Monday, October 14, 2013

WA/OR Memorial Run

The Hammond "Gallop" leads to only one place... Glenwood.

Lots of lead time before Thursday to work out a variety of plans and I am the unofficial winner of the "Bruce≠Glenwood" pool with a cancellation time of 2 hours 31 minutes before the day we were to ride!

We linked up at Costco gas pumps at 0800 with my portion of dinner supplies... bread and wine (works for me, if I break down I'm set!) and off we go. A ride to Desert Aire for breakfast and then a drop across the Vernita Bridge, Sunnyside, Mabton (hey, they are looking for a Tech Director there) and Bickleton stopping at various pull-outs to reflect on the history of the area on the way there and on to Goldendale for other supplies.






Terry decides we are going to take some "byways" to get to the Flying-L and I lose them taking pictures, so I head up the 142 as planned but stop to figure out which direction they took (come to find they didn't head up the 142 at all but missed the turn and got lost).





So I wait from one intersection to another thinking they would at least wait somewhere (after Butter-something road last year, why would I think that?) and end up at the Flying-L Ranch to find John walking down the road looking for me at and them in their Pajamas (well, sweats) and cooking dinner and asking where I was... sheesh!




The spaghetti feed was top notch and I learned two things... Terry doesn't ever open the salad dressing if it's a new bottle at his house and you can substitute olive oil in a brownie mix.

Men... we are survivors!

So after dinner, Hammond shows me his "every bit as good as John's" 18¢ throttle lock tie-wrap. As soon as I show Terry the safety feature of it being able to back off the thing snaps in half and I'm left owing Terry a quarter! Some believe in quick disconnects with their throttle locks... Terry's has a "disintegration" feature!  :D

As it is, no one else drinks wine except Don's 2 oz taste and it's my bottle the rest of the night with a large room to myself and some of the best sleep I have had in a long time (no, not due to the wine).

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Friday met the group at 28°f and frost on the bikes.  Hammond came by to collect the rent for the Flying L hosts and said everyone was around the fire still and wouldn't be ready to roll before 10:00 AM

10:00 AM?!?!?!?!?

Finding everyone by the lodge fireplace, comments were made about NOT wanting to ride for 10 hours/450 miles/too cold/ where's my blanket.  Hells bells, I didn't take a vacation day to sit around a fireplace because it's a little chilly to ride. John must have seen my discontent because he says "Yancey, you're studying that map way too hard". Looking up, I informed the group I was heading deep into the middle and then heading East and would meet them all in La Grande, OR.  So I geared up and headed out to Trout Lake and dropped down the 141 to White Salmon and a hot breakfast in Lyle (how was your Egg McMuffin, John?).   :D


Crossed the Dalles on the 197 and shot down to Maupin/Ovenbake Road/Shaniko/Antelope/Fossil/Lunch in Service Camp/Sprey/John Day/Sumpner/Baker City/Union and up to La Grande. 422 miles at 50 Degrees was doable but tiring at the end of the day.



I met John at the Rodeway (John, we are trying other motels if we ever stay in La Grande again) and met the group for dinner at the Ten Depot Restaurant. Terry's children met us there and it was a nice evening of good food (I had local lamb) and good conversation.

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Saturday was cool and with rain on the forecast John and I grabbed a bite to eat and a good coffee (can you believe we found it at Safeway?) and then to meet at the America's Best and head out to pay our respects to our friend Terry Grubb where he took his final breath on this Earth. The core of this ride was to be there at the site where motorcycle and man finished their mortal journey and honor a good man. The markings on the road from the investigation brought a reality like no other as one realizes just how fragile our time here is.


The plaque in place and his children to place it there in honor...


We left the site and headed on NF-52 to Granite and the continuation of a days rain. Granite for lunch was a nice break before the torrential rain and then off to find a cutoff no-one had ever been on from this direction.


We passed it readily... who was leading? Oh yes, it was me. Realizing we were 5 miles past the Galena cutoff, I stopped the group and said I would need gas in Ukiah, where Don informed me there was no gas anymore so I pointed out the area on the map and told Don and John I would head for John Day and blast up the 395 to meet them in Ukiah. At this point it was so wet and cold that pictures were not readily available as I was not going to dig for  a camera and button back up every 20 minutes (although I should have taken one of me cold and waiting in Ukiah).

*note - more to story.

As I entered my third Snow Zone and sleet was having to be wiped off my face-shield as the storm moved toward the East, I began to worry about the back roads my friends were taking so I pressed it a little harder to meet them. Just after Long Creek I came into a corner with a slew of manure that cause my back tire to slide a little and unnerve me for the next 20 miles, but then before Dale, OR I came across the two cattle trucks responsible. Passing the first one was in a passing zone, but the second sped up every straight and slowed every corner. Finally my Garmin showed a straight that even though was double-yellow was plenty long enough and no oncoming traffic. Swinging out to pass I realized by the second rear dual my space was shrinking and by mid-trailer the truck was half over the center. At that point I decided to drop a gear and get past as I knew the driver was not going to play any nicer the second time and got past to see the truck in my mirror fully in the opposite lane. This cat was going to squeeze me into the ditch and I wasn't giving him a second chance so took advantage of every corner to gain as much distance as possible. There is a special place in an afterlife reserved for these guys, I know it, where their toes are constantly ran over by scooters with studded tires.

Pulling into Ukiah at 3:20 there was no sign of bikes so I puttered in wet and cold into the General Store asking if my friends had checked in. "No friends yet, you are the first rider I've seen today" said the lady at the wood stove... but I'm not sure I heard her as I was mesmerized... no, beckoned... by the hot and tempting curves of the creature before me (the wood stove, not the proprietor) and wisps of steam came from both me and a coffee that was thrust in my hands waiting a few for friends that were to have met me there. At ten minutes 'til 4:00 PM I started to put my gear back on and told the lady at the counter to let my friends know I went on to Heppner should they stop. Another local met me at the door and said he just came down the NF 53 and it was snowing hard so I decided I had had enough adventure and would take the 395 North to the 74 SW and on into Heppner. In Heppner I found one of the group cold and finished for the day and the rest had gone to Pendleton.  Pendleton?  Really?? Where was that in the plan???

Walking over to the library and getting a WiFi connection showed me that Heppner was determined to be wet and cold for the next 14 hours and I was done with wet and cold. Hermiston was looking dry so 45 minutes later I was pulling into H-town and not liking what I was seeing, so up to Umatilla, out of the rain but dark and I was done too. I got a room at another debatable motel that was a step up from the Rodeway, but not much, walked down to a Pizzeria for a great pizza and back to the room for the short night.


* I had lunch with Jon on the 18th and found out that all turned around a mile from where I left them as they were thinking there might be dirt (mud) roads involved and they ended up following me on the 395.  They were no less than 5 miles behind me as they turned around yet my 650 GS Thumper stayed ahead of them all through many mountain twisties and they never caught up to me... on the other hand, they left me in Ukiah while I was warming at the stove.
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Sunday morning was a series to short shots of sleep as a vehicle came and left the room next to me within 2 hours (yeh, I'm thinking that too) and someone at 4:00 AM looking for Sergio. Got up at 6:45, showered and packed the bike, and headed to Pasco and Road 68. The freeway (I82) was so quiet it was like many back-roads I'd taken over the last few days. Had coffee at Starbucks and was the first time I'd felt warm sun in days. Up to Othello/Potholes/Frenchman Hills/Quincy and home closed the morning and I was home by 11:20.





Later that afternoon, I had Mystique broke down for servicing the steering bearings...

I went with a group but ended riding most of it on my own in true Beemer fashion. It was nice to meet up in the evenings, and share the stories... these are great guys and I look forward to more meets like this next year, just tell me the rally points and where you plan on ending up for the evening guys!



Addendum: I finished replacing the steering head bearing in Mystique Friday evening the 18th. I love this bike and the simple maintenance it brings (although I paid $94 for a a crazy BMW tool required to do the job saving $400 in the shop).  I also mounted a spare Koplin Fuel Can and mounting brackets to my Caribou Case mounting plate thus adding another 100 miles to my basic 200 mile range.

300 miles before needing fuel, now I'm set!











Monday, September 9, 2013

Escape

School was ramping up and the retires were doing what they always do... making plans when us working souls had to work and then chide us to get time off at the worst possible time.

Plus is was going to be a wet weekend, extremely wet and brutally wet weekend. So seeing as I couldn't take Friday off, seeing as it was my birthday weekend, I told Mrs. RedTigre we were heading South to the good stuff and Saturday morning off we went.
Heading out of Wenatchee saw the skies opening up to patchy clouds and cool temperatures as we did the familiar Hwy 28 out toward Quincy, White Trail Road to Rd. 6, Adams Road, and Frenchman hills to breakfast at Mardon Resort and Hwy 17. Cutting the path through Warden on the Lind-Warden Hwy to Lind and a shot across the 395 south onto Hwy 21 (Lind-Kahlotus) to Wastuchna/Palouse Falls and a break at Lyons Ferry and 75° warmth



Mistress hit 101,000 miles here... damn fine bike.

Look at that blue sky!












We went on through Starbuck, Pomeroy and Clarkston before taking the Asotin/Enterprise Highway (Hwy 129) for curve after curve after curve after curve... and entered Enterprise to find "Mule Days" had locked up every motel in the area. So, getting dark and running out of options we got lucky and found a place at the South end of Lake Wallowa at the Eagle Cap Chalet.

It was dark when we pulled in but the morning found us again with blue skies and 70° starting off.
 


Return trip were some roads new to us, out on the 82 to the 204 north at Elgin, up to Milton-Freewater and then a side road that brought us though Umapine and onto Hwy 12 at Touchet.
Umapine School

We followed the 12 to Road 68 at Pasco, up Taylor Flats to Sagebrush Hill, Othelly, the back roads to O'Sullivan lake and a return trip across the basin to home.

Perfect weather once out of Wenatchee, warm sun, no wind, Mrs. RedTigre and a fine weekend.

















Sunday, August 11, 2013

Ammo Can Panniers

Being CBOA takes work... you can't be cheap without enough effort to prove how cheap you really are. Maintenance is one thing, never skimp, always on schedule with the right parts, never substitute.

Accessories are another...

Often overpriced and a crap-shot if they fit as described, I'm a make your own kind of guy utilizing "My Garage Technologies" business approach.

The soft pannier Medium ALICE packs (rucksacks) worked well enough, but collected dust on the gravel roads and trails like maintenance dollars in a BMW service shop. So what could be attached, sturdy enough and dust free to handle the bouncing around on my Happy Trail frame, and not cause tears if/when the bike does a ditch-dive being cheap to replace?

At first I thought Mermite cans, but they were so big and heavy, plus the locking lid was going to be a pain, so I settled on ammo cans. All shapes and sizes, but I wanted something that would not block the side of my rear turn signal, yet have enough capacity to make it worth mounting.

I used some mortar ammo cans as they gave me the width and depth, plus hung low enough to not be a center of gravity issue over areas unfriendly to high center mass trekking. Three 1/2" U-bolts and rubber strip waterproofing per case and the first dirt road has proven them functional and with minimal vibration.


$65 into it and I think it'll do... I'll let you know.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Vacation -Destination Glacier

We decided to break our vacation into two rides instead of one big one for logistical reasons.  We wanted to do Glacier National Park in reverse and hit the Washington/Oregon Coast so we decided to do the Glacier run first.

Day one was a lot of roads we have taken in the past,  and a few new ones for us as a couple. Hwy 2 from Wenatchee to Wilber was the usual "they need this to be a 90 MPH Speed Limit" run and we had breakfast in Wilber where we discovered they were replacing the Keller Ferry with a new ferry (It had  been in service since 1948 and they can't get parts for it anymore) and it won't be in commission until after mid-August, so we elected to go on a route I had ridden with the guys once before. Coming off the 2 onto the Miles-Creston Road to Hwy 25, then North to the Cedonia-Addy-Gifford Rds landing on Hwy 395 N to Colville, East on Hwy 20 to the 31 North and on up to the Nelway Border Crossing. It was warm riding until we followed Canada Hwy 6 to the 3 (Crowsnest Highway) East and enjoyed crossing the mountains in the cooler air coming into Creston for the night.
24 July 2013 -Day 1


Day 2 was much more pleasant as we stayed high in the mountains for the most part. Once we were out of Cranbrook traffic settled a bit and we worked out way East.  
The Crowsnest was beautiful as always and passing Frankslide once again keeps one humble to the power of Mother Earth (boulder landslide that wiped out a mining town). 

Following the 3 East we cut South on the 6 at Pincher Creek and then continued past Waterford Park down to the US Border. From the point where Hwy 5 and Hwy 6 meet down to the border is one of the most visually pleasant meanders one can experience. From the fields to Aspen, pines to mountains, this road rolls up and around and is best enjoyed at medium speeds. When you hit Hwy 89, South takes you to tourist central and St. Mary. 










St. Mary is the East entrance of the Going to the Sun Road and $129+ lodging. So we decided to head back 30 miles or so into Canada and $69 lodging at Cardston, Alberta a really small town with a decent Greek restaurant and a humongous LDS temple.


25 July 2013 -Day 2

Day 3 brought us to the border back into the US and a backup 25 vehicles deep. Once through the border and into the park the beauty came to life. Joan and I both agreed that the trip from the West to the East has more visual opportunities to enjoy the splendor that is Glacier, but it is such a nice place either way.




 

 























Ended up in Libby, Montana for the night.
26 July 2013 -Day 3





















Our final day:


Leaving Libby we headed west going over our favorite areas of travel and the ferries that take us there.
Explain the ferry propulsion system again?





100,000 miles!
100,000 smiles!
RedTigre and the Agent Provocateur

Live music in Pateros!
"Mistress"
Life is good...






27 July 2013 -Day 4