“Just like Ann Arbor, but bigger,” I was told. Similar, maybe, but not exactly alike; although it's true I moved here partly because the trees wouldn't make me homesick. Instead, they make the horizons here almost familiar.
Madison is a biking city—and, according to some people, one of the best in the United States. There are streets where cyclists are granted equal status with cars. The street I live on, for instance. My neighbor has propped a sign near the road reading, “Mind Bicycle Boulevard,” with an illustration of a bike, a heart, and a car.
I see cyclists, dozens of them, every day. Despite this, I wasn't brought home to the meaning of a “biking city,” until I was riding a bus that was held to the speed of four cyclists zooming along directly in front of it.
Madison is a foodie city, too—which would be wonderful, if I could afford to eat out as often as I have some new place suggested. This place has the best Laotian, that place offers amazing gyros. I hear things like that all the time. Bloody Marys. Fish n chips. Italian. Cheese. Sandwiches. Indian. Fru-fru drinks. I have a list of recommendations as long as my arm and leg to check out once I have a decent job.
One tent full of dried bird-house gourds is fronted by a grinning man, and the next sells lamb skins. I find myself drawn to the tents full of colorful produce. I don't have the budget for organic lettuce at $3 a head, but in making my circuit around the square, I find better deals. For my farmer's market haul, I bring home small sweet onions, new carrots, dirty young beets, and a cutting of rhubarb in seductive red. I'm more than satisfied.
So...not just like Ann Arbor. I find myself missing Top of the Park, and meeting up with friends at Arbor Brewing Company. I have yet to find a bookstore equivalent to the Dawn Treader. There's no Zingerman's Deli. But I think Madison has its own wonderful corners, and its own festivals and farmer's markets.