Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Ride from Champaign to Seattle
Collapse
X
-
Craiger
Originally posted by p_s View Post
Well, the next part will be very good. I didn't go up to Glacier NP.
-
Originally posted by p_s View PostThanks. So you wouldn't ask me if I own a car, why I didn't drive it to Seattle, why it took so long, where I put everything, what if it rains, what if it breaks down?
Meanwhile, they flunk life.
Bummer.
Comment
-
p_s
Day 5: Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Start: Sheridan, Wyoming
End: West Yellowstone, Montana
So I woke up and looked at the weather forecast in Sheridan, Cody, Yellowstone NP, Glacier NP, and Jackson, where I wanted to sleep that night. Looked pretty bad. Highs in the upper 30s or lower 40s and rain and snow all day. Accumulation at night. Well, I figured that with that kind of weather the roads would be wet but not snowy or icy. I left around 8 in the rain and stopped at a gas station just before the beginning of Granite Pass (9000 ft) to put on my rain suit and cover my saddlebags. An old man driving a rusty truck confirmed that the roads wouldn't be icy.
So a few minutes later, covered in rain gear, I began my ascent through the twisties up the mountain. It was snowing, the roads were wet, and the visibility was about 100 ft. Pretty soon I found myself going up VERY SLOWLY behind an enormous tour bus. I managed to pass the tour bus on a rare straight section and the ascent continued. Pretty soon I was high enough that there were still several feet of snow on either side of US-14. It was snowing heavily and I was the only one on the road. I could have leaned the bike over more and had a better view if the road were dry, but it wouldn't have been as good. My new Roadriders had an excellent grip on the wet road, and I was riding up a mountain by myself while it was snowing, with snow-covered pine trees on both sides of the road as far as you could see. How much better can it get?! I don't think I'll ever enjoy a piece of road as much as I enjoyed Granite Pass in the snow in May.
Of course it was all scenic and beautiful, but my waterproof gloves weren't really waterproof, and soon my hands were icy cold. Heated grips would have been a big help there. After descending the pass I came across some sort of winter resort with not much business judging from the handful of cars parked in front. I crawled through a snowy parking lot and walked in. It was some sort of snowmobile/four-wheeler resort. I took off my gear and stood in front of a hot fireplace while the receptionist brought me coffee. Everyone thought I arrived on a snowmobile and were shocked to find that I rode in on an old Suzuki road bike. Inquiries were made, and 10 minutes later I was standing in front of an enormous commercial dryer, almost naked, while all of my clothes were drying. Then they went online and looked into the road conditions into Yellowstone: east road open. Finally they gave me about 20 latex gloves to wear under my gloves in the wet.
Resort:
The next couple of hours were pretty boring. Light drizzle on and off and fairly straight roads. I think I reached Yellowstone around 1. The man at the gate told me the road to Grand Teton was closed, but I could take a highly circuitous route through West Yellowstone and around. The park really didn't open until Mother's Day Weekend, only two days later. Drat. Well at least I'd get to see a good bit of Yellowstone.
(continued)
Comment
-
p_s
Sylvan Pass (8500 ft), on the route from the east gate into the center loop was exciting, especially with the snow and hail. I rode around as much of the loop as was open and saw all sorts of interesting springs and geysers. Strange smells, too. You could pass as much gas here as you wanted and noone would ever be the wiser. I even passed two fellows on Harley-Davidson motorcycles, who gave an enthusiastic wave. The cagers all looked at me as if I had lost my mind.
Of course I had to go see Old Faithful go off. I arrived at Old Faithful around 4:15, and the next eruption was predicted to occur around 40 minutes later. It had stopped snowing so I walked around, grabbed a snack, and called my wife. It began snowing very hard again, and then I realized that my helmet was resting upside down on my handlebars. I rushed to my bike and grabbed the helmet. Somehow in the process my gloves and glove liners also became saturated with snow.
I stood around waiting for Old Faithful to go off. Even though my clothes were wet, I was dressed more appropriately for the weather than most of the tourists. When it went off it was snowing so heavily that one could hardly tell where the clouds ended and the geyser began. Everyone was disappointed.
Then I brushed the snow off my bike and searched for 20 minutes for the one gas station that was open (in the sense that the road was plowed and they were open for credit cards only). I filled up and then struggled to put on the latex gloves from the snowmobile lodge. It was a good thing the resort gave me so many, because they were impossible to put on over cold wet hands. There was no trash can around, so I had to leave a pile of paper towels and torn latex gloves on top of the pump. Whoever cleaned the gas station must have been very puzzled when they discovered what I left.
I was pretty miserable on the 40 minute ride to Yellowstone and the drivers were only making it worse. Otherwise sensible drivers get into a National Park and don't know the rules of the road anymore. Maybe I was just cold and grumpy and they were in a climate-controlled wonderland. 40 minutes and many broken traffic laws later, I was in a West Yellowstone, Montana motel room warming up and feeling better. I ran through the snow to a restaurant and had a couple of dark beers, a salad, and a 12" pizza and felt great.
Comment
-
Great story so far
I'm looking forward as to what's next.
I know what you mean about tourists in Yellowstone. We go there about every other year. Back in 89, my wife and I were there at the end of June and it went from 90 one day to sleeting the next day. People forget they're at 7,000', we saw lots of cold people in shorts and hoodies trying to tour the hot pools in the sleet.1978 GS 1000 (since new)
1979 GS 1000 (The Fridge, superbike replica project)
1978 GS 1000 (parts)
1981 GS 850 (anyone want a project?)
1981 GPZ 550 (backroad screamer)
1970 450 Mk IIID (THUMP!)
2007 DRz 400S
1999 ATK 490ES
1994 DR 350SES
Comment
-
p_s
Day 6: Thursday, May 8, 2008
Start: West Yellowstone, Montana
End: Missoula, Montana
My original plan for the previous night had been to sleep in Jackson, WY, outside of Grand Teton, but the road to Grand Teton from Yellowstone was closed for another day--it opens Mother's Day weekend. Maybe it was a crazy plan anyways. So I ended up in West Yellowstone. That killed my US-93 twisties path from Jackson to Missoula. Well, after a long detour I managed to get the very last of the twisties. For an hour or two I was at a high enough elevation to be riding among snow-covered pine trees, but the sun was out this time, and it didn't feel as special as the previous day.
The day was pretty uneventful, and at 330 miles, one of my shortest. I did hit a nasty, long stretch of construction south of Missoula on US-93, which later caused an annoying rear brake squeal. Early in the day, my idle had somehow gotten stuck at 3k once. Wiggling the idle stop brough it down again. Then this happened again in Missoula rush-hour traffic, which was slightly scary. When I found a hotel, I thought "air leak" and sprayed all over the intake with WD-40 with no results.
Oh well. I walked around Missoula, which is a classic college town. I stopped at a scooter shop and chatted about scooters, riding, Seattle, and life. (I also ride a '63 Vespa, and they had some more recent but very similar scoots, so we had something to talk about.) I had coffee at a coffee shop that also stocked probably over 100 microbrewed beers. A beer sounded good at the time, but they told me they had no beer license so I couldn't have it there.
Another customer brought a beer to the register and asked them to open it. They repeated that they had no license, and he said he was taking it outside. They opened it. On my walk back to the hotel I saw another fellow drinking a beer on the street, with no brown bag around it. I asked the pothead alcoholic college-aged clerk about it, and he said the fine for public alcohol consumption was only $25 and that Montana is per-capita the drinkingest state. Aha.
I still had $50 on my daily meal allowance, and I had spent none of them yet. I'd eaten some cereal at the hotel for breakfast and a candybar for lunch--I don't like to ride on a heavy stomach. So I found one of the pricier places in town, the Pearl Cafe and Bakery, and had one incredible meal: to drink, two glasses of a locally brewed porter, for the entree: "Boneless rabbit, herb marinated, bacon wrapped, grilled and served with fresh locally raised wild mushrooms, tomato and rosemary sauce and baked pasta flan", and a very rich chocolate cake and coffee for dessert.
There was an indie rock band staying at the hotel, and I decided to go to their show. They were pretty awful, but the previous band I enjoyed. Better was the strong IPA beer that was supposed to be $3 a cup, but they gave me for $2 because there was too much foam on top. Missoula is a place I definitely would have liked in my undergraduate years. (Austin Texas ain't bad for music & beer, though, either.)
This was the one bad night of sleep I had on the trip. The indie rock band was the depressing introspective type, but they were clearly not feeling depressed or introspective when they returned from the club. There was shouting and whopping until about 3 am. By the time I woke up at 9 they had already left--I'd like to think they saw me tinkering with my bike and knew I had the tools and know-how to make them very late for their next appearance. (My valve caps double as a valve core tool.)
Comment
-
p_s
Day 7: Friday, May 9, 2008
Start: Missoula, Montana
End: Pasco, Washington
(Last part not entirely correct.)
I woke up late and poorly-rested and missed the continental breakfast. Had a good cup of coffee and zucchini bread around the corner from the hotel and made my way out of town. The route today was the famous twisties of US-12 from Missoula to Lewiston.
When I left, the temperature was in the upper 40s, but it was sunny and the mountains blocked the wind. I passed a few white-knuckled tourists in rentals and found I had the road to myself for the next hour. The road climbed high enough that for a decent stretch there was still snow on both sides of the road. A ways into Idaho I lost some elevation, and the temperature got up into the 60s, which was the perfect temperature for all the gear I was wearing. This part of the route follows a river and the sides of the road were greener than any I'd seen the whole trip. There were tourists rafting down the river, who looked very happy, but I was happier riding my old Suzuki GS. Many of my friends thought the bike would leave me stranded somewhere in South Dakota, but the bike was running great and I had less than 400 miles left in the trip.
I'd been warned of out-of-control racers on motorcycles and sportscars. I didn't meet any motorcycles. I did cross one group of Miatas and another of assorted sportscars. Both groups stayed inside their lanes and didn't do any stupid stunts. The locals in pickup trucks were well-behaved, too, unlike the seasonal workers in the mountains of Yellowstone NP a couple days prior.
I stopped for gas in unincorporated Powell Junction, which was a gas station, a general store, and a few cabins. Gas here was $4 a gallon, fifty cents more than I'd paid hours earlier in Missoula. The woman running the place said they were just very remote and had to pay a lot more to get gas deliveries. (10 miles later I reached a few towns and gas was down to $3.60. But not a big deal when you get 3 gallons at a time.)
There was an older gentleman in the store who saw my gear and my way out-of-state plate and wanted to chat--he was the only person in my trip (besides GS Resources folks) who understood what was I was doing. It turns out he'd moved from some city somewhere to rural Idaho to write books and man a fire lookout. He also used to ride. Both of our first bikes were 3-speed automatic clutch Hondas--his the dirt 90cc model, mine the street 72cc. He had previously owned a GS850 (or some GS model, anyways, that was bigger than mine), but lost it in a roundabout and didn't own it anymore. He was selling a book he wrote on his adventures to raise money for a local boy who had liver cancer, which they'd cured, but whose family had massive outstanding medical bills. A good cause. (I need to finish what I'm reading now and get on with his book.)
It was good to have a proper conversation again--I hadn't had a good one since leaving DanTheMan's 5 days before in Minnesota.
I went on and the twisty pleasant roads ended and I was in Lewiston. I tried to find the old spiral highway that GSJohn had mentioned but I took a wrong turn and missed it. *sigh* I'd had a pretty good day thus far anyways. Maybe 40 minutes later I met GSJohn in Pomeroy, Washington.
I ate a club sandwich at an old diner and then he took me on the scenic route to the tri-cities of eastern Washington. I don't remember the roads, but there were straight bits, sweeper turns, tight turns, hills, lakes, bridges--everything you need. We arrived in Pasco and went over to GSJohn's neighbors, who were celebrating because they'd just poured a new driveway for their second garage. This garage had a nice couch, a flatscreen television, and a stereo system, and they spent a lot of time there. They were many beers ahead of me when we arrived, but one tall big man made sure that I caught up. ("ILLINOISE!" he'd shout, pointing at the refrigerator, and I wasn't going to argue or tell him the "s" in "Illinois" is silent.) I fell asleep in seconds and slept late.
(Photos shamelessly linked from GSJohn's photobucket site.)
Comment
-
p_s
Day 8: Saturday, May 10, 2008
Start: Pasco, Washington
End: Seattle, Washington
I woke up late with a mild hangover and ate a delicious breakfast of scrambled eggs, bacon, and fruit served by Mrs. GSJohn. And lots of coffee. Then we went out and picked up some brake caliper grease so I could take care of my noisy rear brake. We called around trying to find an allen-head bolt to replace the one that rattled out of the tail cover with no luck, but on the way out of town GSJohn took me by a big motorcycle dealer and they had the exact one.
On a short run on the freeway my turn signals stopped working, and then one of GSJohn's fell off of his bike. We parted ways at a gas station, but first I put on the tunes. Well, I tried to but my iPod gave me the sad face. I bashed it a few times and it came back to life. (The sad face means hard drive problems, and many people have reported that percussive maintenance can help.)
The plan today was to ride up to US-2 and through Stevens Pass and onto Seattle. About 40 minutes into the trip I heard a noise and felt something very not right in the pegs. I pulled the clutch and the bike rolled on fine, I slowly let out the clutch, and it still ran okay, and then I pulled over where it was safe. My taillight had halfway fallen off, and the end of my tie-down strap was shorter and frayed. I hadn't touched the jerry can since day 2 until the previous day when I knocked it putting away some gear when I met GSJohn. The only thing I can think of is that somehow the tie-down strap got caught in the rear wheel, and it pulled down and snapped the taillight before the strap broke.
I arranged something with the bungee cord GSJohn gave me and some bailing wire to hold up the taillight. I didn't do a very good job, as 1 mile later my bike died with a total electrical failure. The taillight was dangling by its wires and one had chafed to the point of grounding out and zapping the main fuse. Of course I burnt up 3 fuses before figuring it out. I wrapped some electrical tape over the chafed wires, took off the tail cover, and did a better job with some bailing wire. (On the way back I'm packing two-part plastic epoxy.) I also noticed a tiny break in one of the wires from the turn signal relay, and with some electrical tape solved my intermittent turn signal problem. I stopped a few times over the next couple of miles, and my taillight was okay, but my iPod died for good.
I was in an awful mood at this point, so I decided to save an hour and just hightail it on I-90 to Seattle. It was wrong, but I just wanted the day to be over with. Looking back now it seems like such a silly thing to get upset over. Of course even on I-90, you have to pass through the mountains. At the beginning of the ascent I saw a bike pulled over onto the shoulder and I stopped to offer help. The motorcyclist waved me on--he was just putting on some winter gear. I saw a few more motorcyclists doing the same thing not much further on, but I was too grumpy and impatient and stubborn for that, so I just kept going. I did get very cold in the pass, but only for maybe 10 minutes, and then it got warmer and sunnier. It wasn't much fun riding the pass with all the big rigs and cars for company. I won't make that mistake again.
I made it from I-90 to I-5 to the exit to my friend's house, and then I was lost and my bike was idling at 3k again. Sometimes whacking the throttle open and closed in neutral would cure it, but sometimes I'd just make a lot of noise and irritate people. I was in stop-and-go traffic a good bit, and almost everytime I pulled in the clutch this would happen, I'd wiggle the idle adjuster, and it'd go away. After getting well lost, I pulled over, killed the engine, and tried to figure out where I was. I got my bearings, arrived at my friend's and started throwing my gear everywhere and cursing at the bike. I asked if there were a cliff nearby where I could toss the bike over. I'm not normally so short-tempered with innocent machines, but something had snapped inside. At least the long trip was over and now I had a couple days to fix whatever was wrong with the bike before my job started. An unexpected plus was that my friends had a garage that they didn't use, and there was plenty of room to get greasy.
Postscript: I can't hold a grudge, so I went to work on the bike the next day. Shockingly, Aurora Suzuki up the road from my friend's had float bowl and clutch cover gaskets in the back. The clutch cover leak actually seems to have gone away on its own. The bike is in good shape again. I was apprehensive about having an old motorcycle as my only transportation here (at home I have two bikes and a car), but it's been okay. Yesterday I visited a friend in Tacoma and replaced all the generic 10W40 I'd been adding during the trip with new Rotella. The bike shifts smoothly and precisely again--what a difference fresh, good oil makes. If you're reading this, John, thanks for all the help and the espresso.
THE END.
Comment
-
Craiger
-
DanTheMan
Hey, Paul, nice story!!!! I never did finish mine after my California trip last year, only got about halfway through the story.......:-D
Comment
-
Congrats on a fine ride. I enjoyed the story. You were very near me when you went by St Olaf. I had just picked up the grandkids in Northfield and was enjoying the day at a park. I would have liked to have met you and rode a while but the bike was down and it was just not in the cards. Maybe on youre way back.......Last edited by bonanzadave; 05-20-2008, 09:15 AM.82 1100 EZ (red)
"You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY
Comment
-
p_s
Thanks for the good comments. Oh, also big thanks to Skreemer, DanTheMan, and GSJohn for putting me up and riding with me.
I am riding back in mid-August. I won't have quite as long since I have a wedding to get to. (Not mine, but I will be a groomsman.)
The thought has crossed my mind of doing an Iron Butt. I did 600 mi on 2-lane roads one day with a pulled back muscle, no kidney belt, and I was underdressed that morning for the cold. I could get one of those water vests that evaporates over a whole day to keep cool, ride interstates, and maybe it'd be possible. I'm taking the northern route through Glacier NP and then there is not much else to see afterwards anyways.
Comment
-
alton_blair
Comment
-
p_s
Originally posted by alton_blair View PostThanks alot for the story. I have been thinking about taking a trip like that for a long time.
Comment
Comment