fucks if a car rolled up behind them, and, importantly, the drivers were completely unbothered too!

We were lucky to get some more-explicit instruction when Merle caught up to us on his e-bike. A one-time road cyclist, locked up knees have forced him to the e-bike alternative, and he was interested in (and envious of!) our travels. As we rode together he showed us that going the wrong way for a couple blocks down one-way segments was culturally accepted too. We were blown away when he revealed that he was 89 years old; we had assumed 70s, so he’s certainly an inspiration to us too!

One of us frequently says “this place reminds me of…”, and the resemblance is often so close that the other one of us can correctly finish the sentence, even if the memory was in a different country. This particular stretch of coastal residential greenway reminded me of pieces of 5 or 6 different places, but none a perfect match, so congratulations to this part of Florida for having a unique identity!
Runners claiming their street space along the Ocean Blvd./1st Ave. greenway.
Eventually the residential street grew into this hotel corridor, at which point the unique feel faded and other Atlantic coast resort corridors could easily slot in its place without anyone noticing.

Where the residential grid came to an end, we added a mile to our route by swinging over to Trader Joe’s (as crowded here as everywhere else in the country), and then turned back out onto isolated Ponte Vedra Boulevard. A 25-mile-long coastal ribbon, it was lined with miles of opulent houses, most built with somewhat better taste than their relatively-new constructions would normally achieve. The narrow shoulderless road wasn’t a problem, as drivers remained relaxed and patient, and then dwindled in volume the further south we went.

A very Florida-looking golf course.
Random sample of a Ponte Vedra Boulevard house.
Random sample of a Ponte Vedra Boulevard house.
The palm trees are marching in force now.

In a strong contrast to most oceanfront roads we’ve been on, I noticed zero public-access pathways running between houses from the road to the beach. I guess the people on the inland side of the road have a strong incentive to befriend their neighbors across the street? A more important difference is that almost none of the buildings here are raised like we’ve seen in most other coastal areas to protect them from flooding. Are they so confident that hurricane storm surges will never hit here, or does the state simply have less-proactive building codes than other states, which are now coming home to roost in the form of Florida’s spiraling home-insurance costs? The homes on the water side actually might not fare that badly, since they sit atop a surprisingly-tall dune (some even had fairly steep winding driveways to reach them, something I never expected to see in Florida!) But from our point of view on the road, which was at least halfway up the dune, we could look down onto the second floor of houses on the inland side, sitting in a basin just begging to be filled with 10 feet of water!

At Mickler Beach we finally hit a public access point, which now necessarily was a much-more elaborate parking-lot/bathrooms/picnic-tables operation than the simple pedestrian pathways used for access in other states. But that made it a perfect place for us to stop to eat our Trader Joe’s lunch, even if our surplus of oceanfront riding has us so spoiled that Rett didn’t even bother to walk to the top of the dune to see the water. Instead she got a lot more value out of a 15 minute emotional conversation about loss and moving forward with a new widow, who was out walking her dog Max who looked very much like Rett’s beloved Pip.

A brief hello to a cute doggie leads to a long and deep parking-lot conversation.
For completeness I walked over to get a photo of the beach, including the “front side” of some of the dune-topping mansions we’d passed on the “back side”.
The girls’ reaction to the wave shows that while the water is warm enough to swim in, in might not be warm enough to *comfortably* swim in?
Past Mickler Beach, Ponte Vedra Boulevard did a very Outer Banks thing, abruptly ending the string of houses and crossing several miles of undeveloped land in the Guana Reserve. While it was nice to get a feel of the native landscape, honestly the houses provided a lot more scenic variety.
When development returned at the south end of the reserve, the houses clearly belonged to a less-wealthy set (this one is nice, but essentially the width of the one-car garage its sits atop), and there were even some unfilled spaces between them!
At the north end of Vilano Beach the houses only populate one (the ocean) side of the road.

We shopped at our first Publix supermarket, and then we were turned inland by the St. Augustine Inlet, which also inspired the Spanish to build the oldest European-founded city in the continental US around this waterway. We only caught a brief view of the old city before crossing back out to the next barrier island and our AirBNB, but we will have more time for exploration over the next week as we stay through Thanksgiving.

Coming down the big bridge into St. Augustine (again, with good bicycle accommodations).
A shortcut mainly to get us off the main highway for a couple blocks revealed this quiet and beautiful “old Florida” street that suddenly brought us right back to Georgia and South Carolina.
This Spanish ship is looking pretty good after docking here in 1565.
A sequence of St. Augustine towers.
Our AirBNB is across the Bridge of Lions and the Intracoastal Waterway. What’s better, a bridge tall enough for the boats that we have to climb over, or one that’s flatter but we have to wait for? Tradeoffs!
Chit-chat at the Bridge of Lions.

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