Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Jackson, WY

Today I woke up to near freezing conditions and put just about every layer I had on. I didn't bring much warm clothing because I was headed to the desert. Come to find out that up here at 6500 feet in late August it starts to get really cold at night but it stays in the 60's during the day. The cloud cover was pretty heavy and was supposed to rain so I thought I would grab a room in Jackson and just do the tourist thing. It did pour rain for the morning and then cleared up a bit. I just did laundry and hung out it was really nice to take a day off the bike. So after the whole tourist thing and laundry I went to see a movie. Before the movie I went into the Million Dollar Cowboy bar just because I can and the last time I was here was over 10 years ago. The place has saddles for bar stools but other than that its just a cowboy decorated bar. Today I am going to do a little more tourism and then find a spot to camp and fight the cold again. I do really want to check this place out in the winter and do some snowboarding on all the mountains you see here. Some day soon I will be back and see it during the wintertime.

Rock Springs to Jackson Hole

Slow start today, I was waiting for some of the storm to move off so I would't chase it down today. I only had a short 3 hour ride anways so no worries. From the start in Rock Springs you can just start to see the Windy River Mountain range to your right and rolling hills to the left. I did find out first hand why they call it the Windy River Mountains. A pretty steady 15 mph wind was hitting me on the left side pretty much the whole time pushing me and and bike around. As you start to head north you then can see the Wyoming Mountains to your left and the further you traveled north the closer those mountain ranges got. I stopped for a short while in Pinewood to top off the tank and there was a Mountain Man Museum. Lots of cool old artifacts from the fur trading days but they also had Jim Bridgers rifle that he carried on his trapping exploits. Back on the road the mountain ranges get to a point where they touch and thats the pass you go over into Jackson Hole. Shortly there after you are in the town of Jackson. I spent some time here as a kid at Teton Valley Ranch Camp and would check out the town when my parents came down to pick me up and it seems the same but totally different. I attribute some of it to I was here almost 15 years ago and thats almost longer then half the time I have been alive. I did remeber the antler archways that are in the center of town. And I was going to head to the Jackson Pharmacy to get a milk shake but as it turns out some people bought them out and now its an art gallery. Life just keeps moving on erasing everything you know. So I was split between getting a hotel because of the weather or camp but just as I was about to grab a hotel it looked like the clouds were moving on. I rode out of town into the Teton-Bridger National Forest and headed towards the place I went to camp. You pass the tiny little town of Kelly who's population was about 10 up from 5 when I was here and then you turn towards the camp. Some time ago the dumb kids of the owners sold the property and now its just call Teton Vally Ranch. I wish they would have come up with something else if your just gonna tear town the memories of hundereds of kids who attented that camp. Hell my dad and his two brother attended when they were kids. The camp is still alive but it had to move to the Idaho side of the Mountains. There is a big No Tresspassing sign but I much just go for it and see what happends, or try to call them tomorrow and ask if I can swing by and see how much they desicrated the place. Enough ranting, I grabbed a campsite just up the Gros Venture River. It's on a lake that was created by a huge landslide. Tomorrow I am unsure of what I am going to do. I do want to swim in Kelly Warm Springs and maybe go for a hike. It's still as beautiful as I remeber here. The Tetons rise out of the ground with just an impressive wall of rock and stand look out over the valley. Its amazing how memories come flooding back with just the simplest thing. I have smelled Sage Brush before but it is a completely different smell here in Jackson. As with this whole trip I will tell every one you will actually have to be here to take in all the beauty of this place. Once you have been here then you will see why there will always be a little piece of my heart that stays right here in Jackson Hole.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Dinosaur NM to Rock Springs, WY

It rained pretty hard last night with a little bit of thunder (kachuga kachuga, from the movie Cars don't know if I got it right) Anyway moving on, I rode up past the camp ground to some petroglyph's and then there was this little cabin at the end of the canyon which was owned by a lady who ran it by herself until she was in her 90's. She used the canyons as natural pens for her livestock. I then made it to the Flaming Gorge Dam, amazing. It was built almost exactly like the Hoover Dam but in the 50's so it was documented very well. The tour is pretty simple but you get to go outside at the base of the damn and get to look up at it from just about water level. The wild part about the whole tour was there was me and another fellow on this tour and that was it. It turned out that he was from the UK and was on a solo motorcycle trip around the country. What are the chances that the only 2 people on the tour are doing solo motorcycle trips. He was riding a Harley that had 10 beautiful ladies air brushed on it from the 40's and 50's movie era. After we got done with the tour I say some pretty dark clouds gathering and decided it was time to get on the road. I was going to take the west side of Flaming Gorge Reservoir and made it to Manila, UT and pulled into a gas station just has the heart of the storm passed over. I'll tell you one thing when you riding just in front of a storm and you see lighting strikes a few miles away you body tries to make you the lowest part of the bike, which isn't possible. All I could think about was getting to safety but there was no where to go until I got to Manila. So I had lunch there and was waiting for the storm to pass so I could follow it. Just as I was getting on the bike this older gentlemen stopped for gas in his Mercedes and told me he just drove through the worst rain storm of his life coming from Green River, WY which is where I was headed. We looked at the clouds and thought it would be best to ride the 35 miles back from the dam and take the east road past the reservoir, which paid off. A few times I begged the road to turn more north because I was headed to the next storm, but I managed to find the window and flew a couple of miles an hour over the speed limit to beat the storm, and it worked. I have been so lucky with rain storms. I've run in to some rain drops here and there but full on storms I have managed to miss. I found a great place right on the hwy I am gonna take up to Jackson tomorrow and a laundry mat right next door. I am excited to get up to Jackson and check some things out where the last time I saw it was over 10 years ago.

Grandby lake to Dinosaur National Monument

Today, I am sorry to report, was a pretty un eventful day. I am back slogging through miles of highway but unlike Texas or south east New Mexico there is actually things to see on the trip. Once I got out of the mountain area of Steamboat Springs, which is a pretty cool town, it turned in to big rolling hills which reminded me a lot of eastern Washington and Oregon. In stead of wheat feilds and farms it was just rolling hills of Sage brush. Then I was creeping (70 MPH) towards the border of Utah the geologically fasinating mountains started to rise again. The colors and the crazy shapes these hills and mountains make almost makes we want to switch gears and become a geologist, maybe I can do it on my days off. I arrived on the southern end of Dinosaur National Monument and found out that they big display of bones is closed. They have to rebuild the facillity because the gound kept shifting under in and broke down the foundations. So tonight it will just be camping and on the road tomorrow which out a chance to see much. I did manage to snag a camp site right near the Green River. I always love camping next to a river and hear the water flowing past. On the down side the river is flowing way to fast for me to hop in a cool off and take a bath so its a couple more days of sweaty stinkyness. Oh and the crikets or what ever insect is makeing that racket is either getting louder or closer so its starting to drown out the river noise. More on the trip tomorrow, Good afternoon, good evining and good night.

Estes Park to Grandby Lake

The ride thought Rocky Mountain National Park is absolutly incredible. You weave your way up the side of the Rockies, where there is hundered foot drops to the side. You end up at the highest point somewhere north of 12,000 feet. As with all the national parks I have been to its a circus. To top it off there was road construction, of course. Besides these few little gripes there is the wonder of what it was like before huge RV's or even motorbikes where your taking these roads on horse and buggy or even on foot like the mountain men. It is also no wonder that places like this are National Parks. There were a few camp grounds before you headed over the Great Divide and I was going to check the park out and head back if need be but because of construction and all the traffic I headed out of the park. I went through several camp grounds that were RV heavy until I found the one I am at, which is still RV heavy but all along the lake front it tent camping... My tent is sitting 12 feet or so from the edge of the lake. Back to the Park though. The Great Divide is a little spot, where basically you can sit in the middle and put one foot on one side and the other foot on the other. If you want a great Divide experiance I would recommend the southern route through the Rockies where there is a lake and one side drains to the Pacific and the other the Atlantic. I will say it again though. Washington and Oregon has wonderful mountains but there is nothing like Colorado to access the mountains with such ease. What a beautiful place, you have to experience it to believe it.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

P.S. Estes Park

I had a pretty rough night last night. The bears came through camp at about 3 am last night and I had a hard time needless to say. I was lucky though the only thing I lost was my camp water bag, they ripped a nice hole right through it. I at first thought they were gonna wrestle my bike because all my food and smelly stuff was in the right pannier. But I think its air tight and kept the smells from escaping. So I got on the road and was gonna take a picture but the camera battery died so I found a little coffee shop and am writing this in the morning and I will write another one tonight about the days progression. I always think about so many things to write in here but always forget to write about them when it come time to sit down and write something. I was gonna write last night how nice people are in this state. I had a few people come up to me in the REI parking lot just talking bikes. This one fellow was curious about the waterproof bag I had on the back and come to find out while he was in Rowanda, Africa he met up with Ewen and Charlie as they were filming the Long Way Down and spent a few days with them. What an incredibly small world. Anyway just sitting here charging all my batteries and sipping on some coffee. Looking forward to the day.

Red Rock CG to Pre-Rocky Mountain National Park

This morning was the earliest morning I have had this whole trip. I woke up at 6:30 and was on the road shortly after 8. I am very proud of my self and hope to do the same tomorrow so I can either grab a campsite in Rocky Mountain National Park or just on the west side if it. I have a feeling that campsites are going to the plentiful in the mountain areas because from what I have heard they mostly shut down the week after Labor Day. So there really shouldn't be an excuse to camp from here to Washington. I really hope that my Father can come out and ride the final leg in, even if its just a few miles it doesn't matter it will feel like a Police escort into town. Today was a pretty short milage day but I did figure out that I am just shy of 10,000 miles on the motorbike and that would mean almost 6000 miles total trip mileage. I spent quite a bit of time in Boulder today, mostly because I got lost looking for the REI and come to find out that I passed it on every loop I made.... Some times a GPS would be nice but I think the only thing it's good for is in city stuff. I love Colorado. Maybe not the whole state but everything I have seen so far is amazing. One of the roads I traveled today is called the Peak to Peak HWY. And not shit it runs a ridge top from one Mountain top to the next. Although it was a hwy and not to many places to stop I have mental pictures that I will only be able to share via word of mouth. The greatest part about the view in Colorado is there is a ton of trees but out of no where there are these huge rock out croppings that make you feel small. There is a lot of hills and mountains in Washington and Oregon but there is only a few select places you can go and most of it is hikeing that you can see for miles down a mountain range that you can here. I love Colorado. Tomorrow I am going to ride into Rocky Mountain National Park and see what the deal is there because it would be hard to top what I have already seen the last few days I have spent in this state.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Cripple Creek to Red Rocks Camp

Today I got quite a late start, about noonish. After I went down to help Chris clean up the bar a bit we came back to the cabin and I did a load of laundry to let the weather pass. It rained off and on in the morning and I was letting the road dry out a bit so I didn't repeat the ride up there and put the bike down. Once I left I headed up the hill to the Molly-Cathlene Mine. It is no longer a working mine but you still ride the same elevator cars that the miners took up untill it closed in the 50's, and you drop 1000 feet underground. It was a very informative and spectacular tour. The tour was set up as a time line, so you started out with a hammer and a chisel and worked your way up to modern phneumatic drills and every step in between. Very cool stuff, and all of the tour guides used to be what they call "hard rock" miners so they do this to make a little extra money. After that I made my way up to the American Eagle Overlook to the moden open pit mine just outside Cripple Creek. When I got up there I was told they were blasting and I had to wait 15 before I could go up there. While I was waiting there is an old mining town you can walk through. So I was leaning against a huge rock and all of a sudden the rock starts shaking and then you can here the blast, I was not expecting that. I thought you would just be able to hear it and thats it. So once they let me pass I rode right across and active mining road where the huge ass dump trucks were traveling along. Once you get to the top you can pretty much see the whole open pit mine but at the top was the actual mine of the mining town I saw while I was waiting. The area around here is so rich with history and I would venture to guess one of the only placed you can see the old and the new side by side then learn about everything in the middle.
After all the excitedment of the day it was getting late so I rode back to Woodland park grabbed some food and then headed north a ways to get to a set of camp ground. I found a good little spot and now its dark gonna get some rest then make my way further north and hopefully make it to Rocky Mountain National Park and if I don't no big deal because I love this whole area here and could spend plenty of time here.

Cripple Creek

I must say that today has been one hell of a day. One of the days that I will probably remeber about this trip for the rest of my life. The day started out with a few drops of rain and was looking pretty somber. I made my way up to the National fossil monument, which was mostly petrified trees and a huge area where they have found tons of fossils, which are kept at various museums and a few held in the gift shop. I followed a park ranger guided tour and was just amazed at the amount of history stored in this one little area perfectly preserved by seemingly random geological events. Then it was time to head into gold county to take some tours of the mines. I made it to the town of Cripple Creek and went through the town museum which took a few hours. So much history here and they still produce about 900 ounces of gold a day out of the main mine. I lot of history meets the present time gold mines, you can see the remarkable movement from old to new in one small little town. After the museum I decided to grab some food and found a little joint that wasn't connected to the many casino hotels here and orderd a calzone. While I started to eat this delicios lunch prepared by the owner I started up a conversation with Chris, the owner. After a few minuets it started to absolutly pour rain so I stayed at the bar just waiting out the rain storm and discussing my options with Chris who is an extreamly nice guy and a very giving individual. At first he was giving me info on where the nice cheaper places to stay were then he said he takes care of a house for a friend and I could stay there. He drove me up to the house and I was hesitant to stay there because I didn't want to impose or feel like a free loader but he was very insistant that it was all good and the house was built for people to hang out there. So we made it to the house down a dirt road and it has a spectacular view of the Rocky Mountains and I said why not. The owner of the house Todd was already there and very much welcomed me to his house. We drove back to the bar grabbed a few supplies and then headed back to the house. On the way there though I hit a very slick spot of clay and laided the bike down at about 20 MPH. The worst crash I have had yet and I just got the bike muddy tweeked my bad ankel and burned my leg on the exhaust, so all in all not too bad at all.
I made it to the house and we started drinking beers and bullshitting getting to know eachother and Chris cooked an amazing dinner of several fish he caught when he was in Canada and some beans, corn, and a salad. I can't say enough about how generious these guys are and welcomed me to stay at the house for several days and eat what ever I want out of the pantry.
So tomorrow I am gonna head down with Chris and work off the hospitality helping him clean up the bar and get it ready for the day then I am gonna finally get to take the gold mine tours. I am unsure if I am going to stay longer or just keep on trucking. The ever nagging feeling that I need to get a job grows stronger every day. Thats the price you pay when you start to get older I guess.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Camp to Woodland Park, CO

I got my camp site together at about 9.... and rode a few miles south to catch up with HWY 24 again and I headed on my way up Pikes Peak. I knew they had talked about paving the road to the top and found there was about 4 miles of gravel and the rest was paved. I talked with an old timer who was there with his 55 year old son and he told me the reason why they hadn't paved the whole road is because there was another mountain with the record of the highest paved road. The view was spectacular, every direction you could see miles upon miles. The bike did wonderful a, s well, the only thing was stupid cars slowing me down!! After the trip up the mountain I decided to hit the Cave of the Winds and waited 2 hours to go on the Lamp light tour which was worth it. Seeing the parts of the cave that was not lit. There was a ghost side of the tour which was interesting. All in all I would recommend the lamp tour to anyone.
So today is also my birthday, I never thought I would be on a lone motorcycle trip during a birthday but all of the people who wished me a great day was very surprising.
Tomorrow I am going to go on the Gold mine tours then camp and then start to head north west again.
I hope that with all the pictures I have taken I can describe which each one means to all of you who have been following this trip.

Colorado City to Camp

I got a desent start from the hotel, 9 am seems to be my go time. I got on the road and headed west a few miles then picked up this awesome road that would take me up to HWY 24 where everything I want to see is off of. Turns out that it was 22 miles of dirt road, very easy dirt road. It took me up through this canyon and into the hills and was just an amazing ride. It kind of sucks that while I'm on a motorcycle I have to pay much more attention to the road than if I was in a car, so I feel as if I missed a lot of what this road has to offer as far as vistas. I had an incredible time none the less though. They blasted away roadway and if they couldn't blast a whole hill side then they bore a tunnel through it. It's awesome that I have the opportunity to ride that road but it sucks that it took the desimation of the country side to create that road.
My luck and timing seems to be way off track. Once I got near the town of Victor there were thousands of motorcycles and I at first thought it was a saturday and was sunny and the mountain roads are the place to ride. I got into the town of Victor and find out that there is a Veterans motorcycle rally in the next town over and most of it spills into the town of Victor, which is an active gold mining town. I found out a couple of things about my self on this little trip. I feel that being in the Coast Guard that I am not a true veteran even though I have earned the title. So many people before me have sacrificed so much in a service that was on the front lines. I have to remind myself that although the Coast Guard is not on the front lines now that they have been, and played an important role in every war this country has been in. It also makes me feel like I have abandoning a sence of duty that I one had but now I don't. As of the 15th of August I am a free man, no ones owns me. I am torn between the two, do I do what I want when I want to do it or do I need to serve this country. A lot goes into this thought and on a motorcycle is where you can really put it all to thought, but that's another rant for another day.
I was able to make it into a BMW dealership to get an oil change done in Colorado Springs, which I am thankful they were able to squeez me in as a walk in. Come to find out that I was about 500-1000 miles from being unsafe on the tires that I had. So Lizzy got a brand new pair of shoes and she feels like a new bike. They were also saying that I was luck to get the mileage out of the tires that I did.
I was headed west again toward a cluster of campgrounds that I saw on the map. I stopped by the camp grounds further from the city hoping to find a spot and they were all full so I headed north and was able to find a campground with a few spots left and snagged the first one that was open. I here I am now back to camping and having a blast, because hotels are all the same and expencive. It was worth it in the heat but no excuse now that I am in the mountains. Going with the bad luck part I wanted to climb pikes peak on the bike today but time and there was an annual marathon up the mountain today... So tomorrow I have some new more aggressive shoes on Lizzy and a mountain to climb.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Amarillo, TX to Pueblo West, CO

Today I just felt like it needed to get the hell out of Texas. That state is huge and feels like a black hole. Once I hit the north east corner of New Mexico things really started to change, for the better. MOUNTAINS!!! I thought I would never see hills, let alone mountains, again. The best part is the temperature, 85 degrees is a very comfortable temperature to ride in. Maybe I have adjusted to the heat a bit but it is very comfortable. I picked up a Colorado map and set my sights on a campsite are just outside of Colorado City and headed right there. I am really tired of hotels and was really looking forward to camping again. But there was a wrench thrown in my gears. There is a motorcycle trials competition thing weekend and all the campsites were full.... So I headed on my way to a state park where I saw a little camp site symbol on the map and tried to get there, but apparently it is not real. It was already dark and the next campsite symbol is about 60 miles away so I grabbed the first hotel I saw so I don't have to back track into the mountains. Tomorrow I am gonna head north and there are gold mines and caves to check out so I will be in this area for a few days and then I am going to try at some point to climb pikes peak!

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Mason to Amarillo, TX

Today was just a day to eat up miles to try to get out of Texas. Just very straight roads and 70 mph. I made it even with a bit of a late start 400 or so miles. I stopped by Sam's famous steak house for lunch and they didn't open till 5 so I just kept moving.
When they say everything is bigger in Texas, they are not joking. From the people to the food servings. If you go to a gas station the "normal" size soda is 32 ounces. It actually hard to find a smaller cup..... Well tomorrow I will be in Colorado and hopefully back to staying at campsites.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Sonoma, San Antonio, George West, Corpus Christie to Mason, TX

Well I got on the road early from Sonoma to haul ass to San Antonio to meet Sam. I got there early and had to hide in the shadow of Sam's Saturn to stay out of the heat.... So we made into to San Antonio and the first stop was this map shop and man it was one of the coolest things of San Antonio. They had maps from all sorts of country and they were all from the 1400's to the 1800's, amazing stuff. Then we went to the Alamo which was pretty cool but there is only some of it left and what I didn't know it the iconic picture of the Alamo is actually the church of the whole fort. I thought it was the entrance to the fort. Anyway it was pretty packed with people and commercialized so it was good to see but I think it would be just as good to read about it. Then we went down to the river walk and proceeded to start drinking and then walking and then drinking and repeat. But then it just turned into drinking. We got a hotel ahead of time and I am glad we did by the end of the night. So the next day was slow going but we made it down to George West where Sam lives and just hung out and caught up. Then Sam started to show me all the awesome wild life that is prominent in his area, pretty much huge or stinging insects or spiders and thats pretty much it. The next day was a lazy day for me which was really nice, some time to recover after the long and fast haul to make it there for the weekend. That night we cooked up a good old fashion steak. The best part about Texas is the mesquite trees that grow every where and you can just cut them down and cook with them, it's very convenient. The next day we drove down to Corpus Christie and while Sam "worked" I spent the day on the USS Lexington, a WW II air craft carrier. There is good reason I spent the whole day there, so much to see and learn! Pretty amazing, instead of talking about it here I recommend to read about it on the interweb. Then it was back to the home stead for some Scotch Pie and Scotch eggs!
Today was a early wake up and I was moving all morning but I did't get everything done till about 11:30 and was on the road by noon. I was gonna be able to make it to Abilene but I showed up here in Mason about 20 minuets behind a rain storm and looked on my phone and saw another one headed this way so I thought it best to hold up here for the night. Tomorrow I am gonna make it to Abilene for lunch so I can eat a steak by Sam's favorite steak house then hopefully make it out of the state of Texas....

Friday, August 13, 2010

Roswell, NM to Sonoma, TX

Pretty boring trip today. Very flat and very hot. The most excitement I had all day was I thought I was going to run out of gas. I first noticed it when the town of Ozona, TX was 103 miles away and I had about 140 miles worth of fuel left. I know that at or around 100 miles left of the range computer it starts to drop faster than every mile gone by. For example at 90 miles left on the computer I would ride 5 miles and there was and 80 mile range on the computer so you can see the dilemma. I tried to pull of to a gas station but it was all boarded up and I had to pee really REALLY bad, but I didn't want to stop and waist fuel accelerating back up to speed. After all that excitement I made it to Ozona with 19 miles to spare. That's all that happened today and I drank almost 2 gallons of water today and didn't pee as much as I thought I would have. As you can tell from what I am rambling about it was a boring day. Texas roads are terribly rough and the speed limit is minimum 65 MPH and 80 on I-10, with rough roads just beats the crap out of you so I am gonna get some sleep so I can get up early and get to San Antonio with some time to check out the city.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Jacob Lake, AZ to Roswell, NM

This entry in a 2 for 1 because I spent quite some time riding yesterday. So I didn't spend the night on the rim of the Grand Canyon because I got a little bit of the rush panic to try to make it to San Antonio for the weekend. I did spend the whole morning on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon and man, if I have learned anything is why these places I have visited are National Parks. They are amazing places and they really are in our own back yard. The Grand Canyon is absolutely amazing, the size of the whole place is the majority of it. At one view point, your sitting there looking at little peaks in the canyon and its all beautiful, then you read the placard and realize that its 2 and a half miles away but it looks like its maybe a few hundred yards. Then its 18 miles to the other side of the canyon. So I will recommend, with out going to the south rim, that every one should go to the north rim. But I might report on that later. So once I was out of the Canyon I just put my hand to the rubber (like peddle to the metal, but for motorcycles) ((I actually just made that up so I cannot comment on the accuracy of that statement)) And rode all the way to Gallop, NM. There was the Vermilion Cliffs that I rode by which were and amazing shade of red, that just sprung up right out of the ground. The rest of the trip was pretty much rolling hills and I rode about 2 hours at night so I didn't get to see a whole lot. Although there was an amazing meteor shower above my head and a thunder cloud about 60 miles north that was helping light the way.
Got up and just started rideing. It's amazing how much time you spend on a motorcycle and feel like if you drove in a car for the same amount of time you could get a lot farther. I spent the day pretty much either chasing rain storms or out running them through the rolling hills of easter New Mexico. There wasn't much beside straight roads and rolling hills so I just kept on the throttle. I was excited to get to Roswell and check out all the alien stuff. I got here and was disappointed. I thought there would be alien stuff everywhere but in reality there are a few shops and 1 museum that I am aware of and the rest is farm town. Maybe I am in the wrong area but disappointed from what I have seen. Tomorrow more riding just to put the miles behind me so I can make it to San Antonio for the weekend.

Henderson, NV to Jacob Lake, AZ

Today seemed to be a pretty boring day really. I spent quite some time on the freeways and in construction zones. Apparently August is the time to do road construction in the desert, who could have guessed. So I rode around half of Lake Mead, which is HUGE by the way. At one point I thought I had left the lake and headed into the desert then about 15 miles later I met up with the northen arm of the lake. Then it was all 75 mph freeway through Mesquite, NV spent 1 hour driving through the northwestern corner of Arizona then was in Utah for about 2 hours and now I am back in Arizona at a camp ground about 70 miles from the north rim of the Grand Canyon. I could have gotten here faster except I wanted to go through Zion National Park. Which was awesome but I didn't take many pictures because, guess what, half of the park was getting re-paved. It was a welcome change from the brown and heat of the desert and I thought I would be thankful that it 99 degrees, the desert hit 110. Lots of red and white sandstone, very pretty and amazing. So you drive into the park, go up several switch backs then through a 1/4 mile tunnel and then your pretty much out of the park. The color of everything on the way down through Utah and into Arizona is the coolest part, very dark and rich hues of red. I stopped at the ranger station out side of the national forest and the guy told me of a spot I can reach thats not quite in the National park but about an hours ride on gravel I can camp right on the rim of the canyon with no one around. So tomorrow I am going to go head to the north rim touristy part then come back out and camp all by my lonesome. Which I am kind of nervous about but I think I'll just pick up some extra water and have at it! Well I still gotta set up my bed because I was in a hurry to put the tent up and try to eat because it rained a little bit on me!

Monday, August 9, 2010

Pictures

I linked the album to facebook but thought I would give access on here to the album. I apologize that its not in order or labeled but at least they are there!
http://s756.photobucket.com/albums/xx207/fawray/

Las Vegas

So the first leg of the trip was on highway 168 and it was a pretty fun road but you really couldn't make anything of the twisties that were offered because the road followed every bump and dip of the ground it was laid on. So it felt like it was upset the suspension and made the bike harder to control around the corners. All in all it was a great road. At the summit it turns into a one lane road that was run right through the rock then you come out of the other side and you start to look down into those big Nevada valleys with the extremely straight roads to the other side where you get back into the hills. Then just straight and high speed highway all the way to Vegas. So much there seemingly in the middle of no where. I decided to stay the night on the strip because I was there. I stayed at the New York New York. The zoo that is Vegas is absolutely crazy. I think though if America wasn't so fat the pedestrian traffic wouldn't be too bad. I just spent the evening walking down the strip and checking it out. Got to bed a little late and woke up feeling horrible I think its because I mixed tequila with whiskey, I didn't drink that much maybe 6 drinks but I woke up feeling like I drank the whole bottle. So needless to say it was a late start this morning. I headed toward The Hoover dam and ended up spending the day there. That is the epitome of a great engineering feat. The size of it and the slight hum you can hear from the turbine generators is amazing. I took the dam tour which takes you all the way down into the damn, you first go about 570 feet under the damn then it ends at the top, with a stop in the generator room. So worth the money to go for the big tour. I spent the rest of the time checking out the little museum and just walking around admiring it all and trying to imagine what it was like being there while it was being built. It's hard to put into words the things that I have been seeing and pictures don't work either so you guys are just gonna have to see these things for yourself! Speaking of pictures I am trying to load them all on Photobucket so you have access to all of them and not 1 or 2 that would be on here. Back to today, I was feeling terrible and I spent about 5 hours at the damn and I didn't have food supplies to camp so I cam back to Henderson and grabbed another hotel and went to "town" and got some supplies. Tomorrow the plan is the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Wish me luck on finding a camp site because you can only reserve a spot no sooner than 2 days in advance. Lame. I am looking forward to getting back up to the high desert where its cooler and cools off at night, because it was 108 at one point today here...... Way to hot for me.

Bodie to Bishop

Today I got up and kinda booked it through Yosemite because I had seen it all the first day, but hat doesn't stop me from looking around and finding things I didn't see before. My plan was to head to a place that was recommended by the guy I rode with yesterday, a ghoast town that was being kept in a state of "arrested decay". So it was about 30 miles south of Lee Vining which was about 70 or so miles from the camp site, so a pretty good haul this morning and the last 3 miles to Bodie was all gravel. You turn the corner and head down this hill and you can start to see the expance of this little town seemingly in the middle of nowhere. Come to find out that what you can see is only a mear 5% of what the town used to be in its hay-day. Simply amazing, long story short it was a hugely productive gold and silver mine that at one point in time was home to 10,000 people in the late 1800's. It was also one of the first mines to be powered but hyroelectricity, sent over some of the first every power transmission lines. Pretty wild, I have tons of pictures and they will be on photobucket when I get a chance. I spent about 3 hours there and saw a huge rain cloud come over the mountains so I thought it best to get on the road, the only thing I missed what the cemetary.
My intentions were to get to Bishop but with the weather coming and time flying I was booking it down HWY-395 at great vilocity. I went by a few campsites and they were all full then I made it to Mammoth Lakes and they were all full including hotels because there was a music festival in town. I then tried a campsite a few miles out of town, full. So here I am in a circus camp site just south of Bishop where its just grass and RV's but its cheaper than a hotel and I missed the National Forest where I could put up anywhere off the road, I just was running from the weather. So tomorrow Las Vegas is not to far away and I think its about time to start heading more east and coming face to face with the desert heat, wish me luck.

Yosemite

Today has been a very good day. I woke up and got on the road about 9 and headed back into the park, I was able to get a camp site (the last one) at the first campground past the west gate to the park. I set up my tent left a few things behind and headed into the "popular" place of the park, the valley. There was a lot of riding today, surprisingly. The popular spot is just that, tons of people. There was a conssesions stand and a small store and a sport store. Everything thing you could want while roughing it in Yosemite National Park. On a positive note I met some pretty cool people while in that mad house. One fella, which I forget his name, was from San Diego and was staying in Manmoth and trailerd his bike and took a day trip into the park. He told me about all the cool places to go and actually rode with me for a few miles to show me the best view point of El Capitan. There were people climing it! We met up with another bunch of people who has some binoculars and we were really able to seem them climb up at least part of the mountain. This place is nothing like I have ever seen before. So much granite which resited the glaciar flows which carved the rest of the valley sans these huge peaks and out croppings of rock.
I do have pictures and instead of posting them here, I decided the next time I get some internet I will start a photobucket account and post all of them on there. And as they say pictures never do the justice that this place has inspired in me. I almost want to cruz around the Sierra Nevadas and see what else there is to offer but I think I need to keep moving. I also don't want to be disappointed by seeing everything that is not in Yosemite.
Today I did get a little "homesick" but I think it is just being by yourself out here and no one to share it with. But this is the experience I have been looking for just flying around on a motorbike and seeing the sights and meeting interesting people along the way. It is everything I could wish for. I just my iPod would last more than a day of riding cause you start to get a little crazy in the head when your in your helmet. Maybe that is the young person in me always wanting/needing sound or music. I know my dad would be perfectly content with the sound of wind and the smell of nature to keep him company. I always remeber riding in his truck and wondered why he didn't have the radio on. It all make sence to me know. You don't need a huge RV or even a car with A/C. You have the aw inspring view and the smells mother nature can graciously provide and that's it. I wonder to myself what this place would be like with out people. I went to a place called Glacier Point where you can look upon the whole vally a vertical 3000 feet, not even joking. But what you see is amazing, except when you look in the vally and you see tons of cars/people/buses/buildings and I even saw a swimming pool.... Anyway I am greatful for this oportunity and this experience, there is some life changing messeges in there some where.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

P.S.

I forgot to mention that I got all the way up over 10,000 feet today. Man who else thinks that California is full of bros, ocean, and materialistic super movie/music stars. Boy was I wrong again. I can't wait till I set up camp at 9,000 feet and it's 85 degrees and over night it is supposed to dip into the 30's! I will report more tomorrow!

I'll call it day 2 again.

Second day on the road again and I had a great plan to get to Yosemite early so I could get a campsite, boy was I wrong. This place is a beautiful mad house/shit show. I talked to the campsite people and there were a few campsites still open so I told my self I would head right there and would grab one then go see the park. Well instead I spend the whole time checking the park out while trying to find a place to set up camp, with no camp to go back to. Oh and when it says the speed limit is 45 go at least 45 please, I know there is a lot to see but there are also a lot of places to pull off to see them. Anyway everyone tell all your friends and family or people you barely know that motorcycles can do everything twice as fast as people in cars, except stop for simple things like paying gate fees or going to the lou.

Enough rambling I went on this road today which I thought was awesome all the while it had a bit of pucker factor. It was an unimproved road with gravel, sand, pavement, and huge rocks. Very confidence inspiring for me, mainly because I didn't put the bike down... There were a few spots that I thought it would happen. Anyway I got all the way through the park and still no place to stay even in the 20 miles or so outside of the park. I got down to a little town called Lee Vining and all the hotels were full there. So from looking at the map and talking to my father the best idea was to head back through the park and try to find something on the west side. And I am glad I did cause there isn't much on the map on the east side of the mountains. So I am in a little town of 50 people in the last room they had left which is a little "cabin" more like a duplex. Anyway my plan tomorrow is to grab the closest camp ground and probably wake people up to leave so I can stay there then go down in to Yosemite Valley where all the popular stuff is. But from what I saw today it's gonna be hard to beat.

The beginning again...

I know it has been about a week since my last post but I can fill in the details later. I spent the week with my friend Bryan in and or around San Fransisco. We went to a Dodgers/Giants baseball game and went to Discovery Kingdom and a whole bunch of stuff in between. He had duty 2 of the days I was there so I spent that time walking around and exploring the city, which I must say is a pretty cool town. All in all I had a lot of fun and it was a good break in the ride. Now I am back to the ride. I spent some time yesterday getting lost waiting for a phone call from a family friend so we could ride into Yosemite together. He called and was unable to make the ride with me unfortunately, I was looking forward to it but we will get to ride together another time. After the call I decided to head east anyway. It was all freeway so I spent some time getting lost again looking for a bypass route, with no avail. I made it all the way here to Mantica and was stopping at the Bass Pro Shop here just to check it out and it was getting late so I decided to hole up in a Hotel so I wasn't riding around all night hoping to get a campsite. But I am on my way to Yosemite so wish me luck in getting a camp site and I will up-date when I can. I am really excited and nervous because this will be the second longest time I spent by myself on this ride before my next destination. But that is a big part of the trip for me, I just hope I don't go crazy in my helmet, to help keep my sanity I have to thank Punk Rock.