TRANSITIONS September 2007
The annual ride that I try to do with my friend Al
intended to be in October this year - we planned to
visit the Trinity Site in Alamogordo; the place where
the first atomic bomb was detonated. No particular
reason to go there except it was a destination and as a
lot of my life has been impacted by nukes and
governments that possess them thought it might be
interesting to see where it all began. I evaluated that
plan with a more close examination of our intended
route and time of year and decided it wasn't all that
smart. The weather can be unpredictable and the daily
mileage requirements left no room for snow delays, or
slippery October roads in the Rockies - plus it would
have been cold.
Instead I planned a route through Utah over familiar
roads, with enough time to unwind from work and
rejuvenate. Normally I ride solo, or with Al but
somehow this year other riders, some from work, and
some customers from the shop got included. The process
of including others is lost to an aged memory but I
recall being nervous about the company of others, and
the unfamiliar condition that being in a group
presented me. When I ride I look forward to transitions
- like night becoming day, or cold becoming hot. I
seems to me the richest part of life occurs in times of
transition and I set my mind to this event as it being
a transitional thing for me. With that sorted I thought
about my companions and adjusted the ride length for
each day and altered the route to include the best of
motorcycle roads I knew of and scenery to gawk at. In
my view one can't go wrong with Nevada and Utah as the
backbone of a grand tour I had in mind.
7 riders were signed on for the ride. My friend Al had
a medical issue and a bike mechanical failure that
prevented his coming. Another rider cut his ride short
after a day to be with a spouse who had some
disconcerting medical test results (all is OK). Another
rider was out of town for the start of the ride but
flew home in time to meet us in Moab after a couple of
long freeway days. With that as a background I'll tell
you how it went from my perspective. I'm hoping the
others will add some of their experiences to this
document as well.
Day 1 - Three of us departed our dealership about 0930
on Sunday morning after attending to some business and
rode freeway from Fife, WA to Mountain Home, ID. I
don't like freeway riding that much but there is no
other fast way out of Washington or Oregon and I don't
feel "released" until I'm in Idaho or California.
Besides, I wanted to ride elsewhere and not waste time
in my home turf. Dismal trip as I kept at the speed
limit or maybe 5 mph over. I didn't want a ticket and
sure enough there was a little police protection
evident which went after the less cautious. I also
didn't have my radar detector with me as I was riding a
new motorcycle and testing different equipment that
would not allow radar devices to be incorporated into
the mix. So I went slow. Two riders left Seattle and
were hours ahead of us. In a long time we met in
Mountain home to briefly decide when to leave in the
morning. 0700 sounded good to me.
Day 2 - As mentioned one of our party left for home,
and the remaining four took off for Cedar City, UT
south along highway 51. It was cold when we left, about
45 degrees and progressively became colder to 35
degrees on my bike's temp gauge.
Janet photo - no food or coffee, cold, but a big
smile anyway!
By Mountain City Jen
pulled over "gotta add some layers - cold - twisty bits
coming up - I don't want to be rigid from the cold - we
gonna eat in Elko?". Twisty bits were fun, and it
warmed up a bit for transition 4 of the day. It had
already been warm to cold, heated gear back to warm,
and now the sun was shining. The tight corners enjoyed
in contrast to the previous straight and narrow. Got
fuel in Elko and descended on a restaurant for
calories. Refueled we headed West for a bit and turned
South for Nevada highway 50 and Eureka.
This is one of my
favorite roads with a great surface and more
transitions based on straight and flat high speed
opportunities mixed with mountainous twisty
sections.
The three "youngsters"
took off from Eureka and I dawdled a bit. We met again
in Elko. People were beginning to unwind and the rider
banter included "neat road". I mentioned the rest of
the ride into Cedar City was kind of uninteresting -
but I lied.
Janet Photo - we negotiated several of these
exchanges, straights and mountain twisty sections - she
figured to get one shot before she ran out of the
area.
J
ust more of the same up
hill and down hill with straights and twisty sections
to keep things interesting. It was hot, as Nevada
should be, but September hot is way different than July
hot - so nobody got dehydrated. At Cedar City we parted
for the night. Jen, David, and Janet were prepared to
camp. I was not, having decided to do motels with Al
and Bob - both of whom had to abort the ride. So odd
man out I headed for a cheap sleep and the three others
went camping.
I don't know what they did for food but I ate steak and
swam in the heated pool. Then fell asleep like dead
people.
Day 3 - We agreed the night before to meet at Ruby's
Inn outside Bryce Canyon NP. I got up early to ride
highway 14 to 89 and then 12 to Ruby's Inn. The sunrise
is magnificent sending rays of morning light onto the
canyon walls and the temperature drops rapidly as I
ascend to the high country about mid route 14.
There are deer all over
the place - big ones and now the sun is in my eyes so I
go slow, becoming a bit of an obstruction for the
working guys who are headed to work in their pickups.
Better to be hit by a truck than slam a deer I can't
see - and I pull over anyway to let the boys go by. I
eat breakfast at Ruby's and grab some coffee to nurse
outside while people watching. I don't dawdle like this
on rides and fight the urge to just take off.
The others are delayed by a motorcycle accident - rider
with no helmet got whacked in the head. I think the
unofficial term was DRT - Dead Right There.
Photo by David
After some group time I
rode ahead to Torrey while the others visited Bryce
Canyon.
Janet Photo - Bryce Canyon
The F800ST I'm riding is
becoming more familiar and I have an almost orgasmic
ride. I'm used to riding bikes with twice the power and
discovered I have to shift the 800 down to 3rd and 4th
to have the juice for a good roll on out of a corner. I
also learn, because of the conventional suspension the
800 has, that I have to set the bike up differently for
a corner. It was frustrating yesterday trying to ride
the F800ST like a K1200S, but now I am adjusting in the
right direction. Feeling like a hot shot until a guy on
an ST1300 blew by - better rider - hence no orgasm. I
do contend with a rain storm for about 20 minutes but
that just made the Cappuccino in Torrey all that much
better. I know the area around Torrey so rode a twisty
road while I waited for the group and arrive just as
they roll in. Nothing but big smiles from the
others.
Photo by David
Janet Photo - Rain in the background
The road from Bryce to
Torrey is a biker's dream. Jen says through a huge grin
"that was some serious adult fun".
I'm enjoying this. My wish was for each of us to ride
our own ride and gather at night. In this way my
companions could sort of discover things in their own
way without a tour guide to say stop here, and watch
out for that, and so on. It seemed to be working. Given
that assurance, I suggested they have cameras at the
ready as they headed South into Capital Reef (they did)
- I was headed for Blanding, UT and a motel reservation
- they for a campground along the way. Adios.
Photo by David - Part of Capital Reef
Janet Photo - Capital Reef
Janet Photo - Capital Reef
Apart from being held up
by a motor-home for a few miles, I had the road to
myself. The temperatures remained high and as I rode I
hoped I would get more of the rain - it was in my path.
Sure enough I would get a shower and cool off and then
dry out for a few miles, then another shower, and so
on. Talk about transitions - I felt intoxicated. The
beauty of the Glenn Canyon area is overwhelming and I
stop many times to take it in.
Photo by David
Doing so consumes
daylight and I run out of it about 50 miles from
Blanding. Once again I slow for deer and there are so
many I figure maybe deer whistles could be a good thing
after all. It is very windy, and raining when I enter
Blanding and it is late. I do score a premium can of
Spam and a cup of disgusting coffee at a gas station
mini mart, and again sleep soundly.
Day 4 - I'm up early and headed for Moab, UT. Rick has
arrived and is in the Motel 8 so I head off to meet and
have breakfast with him. The short ride of 78 miles is
warm and sunny with the landscape littered with
interesting and unusual rock formations. Utah is truly
a state full of scenic eye candy and before I know it
the trip is over. Desperate for coffee, I pull into a
McDonalds and then call Rick. We are having breakfast a
few minutes later. We discover that today is our
birthday - he 55 and me 60. Cool!
21st Century devices like cell phones and text messages
let us know the others are behind a few hours and they
request we find them a campground. Some local inquiry
reveals the best place is about a mile from the motel -
so reservations are made. Rick brews Marty some
birthday coffee and we wait for our friends who arrive
in about an hour. The clinician in me won't allow
questions like "what's your favorite food" or some such
as a ploy to learn about people. Instead I just listen.
I learned that Janet does not like leaf blowers -
really dislikes leaf blowers. I think the maintenance
dude knew it too as he dutifully blew leaves all around
our camp spot. He could have blown them in other places
an acre or two away but, perhaps contracted by the Mob,
rearranged them in our area. he he.
Some of us cooled off in the pool, Jen and I went to
town for calories. Then rounded up the others for a
tour of Arches National Park. On an earlier visit I met
this guy:
Always need bike pics:
This was an all BMW ride.
A GS, an RT, a GT, a K1200R, an R1200ST, and an F800ST.
Of course the pretty women got in the way of the bike
pic :)
Riders get hungry, and
some had not eaten since the morning, so we rode back
into town for calories and a good night's sleep. The
group has rested and is ready to ride in the morning.
Day 5 - We depart along a scenic and twisty byway South
of Arches NP that joins the freeway just West of
Colorado. There are lots of blind corners and some
where you just have to take it on faith that the road
continues on the other side of a small rise. In a
couple places the road does continue - but in another
direction. Pucker factor is elevated. That leads to a
discussion about how one reacts "My toes tend to curl
around the foot pegs" says one. Marty just gets into
his vowels.
We head North on Colorado 139 but have to wait for an
accident to be cleared from the road - no way around
it. Rangley Colorado gets reeled in and we head for
Vernal, UT for a lunch.
Janet Photo
Janet Photo
After that we pound along
Route 191 headed for Rock Springs, WY. 191 has plenty
of high speed U turns and near the the mid point
present high speed sweepers that delight us all.
Transitions - the day's ride has been nothing but.
I'm amazed how Washington residents can find a
Starbucks coffee shop - their sensorium is tuned to
where they might be. At the Starbucks shop there is a
discussion about where to stop for the night. One
Wyoming resident offers just about all the campgrounds
the state may have as good places to go to. Just being
helpful, but I think - based on her facials - his wife
just wanted him to quit being helpful to Janet and
physically pulled him out of the planning. I made for a
motel and the rest headed out into the darkening
Wyoming. The plan is to meet in Lander, their assumed
destination.
Day 6 - I'm up early to be at our 0900 rendezvous. By
the time I get to Farson about 35 miles away, I'm
freezing. All my stuff goes on including the Gerbing
Jacket and winter gloves. The ride to Lander is
stunning as the sun comes up. There are antelope all
over the place - always magnificent - and color to warm
the transitioning soul. The temperature drops to around
35 degrees then warms to 45 as I get into Lander. The
rest of the group arrives at the appointed time and are
similarly chilled having ridden from Farson - which is
as far as they got the night before. (Hopefully one of
them will tell the story). After food we headed for
Cody, WY. There we decided to ride the Chief Joseph
highway and turn right over the Bearthooth Pass for Red
Lodge, MT.
Anyone who has ridden these two roads knows the kind of
fun a person will have on a motorcycle.
Photo by David - Chief Joseph Highway
Calories are obtained in
Red Lodge - one of those Western towns converted to the
tourist trade.
Photo by David
David, Rick, Janet, Jen, Marty - I tried to smile,
honest!
A fun 2 lane road, Route 78, takes us to the freeway
and we pull in for the night at Livingston.
Day 7 - The group will split up today. David rides to
Seattle. Rick, Jen, and Janet for fun on Flathead lake.
I decide to have some solo time and explore. We say our
good bye stuff after breakfast and go our separate
ways. I ride South past Yellowstone NP and into Idaho
and turn off near Idaho Falls for Arco and highway 93.
Desolate road. No wonder there are energy research
facilities (probably nuke) out there. Arco, ID is small
and uninviting so I motor North. Highway 93 is well
worth the ride. Much of it climbs to sub alpine levels
and is lightly travelled. After a while the road
descends and begins to follow the Salmon River. Twisty,
Twisty, and fun, but there are the ever present deer to
be aware of. Salmon, ID looks like a nice town to spend
the night and I score a cheap motel room and a good
meal. I also meet some customers from our shop and
spend the early evening discussing the virtues of the
F800ST.
I have grown to really like this bike. Ridden
appropriately, it will carve corners with the best of
sport touring bikes and has enough snot to hit the ton
in 3rd gear. It got to 121 without trying hard and 126
before I decided to back off - though there was still
power available. Fuel economy is excellent getting 63
mpg on twisty roads with an average speed of 63 mph for
the tank. On the freeway we see 53 mpg at anything over
75 mph. There isn't a lot of weather protection but the
little fairing moves the wind around enough and the
wind screen keeps the bugs off the chest. There is a
flat spot in the power band around 4K rpm so one has to
ride around that and my aftermarket pipe helped
diminish the effect, but it requires one to drop a gear
or two to get the revs into a useful range - do that
and hang on - there is a nice bump at 5K. I found the
saddle to be OK but after my butt got hot it became
torturous. Initially I though to get a peg lowering kit
- and I may still do that - but I think the best
solution is to raise the saddle by adding sheepskin or
foam. The BMW luggage is interesting - it works well
but I had to figure out how to get the most out of it
as the dry bag liners take up a lot of room. All in all
a great motorcycle.
Day 8 - My plan for the
day is leave early 0600 and ride to Hamilton, MT for
breakfast, and then ride highway 12 through Lolo Pass
and across Washington to White pass and then home. It
started out fine. I motored along at 50 in the dark
watching for deer and I pulled over to let a big truck
get by. He honked his thanks and I trailed along at an
elevated speed assuming he would flush the deer off the
road. I got warnings from the driver as he'd turn on
his 4 way flashers to alert me to danger. I'd slow and
he'd continue.
It was just beginning to show some light as I dropped a
couple gears and pitched the bike into a left hand
sweeper. There is a Jersey barrier on the right
shoulder and the Salmon river on the left and the
corner tightens mid way through. The 4 way flashers
come on as I press into the corner and I quickly scan
for deer - but it isn't deer. There had been a rock
fall and some had spilled over the jersey barrier onto
the road bed. I rolled off as much as I could but hit
the biggest rock of the lot. I had a wild ride with a
tank slapper and basically out of control motorbike
between my legs for a bunch of seconds. It stopped
about a foot from going into the river and me un-assing
it. Bummer. End of ride.
(Note - I rode this section in April 2008 and had a
good look at the corner where I hit the rock. I
travelled a lot farther in an out of control state than
my memory had registered. I guess my speed on impact
with the rock was much greater than I assumed. I'm a
lucky dude for sure).
Front wheel - little crack in the rim
Back wheel
We motorcyclists tend to
think of roads in terms of their beauty, or quantity
of, and quality of, twisty bits. I learned that tow
truck operators view the road as a revenue stream. The
fellow who got me to Missoula, MT pointed out all the
places that bikers tend to wad their bikes up, or hit
deer. Same went for cars and motor-homes. A transition
in perspective.
I flew home - an unwelcome transition from riding as I
hate flying. Well, I got my bike home after it was
repaired. The folk at Big Sky BMW Kawasaki in Missoula
did me right. They ordered my wheels VOR to get them
from Germany as soon as was possible and ordered the
brand of tire I wanted. Flew over to Missoula on a
rainy Sunday and the owner of the shop opened his store
up so I could ride home on Monday (they are closed on
Mondays). Customer service of the highest order so,
just like the shop I work in, you get BMW service out
of the Missoula store too.
It was very wet with a prediction for snow, so
following Nate's advice I rode the freeway home. Not
what I wanted to do on a wet freeway with fresh tires
but no options. I stalled the bike a couple times
leaving the parking lot, and then had a talk with the
bike - thanking it for not kicking my ass into the
Salmon river. After that it ran like a top all the way
home. No slipping or sliding, no funny stuff, just a
fun predictable bike again. I got cold and stopped for
food by 10,000 Silver Dollars just before the pass into
Idaho. Then made it to Spokane where the rain stopped
until Easton in Washington where it resumed in force
for the ride over Snoqualmie Pass. The wind through
central Washington was intense - more demanding than
usual - but the bike did OK with it, just consumed a
lot of gas.
Observations: I had a revelation of sorts. Simply put I
can enjoy solo riding when in the company of
experienced adult riders who appreciate and value each
other's needs as a rider. There was no deep
philosophical content to conversation - fact there
wasn't much conversation - just commentary about the
road and what it was like. I can manage that. I made a
huge personal transition as I'd like to ride with these
folk again. I damned sure need to get a ride in with Al
- its been two years now - not good for us.