Okay people. It's time for me to start putting our adventure into words before I forget too many of the good details and the days just run together into one looong ride . Hope you all enjoy the story, or at the very least some more pictures. With no further ado, here goes.
Day 0: The Preparation Story
The idea for this trip happened about a year ago. Kyle had come up to visit me at school and we went out to the pub. Of course we talked bikes. I brought up the crazy idea of riding to Alaska, he said he'd go with no hesitation... And the adventure bug bites... For the next year or so I saved up my money. Put aside 10 bucks here, 25 bucks there, skipped the little things, and over the course of a year had saved up about $1200 for our adventure. About 4 months before the trip, Kyle and I got down to looking at a map and realized just how far away Alaska is. 14,000 miles there and back, if we took the short way . Reality set in, and we revised the 'destination' to the west coast. Picked July 2nd as the day to leave, and went to work adventurizing our bikes. Kyle made his bags from some sheet steel and a welder, I made mine from Army Surplus Mermite cans. We bought a tent, dug out the camp cooking stuff from Dad's basement, and were ready to hit the road!
Before anyone asks I'll tell you what I carried. In the top tube was my sleeping pad and the Travel Ax guitar. In the right case I had my socket set, 10-in-1 screwdriver, tire plug kit, with very small compressor (thankfully didn't need it, but glad I had it all the same), my little netbook laptop, a freezer bag with misc electric chargers and things, the Fender Mini-Twin guitar amp, a drawstring bag of clothes, one towel, and a pair of flip flops.
In the left case I had a 7x12x5 plastic container with more tools, voltmeter, spare rear spline, some zip ties, box wrenches, pliers, wire cutters, spare wire, spare connectors and fuses, some JB weld, anti-seize, Loc-tite, and a few extra bolts. Also in the left case I had a spare RR and Stator, small hatchet, cooking gear, homemade stove using Heet and cat-food cans, peanut butter, honey, and bread.
The compression sack held my sleeping bag, long sleeve shirt, and rain gear.
The little tank bag carried the maps for the day, a bottle of water, cell phone, wallet, and swiss army knife, and some other odds and ends.
Kyle carried the tent, as well as his clothes, sleeping bag and rain gear. I was the pack mule for the trek .
My GS ready for adventure!!
Taken on the first day, at the first gas stop. It was so clean then...
Day 1: July 2, 2012
We hit the road around 8:30 am that day. Our destination for the day was our Aunt's house in Ebensburg PA, about 260 miles away. However one of our goals for the trip was to avoid major highways as much as possible, so after looking at the map we headed out towards Gettysburg. The traffic from our house until Gettysburg was pretty bad, lots of tourists there for 4th of July. We stopped in Gettysburg and had our lunch of PB&J, and couldn't wait to be on the other side of the town. It was really hot, and slow moving traffic in little towns was brutal. The little towns were actually very pretty, but growing up in the area I didn't appreciate the old Victorian houses and so didn't really take any good pictures of them. Too busy riding .
Kyle using the back of my bike as a table, it worked out really well as a table....
On the other side of Gettysburg was a different story. We had started climbing the mountains and were on some really fun roads. As the day wore on, the temperature dropped a bit into something more bearable, and he riding was very enjoyable. The little mountain roads of PA did us well and we rolled into Ebensburg around 4 pm.
Aunt and Cousins were excited to see us, and cooked up a fantastic dinner or grilled chicken and veggies.
Here is the rough route we took, I did not write down the exact road names for this day but this is the approximation.
We used paper maps to plan our trips, the google image is made after I got home as a documentation tool.
We rode a total of 265 miles on the first day, and it took us about 8 hours to do it. Not an impressive pace by any standards, but we made it there in one piece, ready to go the next day!
To be Continued....
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