The Wild West: Prairies, deserts and wide open roads
- 166450 km on the bike That I am back in "civilization" becomes even more obvious
at 4 am this morning, when a potential thief tries to lift off the
cover from my bike. Of course he triggers the alarm and the guy
disappears right away. One would expect such things in Big City
USA, but not in the Canadian hinterland.
But potentially being woken up that early was not bad; the motel
room is freezing cold. Maybe it wasn't such a good idea to leave
the bathroom window open, either. I am frozen stiff and my body
signals to me, that normally I would get a cold. What I mean is
that I never get ill, but if I do something stupid like sleeping
in such an ice cold room without using a proper blanket my body
at least tells me that he had to send the immune system into overtime.
I turn the heater up and go back to bed, well knowing that in the
morning I will be right as rain.
We exchange a few biker stories over lunch. The two used to have
an RV,
but one sunny day they found themselves sitting in their air-conditioned
gas-guzzler and watching TV, and realized that this kind of "camping"
was not the real thing - they got rid of it and bought the bikes
instead. Good idea, I'd say. - 166900 km on the bike It is a truth universally acknowledged, that an Englishman in possession of a reasonable command of the language, must be in want of a place to dispose of all that. Canada definitely is such a place. Though Queen Liz is de-facto the head of state, the Queens English is rapidly turning into something resembling Pidgin English around here. That North Americans misspell a large number of English words is one thing, but that professional sign makers apparently can't be bothered to buy a spell checker is abominable. This is the sign above the laundry of the Econo Lodge here at Quesnel, where I stayed tonight
I am off at 10 am as usual. The road leads southward along the
Fraser
River. After about 100 miles I reach Williams
Lake, the next port of civilization along the road.
After 400 km I finish the day at Kamloops. Down here it slowly starts to warm up, but seeing local bikers wearing shorts gives me the shivers not just because of the dangers when having an accident. - 167300 km on the bike My route today leads me initially from Kamloops westwards along
the South
Thompson River. But soon highway 97 heads southwards again towards
the U.S. border. Note: the prices below are from 2007.
It feels good just to pay 15 dollars to fill up the tank instead of 24. I ride on until I reach Omak. In town the local folks tell me that the Omak Inn Motel is a nice place to stay - they are right. It appears that I timed my arrival very well; the annual Omak Stampede just ended yesterday - and apparently for the event all motels are booked out well in advance. That some fool who is frying popcorn in the microwave sets off the infernal fire alarm is just a little interlude. But as you can see in this picture, Washington is quite popular with bikers - it shows the motel parking lot tonight: seven bikes vs. two cars:
Now I know how long it takes from leaving Alaska until one reaches mainland USA again: seven days of hard biking, covering over 3400 kilometres (2100 miles). As usual, you can download my route and the tracklogs here. Note that the tracklog for the third day is missing - I stupidly forgot to save the file when I had it already deleted from the GPS. - 167700 km on the bike The motel serves a free continental breakfast,
and much to my surprise the corn flakes are not coated with the
otherwise usual thick layer of sugar, so I have some and some more
of that thin, brown liquid they call coffee around here. This morning
I also had to make a new route for the GPS. I have decided that
I am going to have a look at the Californian
Sierra. This time of year it should be lovely there.
The weather is brilliant, as you can see, but it gets slowly very hot. Anything that is coloured lush green in this part of the world stems from irrigation. The natural, un-irrigated vegetation is greyish green. But whenever river water is available, the industrious Washingtonians have build dams for irrigation and electricity production. Here is a picture of Kitty on the shores of lake Wanapum.
Then I follow the Columbia
River until I reach the town of Richland.
Here the river forms the border to Oregon.
On my approach to that town I notice tons of garbage thrown left
and right along the road. This is weird, as usually the "Adopt
a Highway" scheme ensures that U.S. highways are spotlessly
clean. I stop at a petrol station - they want "pre-pay"
(i. e. pay first, then pump petrol), which I refuse out of principle;
if the petrol station owner assumes that I am a crook and demands
advance payment, then I do not want to do business with that owner.
But after three petrol stations I give up - and realize what is
going on. The entire area lives from fruit farming and vineyards.
Like in Europe the farm owners can no longer find employees in their
own country for picking fruits or vines. So Richland has an unusually
high percentage of Latinos living here to do that kind of work,
bringing with them the usual problems of ghetto formation, drug
abuse, crime and - pre-paying for petrol. - 168350 km on the bike The traffic outside the motel wakes me up at 7 am. The place is built on a hill and 60-ton trucks are creeping up the hill with roaring engines and whining turbos. The trucks going downhill ignore those polite signs suggesting to refrain from using engine brakes and roar past on full compression brakes. For a sleepy town of 1800 souls in the American outback there is an incredible amount of trucking going on. The half inch gap underneath the front door of my room is not helping the noise either, it just helps these warmth-seeking creatures, warned about just outside the town, to find a free place for the night here:
The weather forecast predicts a high of 97 degrees
for John Day today - and this town is 3000 feet above sea level.
I decide to stick with my destination, but to change my route into
the Sierra Madre. Instead of crossing all of the deserts of Oregon
and Nevada,
I will divert and take the highway along the Pacific coast. I looked
up the weather forecast for that area, and for at least a week it
will never exceed 74 degrees there, while further inland it will
be over 100.
Like yesterday the whole area is thinly populated and I have to drive all the way to Springfield before I find a decent motel to spend the night. - 168850 km on the bike Springfield is just 400 feet above sea level, but soon after leaving
the town I enter the Siuslaw
National Forest, and there I can smell it; the sea is close
by. I ride on along the Siuslaw
River and instead of heating up it gets cooler by the minute.
At Florence
I finally reach the Pacific
Ocean at the mouth of the river, which I traverse on the Siuslaw
bridge. It is a nice thought, that just four month ago I was
on the other side of this very same ocean in NZ.
I take in quite a few of those great sights like the one in above
picture. When I decided to take the coastal road I expected much
more traffic and less scenery, so I am positively surprised. The
temperature has fallen from yesterdays 100 degrees in Oregons High
Desert to about 63 here on the coast. Escaping the heatwave has
worked brilliantly. The only potential hazard out here is the morning
fog.
After just 300 km I call it a day at 4 pm at Gold Beach. I would like to go on, but I have again a few chores to do. First I need to do some washing. That is no problem, as all motels in the U.S. feature coin laundries. The second problem is that since Alaska Sally (my GPS) is no longer talking to me. Initially the right speaker in my crash helmet died, then it went completely silent. It appears that at the spot where the cable from the GPS unit to my helmet is routed between saddle and tank, some chafing may have occurred due to the slow wearing down of the rubber spacers. Knowing that for this type of German High-Tech I wouldn't get spares in a country where everything is oversized, under-efficient and clunky, I have brought a few spare parts with me for it. After two hours of wrestling with these German precision electronics, put in place by a Swiss mechanic equally precision-minded, I have the wiring working again. And the washing is also done, including my biker outfit, which was beginning to look as if it had been up to Alaska and back - hey, thinking of it, I believe it actually has... - 169150 km on the bike There was some rain overnight and the forecast predicted showery
weather for today. Instead the sun shines out of a spotless blue
sky, it is nice and cool and we did not even get any fog - it simply
couldn't be better.
Most of the coastal areas are State Parks, and simply too many
to list here. After about an hour I reach the state line of California.
There are a few facts about that state you may or may not be aware
of: should these fairly liberal minded people of California one
day decide to secede
from the United States and its current
unpopular government, then it would still be the planets seventh
biggest economy all by itself. And it is big; from the border with
Oregon which I just crossed it is still over 350 miles to San
Francisco, the northernmost big city in the state.
Swiss readers of my homepage are excused for assuming this to be
a photograph of their Swiss
Plateau during the period from mid-October to the following
April - it is not, though I admit that the resemblance is striking.
It really is the Californian Pacific coastline in summer, believe
me.
Entering such a forest is impressive; the trees wipe out all the
light and at the bottom it is nearly dark. And other than the New
Zealanders with their Kauri
trees, here in California large areas of pristine 400 to 600 years
old Redwood forests have remained untouched by humans.
As you can see from the reflection of the cat eyes on the road
and the illuminated signpost, the flash of my camera fired because
it is so dark down here. - 169500 km on the bike I am rolling at 10.30 am, first for a few miles on highway 101,
but then heading out west on highway
1 back to the coast.
At Fort Bragg I have a Chinese lunch and later at Bodega Bay I check out the motels. But I find that the coast is very popular with the Californians, and motels here are very expensive. I decide to move a bit inland and try at Santa Rosa. I end up a few miles down the road at Rohnert Park. The reason why my average daily mileage is down on previous performances is simply due to the winding roads and the many sites where one just has to stop and look at the scenery. - 169800 km on the bike This morning I ride back to highway 1 - it is amazing what a huge
difference the proximity to the water makes. Inland it is already
burning hot by 10 am, while at the coast one sometimes wishes for
a few degrees more.
They like beach life, especially if the interior of the land is
scorching, while at the beach it is nice and cool. Cars and vans
loaded with surfboards, kayaks and other sort of beach kit are out
in force. It soon dawns on me that this invasion of weekend warriors
may make finding a place to stay quite difficult today. But soon the next thing we all know so well is in the way: the
Golden
Gate bridge, spanning the San
Francisco Bay. Well, I suppose you all know that bridge, but
do you know that it costs five bucks to cross the bay on it? And
with that usual inefficiency that drives me completely nuts these
Yanks charge five dollars for any car or bike - as they just charge
$2.50 per axle, completely ignoring the vehicle gross weight. The
average truck pays $ 12.50 for 60 tons, while I pay five for 0.3
tons.
Highway 1 is a good way to avoid most of Frisco. Soon I am back
on the open road along the coast of the Pacific Ocean. At Santa
Cruz the road takes a shortcut inland - and immediately it gets
burning hot. Monterey
I reach by 4 pm. The local Super 6 budget motel wants 170 dollars
for their cheapest room. Hmmh, I think I have to contemplate that
other problem out here - room prices on weekends just treble due
to all those weekend warriors out and about. - 170350 km on the bike I am up early and on the road by 9.30 am. The highway is good and
fast and Kitty eats the miles. I think it is not necessary to mention
the places I pass - you should know them anyway, places like Santa
Barbara, Malibu
etc. I also come along Vandenberg
AFB, yes, the place where the space
shuttle lands if it rains in Florida.
I do not stay long - I do not want to get run over by Mad
Mel or some other drug-crazed Hollywood star or being "discovered"
as the next Mad Mel by some wannabe producer.
I have found detailed online information upon what checks the LA
waterworks guys are performing on the raw water from above aqueduct,
all the nasty guys need is to find something they don't check for
- and LA is gone. - 170800 km on the bike The motel price includes full American breakfast, so I stuff myself
sufficiently this morning for another 24 hours.
I have been here before and places like Lone Pine are no place for people with breathing problems. The high wind raises caustic soda dust from the former lake bed and pollutes the air with it. But today the situation is completely off the known chart: the usual soda dust is bad, but the added acrid smoke from the forest fire turn this town into a nightmare of air pollution. Governator Arnold A. Schwarzenegger has declared a state of emergency yesterday, but I had no idea that it was so bad. I stop at the Lone Pine visitor centre, and some people working in there are virtually on their last legs. "Air pollution is common around here" I am told by one of the clerks, "but this is the worst we ever had in decades". I am told that the smoke extends up to 40 miles north from here, so I am keen to get on. My throat is scratching and the acrid smoke smells awful. I am also very concerned for Kitty's air filter, already strained heavily by the dust up North in Yukon and Alaska. The great heat remains bearable all day due to the low humidity
of just 50 percent. Every ounce of sweat evaporates immediately,
so it is just important to drink enough water. This morning I drank
three litres before setting out. - 171200 km on the bike I find that the tap water quality here at Lee Vining is more than excellent. I suggest to the landlady that the town should sell this exquisite liquid as mineral water. But apparently I am not the first one to suggest this; the local spring does support the community, but bottling thousands of gallons would overwhelm its capacity. I fill my half-gallon bottle with the stuff and also drink five pints before I leave the village at 9 am. Here is an impression of nearby Mono Lake at this beautiful morning:
The road remains for many miles above 2000 metres of altitude,
but towards the Nevada
state line it slowly comes down to about 1400 metres. I need petrol,
but here in the outback they charge 4.25 dollars for the gallon
of premium. I coolly fill the tank with just three dollars worth
of juice. That will get me to Carson
City in Nevada. Once there I fill the tank to the brim - at
2.89 dollars per gallon and have my lunch there. Then I head on
those few miles to Reno.
The dealership is a bit hidden, but I find it all right. The air
filter is in surprisingly good nick in spite of the dust in the
Wild North and the 100 miles through wildfire smoke yesterday.
That changing oil and filter, air filter and spark plugs takes
three hours is something I am now used to, having seen American
mechanics in action before. Hans and his crew in Switzerland do
that kind of work in under 20 minutes, but alas, this is not Switzerland.
And the guys here are very friendly and I chat with the staff and
the various bikers that visit the place. All agree in one point;
they have never seen any bike with that mileage on the clock. By
4.30 pm everything is sorted and the bike ready to roll on until
I can finally hand her to Hans for a real service. The mechanic
after his test ride can hardly believe that Kitty is still running
so smooth and the engine runs just as good as a new one. They also
have cleaned the bike, so she is quite nice to look at - another
thing that these guys here find very extraordinary. By 5 pm I am back on the road. I have also been given a scenic diversion from my planned route; they told me to take highway 431 to Virginia City instead, and that road really is great fun to bike. Virginia City is the same kind of crumbling collection of cheaply built cardboard boxes dating from the second half of the 19th century as Dawson City was in the Yukon Territory. Back home we'd bulldoze these crappy constructions and we'd then build something fit for human habitation instead. But here there is a big problem with that entirely logical solution; though most of these matchwood boxes are only a few decades old, people regard them as part of the national history. Sounds ridiculous, but these guys here are absolutely serious about it.
Luckily for me I need not stay in one of these moulding tourist
traps. There are modern motels at the far end of town, where 55
dollars buy a room where two of the four walls are actually made
from bricks. And there is a view, too; right opposite the motel
is the real thing, the Comstock
Lode mine. - 171400 km on the bike At 9.30 am I set out until I reach highway 50. I turn eastwards
on this road, nicknamed "The
loneliest Road in America". And especially this stretch
here deserves that nickname - there is just desert and high passes
out here. Seldom do I find myself below 2000 metres - but it is
still burning hot. The evaporator works quite well and also really
cools for four hours - I am very pleased.
By 4.30 pm I arrive in Ely,
one of the few larger villages around. The place looks like downtown
Belfast. Murals
are on many walls, but I soon discover that these murals are far
less political the the Irish ones - they depict scenes from when
the town was founded a few years ago. - 171950 km on the bike From Ely I head south on highway 95 this morning. The ride is not
overly exciting, but I know that this diversion south will pay off
this afternoon. At Panaca
I fill the tank and turn eastward onto state
route 341 and after a few miles cross the state line into Utah.
At Cedar
City I have a quick chinese lunch and then pull in at the Zion
Bank to get some cash from their ATM machine. I walk around the
entire building, but can't find it. I ask inside, and the clerk
points me to an isolated concrete box near the driveway exit. How
stupid of me. Did I expect the average Yank to get out of his car
and walk to the hole in the wall? Of course not, most banks here
feature just "drive through" ATM's.
The road is also fantastic, winding itself slowly up to over 3000 metres. In Cedar City I have donned my evaporator, but up here I soon find it quite cool with that thing on. And the road remains high up for many miles. I hit highway 89 and turn north. After 400 km today I stop at the small hamlet of Hatch, where they have a very quiet and comfy motel. - 172350 km on the bike It is just a few miles from Hatch to the junction of highway 89 and state route 12. I turn east on SR 12 and find myself immediately in the fantastic Red Canyon of the Dixie National forest. But that is just the beginning of the fun; after a few great miles the cul-de-sac turnoff into Bryce Canyon appears. There is an entry fee to pay at the park entrance, but this time it is not a flat fee for everyone; cars pay 25 dollars, motorcyclists only 12 - now that's what I call fair.
This National Park is an absolute must-see if you are ever in this area. Spectacular views of eroded rock formations are around every corner. I stop every two minutes to take yet another picture fit as a desktop background or cover of National Geographic.
Taking so many pictures slows me down and it takes more than an hour to reach the end of the road at 2700 metres above sea level. Here is a picture of a view which I photographed with multiple images which I then "stitched" together:
This is the only way for me to give you at least some inkling of
what I have seen today.
At Boulder I have a late lunch at a surprisingly good local restaurant.
Outside there is a dusty Mercedes
with New York plates parked at the curb. Its owners are Henry
and Jourdan,
two Big
Apple citizens who are trying out a different way of life. We
have an excellent lunch and an excellent conversation about life,
the universe and all the rest.
- 172650 km on the bike The road today goes initially eastward along the Fremont
River on state
route 24. At Hanksville
the river unites with the Muddy
Creek, and forms the Dirty
Devil River, which I cross at this place, and then head south
on highway
95.
The only view from a ridge road that tops above picture is God's
Window. You can see the road continuing on the valley floor
in above picture. Halfway down the gravel track I meet a biker with
a British-registered BMW and a strong Leicestershire
accent. He is part of a 16-strong team of bikers doing Alaska to
Argentina.
We have a brief chat and then head on.
It is Monument Valley, at the border of Utah and Arizona inside the Navajo Indian reservation. All of today was mainly biking through completely unpopulated area with just a trading post and a petrol station every 100 miles. The same can be said about the reservation, especially once I hit highway 160 and further on state route 98 towards Page, the only town in the area. I stop there at the motel 6 at the far end of town. What a great biking day! - 173200 km on the bike I set out at 9 am this morning and after 20 miles turn westwards
onto highway
89A. A few miles on and I finally leave the Navajo reservation.
It is an interesting fact, that this Indian reservation all by itself
is 30 percent bigger than all of Switzerland. - 173500 km on the bike Previous Page - Index
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