I didn't get a chance to post anything yesterday (Friday) because we camped at Blackjack Campground just beyond "The Pass", that is, the pass that is 14 miles up from Three Way. At first we thought we'd camp at the USFS Ranger Station in Three Way, but we arrived there just after 11:00 a.m. and there is absolutely nothing to do in Three Way. So after getting water and snacks at the one and only Three Way store, we forged on up highway 78. There are some pretty steep climbs (7-10%) and we were down in our last gear a few times. But we were fresh after a rest day, so all in all, it was a good day, especially since the weather decided to cooperate -- it was overcast all day and the temperatures were really nice. Even so, we sweated like pigs going up (do pigs really sweat???).
So we top The Pass, and just a mile or so past that we pulled into the Blackjack Campground. This is a forest service primitive campground, no water, vault toilets. Got the tent set up and were starting to work on our "gourmet" dinner of pesto pasta and instant mashed potatoes. By the way, the instant mashed potatoes they're coming up with these days are absolutely scrumptious. We had garlic parmesan ones last night. Hey, and we actually got COLD for the first time on this trip. It was pretty chilly up in those mountains.
Anyway, several pickup trucks loaded with kids -- boys age 10 and up -- started pulling into the campground driving around obviously looking for a site. Then more truckloads of boys starting coming in. And of course, a pack of them set up camp in the site right next to us. Rick says, "Looks like a Boy Scout Camperee", and sure enough, one of their leaders came over to apologize in advance to us. He told us there would be about 100 boys in that night and they'd be running all over the place and get pretty noisy. We were SURROUNDED!! But it really didn't matter too much; we were too tired to care and crashed out at 8:00 p.m. anyway.
So this morning we headed out for Silver City. We got a late start (8:20 a.m.) because it was pretty chilly this morning and we took time to make breakfast (cheese grits) and have hot tea/coffee. The ride started out very beautiful and we crossed into New Mexico about 4 miles from the campground.
Now I really feel I need to mention this spot just to the left of my cervical spine. It has been a problem for me ever since we started riding distances multiple days. It is an irritating pain that seems worse when I'm fatigued and sometimes gets stabbing. It's been with me so constantly that I've decided to name it "Spot". Yesterday with all the climbing, Spot was just fine, go figure. But today starting out with downhill and flats, Spot decided to get mean. So that, for me, took today's rating down from what could've been a 1.
We made it to Buckhorn in 2 hours, stopped and had brunch. The store there has pizza and does made-to-order burritos. Very yummy. Then we headed off for more hill climbing; not as steep as yesterday, but seemed for longer miles. We left Buckhorn at 12:40 p.m. and didn't get into Silver City until 5:00 p.m.! And, just as we reached the Continental Divide, it started to rain. Arriving in Silver City, we had no idea where to go for a good beer and the kind of food we like. We ended up at "Diane's" which was very good - good bottled beer and delicious pasta among other things, but fairly pricey. It was dark and still slightly raining when we left there and went searching for a place to stay. I said that I required a motel this night. I really was on my last legs Spot had been "talking" to me all day, and my right knee started "talking" also and it has never spoken before.
So....safe and sound finally in The Drifters Inn. We were going to head out to Caballo Lake tomorrow (77 miles) but I'm not so sure about that now....
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Thursday, September 27, 2012
The Essence of Tranquility
Today was a rest day and THAT is the essence of tranquility. Oh to let the body rest! I had the best sleep last night in my sleeping bag, on the ground in our tent at the Essence of Tranquility Hot Springs. I think Rick didn't sleep as well as I did as he informed me this morning of the cat fight, dog barking, goat bleating, and coyote yipping he heard last night. I only heard crickets for a few minutes and maybe coyotes once during the night.
The hot springs is a very funky, 60's kind of communal place. It is about 6 miles off route so it added 12 miles to our tour. Definitely nothing fancy but has a certain charm to it. It did have a communal kitchen and common room and THAT was really nice - I didn't have to break out the camp stove and there was plenty of water to clean up with. We met some nice people there - Clarisse the owner, Charles, David and Lisa, Keith and Daniella. Everyone made us feel very welcome. Keith even gave us some green chile this morning (which I added to our grits along with cheese - yum!). The hot springs tubs range from 98 to 105 degrees in temperature and sure help sooth tired muscles, although when we first arrived mid afternoon yesterday it was a bit too warm to partake. The soaking felt good last night and this morning though!
Today was a planned rest day as for the next several days we will be facing the most challenging climbs of this entire tour up into New Mexico. We toyed around with the idea of starting up the mountain today, but since we slept in and goofed around at the hot springs till after 11 a.m., decided to go into town, get lunch and check into a motel. That way we can get an early start tomorrow morning and not have to break camp before we leave.
Today's rating: 1 (how could it not be? We're RESTING!!!!)
The hot springs is a very funky, 60's kind of communal place. It is about 6 miles off route so it added 12 miles to our tour. Definitely nothing fancy but has a certain charm to it. It did have a communal kitchen and common room and THAT was really nice - I didn't have to break out the camp stove and there was plenty of water to clean up with. We met some nice people there - Clarisse the owner, Charles, David and Lisa, Keith and Daniella. Everyone made us feel very welcome. Keith even gave us some green chile this morning (which I added to our grits along with cheese - yum!). The hot springs tubs range from 98 to 105 degrees in temperature and sure help sooth tired muscles, although when we first arrived mid afternoon yesterday it was a bit too warm to partake. The soaking felt good last night and this morning though!
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One of the tubs at Essence |
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The communal kitchen |
Today was a planned rest day as for the next several days we will be facing the most challenging climbs of this entire tour up into New Mexico. We toyed around with the idea of starting up the mountain today, but since we slept in and goofed around at the hot springs till after 11 a.m., decided to go into town, get lunch and check into a motel. That way we can get an early start tomorrow morning and not have to break camp before we leave.
Today's rating: 1 (how could it not be? We're RESTING!!!!)
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Traveling Across the Land Fill
Today we journeyed from the Apache Gold Casino to a hippie hot springs in Safford, AZ (that charges money for the experience).
I learned about chip seal today. I HATE chip seal, especially when they leave big piles of gravel on the shoulder that skinny tires don't like. About mile marker 278 on highway 70 it began and went on for about two miles. We tried our best to crash once in the deep gravel they had wasted. Note: by the time you get to this section of road, fellow cyclists, there will probably be 4-5 miles of fresh chip seal - they were still working on it today.
OK, now here's the scoop on the title. Today we rode through the San Carlos Apache Indian Nation (reservation) for about 40 miles. They were trying to give everything back to the land by breaking every glass beer bottle and throwing it to the side of the road, along with every other piece of trash. It was really a sorry sight. We do our best not to be prejudiced and this is only a small percentage of the population on the reservation responsible for this mess. It was amazing when we finally exited the reservation how much less trash was on the roadsides. It makes me wonder what has happened to that Native American respect for the earth?
On our route today, we passed through the town of Pima, AZ There's this crop that we've been seeing actually since Imperial Valley and I've wondered what it is. Well, today I figured it out -- it's COTTON. Every heard of Pima Cotton? This area (Pima to Safford) is a big cotton growing region. Those white "flowers" on the plants were actually cotton bolls.
We are thinking about renaming our "Bongo" trailer to "Rumble" as it has been bouncing along the rumble strips on the narrow shoulders.
Well, we survived today, amazingly enough after being so tired yesterday. And tomorrow is a REST DAY!!!!
Total miles: 77.24
Time: 5:55
Avg: 13.05 mph
Today's rating: 2
I learned about chip seal today. I HATE chip seal, especially when they leave big piles of gravel on the shoulder that skinny tires don't like. About mile marker 278 on highway 70 it began and went on for about two miles. We tried our best to crash once in the deep gravel they had wasted. Note: by the time you get to this section of road, fellow cyclists, there will probably be 4-5 miles of fresh chip seal - they were still working on it today.
OK, now here's the scoop on the title. Today we rode through the San Carlos Apache Indian Nation (reservation) for about 40 miles. They were trying to give everything back to the land by breaking every glass beer bottle and throwing it to the side of the road, along with every other piece of trash. It was really a sorry sight. We do our best not to be prejudiced and this is only a small percentage of the population on the reservation responsible for this mess. It was amazing when we finally exited the reservation how much less trash was on the roadsides. It makes me wonder what has happened to that Native American respect for the earth?
On our route today, we passed through the town of Pima, AZ There's this crop that we've been seeing actually since Imperial Valley and I've wondered what it is. Well, today I figured it out -- it's COTTON. Every heard of Pima Cotton? This area (Pima to Safford) is a big cotton growing region. Those white "flowers" on the plants were actually cotton bolls.
We are thinking about renaming our "Bongo" trailer to "Rumble" as it has been bouncing along the rumble strips on the narrow shoulders.
Well, we survived today, amazingly enough after being so tired yesterday. And tomorrow is a REST DAY!!!!
Total miles: 77.24
Time: 5:55
Avg: 13.05 mph
Today's rating: 2
6% DOWNGRADE NEXT 12 MILES
…BULLSHIT! The
Arizona road department has some weird idea of what is a downgrade!! This particular sign on highway 60, east of
Superior, after Gonzales Pass, just after you reach the sign that indicates
4000’ is just not very truthful. To a
cyclist, seeing that truck downgrade sign is like reaching nirvana – it means
your screaming quads, back, and shoulder muscles are going to get a break. Oh, but not this road. They start you out with perhaps a 1-2 mile
drop which rapidly turns you right back up another mountain You keep expecting the other part of that
12-mile downgrade but it never really happens until you eventually get to the
4600’ elevation sign near Signal Mountain.
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Looking back towards Superior from Gonzales Pass |
Then you finally get a drop, then a mostly flat ride into
Globe which is a long town. Today when we passed through it we stopped at
a Subway next door to the Liquor Stable Saloon . Grabbed a $5 footlong sandwich and holed up in
the cool dark saloon and some conversation with Donna, the bar tender. She was very nice, filled up our water bottle
and informed u s that Gila County has an e-cola alert out for their water
supply, so drink only bottled water or get of out Gila County. A lot of the restaurants farther into town
weren’t open so it was lucky we stopped where we did! This is a great place to stop for a cold one, a good sandwich next door (which you can bring into the bar) and some local conversation.

So…there are about 63 miles between Apache Junction and
Apache Gold Casino past Globe. Most of
them are UPHILL, long slow up hills on a road that occasionally has shoulders
with inappropriately placed rumble streets almost 6 inches inside the white
shoulder line. The truck traffic was terrible,
about non-stop, although most trucks are very good and pull over into the other
lane to avoid us. But that constant
thundering noise and checking back is exhausting. Then the piece de la resistance….THE
TUNNEL.
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THE TUNNEL |
You are still climbing uphill
when you have to go into this dark tunnel
through the mountains which has NO shoulders, but does have an extra
right lane. Oh the noise and thundering
of those trucks and cars inside there. I
honestly felt that this might be the place that would do me in before my 57th
birthday; afterwards had to stop in a pullover area to let my panic die down
before going on. This road made the
rollers on Highway 78 like child play.
The good things about today: Seeing a desert tortoise just the other side
of a guard rail! (Climbing up that hill,
we felt like him!)
Stunning views of the Superstition Mountains up close and personal... And the Apache Gold Casino which, when it
appeared out of the desert might as well have been the promised land. Great air conditioning, wonderful room,
comfortable bed. We were too tired to
eat out tonight, so brought food into the room; went to sleep at 6 p.m., woke
up at 11 p.m., ate, then went back to bed.
Good Night!
Total miles: 63.89
Time: 6:07
Avg: 10.45 mph
Monday, September 24, 2012
Turn, Turn, Turn
To everything there is
a season and a time to every purpose….
Today was a day of turns…..really, a LOT of turns. We resumed our route at 7:05 a.m. exactly
where we left it yesterday – at the McDonald’s on the outskirts of
Surprise. We had stayed overnight at a
motel a little over 2 miles away, but thanks to Rick’s “I”, we rode back to
where we left off and continued from there, adding about 5 miles to our total
for today.
So today we crisscrossed through the Phoenix/Scottsdale/Tempe/Mesa
urban area. Our average mph is compromised
due to all the stop and go cycling we did today. It wasn’t a hard day, though; some downhill,
a lot of flat, a little bit of rising out of Scottsdale, but overall not a hard
day at all. The weather gave us a break
with a lovely cloud cover most of the day keeping the temperature down to the
low 100’s. And, best of all, today we
finished Map 1 of the Southern Tier!!!
Tonight we are at the Superstition Inn & Suites in Apache
Junction. We actually had enough energy
after the ride to go to the pool and hang out a bit, do laundry, and walk next
door to the Waffle House for “dinner” (salad for me, loaded hash browns, and
the most scrumptious Pecan Waffle I’ve ever had). Going back there in the morning for another one before tomorrow's ride!
Total miles: 70.12
Time: 5:26
Avg: 12.91
For those of you
following a day or so behind us….
When you get onto the Phoenix “detail”
insert, note that the left turn onto Bethany Home Road is a really weird left
turn. You have to turn left onto what
looks like a sidewalk going through some shrubs, before you get to the traffic light.
This takes you into a residential area and from there, the
directions on the course map are spot on.
If you get to the actual stop light, you’ve gone too far; make a U turn
and go through those shrubs.
Also on the “detail” insert, when
you get on Oak St., you think you’ve got a straight shot down Oak until you
turn right on 68th. However,
at one point, you’ll see a road sign indicating that Oak St., is “not a through
street”. Keep going. It’s NOT a through street to cars, but it is
to bicycles. You will get to a place
where it seems to end, but there’s a path that goes through a greenbelt and
takes you to the continuation of Oak on the other side of the greenbelt at
Orangedale.
When we got to the Rio Salada
(river), we actually had to ride into the Marina there, go left through the
parking area at the end of which we saw a bike trail. Got on that bike trail for a bit, then exited
at Scottsdale Rd. and rode up and over Scottsdale Rd. across the river. And there at the corner of Scottsdale and Rio
Salada Pkwy, is the Matchline for the end of Map 1.
You turn left at Rio Salada
Pkwy. Go about a mile and on the left
there’s the Tempe Marketplace and a number of restaurants to eat at and shops
for anything you might need (including a Target).
Sunday, September 23, 2012
SURPRISE IN SURPRISE
A brick surprised us on
the outskirts of Surprise just before Sun City in the dark…
Today I learned why this is called “Adventure Cycling”; you
never know what’s going to happen next. Also I learned for every Yin, there is a
Yang; for every action, a reaction; for every “1” there is a “4”….
We started out dark and early at 4:15 a.m. with lovely cool
air, downhill, and a tailwind. It
doesn’t get much better than that. We
were cruising along about 17.8 mph, the traffic was light, the shoulders
wide. We even saw a deer (buck) in the
bushes along the side of the road. (I’m
glad it didn’t run out into the road and hit us!)
And then, just before Happy Lane (!!) on the outskirts of
Surprise (a retirement suburb of the Phoenix area, as is Sun City) at 5:20 a.m. we encountered THE GREY BRICK. Yes, a brick, in the middle of the shoulder and just
about the same color as the road.
Neither of us saw it, but we felt it.
“What the hell was that?” I exclaimed.
A moment later, we pulled over to examine “the damage” while vile expletives
poured forth from Rick’s mouth not suitable for publication. Flat
front tire (not so bad), but then there’s that BENT REAR RIM. Very bad.
Especially on a specialty rim with carefully tensioned spokes. Fortunately, it was not so bad that we
couldn’t limp into civilization in Surprise, AZ, but bad enough that we can’t
continue our tour without replacing it.
So by 7:20 a.m. we rolled into McDonald’s in Surprise to
fire up the Internet to see what bike shops were in the area (probably not open
early Sunday morning nor carrying a heavy-duty 36 spoke rim). While there, we had a really nice conversation
with a couple of local cyclists, Kingsley and April who were out for a Sunday
morning cruise. They were very helpful,
told us where the nearest bike shop and rental car agency were.
We ended up calling Budget Car rentals which just happened
to be open this early Sunday morning, and only until 9 a.m. They came out and picked us up; we rented a Mazda CX7 SUV, stuffed the bike,
trailer, and bags into it and headed the 100 miles BACK TO BRENDA. (Buzz and Pam were surprised to see us again! Rick had another set of wheels in the truck
there; he switched them out this afternoon, we had a quick beer with Buzz and Pam (thanks again, guys!) then headed back to Surprise. Along the way back we stopped in at the “Horsepitality
RV Park” in Wickenburg and visited with the group with Adventure Cycling who are on the same
route about two days behind us. It was good to see Ed, John, Kathy, and Olaf again, and meet Buster, Neil, Greg, Arthur, Errol, Kelly, Berit, Joe, and others with the group.
Tonight we are safely tucked in at the Days Inn in
Surprise. We’ll head out tomorrow
morning, traverse our way through the Phoenix metro area, destination Apache
Junction for tomorrow night. Tuesday we’ll
push on past Globe to the Apache Gold Casino Resort. Tomorrow is supposed to be the last day of triple-digit temperatures, the rest of the week only in the mid 90's in the Phoenix area - wahoo!
Our thanks to the people who were going to host us tonight
in Scottsdale – Steve and Jan; and Monday night in Superior – Charles & Mari.
Total miles today:
30.78
Time: 1:41
Avg mph: 18.29
Today’s rating: 2
(would’ve been a 1 without the bent rim)
Saturday, September 22, 2012
We're On a Vacation, Going to Visit Relatives, Happy Birthday Neil!
I learned something today.
For every bad day, there’s a good day.
Actually, there’s way more good days than bad and today was a GOOD
day.
Our thanks again to Buzz and Pam Comer for putting up with
us (and letting us park our stuff at their place in Brenda). Last night they gave us a nice respite from
the heat in their lovely home before we had to head back to our RV for an early
bedtime.
So today…..on our scale, we give it a 1. It might’ve actually been a 1+ if there had
been a good breakfast in Aguila instead of a fly/cricket infested convenience
store, “Woody’s”. Does Aguila mean “flies”
or “crickets” in Spanish? What do crickets eat anyway? There were thousands of them hanging around
this store at 7:30 a.m. this morning – what do they survive on? And the flies!! The good thing was we only stopped long
enough to get water, coffee/tea, honey bun and move on. (If you’re following us on a tour, keep going
and stop at the Cactus Café – it was open early and has got to be much better.)
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Fly/Cricket City in Aguila, AZ |
We started today’s trek at 3:15 a.m. It was great!
The sky was filled with stars and Venus was rising in the eastern
sky. It was COOL (literally and
figuratively). We rolled into Wickenburg about 10:15 a.m.
before the heat has really built up.
Stopped for breakfast at Ike’s Cook Shack (go somewhere else if you’re following
us), then checked into the Best Western Rancho Grande at 11:30 a.m. This is a really nice place to stay. Pat in the office was very, very nice and the
motel is conveniently located within walking distance to grocery, shops, bars,
and restaurants. Walked over to Basha’s to get beer & wine,
chips and salsa, and check out a few restaurants/bars for later today.
Did I mention we found a dog? According to his tags, his name is “Dinky”.
He rode with us this morning on
top of the bags on the Bongo. About
10 miles before Aguila we got pulled over by a highway patrol because the
harness and leash were dragging behind the trailer. The little guy probably kept up with us for
20 miles or so.
This must be a VACATION! Happy Birthday to Neil, my brother. And...I really like the Yucca plants out here in the desert....
Total miles today: 72.15
Total time: 5:41
Avg: 12.70
Friday, September 21, 2012
We Haven’t Left Brenda
….YET!! We decided to
take another rest day at our RV and regroup.
We did some serious paring down of what we’re carrying and were able to
eliminate 30 POUNDS!!!! After
re-weighing Bongo and contents, we’re down to 97 pounds on the trailer (that
includes Bongo’s own weight) and 17
pounds actually on the bike (not including water which can weigh up to 12
pounds). Our panniers and rack were
eliminated, as well as about 6 inches of trailer platform. No wonder we were beat!! We were carrying a 144 pound non-pedaling
passenger, not the 100 pound one we thought.
We plan to head out to Wickenburg very early Saturday
morning (3 am?) to try to beat some heat.
It was supposed to cool down this weekend in the Phoenix area, but
instead it’s decided to stay up to 106-107 degrees (almost record-breaking
temperatures) so traveling early is very important. Also, camping is out of the question until
the temps cool down so it’s a motel in Wickenburg, and thankfully, Warmshowers
hosts in Scottsdale/Tempe area. For
those of you not familiar with the Warmshowers organization, it is a network of
cyclists who offer hospitality to other traveling cyclists. Their website is :
With all this heat we’ve been facing, I realize more than ever
how IMPORTANT water is!!! We need to
take in almost a liter an hour to keep adequately hydrated during this heat. It was pretty funny, though - the other day when we stopped for lunch in
Jacumba, the café’ owner (a middle
eastern man) poo-poo’ed people who drink a lot of water or sports drinks. He told us, “Just drink hot tea, it’s better
for you and will actually cool you down” (!!).
He also told us “Just suck on a small rock to keep your mouth wet and
salivating”. I don’t know about THAT –
I think I’ll stick to sucking water from my trusty Camelbak hydration pack!!
Oh, and about posting comments to our blog: we found out tonight that in order to post a
comment, you must have an account in either Google, LiveJournal, WordPress,
TypePad, AIM, or an OpenID URL. If you
don’t have any of those, I guess you just have to email us. Google is very easy to start an account with,
though; we highly recommend it.
So the adventure continues tomorrow….stay tuned!
Thursday, September 20, 2012
How to Post a Comment to our blog
Hello followers....and thank you for following us. Your encouragement means so much to us!
We've had several people tell us they can't figure out how to post a comment to our posts. I figured it out myself just today:
Scroll over to the right to where the Blog Archive is listed. Click on the post you want to comment on. It will open it up in it's own window. Then scroll down to the bottom of the page and there should be a box that tells you Enter A Comment.
Hopefully that works. If not, let us know and we'll research further.
Again, thanks for your support and encouragement!!!!
We've had several people tell us they can't figure out how to post a comment to our posts. I figured it out myself just today:
Scroll over to the right to where the Blog Archive is listed. Click on the post you want to comment on. It will open it up in it's own window. Then scroll down to the bottom of the page and there should be a box that tells you Enter A Comment.
Hopefully that works. If not, let us know and we'll research further.
Again, thanks for your support and encouragement!!!!
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
To Proceed or Not To Proceed, That Is The Question
Of course, we will proceed….after some well-deserved
rest. We made it back to the RV today
(which is parked at Buzz and Pam’s place between Brenda and Salome, AZ). Left Blythe at 6:00 a.m., stopped at
Albertson’s for water after a sumptuous breakfast of leftover pizza (!!).
You have your great days, your okay days, your not-so-great
days, and then your bad days. We’re
going to start a ranking system – 1 being a great day, and 4 being a bad
day. Today was a 4. It started out as a 2 with the first 12-mile climb up to Quartzsite
(it was still early and fairly cool). Temperature high for Quartzsite (which we
passed through about 10 am) was 106 today and it was heating up early. With
the f’ing heat it turned into a 4 after passing through Quartzsite and heading
on to Brenda. There is this little 12 mile climb from
Quartzsite on I-10, up till you exit to highway 60. Twelve miles of dodging shit and debris on
the shoulder. Twelve miles of huge
trucks roaring past you every 10 seconds (they were all pretty good, but still,
the noise!!). Twelve miles of pulling
our 100 pound non-pedaling “passenger” up a hill in the sweltering heat.
Our legs are doing well.
They were tired today, but still working well. Our upper bodies – shoulders, arms, necks –
are taking a toll. I have a chronic
pain to the left of my spine that sometimes stabs; it comes and it goes. Rick’s arms and shoulders are beat up from
the rough roads the other day plus dodging all the crap on I-10 today.
Good thing is….TOMORROW (Thursday) IS A REST DAY!!!!! We are at our RV, we have the A/C on, and
plan to sleep, rest, eat lots of pasta, and get rid of sh*t in our “passenger”
that we’re not using. And leave for
Wickenburg (or some intermediate destination) very EARLY Friday morning (Rick
says 5 a.m., I say 3 a.m., earlier the better….we HATE the heat!!!)
Total miles today: 46.9
Time: 4:27
Avg: : 10.54
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
We Are Still Alive!
We got an early start today – 5 a.m.! Temperature then was 74 degrees and just
great! Grabbed some coffee/tea and
pastries across the street from our motel at Donuts Plus (Brawley, open 24 hours). Sunrise at 6:30 a.m. Starting to get warm by 8 a.m. I’m wishing we started at 2 a.m. as we didn’t
finish up today until 3:50 p.m. Finish
up meaning settled in for the night (motel) and having a beer.
Total miles for the day:
89.2
Time: 7:05
Avg: 12.68 mph
So….the “rollers” on highway 78. They are nasty for sure. We hit them about 9:15 a.m. after a long,
slow 35 mile climb out of Brawley. Up until then there was hardly any traffic
passing us. But as soon as we got into
this section I think the truckers put out a call and they all headed our
way. Lots of hay trucks, going both
ways. They were all pretty good to us,
though, and we had no close calls. But
as usual, since Rick is born under “the sign of the turd”, we had numerous “squeeze
plays” (traffic passing us in both directions at the same time). But everyone handled it pretty well.
For those following us in a day or so: the store at Glamis (Sand Dunes) is open and
has water for $4.25 a gallon (!!, but worth it). About 14 miles east of Palo Verde, at
Milpitas Wash Road, there is an unopened gallon of water under a palo verde
tree on the south side of the road. The
Palo Verde Inn has COLD beer and great French fries and is open at 11 a.m. There are two small markets in Ridley (at
least 5 miles before you get to the I-10 intersection) that are open.
Enough for today.
Tomorrow we just have to limp into Quartzsite (actually Brenda, AZ about
20 miles east), with only about 1800’ of climbing.
Good night!!!
Monday, September 17, 2012
Just when you think it’s gonna be an easy day….
Today started out crisp and cool. Heading out from DeAnza Springs at 7 a.m.
after sitting in the
Spa (with no clothes on for a nice change) and a good
night’s sleep, we felt really good. Only
about 55 miles to Brawley, the first part a long downhill, then mainly flat
roads after that.
Now, for those of
you who may be a day or so behind us on this route, here are some NOTES:
The downhill after the last ascent out of Jacumba is fast
on the freeway. There was road
construction with one lane blocked, which we were still able to use except for
a few spots. We had to use our drum
brake frequently, even so we got up to 49 mph.
The wind gusts were something else; good thing we had our own lane
because even the tandem was getting pushed around. Rick’s glad he wasn’t on a single with those
gusts. I’m glad we had the extra brake! But, the downhill was a nice break from the
past two days of climbing and boosted our average mph for the day.
Next note: The
road between Ocotillo and almost Seeley (the Evan Hewes Highway) is a bumpy
piece of shit. One of those roads that
the State of California probably wants to let go back to dirt. Several miles before Seeley, not long after
the turn off for the State Prison, there is a DETOUR. A bridge is washed out (due to earthquake or
something). This turns you left off good
ole Evan Hewes onto Westmoreland….which is WORSE than Evan
Hewes. Not knowing where this detour
went, we consulted our Garmin Nuvi GPS which nicely gave us directions to
Brawley, which we followed instead of heeding the detour signs. NOT A GOOD IDEA!!!! We ended up on notorious Huff Road which took
us 12 miles through a BOMBING RANGE, and that road made Evan Hewes seem smooth. Also, absolutely no services along that route
until Brawley. I was started to get delusional,
thinking I smelled turkey gravy and stuffing, and Rick’s back and shoulders
were killing him from the road conditions.
Not to mention the HEAT!!!! Just
102 degrees today….
![]() |
The Imperial Desert, Huff Road to Brawley |
We finally rolled into Brawley at 12:30 p.m. and checked into
the Desert Inn. Had Pizza Hut and a
six-pack in the air-conditioned motel room (first floor thankfully). The manager here is very accommodating; I
asked about the nearest Laundromat and he said it was the other end of town but
offered to run a load for us in his machine.
Very reasonable rates too, nothing fancy, but the AC works well and the
beds are comfortable. We’re too beat to
want to do anything else.
Tomorrow we are going to try to make it to Palo Verde County Park. We have to go through some nasty "rollers" with a lot of trucks on the route and no shoulders. We are considering starting very early in the dark to beat the trucks. 67 miles to Palo Verde Park and tomorrow's forecast is 106 degrees.
Total miles today:
57
Time: 3:55
Avg: 14.55 mph
Sunday, September 16, 2012
A HAPPY ENDING
Day 2: We departed
Mar-Tar-Awa at 7 am and were greeted first thing by a 7 percent climb up to the
highway that pitched up to 17 percent the last 200 yards. That got things rolling! “Bongo” our new two-wheel trailer performed
well; it was like having another 100 pound person along for the ride (without
them pedaling). This made the 4100’ of
climbing today a bit of an effort (!!) but the good thing was, it was cooler
than yesterday; only peaking about 88 degrees in the afternoon.
Dennis and Lyndsay reported that the Xterra was safely
delivered to Buzz and Pam Comer’s house in Brenda (where the RV and sailboat
are stored – thank you Buzz and Pam!)
Dennis and Lyndsay have been so great during our preparation for this
trip, and continuing their support with logistics and encouragement.
We walkedI into
DeAnza Springs Resort in Jacumba, CA about 2 p.m. today. I say walked,
because it turned out there was a 2 mile dirt road into the resort, the last
400 yards too soft to ride with our skinny road tires. They’d had a lot of rain this past week and
it washed a lot of gravel and sand into their otherwise nicely packed dirt
road.
The folks at DeAnza, Dave and Helen and Kay, were so
welcoming. Again, it just about brings
tears to my eyes after a long hard day riding to be greeted so warmly. DeAnza Springs is a great resort nestled in
the hills adjacent to the Anza Borrego Desert.
And, it is clothing optional!!
Wonderful to strip off the hot, sweaty bike clothes and take a dip au natural in the crystal clear swimming pool and soak in the hot tub. We also met a few people here at DeAnza that
we see down at the Magic Circle in Quartzsite:
John, and Eric and Teresa. (We twisted the arm of the restaurant staff and found out that John bought our dinners; this really puts pressure on us now to finish this trek!) This is definitely a place to come back to and
stay a longer when our ride is over. One nudist resort down, just 10 to go. Too bad there’s not one for every night!!!
So today’s happy endng is we made it through the first two days of
major climbing and are safe, well-fed, and comfortable for the night.
Total miles today: 48.9
Total time: 5:13 (This was under 10 mph; that's really hard on us!!)
Saturday, September 15, 2012
WE HAVE BEGUN!
At 8:06 am today we started THE RIDE. Dennis and Lyndsay Morris were there to see
us dip the rear wheel in the Pacific Ocean (see photo below; the shadow is
Dennis).
Last night we had a great get together and dinner with
Dennis and Lyndsay, and four of the folks who will be starting two days after
us with the Adventure Cycling group: Ed from
North Carolina, John from Michigan, Cathy from Victoria, B.C., and Olaf from
Hamburg, Germany. It was interesting and fun to hear their
stories and good to know some of the others who will be out on the road around
the same time as us.
So THE RIDE today….uphill as advertised, but nobody said
anything about 100 degree heat and the 20 mph headwind! There was a lot of steady 7percent grade as
we started up to Alpine, with an occasional 10-12 grade. Maybe this wouldn’t have been so bad on a
cooler day, but today it was hard. Our
heart rates were up pretty high trying to cool our bodies off.
At Alpine, we stopped for a break and had a cold one at
the first beer stop of our tour (photo below).
It really helped cool us down and give us the final push to do the last
5 miles uphill to our campground. We
rolled into the Mar-Tar-Awa at 2 p.m.
Rene at the reception desk was really nice, let us pick our campsite,
and told us there was a free shuttle to the nearby Casino so we wouldn’t have
to ride our bike to get dinner (I almost cried with joy).
Total miles today:
43.5
Total time: 4
hours
Miles to go: DON’T WANT TO THINK ABOUT THAT!!!!!!
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Good to Go!
We picked "Bongo" up Monday, tested it out today, and all is Good to Go!! This is our last day in Flagstaff (and it rained for us one more time!). Tomorrow we head out for Quartzsite, Friday for San Diego.
All systems are GO!
All systems are GO!
Sunday, September 9, 2012
OUT WITH BOB, IN WITH BONGO
Well! Here we are, 6
days before blast off, and we finally loaded BOB up with everything and went
for a “test drive” (pull?). All 90
pounds of BOB and cargo (two BOB bags, 2 panniers, 1 extra dry bag). The tandem itself weighed in at 70 pounds
with all the spare parts and tools taped here and there plus handlebar bag and
rear rack bag. We rode up the steepest
hill on Lake Mary Road and back down.
End of test.
The good thing was the weight wasn’t a problem and the gears
were low enough. The BAD thing was the
bike handled horribly. The BOB caused a
lot of flexing of the titanium frame and Rick could barely reach down for a
water bottle without the bike swerving.
Going downhill was worse than going up.
At 25 mph, he dared not even try to take a drink of water.
So this is a BIG problem.
What to do? Luckily we are in
Flagstaff, home of a great bicycle trailer warehouse, Bike Shop Hub. We’ve been in there several times over the
past few weeks getting various bags.
First thing tomorrow morning we will visit them again and see about
getting a two-wheel trailer which will be much more stable, take more weight
off the back wheel (which Rick has been concerned about), and will carry more
weight (not that we need to add more
weight, but then I won’t feel so guilty about taking a curling iron).
Oh, the title? BONGO
is the name of one model of two-wheel trailer that we are considering, the
Wandertec Bongo.
![]() |
Bye-bye BOB |
![]() |
Hello BONGO |
Monday, September 3, 2012
MINUS 2 WEEKS TO BLAST OFF
View out our kitchen window |
The “blast-off” date is getting closer and closer. We are both so ready to get going on this
trip; tired of training,tired of riding
Lake Mary Rd., and tired of the RAIN
here in Flagstaff. We do have a
beautiful spot up here on forest road 82E, though, and when it’s not raining, I
can hardly imagine a more beautiful place.
View from our front door |
Hey, and there’s a park
here named after me, Wheeler Park!
We rode 264 miles this past week, 5 days in a row. It was good and I felt like I could go the 6th
day, and 7th, and on.
However, we decided to take a break and make a bomber trip up to
Northern California to see my son, Barrett, perform as Harry Potter in a
production of “A Very Potter Musical”.
Almost 1600 miles (in the car) over a 3 day period. Rick commented when we got home that this is
the kind of mileage we’ll do, on the bike, over a 5-6 week period on the
upcoming trip. Wow, 3 days versus 5-6
weeks. Puts in all in a weird
perspective….
Loooong Weekend
Who says we are old. Being young and foolish we decided to take a 1600 mile 3 day road trip in the Xterra over the long weekend. We did not take the bicycle because we knew we would be driving all of the time. On a drunken whim (Wednesday night) we left Flagstaff Thursday at lunch on a mission to surprise Lee's son Barrett as he was playing the part of Harry Potter in "A Very Potter Musical" in Susanville CA. He was surprised, we spent the night with Joe and Lisa, had coffee, tea and scones, and were off for Flagstaff and in bed by 11:00 pm Saturday night. It's a blur like that last sentence.
Well it's safe to say we did not ride Sunday. I did spend several hours installing the new chain rings and tuning the bike and getting parts and tools together. We finally returned to riding today (Monday) when everyone else was returning home from their weekend. I really like the wide shoulder on Lake Mary Road especially when the road is full of weekend warriors and their toy hauler RVs. I will give the drivers around here a lot of credit as we have not had any close calls. As with any place I've bicycled the school bus drivers are the biggest assholes. Maybe it's all of the little shits in the back that cause this attitude. New Rule (term stolen from Bill Maher) Allow school bus drivers to use duct tape to take care of problem little shits (tape mouths, hands, arms, legs, genitals, what ever it takes). There problem solved. Be happy school bus drivers and give bicycles room.
Oh yea, we got almost 42 miles in today before the rain, including a couple of long intervals. Intervals around here always include someone chasing us or us chasing someone. Today's were fun because of the comment made by one of the riders that caught us as we were turning off for the car. "Shit, it's a tandem with two old people and a handlebar bag".
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