tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-64373165396566878352024-03-05T04:00:55.528-08:00Tansy + Goose<center></center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.comBlogger190125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-41871786096128430912013-03-05T19:25:00.001-08:002013-03-05T23:03:28.853-08:00<p class="para">Howdy. I'm staying in Bisbee for a bit, saving money, putting some stuff up on my <a href="http://www.etsy.com/shop/uglygoat">Etsy shop</a>, and deciding where to go next. Might be Moab again, or maybe back into Northern Arizona. We'll see :)<br />
</p>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-44249971542134782812012-12-08T10:31:00.000-08:002012-12-08T10:31:06.424-08:00Well, folks...<p>So, the bike riding part is nearly(perhaps completely) over for the year, and I've just started writing about it.<br />
</p><p>A few good reasons for that: My ailing laptop is filled with sand and mildew and I really don't want to touch it. I've been picked up by a couple of good friends and I'd rather talk to them then write. It's cold out and my fingers don't want to type..<br />
</p><p>Most of all, I'm pretty sure this whole ramble isnt really a "bicycle tour" anymore. It hasn't been for a while. Some critical straw tipped that changed me from "bicycle tourist" to... what? Another travelling kid? Getting a bit old in that demographic. Someone called me a rainbow mama a month ago in north california. That was just bloody wierd. Ain't no one's mama. I used to say "I just live on a bike", but I'm not adverse, entirely, to coming back out here with just a backpack. Maybe horseback(muleback?). <br />
</p><p>Anyway, point being, it felt a bit odd to continue this journal as if I'm still doing the same thing I was when I took off from Minnesota. Really, I'm not. Since leaving Portland in September, I've moved my wheels all the way to... Garberville. Some of that milage was hitchhiking. Most days I never biked more then 20 miles. Most stops I stayed stopped for a few days. I've been selling jewelry and trading along the way, hooked up with some good people and spent about four weeks in Humboldt county. I've a lot of plans for the next few days, but for now I'm heading to Quartzsite for an easy winter.<br />
</p><p>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-7095674136767412482012-09-02T12:30:00.000-07:002012-09-02T12:30:00.323-07:00Plan? What plan?<p Class="para">So much for planning - I'm still in Minnesota, after an unplanned six week visit with my cousins up north. New plan: Leaving for Portland Oregon via Amtrak on the 7th. Tickets are bought. For real, this time.<br />
</p>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-5830603410838572252012-07-01T19:13:00.000-07:002012-07-02T15:02:59.418-07:00What Next?<p class="para">I'm back in Plymouth, Minnesota again. It's been just long enough so my general feeling is that of boredom mixed with apprehension of going back into the unknown. I only wish I were a person completely above the lure of predictability, loss of responsibility, and safety. I definitely need to get back on the road. Route planning, bike talk, lusting over tech gear, and more route planning are helping me keep in the right mental state, fortunately.</p><p class="para">While I was originally hoping to hop up into Canada on the Crowsnest highway in British Columbia, the lack of money is a continual reminder that <b>I lack money</b>. With a passport costing $130, I'd rather wait until I'm closer to Quartzsite and a certain source of income before getting one. Some people can peace out and relax with nothing but a twenty hidden in the left shoe, but I get a bit nervous with less than $500 to my name. I'm well below that, now.<br />
</p><p class="para">Along with certain other decisions, though, missing a tiny slice of BC isn't such a big deal. I'll get to it eventually. So here is my planned route for the rest of this year:<br />
</p><center><br />
<img class="sim" src="http://content.screencast.com/users/Sluttio/folders/Jing/media/6c36b36a-2838-43e3-9d90-cbd236216876/2012-06-30_2038.png"><br />
</center><br />
<p class="para">For the American long distance cyclist, nothing too exotic. With just about all of this route, mile for mile, fitting into the ACA's Northern Tier and Pacific Coast maps, I'm back on the beaten path. Nice and easy. Bet I won't be saying that while climbing up Going-to-the-sun road or riding through days of coastal rain. <br />
</p><p class="para">Until Portland, I'll be on a schedule, too. I don't know how other people deal with those. Just having one or two commitments in an entire year dictates my travels for months preceding! This time, my mother is coming to visit me in Portland, Oregon. She'll be nearly a year late, since I sorta finished the TransAm last November and that's when <a href="http://americabycycle.com/where-are-we-2">everyone else's</a> parents showed up to celebrate. No, but really - it'll be a lot of fun to actually get her out here. Portland is definitely my favorite city thus far.<br />
</p><p class="para">After Portland, I'll take a slow cruise down the coast, hopefully making some money by way of selling jewelry and trinkets(If I were a bit further along in setting up an Etsy shop, that would be a link), before staying with my cousin in San Diego for a bit. Then it's back to Quartzsite till spring.</p>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-57437674088897150542012-05-16T08:59:00.001-07:002012-05-16T09:00:54.229-07:00Moab!<p class="para">Hanging out at the Lazy Lizard Hostel in Moab for a few more days. Watch the map for updates, which I'm scrambling to catch up on.</p><hr class="hr1"><center><br />
<img class="sim" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgl9JRjUvErIEk-cr3jw-2-JQ_6Sxet3-eeJGinlLAXtOmLbJrPVpshMPh-wBDV3ByR70rwSrorJ4gQQVnO7AKHhd2luTrb5Jhv7I_aT_Mcc6Ec3Czlbjh8xeogd09J2xQRQfuV_XQCxKs/s800/P1012482.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Completely unrelated to anything...</div></center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-68830962023644463192012-05-15T13:51:00.000-07:002012-05-18T14:00:29.384-07:00Crochet Crystal Pendants<p class="para">I went down to the Colorado river to see if I could find a better place to work on jewelry and maybe sell a bit. It turned out to be pretty quiet, but I had a neat idea and ended up making these funky wire and wool pendants:</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-0FP9c0TaxuA/T7XOnDosMQI/AAAAAAAAF5I/S8oBB3Ocap0/s800/P5142637.JPG"><br />
<br><br><br />
<img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-ilvPIx9o_iA/T7XO8R9p_VI/AAAAAAAAF6A/Gd2UtUNk7Ac/s800/P5162650.JPG"><br />
</center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><p class="para">The yarn is a hand dyed wool and silk blend from the fantastic fabric shop(Desert Threads, I think it was called?) in Moab. I might spring for some merino wool yarn and knitting hemp before I leave. <br />
</para>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-87174299686705057302012-05-14T12:21:00.000-07:002012-05-18T13:50:31.383-07:00Nom nom nom<p class="para">I went out looking for parts today. There are five bike shops in Moab, all but one on main street. Chili Pepper Bikes was first. These guys all do repairs on the spot and charge low for labour, but once my bike was on the stand the mechanic realized he didn't have the right brake pads. He did the rotor true and replaced the back brake cable for $5 + parts then let it down. Moab Cyclery had the neatest building, but still no brake pads that would work for me. Next up, Uranium bicycles - just what I needed, $20 a pair and $10 installation. Sure, I could do it myself, but it's nice not to. Some people get manicures, I get my bike worked on by a professional.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-p00Aru8fHjI/T7XOZxJNl9I/AAAAAAAAF4Q/S1-f7uuRfy0/s800/P5112624.JPG"><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-dv9qPxZPnMA/T7XOeZsFb-I/AAAAAAAAF4o/0JOQYABDWBQ/s800/P5112629.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">If I'd failed to find my part at Uranium, Poison Spider Bikes would have been my next stop. Check out the wall mural.<br />
</div><br />
</center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-15417885185594394182012-05-11T14:05:00.000-07:002012-05-18T14:05:40.953-07:00Almost there..<center><br />
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-5R8ci4klzTU/T7XOQxD82BI/AAAAAAAAF3w/8attwgIfV7o/s800/P5102617.JPG"><br />
<br><br />
<div class="cap">A lovely paved trail 8 miles into Moab. Unfortunately it was rather steep, and by this point my brake pads where nearly gone, by cables about to part, and my rotors warped.<br />
</div></center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-90942459040307053042012-05-05T13:53:00.000-07:002012-07-05T08:04:08.492-07:00Boulder, Utah<p class="para">I turned down an offer from Mark, whose campsite I shared, to drive me to the top of the hill visible from the campground. It didn't look all that bad - probably just a short, steep climb. There'd be many, many horrible hills to come, so why wimp out on this one? Silly logic, right? Six miles of walking later, It certainly didn't seem very smart. But it's okay, Utah is beautiful.<br />
</p><p class="para">After the painful uphill, came the nerve wracking downhill. My front brake is completely stripped, down to the metal, useless now. The back one works, slowly. The cable looks sound), but if it snaps I'll probably fly off the side of a canyon, hit a car, or wrap around a tree. The cable also looked 'Okay' right before snapping in Quartzsite, you know.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-QI92FlyhKr4/T6g14uljgwI/AAAAAAAAFio/r5BbUwz2iFk/s800/P1012419.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">These are two different signs, by the way.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-f0IqS8qGYqk/T6g17BsRb_I/AAAAAAAAFiw/Itbk8zsQjQI/s800/P1012420.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
Eventually the worst of the up and down was done with, and I reached the town of Boulder, Utah. I didn't have high hopes of finding any food, here. Just too small of a town. I noticed gas station on the way int - wait, what? Beer, Ice, and Natural Foods? Well, that's what the sign on the road said. Sure enough, this place wasn't quite what it looked like. Two young, brightly dressed women ran the store, which was stocked with organic fruit, home made donuts, and kombucha(!). There wasn't a big selection, and it was fairly pricey, but when am I going to see this stuff again? At least not until Moab. <br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-k-tO3Dqqk7Y/T6g18cR4mYI/AAAAAAAAFi4/jm-AOOrvrQs/s800/P1012427.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-MOUSXA9cz_A/T6g19vpzPGI/AAAAAAAAFjA/6aupSHxGxcg/s800/P1012430.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">Pastries devoured and Kombucha drained, I headed towards the real challenge of the day: the 9600ft climb up Boulder Mountain(Fun fact: It's actually a plateau. Or half a plateau. Kinda confusing, actually). Getting to the top before dark wasn't going to happen, but I'd like to at least get some of the climbing out of the way. <br />
</p><p class="para">Six miles later, the temperature was dropping in a big way, the sun was doing down, and I couldn't find a place to camp. I was just barely in the Dixie National Forest, and the highway was still lined with private property. This doesn't happen to me nearly as often in Utah as it does in neighboring states, and if I'd really been desperate I could have just settled for camping on uneven or rocky ground. Instead, I met Julie and Tim, who invited me to their home.<br />
</p><p class="para">It turned into a bitterly cold night, and I was very grateful to have a heated workshop bedroom to sleep in. Tim and Julie often host the local organized rides, and made me feel very welcome. I learned from them that Boulder is surrounded by organic farms, and gets an influx of WWOOFers and seasonal workers in the summer. Maybe that's reason to come back some time. I gave Julie a bracelet and some earrings, and she sent me off the next day with a big bag of home made fruit leather and dried apple.<br />
</p>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-59349923349749355332012-05-04T13:25:00.000-07:002012-07-03T13:52:55.597-07:0014% Grades, and a Real Campground at Calf Creek<p class="para">Something in my mind rebels again the notion of descending first... then climbing back up. Blazing down a mountain should be the reward for climbing up it. If I reach the top of a pass and camp, that should mean a downhill in the morning! Instead I'm going down, and down, and down today, with a horrible steep climb looming in the morning. In fact, it's too much downhill. <br />
</p><p class="para">My brake pads have been in rough shape for a while, but now I can barely make them stop. I've been having to stop every half mile to cool them off. Letting off the brakes and flying down isn't a good options, I'm not sure if I'll be able to get the bike to stop if I really get moving. It's often too steep to even walk down without holding the brakes. Really need to get this taken care of, soon.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-Vi2k0Ic1558/T6g1wwfQQaI/AAAAAAAAFh8/VOltBSotATc/s800/P1012390.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">There was a rest stop at the top of this hill. A group of 40 or so French Motorbikers decided to take a break there, and I literally had to run to my bicycle and pull it out of the way as they parked. God forbid a mere bicycle stand in the way of these men and their perfectly straight line of parked motorcycles! More funny then annoying, really.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-sEpQmoKznQY/T6g1zaR2j7I/AAAAAAAAFiM/utKgw-ShW9I/s800/P1012402.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">After a bit of climbing, this. Oh, Utah, aren't you just something else.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">I took a rest at the <a href="http://www.kivakoffeehouse.com/">Kiva Coffeehouse</a>, which was recommended by a couple who stopped to talk me whilst I watched dozens of lizards dart around on slickrock at a scenic overlook. Wonder how they got that real estate - there's no other development here. I imagine it's been there for quite a while. Anyway, it was a nice place, with (rather expensive)baked goods, beautiful architecture, and free WiFi.<br />
</p><p class="para">While enjoying a cinnamon roll and uploading pictures, I got into a conversation with Mike, a traveling software designer. He offered to share his site at Calf Creek. That would make for only a 12 mile day, but with the inevitable climb coming up, I'd just as soon have an easy day and start fresh tomorrow.<br />
</p><p class="para">The Calf Creek campground, as it turns out, was wonderful. It's small, maybe 12 sites or so, nestled between sheer rock walls, bisected by the namesake creek. Several of the sites are only accessible by footbridge, or fording the river in a vehicle. It's a $7 BLM campground, with pit toilets and no showers, so I walked down the creek a ways to bathe.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-gnVXdSIQQO4/T6g10gTC7DI/AAAAAAAAFiU/85dmZML48OQ/s800/P1012404.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Are you a Scarlet Gilia? I think so, maybe.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-0nwdqWTtgxI/T6g12QBcFBI/AAAAAAAAFig/Y1AKlcUab_g/s800/P1012417.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Calf Creek Campground from above.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-37374160903096724512012-05-03T13:03:00.000-07:002012-07-03T13:25:40.076-07:00Escalante, UT - Hole in the Wall Road<p class="para">Days are getting longer, climbs are getting steeper. I tend to wear myself out early, then sit around doing a lot of nothing until the sun goes down. That's okay - I don't feel in any hurry. I climbed and walked and pushed my way out of the canyons and into more agricultural land, then the descent into Escalante. <br />
</p><p class="para">I've been noticing a very distinct smell in this state. Whenever there water being sprayed in fields, I smell it. Closest thing I can compare it to is spoiled milk and swamp, and it's all over Utah. I've heard there is a lot of organic farming being done in the state, so maybe it's some foul smelling organic fertilizer. <br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-Kg1nzaoKiPk/T6g1sKZ7jYI/AAAAAAAAFhc/1Dtm5VmeJvY/s800/P1012381.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">On to the town of Escalante... I stopped at another well appointed GSENM visitor center, did the usual recharge/refill routine, stopped at the market and had lunch in the park. Like quite a few other Utah town parks I've stopped at, this one has a "No Camping" sign. I'm not too bummed out, since with the plentiful public land in Utah. This is a town on the tourist trail through the National Parks, so I'll make that excuse for them.<br />
</p><p class="para">I'd intended to go a ways past Ecalante, but as I passed the Hole-in-the-Rock road(Historical road, that. Crazy Mormon pioneers.) I saw a sign left by some camper, beckoning the rest of his party to stop here. Well, there must be some nice spot to camp down there, then... There was, so I called it a very early day, set up camp, and went to check out the area a bit.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-7dY4z1CzDg4/T6g1unTt5-I/AAAAAAAAFhs/GVcvVHJsIDA/s800/P1012387.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">I'm almost out of the GSENM, and I've barely been in it. Imagine how long a person could spend exploring the interior of the monument...<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-3XrZG3Viu34/T6g1wOHOeaI/AAAAAAAAFh0/YBn_CXJjCpQ/s800/P1012388.JPGG"><br />
<div class="cap">Hole-in-the-Rock unofficial camping area.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-77300917836556931212012-05-02T22:46:00.000-07:002012-06-27T23:14:21.338-07:00Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument - Campsite by a River<p class="para">Another peaceful, restful night in a great place. I woke up well rested and packed up early. There was a strange little Subway(Looked like it used to be a cafe or sit-down restaurant)at the junction with HWY 12, so I got a sammich, filled containers with ice, and plugged in my phone. Despite the advertising of free WIFI, I wasn't able to pick anything up, so I just sorted through photos and copied a huge load of media onto my external HD. Still time well spent. Since I'm just throwing money left and right anyway, I bought a box of 12 cookies for about $5 before leaving.<br />
</p><p class="para">HWY 12 dips into a panoramic view of the Bryce Amphitheater, and a nice descent. I stopped for a look at Mossy Cave, outside of the park but sharing the characteristics of, and maintained by the national park service. The cave was just okay, but the fast-moving, milky stream and waterfall where beautiful. The stream in question is a long-ago man made irrigation ditch, but at this point it looks more like a natural flowage. I talked to a few people, most memorably a very kind couple whose name and home state I've forgotten(big surprise there. Every heard of taking notes?). We had more of a conversation then the usual "Where are you from? Aren't you scared?" exchange, and even if I forgot their names, I think very well of our meeting. Happy trails, folks.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-vmcMYhfe0Yc/T6g0_6eq-yI/AAAAAAAAFeM/z83_JbZ7QGQ/s800/P1012245.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-YMaLDLNC8GA/T6g1PneChOI/AAAAAAAAFf0/mCeYzLfr3AQ/s800/P1012291.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-tNt0I8ot3mE/T6g1D75lqNI/AAAAAAAAFeg/Jps5AXjdQX4/s800/P1012253.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">After the last vestiges of Hoodoo and Amphitheater terrain where passed, I rode through ranch and agricultural land through the small towns of Tropic, Cannon, and Henrieville. Then, it was back into the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, that incredible expanse of open land. I found a well used camping area, over a river and across from a huge, sheer rock wall. The ground was littered with dried up cow dung, which worked just fine for fuel. The moonlight was bright against the rock wall, and I had the rare sound of running water.<br />
<center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-_vnfU1rGEM0/T6g1i9QAYsI/AAAAAAAAFg0/1hmKgSB3L7o/s800/P1012340.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-69620298127504712262012-05-01T21:58:00.000-07:002012-06-27T22:43:58.540-07:00A day around Bryce Canyon<p class="para">I decided yesterday evening to stay here a day, Bryce Canyon visit or no. It's not like I've had a real difficult couple of days, but more relaxation never hurts... The decision being made, I walked up to the road and called home for a bit, then came back to write a letter and watch the pronghorn and white tail deer graze at dusk.<br />
</p><p class="para">Morning was a lazy affair. I felt sort of slow and heavy and it was tempting to just stay put all day, but instead I repacked a bit, left my heavy stuff in camp, and took off down the dirt road the seemed to go in a favorable direction. I'm not sure what natural barriers may exist between me and the actual Park boundary, but it wouldn't hurt to keep an eye out for a back entrance of sorts. A quick cell-phone enabled search also revealed a road to a reservoir down there somewhere, but instead of getting too into exact locations and directions, I just figured "Downhill probably means water".<br />
</p><center><br />
<Hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-3H78HIEggV0/T6g0OvZBftI/AAAAAAAAFas/2b_sxefDjS4/s800/P1012171.JPG"><br />
<p class="para"><div class="cap">Very nice dirt road.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
The road I picked was a good one, it turned out. I rode a few miles through beautiful, airy pine-woods, walked up a loose-gravel incline, then back down into a wide meadow. At a T in the road, I had a strong feeling that one way would lead to the aforementioned reservoir and went for a look. Shortly down a second, nicely compacted dirt trail, was a tiny wooden signpost; "Bryce Canyon", indicating the other arm of the T. Sure enough, after turning around and riding perhaps another mile or so, I came across a gate - the kind passable by hikers and cyclists only. Beyond this, an employee housing area, and the return of pavement. After a few short, steep hills, my road joined up with the main passage through Bryce Canyon National Park. No entry fee for me, thank you very much. <br />
</p><center><br />
<Hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjmGtZQ8DCy2nZ4cZohWEn7LwFiSZCOpH7xeOPa9KHEVyXxobpBcpVdiMdlPBzIakpQcH5P7TLReMFJqxo80XGQxNFA6oYSmMlvLtWKbwYHJC3ItlUy2hx52BVz2roZ2IsxwIxizTrotU/s800/P1012173.JPG"><br />
<p class="para"><div class="cap">Me, being a sneak.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">I've not been in one of the big National Parks since Yellowstone, so I braced myself for a crowd. The roads where quiet enough, but the parking was packed. Busy or not, the view from the tame little fenced off overlook was undeniably amazing. Way down there I'd see a clump of hikers, or a horse and rider. Okay, how do I get down -there-?<br />
</p><p class="para">I ended up going down the mile-long Navajo trail. Doesn't sound too big, but it's very steep down a twisty snake of switchbacks. When I reached the bottom, I was confronted with a "trail closed, go back the way you came" sign. It was interesting to see the variety of people pumping back up the trail - old and young, everything from classic backpacky looking folks to some middle aged Japanese fellow who didn't understand that it's not cool to play tinny cell-phone music LOUDLY in the midst of a natural wonder. <br />
</p><center><br />
<Hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-Kazrpv5L-OU/T6g0SHiIY_I/AAAAAAAAFbM/tKRMe6KhxzI/s800/P1012188.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">The crowds, buses, fences, interpretive signs, and the idiot playing music off his cell phone didn't stop this from being special.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-8F0XWVFMCcY/T6g0Wza9CjI/AAAAAAAAFbo/T-fvUzOQyw8/s800/P1012193.JPG"><br />
<p class="para"><div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-QWwEhPPprRc/T6g0cLGOMEI/AAAAAAAAFcA/a2dmB6rks6w/s800/P1012205.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Switchbacks on the Navajo Trail.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfEpfov_2jIvRKVwjeyhVAcxSmDShmLVcDq42sVjJtQuR0oUJIfD5s-xlYUqchZADxZFCarUqeo55lytFIEZu8aMXVEvNx41i6C1Q5yZcgXQkIzDvek4tKW8G_uS-ztNTBR3Aa4M4HThw/s800/P1012240.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"><i>More</i> switchbacks on the Navajo Trail.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">After the toe-bashing trudge down, and the calf-burning one up, I made sure my bike hadn't wandered off, topped up on water, ate some more nutella, and pulled out. During this, I encountered an interesting phenomenon. I came across a line of Asian tourists disgorging from one of those "Asia America" tour buses, and quickly discovered that I <i>could not</i> cross that line. Every time I tried to walk through them, they'd cluster up and prevent it. In the end I just had to wait until every last person had left the bus before I could leave the parking lot. Hmm, that was different. I stopped at the main visitor center on the way out, where I felt oddly compelled to buy a postcard. In my defense, it's a legitimately neat <a href="http://www.rangerdoug.com/">WPA reproduction postcard</a>.<br />
</p><p class="para">Having seen the essence of Bryce Canyon, I didn't feel I needed to ride way up the road then way back down, so I turned back to camp for some overly complicated soup that didn't turn out well, more deer-watching(Wandering right into my campground while I'm cooking!), a good shit in the woods, and sleep. Pretty awesome day.<br />
</P>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-52825408580965768902012-04-30T21:00:00.000-07:002012-06-27T21:56:28.336-07:00Red Canyon on to Bryce Canyon, but not all the way<p class="para">I woke up from my first uncomfortable Utah campsite. The warm-ish nights in unquestionable locations made me lax, and I curled up on a tarp instead of setting up my tent. After the cold night, my sleeping bag was fairly well covered in frost, with a matching skin of ice in my water.<br />
</p><p class="para">Because I was camped in a fairly ambiguous spot(It appeared to be a driveway, actually...), I didn't wait around for the sun to come up. Wet gear goes in, gloves go on, and I head back to Hatch, hoping to find some food.<br />
</p><p class="para">No luck in Hatch. One tiny C-store doesn't open until 10am(It's 7am), and the others look to be shut down for good. Guess I didn't need to eat all that bad... on towards the Red Canyon it is. An easy, pleasant ride, quickly done. There are a few trails going off into the BLM land outside the more developed area(Developed by Utah standards. It has a visitor center.), but I'm dumb so I don't investigate them.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-hcH2VUNCnxg/T6hDGWzgg_I/AAAAAAAAFvQ/grLIYOQozRc/s800/P1012142.JPG"><br />
<br><br />
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-VnSA5MSJFXE/T6hDKmtasgI/AAAAAAAAFvg/rTzsncwVCVE/s800/P1012149.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Wonderful bike trail through the Red Canyon area.</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">I pulled off into a trailhead area to change out of my greasy sweat-in then slept-in clothing. By this point it was sunny and warm again, at least into the mid 70s. Took a rest at the Red Canyon Visitor Center to recharge and refill a few miles later, then onto the bike trail. It's very nice - 5 miles of well maintained trail. For the most part it parallels the road. It looks like they keep people in designated campgrounds here, but I doubt it would be problematic to camp off the bike trail where it diverges from the road. The smell of Juniper and Ponderosa is strong here, green sharp against the red rocks.<br />
</p><p class="para">The ride eastwards is a gradual climb. Even with a steady headwind, it's fairly undemanding. Still, it goes on a for quite a while and as the land flattens out at the end of the trail, I saw what I was expecting: An elevation marker, indicating the top of a climb. Few of these seems to actually be marked on my Utah state map. No complaints here. The rock formations quickly vanished and turned to ranchland while I rode along reading about Edward Abbey's funeral on my cellphone.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-hGu4oHLcle0/T6hDL9891uI/AAAAAAAAFvw/IuIS8fAiW_Q/s800/P1012153.JPG"><br />
<hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">I've still got that nasty, slick-under-the-clothes feeling from marinading in my chilled sweat last night, so I treat myself to some hostess cupcakes and a $2 shower at a C-store RV park on the way to Bryce Canyon. I had to wait while the showers were cleaned, by there was a friendly cat to keep me company and cupcakes to eat, so no problem.<br />
</p><p class="para">This last bit of road, two miles or so to the tourist zone outside of Bryce Canyon, I'll have to backtrack tomorrow. I'm not sure if I even want to go into the park(No shuttle running yet, no hiker biker sites, $12 entry, only one way in and out...), but there is free camping in the Dixie National Forest right outside the entrance. Every time I go into the Dixie National Forest, I'm enchanted. The patchwork of land encompassed by it is beautiful conifer forest.</p><p class="para">After a stop into the inevitable overpriced tourist grocery giftstore(I'm really treating myself, today..) for a can of corn, a top off of water, and a half hour of battery charging by the shuttle stop, I find my forest service road. There is so much evidence of camping it feels a bit like a very spacious, clean campground back there. The roads are very rideable hard-packed black dirt. Maybe I'll just explore them a bit, tomorrow, instead of going into the Park.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-lD9z2Qv2aL8/T6hDOL9R8CI/AAAAAAAAFv4/PF7vecivwQE/s800/P1012156.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">German serious-business vehicle parked in tourist-land.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">To those of you reading, I hope you take my cynical tourist comments with a grain of salt. I'm pretty much okay with most of the stuff done in the name of tourist revenue. Everything humanity does is pretty destructive these days, and tourism is less so then most. And as with everything else, the people involved are just people, most of them pretty decent. <br />
</p><p class="para">Once I'd set up my camp down a forest service road a ways, one of the hotel employees came cruising through on a golf-cart(Goes to show just how nice these roads are) and chatted for a bit. I can't remember her name, but I believe she was from the east coast. She offered to give me a ride to some property owned by the hotel(They have a lot of it) where there is a wonderful view of some Hoodoos and a waterfall. Now I have a few shots of the iconic Utah Hoodoos, just in case I don't go into Bryce tomorrow.<br />
<center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-Y9ug_05Vp_M/T6hDUJOmaJI/AAAAAAAAFwQ/glnWyHazmz0/s800/P1012159.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">This'll probably be the view from a hotel window someday, but, hey - it's not yet!<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-obtHedg1v0Y/T6hDSN4dfgI/AAAAAAAAFwI/WfUwYV_Qudw/s800/P1012158.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">A very comfortable free campsite, on the doorstep of Bryce Canyon National Park.</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-4332386266701445092012-04-29T17:32:00.000-07:002012-07-02T22:20:39.119-07:00Long ride to Hatch, UT<p class="para">Out of the canyons and desert for most of today. I've mostly been riding by small farms and pasture, bordered by mountains and canyon terrain. The procession of tiny towns, Mt. Carmel, Mt. Carmel Junction, Orderville and Glendale was nice to ride through. So far, these southern Utah towns are much more welcoming then anything I saw in Arizona.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-L7jxl284tbQ/T6hCmVCo1xI/AAAAAAAAFtQ/f1VsTxoIUFg/s800/P1012088.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">Orderville had several rock shops - I stopped in the most eye catching of the lot and ended up buying half a pound of Quartz/Amethyst/Tourmaline pieces, to be made into something interesting down the road. Not sure when I'll get around to using them, but they where only $5/pound and half a pound more weight isn't really worth mentioning.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-NK0d2iQZNBQ/T6hCnXFpKpI/AAAAAAAAFtY/yU4ZqKSrKlk/s800/P1012090.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-iZ2vVbYyXWE/T6hCstgOZVI/AAAAAAAAFtw/-rwlrM4qxrw/s800/P1012097.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">For the first time in this state, I had a bit of trouble finding a good spot to camp. If I'd been less picky, there where a few places I could have stopped, but instead I kept going. I ended up in more agricultural land, and on top of that there were steep slopes on both sides of the road. I was picking up elevation and as the sun went down it actually got pretty cold.<br />
</p><p class="para">The cold makes me crave a snack, but when I finally arrive in Hatch, everything is closed. Everything, of course, means a selection of two tiny C-stores. After straining my eyes in the dark for a few miles, I found what may have been a BLM road of some sort. Very cold, by this point, but I don't want to set up my tent or cook on the uneven, exposed ground so I just eat some Nutella and roll up in my bag.<br />
<center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-IvU47BGSbzg/T6hCvpZOroI/AAAAAAAAFuA/5wHlxLkSOmo/s800/P1012101.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-qP3agsED864/T6hCw_rqXSI/AAAAAAAAFuI/vRMqlj6YD3k/s800/P1012107.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-okx5axfAl7s/T6hCyn-VdII/AAAAAAAAFuQ/tD3EOxWxtqk/s800/P1012109.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-79431682291550828582012-04-28T15:55:00.000-07:002012-07-02T16:51:11.926-07:00Kanab, Hwy 89, Peekaboo Campsite<p class="para">I'm getting used to waking up early, again. The sun comes up, it's warm, I'm on my way. It's only 15 miles to Kanab, and a nice easy ride. The GSENM Visitor Centers seem to all be elaborate affairs, and I stop at the one in Kanab. <br />
<br />
</p><p class="para">I meet another cyclist in Kanab, who warns me against Hwy 89. He's planning a route through 80 miles of rough dirt track and mud, to avoid it. He also warns me to stay well away from all offroaders, who are a destructive and untrustworthy bunch. In part I tend to agree, having seen some of the damage they do the desert, but near this tourist town I'm just as likely to run into families and kids on ATVs, on guided tours or staying on trails. As far as the warning about the road... After running the gauntlet every day among some of the worst drivers I've ever experienced in Quartzsite, I'll take the risk.<br />
</p><p class="para">In Kanab, it's unmistakeably spring. The entire town smells like lilacs. There's a beautiful memorial garden, where I spend some time experimenting with my new camera. There's a nice grocery store, too, but I don't need much after stocking up in Page. With some trepidation, I leave town on Hwy 89.</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-LQImcFaxwOM/T6hCDWGgqOI/AAAAAAAAFrQ/Wo42c7mCCdI/s800/P1011994.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-ALXty16Zrrw/T6hCC9KbzVI/AAAAAAAAFrI/5PBJaT0hRKk/s800/P1011988.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Memorial Garden with a pond and fountain in Kanab.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">Now, I'm sure the other cyclist has valid reasons for his opinion, but experience vary greatly. To my eyes, Hwy 89 was pleasant bordering on wonderful. The first mile or two out of town was narrow, with offroaders often riding next to the road, throwing dust and gravel around. Most looked to be ordinary enough people - some were riding with kids. None where speeding or being intentional obnoxious. After that, the ATV trail went elsewhere and the road widened out. Most of it had a decent shoulder. It was pretty steep, but that's to be expected. Climbing the staircase, and all.</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-VdAZ3UkBZUQ/T6hCS7xwhcI/AAAAAAAAFr4/bsoJTrvp4QE/s800/P1012029.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Hwy 89 just north of Kanab.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-QMzVhXociZc/T6hCUXgPFLI/AAAAAAAAFsA/YDbJpOQsHYc/s800/P1012038.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Further along Hwy 89.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-irlFG9yGASo/T6hCXmdj-II/AAAAAAAAFsY/uudjOeIkmN0/s800/P1012055.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Part of a big piece of property along Hwy 89. Inside was a building constructed into the mouth a huge cave, a private pond(small lake, depending on how you look at it) with a dock, and a tall spiral staircase leading up into a high rock wall. The whole place had a kids club-house like feel, as if various people went to work building fun stuff. A sign on the wrought iron fence implied that it used to be open to the public, but is no longer on account of vandalism. I never was able to find out more about it.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">The highway passes the Best Friends Animal Shelter, which is apparently the largest no-kill shelter in the country, or something like that. If I'd known just how far off the road it was, I might have gone down for a tour. My life has been lacking in cats, lately. I'd like to visit some. I was more driven to find a place to camp, though, as this had been a somewhat longer day then my last two - a whopping 30 miles, but most it had some pretty good climbs, and I'm still getting used to being on the bike.<br />
</p><p class="para">Around 5pm I found a nice staging area for ATVers(Do I -ever- listen to advice? Seriously.) with picnic tables and fire rings. Another group was camped in a tight cluster of rvs, but I didn't see much of them. Had myself a tuna-corn-hashbrown sandwhich, then read for a few hours before bed. No need for a tent, again. It's in pretty rough shape after the wind in Quartzsite, so I'm going to try to avoid using it any more then I need to.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-ioHts2XyxVs/T6hCahveWCI/AAAAAAAAFso/NUTMKG2uqSo/s800/P1012063.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">One of many roadside flowering cactii.<br />
</div><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-XyrD7sje89I/T6hChnzBx6I/AAAAAAAAFtA/CMQQHBb_-U8/s800/P1012077.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Peekaboo Staging Area campsite.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-1413105063523506892012-04-27T15:17:00.000-07:002012-07-02T15:53:13.943-07:00In the General Direction of Kanab, UT<p class="para">No reason to hurry for a while. While I am on a schedule to get into Minnesota by June 18, I'm not going to start rushing yet. I'm not really looking all that forward to Colorado. Better to prolong my time in Utah.<br />
</p><p class="para">The Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument is massive, containing some of the last places to be mapped in the United States. I'll be riding in and out of it often over the next several days, as my route on Hwy 89 and Hwy 12(National Parks Byway) sort of wraps around the monument. There are no paved roads in the interior of the monument. <br />
</p><p class="para">After a mostly flat ride, with a few brakes at trail crossing, I decided to call it a night at the western edge of the Monument heading towards Kanab. Tomorrow I go north instead of west, then eventually east again, a few steps up on the 'Grand Staircase'.<br />
<center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-IA7oFJ2eY6Y/T6hB4v3-sJI/AAAAAAAAFqQ/28-xoAReMZc/s800/P1011965.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Making use of some found cattle bones to keep my grill stable.<br />
</div><br><br />
<img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-z9DZnkzaaHc/T6hB8Kcz_lI/AAAAAAAAFqg/FjL_Lq3nu1o/s800/P1011970.JPGG"><br />
<div class="cap">It's warm and dry into the night. No need for a tent, here.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-89494007681300122772012-04-26T14:50:00.000-07:002012-07-02T15:13:02.243-07:00The Journey Resumes - Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument<p class="para">There is a very nice visitor center near Big Water, Utah. I'll consider this the beginning of my day. From here on in, I can look forward instead of riding along wondering what the hell I'm doing. And, oh, Utah is making it easier - just keep your head up and see how beautiful it is. Anyway - the visitor center. Very helpful, water, electricity, a ranger on hand to tell me 'Ignore all the restrictions on the map. You can camp anywhere' and sign a free permit.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-8YNlml_0D5Q/T6hBp_3KaTI/AAAAAAAAFow/J2c1wFu7aKE/s800/P1011920.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-m-52InKv9gg/T6hBxOGwL9I/AAAAAAAAFpg/ppJMNFBeZSM/s800/P1011941.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">Stormclouds skirted the bit of road and desert I was riding on. The wind felt full of rain, but nothing fell on me. I stopped at a trailhead(Toadstools) for lunch, descended into a canyon and started climbing out. It was a very short day riding day. I saw a short track curving away from the highway, behind some smooth red rocks, and found a place to camp back there. Broken glass, highway noise and all, it was one of the prettiest campsites I've found yet. There is a steep-sided wash, or a narrow canyon below, with shallow caves on the other side. It finally rained, briefly, and I climbed down into one of the caves and read until dark.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-jj0HQlcbIOo/T6hB1aE0ZtI/AAAAAAAAFp4/I2RRu5wguwk/s800/P1011952.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap"></div><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-f0_6iIAao_w/T6hB0nBYWrI/AAAAAAAAFpw/A2wdCV5Lpzs/s800/P1011951.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">First nights campsite, at Catstair Canyon.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-67211311730513807812012-04-26T12:39:00.000-07:002012-07-02T14:47:53.082-07:00Where I've been, where I'm going.<p class="para">Late in the month of November, I arrived in Quartzsite, Arizona. I'd marked this as a place to rest for a time, in a town well-equipped for and accustomed to long term travelers.<br />
</p><p class="para">I rode into Quartzsite on a unseasonably warm night, and found a place to camp, east of town, between a towering Saguaro and a scraggly mesquite. I stayed here for three weeks, each day spending more time in town and meeting people. The hitch hikers, tramps and vagabonds told me it's easy to find work setting up for vendors, here. The old men who sit in MacDonalds all day said everything is going to hell and good luck getting a job. The vendors said "wait until more people show up".<br />
</p><p class="para">Two weeks in I was offered $9/hr to clean a couple of motorhomes "Before the boss and his crew get here". Motorhomes clean, boss arrives, and kept me on for five days sorting beads and setting up tables. A week after that ended, I had season-long work at D&D produce, a rather large seasonal produce stand. I spend most of the winter re-packaging nuts and candies. At this time I was also given a notice to leave the two-week limit BLM area I was camped in, and moved north two and a half miles north of town to the Tyson Wash long term visitor area. I stayed here, in a pretty spot between a tree and a wash, until March.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-cN2hPbw_1h8/Tzih8tbBrCI/AAAAAAAAD1I/YkDD89OP8xo/s800/P1240852.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Second Camp. Later on, in the endlessly windy spring, I made a covered outdoor oven of Crysacolla and Quartz.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">Quartzsite was very cheap to live in, ideal for saving money for the next leg of my adventure. Being without a vehicle, no one ever checked my LTVA permit. I paid my $40 fee once, and let it expire after two weeks. Nothing happened. There is a church, Isiah 58, that serves a free dinner every evening. It's also the only free shower in town. I never had any compunction about using the shower(The "cheapest" shower in town is $6. The truck stops are $12), but for a few weeks I persisted in making my own dinner - various combinations of tuna, pasta, and potato. By the time I was working at the produce store, I'd rush there every evening after work to get a meal before 6:30. That, and the MacDonalds, where my social centers. Most people camp in groups, but I was far out of town and no one really knew were I went at night.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-QIUbhnrdvgo/Tw4MA_JlWKI/AAAAAAAADd4/uEak7KM2X2M/s800/P1240469.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">As soon as I was certain I had a long term job, I got to go shopping and replace my tired, worn, dull "bicycle clothes".<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">I've not had much luck explaining Quartzsite. A google search brings up tales of wild west politics(very true), and mostly puts Quartzsite off as a dying snowbird town(I have doubts). The experience of being a transient worker there was a bit different then what'll come up in a Arizona Times article. Among the retirees and tourists there is a incredible, colorful, group of travelers - artists, crafters, free spirited wanderers. I learned to make my copper jewelry, here, from three fantastic teachers.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-TLN6g_RLtgk/T3U0lpC1tLI/AAAAAAAAD7s/GbPxSzP-YFo/s640/P1250207.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">The feet of my friend and teacher, Kellilee. Also, Ganesh the special puppy.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center><br />
<p class="para">I also met Karl in Quarzsite. I'm not how much I can, or want to, explain about him, but he the only person there I never had to put up a front with. The old liar's club at Macdonalds gave him hell(Mostly behind his back) because of me. I'm sure every day people looked at me, with jealousy or disgust, thinking I was "involved" with a much, much older man. I didn't care. Not one bit. Normally that would mortify me, but I've never met anyone like Karl and his friendship was worth a town full of rumors. Being the sort of person he is, I doubt Karl cared either. He certainly has a lot of experience being reviled in ass-backwards small towns.<br />
</p><p class="para">I'd worried about getting too attached to a fairly stable life in Quartzsite, but when it came time to go, I couldn't wait to put the town behind me. Once most of the visitors clear out, it gets a great deal less friendly. The fun, open-minded people vanish, leaving the bitter and genuinely crazy. The produce store shut down for the season. My long time hangout at MacDonalds become unwelcoming. Loitering tickets became a concern. A few days later, Karl and I left in his 70s Oldsmobile, my bicycle in the back, without saying a word to anyone. 'till next year.<br />
</p><p class="para">After leaving Quartzsite, we drove for three weeks. We saw the London Bridge, Las Vegas Strip, a snowstorm just outside of Reno, and Mono Lake. I left Karl in Shoshone, Ca for three days while I explored the southern half of Death Valley on bicycle, and tried to come to terms with being on my own, again. We made our way to Paige, Az. At the Wahweap Marina Campground, on Lake Powell, early in the morning on April 26th, we parted ways for a longer time. I'd feared this moment for weeks, and delaying it would just build the tension. It was time to go.<br />
</p><p class="para">I know Utah will be special. I hope it will be enough to ease my way back to being a solo traveler. Watching Karl's car drive away was harder then leaving home, but now the separation is behind me and I can look ahead. I'm back to doing what I'm good at.<br />
</p><center><br />
<hr class="hr1"><img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-xFYxbE4tYb0/T6hBk5NlpqI/AAAAAAAAFoQ/aEz3NtfHGnM/s800/P1011899.JPG"><br />
<div class="cap">Please, Utah. Be Special.<br />
</div><hr class="hr1"></center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-77784471878275762282012-01-17T20:27:00.000-08:002012-01-17T20:27:49.932-08:00<p class="para">
Today, a pirate showed up for dinner.
</p>
<center>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-EAKzbLbZe1c/TxZBE-9btII/AAAAAAAADmU/_xgDdgd_5mE/s800/P1240580.JPG">
</center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-30601154141880122392011-12-17T18:20:00.000-08:002011-12-17T18:44:17.790-08:00My Daily Routine in Quartzsite<p class="para">
Wake up. It's 6am, and cold. I'm planning on going down to the tents and looking for work today. Go back to sleep.
</p>
<p class="para">
Wake up. It's 6:30am, still cold, and I have to pee. Still have some time, though. Go back to sleep.
</p>
<p class="para">
Wake up. It's 6:45, and I really, really need to pee. Where are my glasses? there, on my laptop. Shoes? Buried under my sleeping bag. Am I wearing pants? Yes. Crawl out, remember the toilet paper. Pee under a bush. Bury toilet paper in my fire pit. Go back to sleep.
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-nn-E3TUGTiw/TueuaDGWQUI/AAAAAAAADP8/f4irSDeCrVE/s800/P1240105.JPG">
<br>
<hr class="hr1">
</center>
<p class="para">
Wake up. It's sunny and moderately warm. Time to get up! My sleeping bag smells funny. Should I change my clothes? Naw, they feel pretty fresh. Check to see if the laundry strewn around my camp is dry yet. Probably not.
</p>
<p class="para">
Go for a short walk, collect firewood and some pretty stones. Take a few minutes to note the progress of various small green shoots which have started growing after the last rain. It smells good out here.
</p>
<p class="para">
Back in camp, I start a small fire, scrub out my pot with sand, then rinse it with a bit of water. Once the fire is ready, a flat rock goes in the center of the ember and I heat some water on it for oatmeal. Wait a bit. Pick the worst of the ashes out, add oatmeal and anything I find buried in my kitchen bag to flavour it. Read while the oatmeal cooks.
</p>
<p class="para">
Wolf down the oatmeal like a starved thing. Maybe follow it with some almonds or dried fish. By now the wind has woken up and I'm huddled by my fire. Maybe I should head to town? No, I think I'll stay here and read some more. Fire is warm.
</p>
<p class="para">
At 9am or so, I wash my face, brush my teeth, pack up my electronics, clothes that need washing, empty water containers, and some soap. My sleeping bag gets unzipped, reversed, and spread out to air. Make sure my tent is staked down securely, the fire is(mostly) out, and no food is left laying around. Kangaroo rats are nocturnal, but you never know...
</p>
<p class="para">
Watch for the small flock of Quail that I always see near the Dome Rock RV Park, which is about a half mile from my camp. The same guy seems to always be entering or leaving his RV, too. Maybe he just stands in the doorway half the day. As soon as I get on my bike, it's finger numbing cold. The wind is always in my face. That's okay, though; the ride to town is short, curving around desert mountains and old mining claims. I notice something new every time.
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-c2QdqUbJbUw/Tueww2gbZyI/AAAAAAAADS8/0-QssYFKYTU/s800/P1240153.JPG">
<div class="cap">Dome Rock Road and the BLM 14-day area. A month from now it'll look like a KOA out there.</div>
</hr>
</center>
<p class="para">
The first truck stop before the freeway exit is a Love's. If I ran my laptop out of batteries the day before, I stop here, plug in various electronics, and write for an hour or so. If I don't need the juice, I rush across town for an amazing apple fritter at the bakery on the east end of Quartzsite. I wonder if they save their day-old pastries. One of these days I'll ask and see if I can get some for cheap. On the way back I'll stop by one of the many flea markets and try to memorize the intricate wire-wrap jewelry techniques. Chat with the vendors for a while, maybe call home and insist the Eileen would just love this place, then move on. If I need it, I'll get in line for a shower and swish my laundry around in a wash-tub.
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-hN2KILKFMN0/TuvRBZFufMI/AAAAAAAADT0/Ya43EBPOIP0/s800/P1240166.JPG">
<br>
<hr class="hr1">
</center>
<p class="para">
MacDonalds time! Bad food, interesting people, and free wifi. Can't plug in my laptop, that's the only downside. This is the hangout for grizzled locals, truckers, and a few camo-clad survivalists types. Old retired couples from the RV parks come in for coffee, along with families stumbling out of their mini-vans on the way to somewhere else. I buy my daily hot fudge sundae and am reunited with the internet until my battery goes dead.
</p>
<p class="para">
At some point I remember that I was going to look for a job today, but now it's too late in the day, and there'll be more hiring towards Christmas, anyway.
</p>
<p class="para">
Leaving MacDonald's, it's probably getting towards dusk. If it's too windy to cook outside, or I have nothing to cook, I might go to Isaiah 58 for a free(Though I usually leave a donation) dinner in the company of all the other tramps, vagabonds, hippies and panhandlers. Eat, socialize for a bit, maybe practice wire-wrapping the stones from this morning, then head out of town. On the way out I'll fill my water containers at Love's. Pro tip: The truck stops have filtered water in their taps. Quartzsite municipal water tastes like salt and iron. Avoid this.
</p>
<p class="para">
On the way back, I'll look at the mining ruins, the trail up into the mountains, and make plans for hiking up there sometime soon. Before the big crowds come. The ride back reminds me why I'm still in Quartzsite. The wind has finally died down, and now that the sun has set it feels inexplicably warmer. The mountains are a hazy purple, and the moon rises enormous.
</p>
<p class="para">
When I get to camp I make sure of the last bit of light to gather more firewood. Wet laundry is left out to dry; stuck to the huge saguero, hung from the dead tree. If I didn't already eat, I'll cook some pasta, throw in some salsa and a can of tuna.
My pot gets scrubbed out with sand, again, then left to rinse in the morning.
</p>
<p class="para">
Keep an eye out for the Kangaroo rat that comes over late every night, drawn to the smell of my dinner. Give the critter a few almonds or dry pasta. Possibly get bit for my kindness. Eventually I run out of excuses to be away, burrow into my warm sleeping bag, and read for a bit before dozing off.
</p>
<p class="para">
Seriously, though - tomorrow I'll look for work.Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-44181268977285561562011-12-17T18:00:00.000-08:002011-12-17T18:01:45.349-08:00Kangaroo Rat<p class="para">
This little fellow has been visiting my camp every night at 9pm or so, to beg for pasta and almonds. He's quite bold, and if I put my hand down near him, equally likely to bite it, or try to climb it. I think he's a Merriam's Kangaroo Rat.</p>
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-o_Hmnjn13JA/TuvRllY-TuI/AAAAAAAADT8/ovlOUyY9fv0/s800/P1240168.JPG">
<br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-GsicQJPb2os/TuvRs1jpYFI/AAAAAAAADUA/PVYZXdjVLws/s800/P1240172.JPG">
<br>
<hr class="hr1">
</center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-61792615577098092102011-12-12T17:01:00.000-08:002011-12-17T17:11:19.856-08:00A Walk in the Desert<p class="para">
Still in Quartzsite!
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-q4Fzbw2fWuM/TuetgEuxX1I/AAAAAAAADOc/YVfN-36onaY/s800/P1240074.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-99kp7QQshiE/Tueth5-XfII/AAAAAAAADOg/Ons-zHDzwzs/s800/P1240077.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-mjihJqi78BY/TuetsVmC9jI/AAAAAAAADOw/oyZ8RLf8Rno/s800/P1240085.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-2kDBPbeoLK0/TueultQUMNI/AAAAAAAADQM/IlGSopeOH6g/s800/P1240110.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-gXDjTw1jsGI/Tueuu-aonFI/AAAAAAAADQg/c3lUtJUtPkg/s800/P1240115.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
</hr>
</center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-73063619550439210102011-12-10T16:48:00.000-08:002011-12-17T17:01:07.667-08:00Quartzsite, AZ<p class="para">
Thus far, my desert campsites have been pretty cozy. Last night I found a narrow arroyo surrounded by thick brush. A fire down at the bottom, and the heat was held in and reflected. Once the wind died down, I popped out and set up my tent above. No coyotes tonight, though. I've not heard them for a while.
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-c7KeEpaVF-A/TuetM3zBQjI/AAAAAAAADN4/kSe20JDiHlE/s800/P1240060.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
</hr>
</center>
<p class="para">
I pulled myself out of bed before the wind got too bad. The check point came up, and I was waved through immidiately. Back into farmland, again, but this time it's nicer. Blue-green fields of Kale, bales of cotton, and the feel of a place where people actually live and work. Palo Verde was a tiny little town. I stopped at a christmas shop/bake sale and talked to an Archaeologist on her way back from monitoring a construction project. She's been looking forward to seeing Quartzsite and Slab City, and regularly drives out into BLM land overnight. Refreshing to talk to someone in California who isn't afraid of bloody everything.
</p>
<p class="para">
I rode out of Palo Verde and into Ripley craving something sweet. A whole box of those fritters Bob had in Slab City would have been perfect! I saw one seedy-looking little place, with a lively argument taking place out in front, and figured they probably didn't have bakery items anyway. An orange would be really good, too, actually... A few miles out of town, I saw a scattering of citrus trees in a yard. Among these, one limb on one tree was hanging over the fence, within reach. On this one branch on one limb of one tree, was... one orange! I spun around, charged over the dirt shoulder, yanked the orange and fled. Sure, it wasn't a tree-grown cherry fritter, but it was still pretty damn good.
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-9DHpJSHvRIw/TuetUvPDYPI/AAAAAAAADOA/V8XRHV7Wx0Y/s800/P1240063.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-iwMDGPWjcw4/TuetWURex_I/AAAAAAAADOE/HvRoNq2wUQk/s800/P1240064.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
</hr>
</center>
<p class="para">
Past Ripley, heading towards Blythe, a truck pulled off ahead of me. By the time I reached it, a young guy in overalls had came out and was waiting for me. Mark offered me some water, then a bag of trailmix. We talked for a bit. He told me his job pays for gas and offered me a ride to Quartzsite. Blythe looked pretty boring, and honestly I was just anxious to get out of California. So, as it turned out, I never rode my bike across the California state line. Train in, truck out. Mark revealed that he was an archeologist as well, working on the same project. He called up Sarah(Archeaologist #1 from Palo Verde) to see if she wanted a lift to Quartzsite.
</p>
<p class="para">
Mark picked up Sarah in Blythe, which turned out to be a typical truck-stop town. I squished my dirty smelly self in between the two dusty, sweaty archaeologists in the middle seat, and listened to them talk about the strange folks they work with. Sarah had found a dried up dead Coyote at the site and carried it away to pull apart and examine. She offered Mark the skull, who seemed torn between polite refusal and "Oh that's really cool I want that coyote skull!".
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-lSOVqElKOgI/TuetZndVqYI/AAAAAAAADOM/X8scXKnO_YI/s800/P1240068.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
</hr>
</center>
<p class="para">
Past the Colorado river, the ride through the brownish desert mountains of Arizona was beautiful. We passed by the Dome Rock area, where I plan on coming back to camp. Mark and Sarah dropped me off at a curios shop, and after poking around a bit at the goods for sale, I said goodbye, took a picture, and rode out of town. It was getting dark at this point, so I decided to take the smooth freeway shoulder instead of Dome Rock road, which I've heard is narrow and roughly paved. This turned out be a mistake, as the exit back onto Dome Rock road was six miles west. During the day, I probably could have seen it and just ridden off the interstate, across some sand, and onto the road. For the sake of the air in my tires, though, I didn't want to do it in the dark. So, six miles later, I got off the freeway and found a place to camp, with lights from other campers visible in the distance.
</p>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6437316539656687835.post-16610674385743750202011-12-09T15:38:00.000-08:002011-12-14T15:50:55.983-08:00Heading Towards Palo Verde<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-Y8hdol50dQk/TuesfuRPy8I/AAAAAAAADMc/2ywrJXP_TC8/s800/P1240022.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-Hn52yKeHmD4/TuesraOyX-I/AAAAAAAADM4/Y5NkI59DQTg/s800/P1240035.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
<hr class="hr1">
</center>
<p class="para">
Not much ground covered today! I took my time and enjoyed the surreal landscape. Tiny footprints are visible everywhere in the sand. On the left side of the road is an area off-limits to vehicles where one can see the slightly-less-disturbed dunes. Rippling sand patches cover the road in places.
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-uTBS0eliUAA/TuestV6o3uI/AAAAAAAADM8/8DpPrtWD508/s800/P1240037.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div><br>
<img class="sim" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-g2C_SwJrg94/Tues3coeXzI/AAAAAAAADNM/Ce43_0OnoTE/s800/P1240047.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
<hr class="hr1">
</center>
<p class="para">
The stretch of highway within the dunes is relatively short - maybe six miles. I stopped at a viewpoint for awhile, and watched all manner of ATVs and dune buggies crest the dunes. Soon, the flowing sands became packed gravel, trash, and windblown shrugs. I camped down by an arroyo, half a mile from a border patrol station.
</p>
<center>
<hr class="hr1">
<img class="sim" src="https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-8Sh4EbpWotU/TuetAqUUnNI/AAAAAAAADNg/6zAhuLOriy8/s800/P1240054.JPG">
<div class="cap"></div>
<hr class="hr1">
</center>Tansyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15795515063468485077noreply@blogger.com0