Color photo — a very straight, smoothly paved bike path leads through sunlit trees and low, dense greenery into the far distance. A yellow-painted dashed line separates the path into two lanes. Thick white lines mark the left and right edges of the path, with closely trimmed grass from the edges of the path to greenery on either side. An unpainted two-rail rustic wooden fence bounds the greenery on the right, leading to a distant red octagonal Stop sign — which marks a small crossing path. ‘STOP’ is painted below ‘AHEAD’ in white on the path just ahead. Minuscule figures — perhaps cyclists — are barely visible on the path in the far distance. The 14.3 mile path follows the former Providence and Bristol Railroad railbed, opened as a paved bike path in 1992,
Color photo — a very straight, smoothly paved bike path leads through sunlit trees and low, dense greenery into the far distance. A yellow-painted dashed line separates the path into two lanes. Thick white lines mark the left and right edges of the path, with closely trimmed grass from the edges of the path to greenery on either side. An unpainted two-rail rustic wooden fence bounds the greenery on the right, leading to a distant red octagonal Stop sign — which marks a small crossing path. ‘STOP’ is painted below ‘AHEAD’ in white on the path just ahead. Minuscule figures — perhaps cyclists — are barely visible on the path in the far distance. The 14.3 mile path follows the former Providence and Bristol Railroad railbed, opened as a paved bike path in 1992,