Inn Between Ride 2024

Ride bikes to bars named “inn” or which are in inns, by way of in-between spaces variously literal and figurative. The rides are free, but bring money for drinks and food.

Join me on 3rd Tuesdays for Pedalpalooza 2024:

  1. June 18, 2024, for ride #1 (SE/Central City)
  2. July 16, 2024, for ride #2 (NE/East Portland)
  3. August 20, 2024, for ride #3 (Gresham/East Portland)

Check the Shift calendar for any last-minute updates in the event of severe weather, etc.

Short link to share these rides: bit.ly/inn-between-ride-2024

Josh (aka carrythebanner)
Email: innbetweenride@joshuahetrick.info
Mastodon: @press1forjosh@mastodon.social, #InnBetweenRidePDX

Inn Between Ride #1 — SE/Central City edition

Shift calendar listing: Inn Between Ride #1

Approximately 12 miles; not a loop. Stops at:

Inn Between Ride 2024 #1 route map

View Inn Between Ride #1 route on RideWithGPS

I don’t remember Holman’s ever going by the name “Hello Inn” before they shut down & reopened. But whatever the reason, they now have a big neon sign in the front window with said inn moniker (in addition to the Holman’s sign, which is still their proper name as far as I can tell). Regardless, as far as I’m concerned they’re officially Inn Between canon now.

This route takes advantage of some older, narrow streets and a quirky street layout courtesy of Sandy Blvd’s diagonal cut through the neighborhood. We’ll skirt around the Burnside bridgehead, then pass under and eventually on the Morrison Bridge into downtown. Some newer bike paths connect to older ones for a mish-mash of pathways which will take us to Press PDX, a bar inside of a Residence Inn in South Portland. This stop marks the first time that we go to a bar in an inn, where the bar is not named “inn” but the inn is. If that represents some sort of achievement I don’t know what it is, but it’s new so there you go.

Departing from there, we’ll pass through a couple of my favorite downtown parks before winding into Lair Hill for some of my favorite (and oddest) downtown bike routes. Eventually we’ll cross the Willamette back into southeast via Tilikum Crossing, skirting around and through my home neighborhood of Brooklyn to arrive at the Bear Paw.

Bonus: There’s a print shop across the street from the Bear Paw Inn called Lowell’s Print-Inn, so if you stand in Franklin St just west of SE Milwaukie Ave, you’re in between inns.

Inn Between Ride #2 — NE/East Portland edition

Shift calendar listing: Inn Between Ride #2

Approximately 15 miles; not a loop. Stops at:

Inn Between Ride 2024 #2 route map

View Inn Between Ride #2 route on RideWithGPS

Returning to the Kennedy School for a second year, this time we head east instead towards NoPo. From there we’ll wind through Cully, cross Columbia (Blvd, not the river*), take a couple of trails, and end up at a hotel bar by the airport — Bella’s, at Shilo Inn.

After that we’ll start heading south-ish, loosely around 122nd Ave (though only riding on it very briefly, and almost entirely on side paths). Once we pass under I-84 we’ll also start drifting westward. Our path will zigzag through East Portland and ultimately end at Tik Tok, which is dubiously counted as an on-site restaurant for an otherwise unrelated but adjacent motel, Best Value Inn.

There is also an opportunity for a bonus inn en route, not to be named here — we’ll follow the whims of the group night-of to decide whether we stop or not.

This route is a bit longer than most other Inn Between Rides, about 15 miles in total. It also carves a path alongside some busier roads like 122nd Ave, Columbia Blvd, Lombard St, and 82nd Ave. We stick to side paths, cross streets, and parallel routes as much as possible rather than those actual roads, but there will be some short stretches of slightly spicier riding than usual. We won’t be taking a lane alongside highway traffic or anything even remotely close, but do note that this ride’s length and adventurousness are an extra notch up from other editions of this ride.

If you need transit service home after the ride, there are multiple TriMet options to head back. The end spot is right on the #9 and #72 buses, and also a short ride from the FX2 bus, #17 bus, and MAX Green Line (all frequent service). There are also a few good transit-adjacent spots mid-route if you need to drop early; ask for details.

(* If someone knows of a suitable inn in VanWA, please share; I’ll totally take this contrived idea across state lines.)

Inn Between Ride #3 — Gresham/East Portland edition

Shift calendar listing: Inn Between Ride #3

Approximately 12 miles; not a loop. Stops at:

Inn Between Ride 2024 #3 route map

View Inn Between Ride #3 route on RideWithGPS

Last year, Inn Between expanded beyond Portland city limits to Milwaukie and Oak Grove; this year, we go to Gresham. The ride officially starts at Cedarville Inn, just off the Springwater Corridor at Linnemann Station Park. (See below for a “R2R” aka ride to the ride if you plan to arrive at the start by transit instead.)

The route starts with a brief return westward on said Springwater Corridor. But in short order, we’ll exit north and wind our way around the foot of Powell (Butte), crossing into East Portland. The route snakes through neighborhoods north of Powell (Blvd), arcing generally northward and westward.

That will place us right where Magic Inn should be, had it not closed permanently in the time since last summer’s ride. There is a bar across the street, however — Bridge City Taproom — so that will have to do as stand-in inn. While we quaff at this alternate saloon, we can wistfully gaze across 122nd Ave at the shuttered inn as well as at its neighbor, Mr. Peep’s Peephole, which I assume is still there and always will be.

Perhaps to make up for a not-technically-an-inn stop, our final inn of the ride will be another not-yet-visited-by-this-ride inn. Our path’s arc will crest and pass back down southward while it continues heading west, eventually landing at Andy’s Inn on SE Foster Rd.

Like ride #2, there are a handful of transit options home from the final inn. The end spot is right on the #14 bus as well as a short ride from the #17 bus, #72 bus, and MAX Green Line (all frequent service). Likewise there are some spots to drop mid-route if needed, though for the first third or so of the route the options are a bit thin.

And speaking of transit — if you’ll be arriving at the start location via transit at Gresham Transit Center, the pre-ride R2R begins there. Come early and ride a few bonus miles between the transit center and Cedarville Inn, eschewing the obvious route of the Springwater Corridor for some cut-throughs, side streets, and other paths.

Inn Between Ride 2024 #3 R2R route map

View Inn Between Ride #3 R2R route on RideWithGPS

Radio Discogs set list — Green Day

Each month at work we have a Radio Discogs day where different employees DJ for an hour each, all day long. A few folks do get on the 1s and 2s and spin vinyl, though many (including myself) play from a playlist of some sort. (Although I’m not mixing live, I do take quite a bit of time to hone my set list in advance, work out a good mix, and nail the segues & fades.)

I’ve spun 7 different sets now in the last 2-½ years, most with a common thread of some sort — ska/dub; songs about monsters, death, and dying, for Halloween; hardcore, noise, industrial, and thrash; etc. My most recent set was all Green Day, mostly deep cuts, accompanied by commentary in our Radio Discogs Slack channel that we use for hyping and talking about the day’s music. I enjoyed putting it together, so here’s the set list along with a lightly edited version of my comments.

Radio Discogs 2024-02 set list — Green Day

  1. Words I Might Have Ate
  2. Peacemaker
  3. Espionage
  4. Don’t Want To Fall In Love
  5. Knowledge
  6. Misery
  7. Desensitized
  8. The Ballad of Wilhelm Fink
  9. On The Wagon
  10. Last Ride In
  11. ¿Viva La Gloria? (Little Girl)
  12. 16 (Live)
  13. Don’t Want To Know If You Are Lonely
  14. Take Back
  15. Rotting
  16. Good Riddance
  17. Rest
  18. Somewhere Now
  19. Are We The Waiting / St. Jimmy
  20. 86

Words I Might Have Ate

Starting off with some vintage Green Day — “Words I Might Have Ate,” last song on Kerplunk. (If you had it on vinyl, that is; I have the cassette, which has 4 extra songs tacked on from an EP the previous year.)

Green Day “Words I Might Have Ate” — YouTube

Peacemaker

Followed by … another 57-½ minutes of Green Day. Apologies and/or you’re welcome 😅 This set was partially inspired by another employee’s single-artist set the previous month (The Beatles; also a deep cuts set, or at least, as deep as you can get with a group that’s had so much attention paid to it) and also an excellent Discogs blog post about pop-punk in the year 1994 💚 This track is “Peacemaker,” from 21st Century Breakdown.

Green Day recently released their 10th* album; being the Idiot‡ that I am, I’ve been on a kick listening through their whole back catalog. This set is a selection of some of their lesser-known tracks — B-sides, covers, album deep-cuts, etc — that (mostly) aren’t quite as representative of their usual sound. (Plus some personal anecdotes as we go.)

* OK, 14th album, but ¡Uno! / ¡Dos! / ¡Tré! and Father of All… aren’t really canon to me.

‡ When Green Day first got big and people asked them about a fan club, they joked, “No, we have an Idiot Club, send us $20 and see what you’ll get,” through stifled laughs. Eventually, they did create a fan club and thus called it the Idiot Club. I joined in 1996 (member #8723) and still have the membership card, wedged in my wallet ever since.

Green Day “Peacemaker” — YouTube

Espionage

Knowing they had released a ton of great songs as B sides off Insomniac singles (more on that later), my friend and I who were both huge Green Day fans tried to grab any we could find when Nimrod came out. They were mostly on import CD singles, which the crummy chain store in our 1-stop-light town didn’t really carry. Neither of us managed to find the Hitchin’ A Ride single this track was on, though I vaguely recall finding a RealAudio clip of it online. (#TellMeHowOldYouAreWithoutTellingMeHowOldYouAre)

Eventually I got to hear a decent-sounding version of it when it later showed up on an Austin Powers soundtrack, and also on their B sides comp, Shenanigans.

Green Day “Espionage” — YouTube

Don’t Want To Fall In Love

First CD I ever owned — I’d bought a few cassettes, but this was my first laser-based music.

I actually got this CD single before I even had a CD player 😅 I was wildly into Green Day at the time and wanted to get my hands on anything that had tracks I hadn’t heard. So now that I think about it, I guess I do understand the Swifties who are buying vinyl without owning a record player.

Green Day “Don’t Want To Fall In Love” — YouTube

Knowledge

After hearing Dookie I became a huge Green Day fan. That lead me to get their 2 previous albums, and the cassette version of their first album had this Operation Ivy cover. This track led me to buy an Op Ivy CD without knowing anything about them, other than their connection to Green Day. (I also bought a Screeching Weasel CD that same day because Mike Dirnt played bass on it.)

Hearing Op Ivy for the first time absolutely floored me — I remember literally dropping my jaw, sitting there entranced listening to the whole album start to finish. Not a stretch to say this is among a small handful of life-changing moments for me. A few years later I got a tattoo of the Op Ivy logo, primarily because of this experience (plus it was and is an amazing album).

(That scene in Freaks & Geeks when James Franco’s character puts on a Black Flag record and gets that 1000-yard stare gave me flashbacks.)

So for whatever sins Green Day may commit (and they’ve made a few), they were my gateway band into all of the music I love and so I’ll always have a soft spot for them.

Green Day “Knowledge” — YouTube

Misery

I wasn’t really into Warning when it first came out — at that time I had recently gotten into louder/faster/angrier punk — but coming back to it later I appreciate some of the tracks that didn’t click for me the first time.

Green Day “Misery” — YouTube

Desensitized

I had always wondered by Mike Dirnt was credited for “Bass, Vocals, Baseball Bat” on Nimrod, until I realized that this B side appeared on the Japanese edition.

(Aside — found this cool list of Japanese CDs With Bonus Tracks while making this set.)

I didn’t have said Japanese import, but this track also appeared on the Good Riddance CD single. My friend had that one, and I ended up getting an alternate single with different B sides.

Green Day “Desensitized” — YouTube

The Ballad of Wilhelm Fink

I love this comp so much — 101 bands playing 30 second songs. Dumb in all of the best ways 😄

Green Day “The Ballad of Wilhelm Fink” — YouTube

On The Wagon

This one appears as a B side in a few places, and more recently on the 30th anniversary Dookie special editions, but I first heard it on this Basket Case single.

Green Day “On The Wagon” — YouTube

Last Ride In

Although they’ve always stretched a bit more than they let on at first, Nimrod was when they really started to openly experiment with different styles like this.

Green Day “Last Ride In” — YouTube

¿Viva La Gloria? (Little Girl)

After the runaway success of American Idiot, they tried to bottle lightning a second time with 21st Century Breakdown. It didn’t have quite the same je ne sais quoi as the previous album, or perhaps lacked a zeitgeist moment that American Idiot had during the depths of the George W Bush years, but their ambition to ratchet things up even more resulted in some interesting experimentation nonetheless.

Green Day “¿Viva La Gloria? (Little Girl)” — YouTube

16 (Live)

This bootleg live recording from ’93 is trash quality, but it’s worth a spin for the jam section at the end. (Also despite the “Live in Italy” proclamation, apparently none of these tracks were actually recorded in Italy 🙃)

My friend and I got a bunch of different bootleg live CDs, and it turns out these sort of jams were surprisingly common in their lives sets of this era (for a band with a reputation for 2-½ minute songs with 2-½ chords).

On this recording “16” segues into “Paper Lanterns,” and I always found it unsatisfying that it fades out just as the latter’s guitar solo was kicking off. Alas, that’s how it appears on the CD, hence the awkward fade out into the next track … (and on the YouTube version below, it cuts off before “Paper Lanterns” even starts).

Green Day “16 (Live)” — YouTube

Don’t Want To Know If You Are Lonely

The overall style of this one is fairly typical Green Day, although the production is a bit darker and rougher than usual.

This Hüsker Dü cover, “Don’t Want To Know If You Are Lonely,” originally appeared as a Warning B side, though later it was re-released for Record Store Day as a split 7-inch with the original.

Green Day “Don’t Want To Know If You Are Lonely” — YouTube

Take Back

An unusually aggressive track, and also unusually short (30 second track earlier notwithstanding).

This appeared only a few tracks away on the same album as the surf instrumental track earlier, so Green Day was really starting to flex more around this time.

Green Day “Take Back” — YouTube

Rotting

And now for something completely different from the last one. Another B side to Good Riddance, it hints at some of the pop sounds they would later lean into.

Green Day “Rotting” — YouTube

Good Riddance

Going from “B-side to Good Riddance” to [nerd voice] “well actually, Good Riddance was a B-side” …

OK so obviously this song is hardly obscure, but the mega-popular single was actually a re-recorded version of this earlier one. This original, stripped down version was released in 1995 as a B-side for Brain Stew/Jaded. The original title was just “Good Riddance,” sans the more marketable “(Time Of Your Life)”.

My friend had the regular CD single of this, but there’s also a version with a brain-shaped CD that I always thought was cool. (Literally just realized I’m an adult with money now, I could probably go buy a copy.)

The other B-side on that single is one of my other favorite GD tunes, “Do Da Da.” (Not making an appearance today in my set today, but easily found online.)

Green Day “Good Riddance” — YouTube

Rest

Lest it seem like “Good Riddance” was just a total cash-in radio hit (OK, maybe it was, my point stands anyway 😅), they’ve been writing ballad-y songs from the very beginning. This song, “Rest,” appeared on their debut album, in 1990.

Green Day “Rest” — YouTube

Somewhere Now

They’ve mostly worn their influence by The Who on their sleeves — sometimes more obviously than others, as with this song from Revolution Radio. (And also a couple of straight-up Who covers: “My Generation” on the Sweet Children EP in ’90, and “A Quick One While He’s Away” as a bonus track for some editions of 21st Century Breakdown in ’09). (Had to make a sub for that last one before this set — realized it wasn’t actually in the db.)

Green Day “Somewhere Now” — YouTube

Are We The Waiting / St. Jimmy

Hard to pick anything off-the-beaten path from one of their massively-popular albums, but I feel like this one this pair is a good example of them having one foot in the arena and the other still in their roots.

A couple of tunes in this set are from the Dookie era, but I couldn’t think of anything even remotely obscure from the album proper, so it’s their only album not represented in this set (aside from their brand new one, and personally non-canonical entries).

Green Day “Are We The Waiting / St. Jimmy” — YouTube

86

Last tune — “86” is always a sort of closer song to me, both thematically and because it was the end of (side A) of the Insomniac cassette 😄

Green Day “86” — YouTube

Postscript: I found an email address for Winston Smith on the internet in, idk, 1996 and emailed him asking him some question or another about the cover art of Insomniac. He was nice and wrote back.

Post-Postscript: “86” Live on Letterman; I always loved this performance.

Green Day “86 (Live on Letterman 1995)” — YouTube