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Another sparkling fall day, so we decided to try a guided kayak tour of the "sea caves" along the shore north of Bayfield. But that didn't work out. Some of the outfits that do these tours had already closed up for the summer and the one that was left couldn't fit us with a boat that worked. Getting into those little kayak holes requires more bending, folding and spindling than Richard's joints can manage, and the tacky looking plastic canoe that Kayak John offered us instead didn't look all that sea worthy. So we wandered over to Tom's Bike Shop (aka Bayfield Bike Route) to look for a map of local bike routes. This was a perfect move. There aren't a lot of dedicated bike paths in the area, but good old Tom knows the road routes like the back of his hand and was able to suggest a poorly marked but perfectly paved forestry road that was actually on our way back to the cities. It really was a lovely bike route, although hillier than we expected. Still, by breaking our jaunt into two parts we achieved our 20 miles and headed home.