Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Portland to Portland...
It's always difficult to see the magnitude of any situation as you are living it; at least in my experience I tend to realize the significance of things long after I live through them. For instance, I am probably the most oblivious person in the world when it comes to women; maybe that is why I felt right at home in the sciences. I have accepted that, but that is another matter entirely. The past 9 days have been an absolute rush. I have hit Washington D.C, Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Atlantic City, Portland Maine, Acadia National Park (AWESOME!!!), Chicago, and now I find myself in Madison, Wisconsin visiting my Pepperdine buddy Peter. The first day has to be the most interesting, it is more a two day experience then one, but I will tell the tale none the less.
So our pal Elo dropped us off in D.C. in the morning and we caught the quickest bus to Philadelphia, about 2-3 hours. So we had about 4 hours in the city and decided quickly to run down to Pat’s king of Steaks and grab an authentic Philly Cheese steak, which was pretty bomb. Next, we walked to the liberty Bell and then downtown towards the rocky steps in front of the art museum. However, it was not all that simple seeing how we only had 45 minutes to get there and it was 2.5 miles away, so we had to run the entire way there and back, up the stairs with our backpacks on… so one can guess that we did not make it back in time, but to pat ourselves on the back we only missed our bus by 10 minutes. So we said screw it, let’s go to Atlantic City; I should of realized then that our luck was not so great, but when in Rome. So we got to Atlantic City around eight or nine and Jared almost got mugged by some guy over a conversation about deodorant and I lost 45 dollars in about 5 minutes to a lovely game of blackjack. So no person technically robbed us, it was just pure mathematical odds that seemed to be my downfall… I hate you Atlantic City. I guess they turn some sort of profit off of chumps like me, who would have known. So we spent about 2 and a half hours there and got into New York at about 2am, realizing our one hope of a place to stay through Becka’s Sister fell through we decided to pull an all nighter and see a bunch of the sights during the wee hours of the morning. That night we saw the Brooklyn Bridge, Trinity Church, Times Square, Statue of Liberty, and the New York Stock Exchange all on foot to eat up time until daylight. Not to mention it was also freezing cold outside so the moving helped keep our minds off of the wind and chill. At the first glimpse of sunrise, around six something, we immediately crawled in our sleeping bags and crashed on a bench for a few hours in a park on the south side of the island. We then toured central park and 5th avenue, crawled on a bus and slept our way to Boston. We arrived at night took the wrong train downtown and walked to Aaron’s old band buddy Chris’ place and took delight in having a roof over our head.
We did the quick touristy things around the cities and we made our way up to Maine where some credit card points got us a rent a car for free, also free shelter from the rain and cold at night (in the car that is). The first night we got some delicious Lobster and clams, along with some victory beer for making it from Portland to Portland. We then drove all night towards Acadia and slept in a nearby town till morning. Acadia and Bar Harbor were some of the most beautiful places on the trip, rolling hills with gorgeous trees, all in autumn colors. The Maine coast was something out of a fantasy, with all the massive cliffs and powerful waves, giant rock structures with trees sprouting out of them in the most peculiar of angles. The water was freezing cold, but well worth the swim. It was a feeling I will never forget, probably the most refreshing sensation I have experienced yet. We definitely caught some attention from the others there in their trench coats and jackets.
With Maine behind us we took a 27 hour bus ride to Chicago and spent the day there and met up with some couch surfers which gave us a place to stay, again thanks to Elo. We got some great deep dish and went to the art museum, and cruised the culture rich streets of Chicago until nightfall. From here our paths diverged, I went to Madison and then I’m on my way to St. Louis and Omaha, and Utah. Jared decided to stay another day in Chicago and randomly head to Tennessee, and Derek went to go see his family in Minnesota. I suppose I will see them in Portland soon enough, but it is a definite change of pace.
Now with long days of travel and solitude ahead, I have a lot to figure out and contemplate as my future comes on fast approach. I have financial stability, Jobs, moving, grad school, friends and most of all family. I look forward to being home for the short bit I’ll be there.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Autumnal Serenity
The seeminly endless stretches of prestine beaches and cozy neighborhoods littered with spanish moss came to a close as we began to transition to the east coast with its variety of people and wide spectrum of colors. Savannah had a great atmosphere, very laid back, but with that old southern charm that lets the lingering history of the area creep back in. Every street corner had some recognized historical significance and even the streets themselves were peeled back to old cobble stone roads to remind one of how things used to be. Here we part with our pal Todd and that night we met some couch surfers and an aspiring author that is traveling by bike all over the country after his financial stability took a turn for the worse (good luck man). The next morning we were off and away on the greyhound thanks to my grandparents and found our way to Roanoke at one in the morning. Here we met up with Paige and her friend Humi, we piled in her car and took off towards Virginia Tech. All together it was four jam packed days of laziness incredible hikes and parties galore. Needless to say, gin and tonic was not my friend and the beauty of blacksburg and the stillness of life here makes the existence of time drift far from conscious thought. Virginia tech like some medieval castle was layered in massive gray stone while the colorful country side that surrounded it gave off a château in France look. Overall I really enjoyed the town and the trails, I was really bummed not to have a bike to hit the trails with, but good people seemed to do just fine.
The next day Elo came by and took us from blacksburg up to Reston and gave us a place to stay in his living room. We toured the capital and saw the town and met plenty of friendly people. WE went to the rally of Sanity on the national mall which was pretty incredible. I have never seen anything like it before, it kind of felt like the zombie apocalypse was happening. We rode the metro into the city and there were lines of people all the way to the parking lot just to get on the subway in viginia 3 hours before the event even started. The streets were shut down in every direction and standing in the field with over 200,000 felt more like wading in the ocean than standing. It was really weird there wood be pockets of current that would develop and people would ride them to the outskirts of the crowd. Altogether though it was pretty stunning to just be a part of it. Probably the best thing about it was the speech at the end, it was dead silent on the mall except for Jon Stewarts voice and you could hear it echo all the way down the national mall, kind of made the spine tingle. Well its Halloween now and tomorrow we head to Philadelphia for some cheese steaks and New York that night via bus. Part II has officially begun.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Cadence clear air revival
A blank canvas unveils the uncertainty and randomness of human thought, every brush stroke adds contrast and meaning as the image unfolds. Every moment of this trip seems to reveal something amazing, some new perspective I have never thought of or some new direction to head. It is strange to think we are already on the east coast when leaving Portland feels like it was only yesterday. Some wild number of miles ago we left on bicycle and today we are sitting below the same stars in what looks like a world apart.
The ride out from New Orleans landed us in some picturesque places, we rode along the swamps of Mississippi, through the rolling hills of Alabama, into deluxe apartments overlooking Pensacola. We were fortunate enough to make a friends with an investor in the area that had this amazing apartment overlooking this harbor with enough couches to fit all three of us and one more in his place with no problems. He greeted us with beers and laughter, and became another great example of southern hospitality, when we needed it most. We left the next morning fed and clean and made our way down to some famous white sand beaches along the way. We even got to spend the night on a giant sand dune overlooking Fort Walton beach, which is a resort town with ocean on two sides of it. The next few days consisted of arduous night riding which kept our daily mileage near a century pretty consecutively. We made it through Tallahassee exhausted and slept behind a truck stop in the bushes, made it to live oak and slept in a shed next to a busy road and the next day we were surprised with a place to stay and a friend to ride out and meet us on bike. It's kind of funny we began our trip with my uncle Greg guiding us out of Portland and we ended the trip with Todd guiding us in; even the milage was about the same for both rides. We were brought around town and had a victory beer as we rode to his place. That night we checked out his buddies pizza place and the next day we rode to the beach to put the cap on the ride and dipped our bikes in the Atlantic on the border of Atlantic and Neptune Beach. We got some hook ups through a couple of local bike shops Todd was familiar with and got our bikes packed up and we leave tomorrow morning towards Savannah Georgia where we will take a bus to Virginia Tech to visit Jared's old friends.
The next portion of the trip is via greyhound buses, we have a pass that gives us unlimited travel for 15 consecutive days where we will pick up in Washington D.C. and begin to head up the east coast hitting Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Portland Maine. However, from Portland on things get tricky, we may separate and meet back up in Oregon, or travel together to Chicago and then split up an meet back again. The logistics are unclear, but the adventure still remains potentially epic. We hope to catch the rally for sanity in D.C. and after head out, landing us in Oregon about the 15th and back home in Newbury Park about the 19th.
If I had to take one part of this biking portion of our trip and apply any sort of moral or lesson to it; it would be that there is a lot more good out there then you think. People will surprise you in the most incredible ways, you could be down and out, your legs swollen from bug bites, your head pounding in the heat and the water you are drinking tastes like sewage, but it takes only two seconds of kindness to change all of that. Never let a moment pass where you can lend a helping hand to another human being. You don't have to know them, you don't have to be wealthy or uncommonly social, but a simple gesture of kindness in your own form can go miles to anyone going through a miserable time. I feel that if God were a painter, my life up to this point would be a massive mixture of different directions, swirls of random colors, distant odd looking things combined with crystal clear landscapes and it all somehow jumbled together into something purposeful with the rigidity and focus of the greatest architectural mind. There is still so much work to be done on it, but everyday seems to build into something I can smile back on.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Digressive English leads to Progressive Hospitality
Swamps, moss covered trees and our very own police escort down the ten and we find ourselves in the big easy. We left Chad’s place with a vague recollection of what bike riding was and made our way through Houston actually enjoying the cool winding bike paths that carved out the hill alongside the Bayou (small little river). We went through some rough parts of town and down long dust filled big rig ridden roads. We came out of Houston and settled down in Liberty Texas, found a park cooked up some dinner and slept under a playground of a park. After being harassed by some raccoons and hooligans we woke up and started our way toward Orange Texas where this nice lady named Jane bought us some sandwiches and drinks and we got our final taste of Texan hospitality as we took on some night riding into our first century of the trip ( a hundred miles). We landed just on the other side of the Texan/Louisiana border and I bought the guys some waffles for completing their first 100 mile ride. Waffle HOUSE!! We then crept behind the hotel next door and fell asleep in some bushes. The sprinklers gave us a nice wake up call at 3 in the morning and we moved into the dirt and slept in pretty late. After so many nights of just trying to get undisturbed sleep after a long day of testing your body, you are humbled by the small things in life you take for granted. Not many people give a second thought to where they are able to sleep that night or where they are going to get basic essentials like water; every single day is a constant test in finding these things. A lot of places refuse to give you ice and water on a scorching hot day, some people are so used to being manipulated and turned off to the concept of generally honest people that they won’t let you in their bathrooms or even give you nasty tasting sink water. Baton Rouge was a prime example of this, but to contrary belief of people in this world, the majority of people we have encountered have been extremely kind and welcoming.
Anyways, rants aside we set out the next day pretty late, but satisfied with the distance we had covered. The guys and I roll out and end up doing some more night riding to get another 100 miles as we lay just outside of Lafayette, but along the way we had more encounters with people just bewildered with our little endeavor. Jared and I struck up some conversations at a gas station as we were filling up water and end up with 47 dollars from people that just want to help contribute something to our adventure. We tried to convince them there are more deserving people of the money and that we don’t really need it all that much, but they insisted. It is incredible how serendipitous some of our encounters are; not a moment later and we would of never of met these people, would of never of even glanced at them, but a seemingly insignificant moment allows us to have some breathing room in our budget and allowed us to splurge on some good food in New Orleans.
The next day we cover about 85 miles, the first 25 miles were on the ten over this massive swamp, you would look out from the bridge you were riding on and see endless bodies of water with scattered trees with moss hanging from the branches and then before you can take in the immensity of it all I turn around to see flashing blue lights on the shoulder about a mile back. I ride back to see Derek and Jared sitting there and this state trooper in the car trying to figure out what to do. We were 25 miles to Baton Rouge and 25 miles back is the closest exit. We can’t turn around so he gave us the option of getting tickets and our bikes impounded or a police escort off the highway to the nearest exit and directions into the city; we chose the latter, in case it wasn’t obvious. We take a 10 mile detour through the country and evade citations, but were warned to not ride on the 10 again in Louisiana. Luckily we don’t need to ride on it again until Mississippi. So we take the detour cross the Mississippi river into baton rouge, navigate our way through and sleep behind an abandoned school bus and cement truck in a field. We got eaten alive by mosquitoes and the next day we got into New Orleans. The guys and I strolled the city that night drinking the patented Derek Wicks (Patent pending). I got a bit stumbly and fell asleep after drinking some strange drinks with toy alligators in them and wearing beads that seemed to fall from the sky. So after cruising some incredibly dangerous bridges on bikes, parading around the big easy and soaking in the awesome atmosphere our time in Louisiana comes to a close and tomorrow we take a bridge out of town and roll into Mississippi along the coast. Southern hospitality and the overall jovial nature of everyone we talk to here made the experience memorable and the million close calls and constant desperate praying while riding on some roads makes me thank God every moment I can take a breath in this place. God is great. Next milestone is Pensacola, should be beautiful, hope the weather stays nice.
Monday, October 4, 2010
The Houstonian Tree Gator
The journey from Becka’s place south was an interesting one; we went from towering mountains and a rolling horizon to long stretches of nothing. We dodged some cars in Denver and rolled down the highway out of civilization, as we were leaving we were greeted with some bizarre thunderstorm clouds that left the sky divided, one half was a bright sunset and the rest was shrouded in dark purple clouds that would occasionally light up the road as lightning surged through it. After meandering through the busy city and being chased by massive thundering clouds we were then blasted by rain in the pitch-black night, we took refuge in this warehouse until it blew over. It seems that every state has a saying about its weather; I guess Colorado’s is if you don’t like the weather wait 20 minutes. So once it passed we popped a tent behind the building and passed out.
The next day we rolled on to Limon which was around 60 or so miles down the road, we covered an easy 38 early in the morning and then made some awful split pea soup, no offense Jared, and then were hit by some of the worst head winds we have encountered yet, around 20 or 30 mph. They were so bad it took about 4 hours to cover 25 miles. The rockies and mountain passes have their challenges, but give a bad head wind it is like climbing hills all day. Absolutely destroys you mentally, let alone physically. So we roll in pretty late and sleep in a dug out again. We then begin to ride and realize that the winds are actually worse then the day before and we decide to make signs for a possible ride. We pass through about 8 miles of construction filled with the some of the biggest jerks I have met on this trip that made us get off our bikes to let traffic pass, making our timing pretty awful, then we begin to run out of water and some nice people helped us out, the winds kept picking up and after another construction zone we sit down to eat lunch looking at the large thunderstorm clouds closing in on us, we are about 42 miles out of limon and this guy in a massive white van pulls over to see if we are okay and asks if we need a ride anywhere. We were on our last straw and gladly took him up on the offer. So we packed up his van and off we went. We were on our way to Amarillo and it so happens that is where he was from, he tells me about his family, his business and some pretty funny stories about the area and his life. He ended up taking us about 290 miles south and gave us a place to stay along with plenty of food. We were about to head out the following day towards Cleburne and as we open the door it is dumping buckets of rain all around us, so we were invited to stay another night. His niece and her friends took us around town that night and showed us a good time. We then wake up the following morning to find out he is actually heading to Cleburne that night and asked us if we wanted another ride, we eventually reasoned out that whatever time and money saved here in Texas we gain on the east coast, which no offense to Texas, but is a bit more appealing to me. So we take another ride and arrive at my great aunt’s place and have a mini family reunion. My dad’s parents from California happen to be there too, and we meet Roger, Dorothy and Roger’s daughter. We get a ride to Rogers and spend the night in his beautiful ranch house, where we each have our own rooms and beds. We spend the next day shooting skeet and eating out and launching illegal fireworks. The next day we go fishing at my other cousin’s ranch (Alvin) catch a few fish and head back for some smoked brisket. So we continue on the skip Texas campaign and get picked up by my mom’s grandparents and are taken down to Saledo, a beautiful little ranch property near this little creek. We spend a few days with them, go down to Austin one night to hang with Chad and relax while soaking up the fantastic Texan hospitality. We make a massive tree swing, shoot some bows and arrows and get an idea of what retired life can look like. Awesome might I add, old people have it great. Anyways we begin to realize that riding in Texas is just something we are all willing to skip so we take another ride from my grandpa to Houston. Chad and Lindsay take us in and we spend the weekend going to the bayou, Galveston, and around town. We watch countless cat you tube videos, Rock a doodle, and City of Angels. We fill the void in our lives that lacked Chad’s awesome sense of humor.
Tomorrow we get back on the bikes and attempt to navigate our way towards New Orleans. Houston is a massive city and it will be tough trying to find a way out of it, but it has been great and Texas has been more than good to us, saving us tons of money and time, and gives us a head start that will enable us to see more of the east coast on this trip. The hitchhiking experiment pays off and we are looking forward to the big easy. I’ll cross my fingers for no hurricanes.
I apologize for all the spelling and grammar mistakes, again I don't have a lot of time to edit.
The next day we rolled on to Limon which was around 60 or so miles down the road, we covered an easy 38 early in the morning and then made some awful split pea soup, no offense Jared, and then were hit by some of the worst head winds we have encountered yet, around 20 or 30 mph. They were so bad it took about 4 hours to cover 25 miles. The rockies and mountain passes have their challenges, but give a bad head wind it is like climbing hills all day. Absolutely destroys you mentally, let alone physically. So we roll in pretty late and sleep in a dug out again. We then begin to ride and realize that the winds are actually worse then the day before and we decide to make signs for a possible ride. We pass through about 8 miles of construction filled with the some of the biggest jerks I have met on this trip that made us get off our bikes to let traffic pass, making our timing pretty awful, then we begin to run out of water and some nice people helped us out, the winds kept picking up and after another construction zone we sit down to eat lunch looking at the large thunderstorm clouds closing in on us, we are about 42 miles out of limon and this guy in a massive white van pulls over to see if we are okay and asks if we need a ride anywhere. We were on our last straw and gladly took him up on the offer. So we packed up his van and off we went. We were on our way to Amarillo and it so happens that is where he was from, he tells me about his family, his business and some pretty funny stories about the area and his life. He ended up taking us about 290 miles south and gave us a place to stay along with plenty of food. We were about to head out the following day towards Cleburne and as we open the door it is dumping buckets of rain all around us, so we were invited to stay another night. His niece and her friends took us around town that night and showed us a good time. We then wake up the following morning to find out he is actually heading to Cleburne that night and asked us if we wanted another ride, we eventually reasoned out that whatever time and money saved here in Texas we gain on the east coast, which no offense to Texas, but is a bit more appealing to me. So we take another ride and arrive at my great aunt’s place and have a mini family reunion. My dad’s parents from California happen to be there too, and we meet Roger, Dorothy and Roger’s daughter. We get a ride to Rogers and spend the night in his beautiful ranch house, where we each have our own rooms and beds. We spend the next day shooting skeet and eating out and launching illegal fireworks. The next day we go fishing at my other cousin’s ranch (Alvin) catch a few fish and head back for some smoked brisket. So we continue on the skip Texas campaign and get picked up by my mom’s grandparents and are taken down to Saledo, a beautiful little ranch property near this little creek. We spend a few days with them, go down to Austin one night to hang with Chad and relax while soaking up the fantastic Texan hospitality. We make a massive tree swing, shoot some bows and arrows and get an idea of what retired life can look like. Awesome might I add, old people have it great. Anyways we begin to realize that riding in Texas is just something we are all willing to skip so we take another ride from my grandpa to Houston. Chad and Lindsay take us in and we spend the weekend going to the bayou, Galveston, and around town. We watch countless cat you tube videos, Rock a doodle, and City of Angels. We fill the void in our lives that lacked Chad’s awesome sense of humor.
Tomorrow we get back on the bikes and attempt to navigate our way towards New Orleans. Houston is a massive city and it will be tough trying to find a way out of it, but it has been great and Texas has been more than good to us, saving us tons of money and time, and gives us a head start that will enable us to see more of the east coast on this trip. The hitchhiking experiment pays off and we are looking forward to the big easy. I’ll cross my fingers for no hurricanes.
I apologize for all the spelling and grammar mistakes, again I don't have a lot of time to edit.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Jared left his heart in Wyoming
So I believe we left off with our pleasant visit with laurel. Since we have been through Jackson hole and Grand Teton National Park. We have crossed the great divide three times, gone through five thousand foot elevation changes and been dumped on by snow. We cut across all of Wyoming with strain, drama, shenanigans and a healthy dose of weather and wind. We would ride from national forest to painted desert to flat emptiness in a matter of 40 miles. This state taught us a lot about patience and team work and that a town on a map does not mean there is an actual town. Thank you Jeffery City… We learned how to conserve a little more and got less picky about where we slept. Some nights somebody would give us a place to stay, others we improvised and made something for our own. For instance, we rolled up to this gas station at the muddy gap at 10:30 at night and made spaghetti and slept on some dirt next to the little store that was closed. Jared made some lady friends at a Subway, I’ll leave the divulging to him. We also met Aaron who was randomly on tour in Rawlings, caught up with him for a bit and the bartender took us around town, and got some random tweakers to give us their camper for the night.
The ride into Colorado was smooth and an immediate change in scenery, we had 5 people offer us a place to stay in Fort Collins and ended up with this nice vegan couple right near CSU. We went to a pot luck with them and then in the morning we toured the incredible new Belgium brewery (Fat Tire). FREE might I add, plus we got some bonus brews for being bikers, there is an awesome biking story behind the founding of the company. Anywho, we say our goodbyes and head to Boulder slightly buzzed and beat down. Once in town I tried to find Becka’s place off of memory and led Derek and Jared around town for a bit, but I still maintain it was beautiful and well worth the extra ride. Heh. Becka made us an awesome meal complimented with some cold beverages and many laughs to go around. Then Mr. Gruber and Miss Phillipson stopped by and amped up the entertainment; a good night to say the least. It was followed by another wonderful day exploring the town and checking out the bars and getting to know her roommates a little better. Jared and Derek probably got rufied and we ended the night with another interesting story. Today Gatsby and I went for a hike in the flatirons and tomorrow we part ways and make toward Ft. Worth, to visit some relatives. Lessons learned… Subway girls aren’t what they seem, don’t stay in Rawlings, and rubber gloves and plastic bags make terrible snow clothing.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Mountains and Montana?
It turns out that the town of missoula is a black hole of sorts in that it kept drawing us back in with strange characters and bike problems galore. Day 1 we rolled in at night and sprung for a motel 6, day 2 we stayed at some commune in the boonies, and day 3 Jared's bike had chain issues and we crashed on some lesbians lawn (we weren't sure if they knew we were there or not), and long behold on the fourth day my back wheel had to be trued because it was wobbling all over the place. It took us a while, but we made it out and went from missoula to drummen, then drummen to butte and butte to ennis and ennis to west Yellowstone. Each day would rapidly switch from freezing to hot and push winds on and off. We had a couple days of off and on showers and from Drummen to Butte we had thunderstorms follow us the whole way. There was this moment where Jared pops his tire in the middle of this storm, I am up ahead and turn around to see derek being pushed all over the road and waving like a mad man that jared needed repairs. So we both head back towards Jared and the winds are so strong we are practically riding at a 45 degree angle to stay balanced while being pounded by rain and lightning is striking in the distance. We come up to Jared and he is standing by his bike somehow smoking in pouring rain and insane winds... he made zero prep for the tire to be changed and he is just standing there. So when we arrive he starts opening his panniers to look for tubes and its at the bottom of the bag. Finally the wheel is off and the tube is the most stubborn tube I have ever changed and we all start laughing and thinking about how good food sounds. Then Derek says his new subway slogan " When shit can't get any worse, Subway."
Anyways we made it out of there and got to Butte and slept in a dugout of some baseball field and then the next morning we wake to this happy Bum named Billy standing at the edge of the dugout who had the most ridiculous hi pitched voice (like Hanky the christmas poo hi)and asked us if we were backpackers and then wandered off to his dugout after slipping in an awkward invitation for us to join.
Well interesting characters aside, Wolf, Jeff, Billy, Harry and a couple others we spent every night in the chilly frontier of Montana and meandered through to yellowstone to meet the Lauerl who gave us a ride to Rexberg to hang out and get our bikes fixed. We get dropped off back in Yellowstone tomorrow after some site seeing and we are on our way to the great divide and Becka's place.
Anyways we made it out of there and got to Butte and slept in a dugout of some baseball field and then the next morning we wake to this happy Bum named Billy standing at the edge of the dugout who had the most ridiculous hi pitched voice (like Hanky the christmas poo hi)and asked us if we were backpackers and then wandered off to his dugout after slipping in an awkward invitation for us to join.
Well interesting characters aside, Wolf, Jeff, Billy, Harry and a couple others we spent every night in the chilly frontier of Montana and meandered through to yellowstone to meet the Lauerl who gave us a ride to Rexberg to hang out and get our bikes fixed. We get dropped off back in Yellowstone tomorrow after some site seeing and we are on our way to the great divide and Becka's place.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Lolo is loco
So we just made our first mountain pass through the 12, we took three days on the 220 mile pass and climbed 4000 feet over one pass. Things really got cold on the third day and it began to rain for a bit. We met a few tourers and camped with them one night and caught rumor of an awesome hot spring in the mountains. It was a long day and climbing into the clear hot water made every muscle relax and every thought of biking float into a distant memory. We met this crazy Canadian and his girlfriend up there and we talked till nightfall. Another day camping in the bushes on rocks and Jared tumbling on Derek and I in the tent. The route went along the clear water river and we were surrounded by massive pines and evergreens along rolling cliffs. So, we end the three day stretch a little more weary of the mountains and the many chipmunks that live there. We also may of taken 30 cups of hot chocolate from some rangers on the lolo pass. The old man there gave us the stink eye and we rolled on down to the town of Missoula. Trying to leave out details for when I talk to people in person. Staring at the path ahead is as daunting a thing as one can imagine at this point. Next stop Yellowstone... Supposed to drop below freezing at night, should be an interesting test of our gear.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Where Idaho meets Mr. Washington
So we are a good five days in on the trip, covered 55 the first day, 52 the second, 48 the third, 90 the fourth and 80 the fifth. Slowly warming up to the idea of tugging a ton of extra weight made for an interesting few days. Every big meal seems to be as amazing as the next and camping each night is half the battle. We stayed in spider infested bushes in the desert, a couple state parks, and in someones backyard for a night... Puttering through you can meet some interesting people willing to lend an extra hand. Some places it was firewood and others it was a place to sleep and free drinks. These quarky little towns draw out some strange folk, but that is the fun of it. Oregon took a while to burn through, random weather, random people and plenty of tom foolery to go around. Washington blew by in a couple days and we are walking distance from the Idaho border leading to Lewiston right now. We have the 12 ahead of us and 218 miles of absolute nothingness till Missoula Montana. We are making our way to Yellow Stone from there, but we are climbing some elevation from here on out. Looking forward to the ride, locals say it is pretty nice. Had a cool car show last night too. Derek and Jared got a couple pitchers of beer on the house and we are forecasted rain for the next couple days. Wish us luck.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
The Oregon Experiment
Every great adventure has its lead players, each needs to play off the others differences and it somehow needs to jumble together into a progressive moving mass that takes them somewhere. Our team seems to assemble some interesting qualities, each of us have our vices and problems and we each are going into this looking to get something different out of it. Derek and I have known one another since Kindergarten and Jared I have known each other since middle school; so knowing each other this well enables the best kind of constructive criticism as well as the inherent ability to crush the others spirit at any moment. Lets face it, when you know someone long enough, you know how to make them hurt. So all that aside we have great potential for success and utter failure, which seems promising enough.
So the trip starts with its challenges, 25 hours straight of driving in a position where you cannot fall asleep. Also getting lost somewhere on the one past the golden gate bridge and harassing some AAA agencies for maps. Needless to say we made it to crater lake just in time to catch the sunrise and it did not disappoint. The deep orange streaks spread from the distance and with every passing moment the water grew from the ultra still dark black to a blue that borders on crystal clear. The cliffs gave the area this unapproachable reverence that made the prospect of hiking down a dark shot in hell and as soon as we soaked in the magnificence of the scene we passed out next to some lookout point on a trail .
Derek and I were walking on no sleep, but Jared somehow found a way to sleep in the most awkward of positions, Jared is an awkward guy though so it makes sense. We took the rest of that day looking for a good camp site along the 138; every quarter mile seemed to present a more incredible camp ground, completely vacant and teeming with towering waterfalls and dense forest. We nestled in along the shore of some river and relaxed under the trees for the night, we even found some logs laying around so when the night passed we roasted some wieners and played some bridge by the fire. Oh, and got pretty drunk.
We finally made it to Portland and my cousins welcomed us with a place to hang out and plenty of food, later my Aunt and Uncle completely spoil us with their amazing cooking and hospitality. Then pasta and beer rained in from the heavens and for the next couple days we strolled the gorgeous streets of Portland and enjoyed the company of good family. We also owe Greg and Suzi a huge debt for all they threw in for us in preparation for this crazy endeavor. Greg had some awesome stories and helped us map our route and gave us some good survival tips. Also took us out on the town and got us some gear and beer, go together pretty well i think and tomorrow he leads us out of the city by bike and the insanity is close to beginning.
Didn't have time to fix spelling and speech so deez with it
So the trip starts with its challenges, 25 hours straight of driving in a position where you cannot fall asleep. Also getting lost somewhere on the one past the golden gate bridge and harassing some AAA agencies for maps. Needless to say we made it to crater lake just in time to catch the sunrise and it did not disappoint. The deep orange streaks spread from the distance and with every passing moment the water grew from the ultra still dark black to a blue that borders on crystal clear. The cliffs gave the area this unapproachable reverence that made the prospect of hiking down a dark shot in hell and as soon as we soaked in the magnificence of the scene we passed out next to some lookout point on a trail .
Derek and I were walking on no sleep, but Jared somehow found a way to sleep in the most awkward of positions, Jared is an awkward guy though so it makes sense. We took the rest of that day looking for a good camp site along the 138; every quarter mile seemed to present a more incredible camp ground, completely vacant and teeming with towering waterfalls and dense forest. We nestled in along the shore of some river and relaxed under the trees for the night, we even found some logs laying around so when the night passed we roasted some wieners and played some bridge by the fire. Oh, and got pretty drunk.
We finally made it to Portland and my cousins welcomed us with a place to hang out and plenty of food, later my Aunt and Uncle completely spoil us with their amazing cooking and hospitality. Then pasta and beer rained in from the heavens and for the next couple days we strolled the gorgeous streets of Portland and enjoyed the company of good family. We also owe Greg and Suzi a huge debt for all they threw in for us in preparation for this crazy endeavor. Greg had some awesome stories and helped us map our route and gave us some good survival tips. Also took us out on the town and got us some gear and beer, go together pretty well i think and tomorrow he leads us out of the city by bike and the insanity is close to beginning.
Didn't have time to fix spelling and speech so deez with it
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