FROSTBURG, Md.—We roll our cycles into this little town like two wet dogs. It is raining, soggy, cloudy, damp, cold, and did I mention it’s raining?
“Welcome to Maryland,” says an old guy taking cover beneath a storefront awning with his dog.
“Thanks,” I say.
“Yeah,” he goes on, “our state motto here is: ‘We may be cold, but we’re also damp.’” He laughs at his own joke.
I try to laugh, too, but I can’t. We’ve been riding the trail for too many days. I’m cold. I’m hungry. And laughter takes too many calories.
The old man has a walrus mustache. He wears thick, Coke-bottle eyeglasses. And to be honest, I am more interested in his dog because this is a Chesapeake Bay retriever; the Lord’s breed.
In my life, I have owned exactly one.
I squat on sore legs to pet the dog. Her name is Brownie.
“This your first time in Maryland?” the man asks.
“Yessir.”
“We usually bring the rain out for guests.”
Maryland is a neat place. It’s one of those itty-bitty states in the U.S., comparable
in size to Hawaii. Except in Hawaii they have hula skirts and fruity drinks. Here, they have emergency weather.
Still, aside from the rain, Maryland is like a mini version of America itself. This state has it all.
Maryland, for example, is a Mid-Atlantic Eastern state where everyone talks like the guy from “My Cousin Vinny.” But technically speaking, Maryland is also a Southern state.
And, it’s one of America’s oldest colonies, steeped in revolutionary history. Baltimore and Annapolis once served as temporary capitals during the Second Continental Congress. But, oddly, Maryland has never produced a single U.S. president. Figure that out.
The geography here varies, too. They have coastal dunes, seagrass, and pelicans. But also, Appalachian Mountains, black bears, and someone even spotted a mountain lion in Fallston recently. They have huge Wye oaks, but also boggy…
