Start: Red Lodge, MT
End: Custer, SD
482 miles
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&sadd...5,6.965332&z=8
You won't be surprised to find out that I had to push-start the bike in the morning. It didn't start after the first trip through the parking lot at the motel, but a man polishing his chrome offered his help, and we got the bike started. I filled up with gas two blocks away and had to push start the bike again, but it's much easier when it's warm.
Then I left town heading towards the Beartooth pass. With a bit of effort I passed a pack of cruisers--they don't like to be passed and I didn't have fuel injection and they did, so it wasn't as easy as it is at sea level. My bike didn't want to rev past 6 grand, and that's where all the power is. I don't understand why you'd want a maniac on a crotch rocket right on your tail, but maybe these guys were still in the mentality that they were driving to their boring job downtown and needed to make everyone else late. I assume that's the reason for the tight formation, even in turns. The locals all pulled over and waved me by, except for the few that were quicker than me (which isn't hard if you have fuel injection and gas it on the straights).
I began ascending the east side of the Beartooth pass. It was slow, tight turn after slow, tight turn with a mountain range to stare at on the short straights. This was motorcycle heaven: increasing radius turns, decreasing radius turns, positive camber, negative camber, blind turns, u-turns. I could have ridden up and down this all day. I was dragging my toes on half the turns, and I was huffing and puffing when I got to a rest area, even though the temperature was not much above freezing.
From the top:
Here is a picture of a fun turn that these three and their support van would take at half the posted speed:
I got stuck behind them on the way down and missed a few good turns. Then I got stuck in the middle of their pack and missed a few more turns.
This scenario would repeat itself all day. You could pass them on the double-yellow, wait, or get stuck. Riding a mountain pass on a dry day would definitely be better with a fuel-injected bike so you could pass these overweight relics and the machines they ride. In May I rode a mountain pass while it was snowing and, given the choice, I'll always take melting snow over slow, American cruisers. It's probably not so bad if you aren't riding in Wyoming right after Sturgis.
Then I took the Chief Joseph Pass into Cody. It was fun, but nothing like the Beartooth. Then I filled up and push-started the bike in the direction of the Medicine Wheel Pass on US-14a. This pass was closed when I rode west in May, and I'd heard great things about it. The views definitely lived up to everything I'd heard about it, and the curves were fun, but, again, nothing like the Beartooth pass. I think the US-14 pass through the Bighorns I took in May was more fun for motorcycling, but the views were far less impressive.
Then I had lunch, push-started the bike, and put down 140 miles on I-90 to get to the turnoff for Custer, SD. I was averaging about 85--the going rate of traffic--and I got to the gas station on fumes. I turned in under 35 mpg that tank. This bike is not made for high-speed touring. But this time the electric start did work.
I made it into Custer around 5 and found a room. I had a sinking feeling in my stomach that I only get at the end of a good snow-skiing vacation. Even though I would ride around the Black Hills the next morning, the excitement was over, and I felt like I just had to put in a lot of boring miles and get home.
Comment