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Inzane 17
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Author Topic: Home from Inzane - Photo link added  (Read 3150 times)
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #40 on: July 11, 2022, 07:55:49 AM »

More to come.
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #41 on: July 12, 2022, 10:10:28 AM »

June 18

Riverton, WY to Green River, UT

https://www.relive.cc/view/vdvmKAM7gN6

https://postimg.cc/gallery/cCM2gcv

Another darn crosswindy day. It's unrelenting.  The road lies straight ahead with a few mountain bumps and some curves to break the monotony. Front wheel skating across the road surface as the wind blows me from side to side in my lane. I'm getting to used to it but not the strong gusts that slow me down by 6 to 8 m.p.h. In a split second. They still make me grit my teeth and wince.

Approaching the continental divide at 7,550 feet there's a temporary, illuminated road side warning – Gusty Winds up to 45 m.p.h - LYING ON IT'S SIDE.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8g1_yX1AaA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8g1_yX1AaA
Crossing into Utah the terrain changes and I'm back on riding roads that curve and swoop and bend and braking and accelerating and swooping and smiling and gawking and slowing and zooming.

Getting close to Flaming Gorge I stop at the Sheep Creek Overlook. Still windy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vd7J3UQHYBA

Then downhill a short way to one of the best views in the lower 48. Looking at Flaming Gorge is like looking at a set for Jurrasic Park.

https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-mVfWbO02DFc/UAb6-qZnaoI/AAAAAAAAjvM/3mIf60wOE6A/s1600/IMG_9663.JPG

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nNffW83_QPs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgDxbgPuXfg

One of my top three views is of the Headwaters of the Rio Grande River viewed from Hwy 149 south of Slumgullion Pass in Colorado. Now the Flaming Gorge is in my top three as well. This has made it worth riding the straight roads and crosswinds.

https://live.staticflickr.com/1750/28542724458_5021abc091_b.jpg

I make a wrong turn which takes me downhill to the Flaming Gorge Dam.









There's a short section of viaduct once I cross the dam where the wind is brutal and is really pushing the bike around. Unsettling when there's a few hundred feet drop off on the other side of the fencing to my right.

Eventually I realize I'm heading north instead of south so back over the dam and the wind challenge. The up hill from the dam is much more fun than downhill getting to the dam and at the Stop sign I turn left and get back on track.

A stop in Vernal UT for a chicken, apple pecan salad at Wendy's.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LznTPSUwG-0


The wind, the wind, the wind.

The road, the road, the road



It's bleak each side of the road.







Hwy 191 is the main route north south and each oncoming 18 wheeler slams me with its slipstream.

Approaching Green River UT I can see Elliot Mesa and Little Elliot Mesa ahead to the left.

https://www.pbase.com/longbachnguyen/image/166966908&exif=N

They are wreathed in dust and sand and I'm wreathed in dust and sand too. I wouldn't want to be riding in an open face helmet.

At last the Motel 6 which is to be my "home" for the next 2 nights.



I hope my bike wont be sand blasted over night.

The office door has been blown open so hard the metal frame around the door lock is cracked.

Dinner at the restaurant next door.



https://tamarisk.restaurant/

You don't see this in Maggie Valley  Grin



« Last Edit: July 12, 2022, 10:27:44 AM by Britman » Logged
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #42 on: July 14, 2022, 04:48:52 PM »

June 19

Dead Horse Point, Arches National Park

https://www.relive.cc/view/vNOPoK4wRYv

Waking early it seemed pointless to just sit around the motel and wait. So up and at 'em.

I bought my timed Arches pass a couple of months ago. My plan was to have a leisurely morning, go to Arches National Park for 11.15 a.m. and Dead Horse Point state park.

Surprise – the wind is still blowing.

Revise the schedule. Dead Horse State Park, breakfast in Moab and then Arches. Looking at maps the previous evening Hwy 128 north of Moab looked like it could be a good ride alongside the Colorado River with a side trip to see Castleton Tower.


The ride along I 70 and then south on Hwy 191 is blustery, gusty and a pain in the butt.

These windy days have beaten anything I've ever experienced before in Kansas, Oklahoma or the Texas panhandle where I saw a freight train that had been blow off the tracks near Dalhart, TX.

The oncoming 18 wheelers are once again slamming me as they pass. The wind isn't strong enough yet to make the front wheel like it's sliding around on the road and I'm able to keep the bike upright.

Once I turn onto the approach to Dead Horse Point the winds calm a little.



I was last at Dead Horse Point about 17 years ago and the facilities have changed. We were able to park and walk directly to the edge of the canyon. Now the parking lot is a longer walk from the canyon and I have to pass by a covered seating area and visitors center.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkNPBrfF-Sk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x67XX1K9nvk

The potash lagoons are still visible

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/potash-evaporation-ponds



Breakfast in Moab was good at Glorias Corner Cafe





They had one of the largest smoothie menus I've ever seen and the most expensive.





Approaching the entrance to Arches the traffic is backed up and I reconcile myself to the slow creep forward. I'm here at 11.10 a.m and I calculate at the rate the line is moving forward it's going to take about 35 to 40 minutes. Kinda makes a mockery of the timed passes. It would have taken the same length of time to get in – perhaps longer – if visitors just paid. It would also have removed the need for the ranger positioned at the small roundabout who was checking the colored sticker the ranger at the ticket booth was fixing to cars to show they had a valid entry pass. Those without the sticker were directed around the roundabout to the exit. Waste of man power but it's government.

The ranger at the ticket booth is happy that I have my printed pass, ID and geezer pass readily at hand and tells me she wished others were so organized.

This is what the line looked like when I was heading down to the exit.



Out of the shelter of the rocks the wind makes is gusting again as can be heard in a couple of the videos.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kCOe0izodI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCIBklY16J8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKH9R1tNdPE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=to-QWOLHAzA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zloHmj5RUdQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q912hISx4hs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QAxqvp7zut0

I've never been to Arches before and it was worth the hassle to get in.

Back into Moab for a gas fill up.

Turn right onto Hwy 128 and the wind is cut off by the canyon walls. Hooray.

The road surface is well paved and it's fun to run at a little over the posted speed limit.

The side road out to the Castleton Tower isn't as well paved and I bump along.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castleton_Tower

Now I have to head north back to the motel.

The wind is worse and I'm getting blown across my lane close to the edge of the road on the right. I find it difficult to safely maintain the speed limit and traffic is backing up behind me. I use every opportunity to pull off the road to let the drivers behind go on their way.

Repeat, repeat, repeat for the next 30 miles to I 70.

I'm ready for the next 20 miles of interstate.

Well, I was wrong. I was nowhere near ready for the ferocious crosswind.

This is without doubt the worse I have ridden in and I will willingly admit there are many moments when I'm scared. Riding at 40 m.p.h. Knowing that others drivers are zooming up behind me at 80 plus. I have to keep one eye in my mirror so that I can let go of the left handlebar to wave vehicles by and wave to help me more obvious to them. Some come close before they “awake” .

The bike is weaving across the lane and I'm leaning off it to keep the bike as upright as possible. There's sand and dust in the air and that's also making visibility difficult for the drivers coming from behind me. The mesa to the right is nearly obscured by the dust and sand. Oh this is taking so long. 20 miles at 40 m.p.h. 30 minutes of wind hell and it's dragging and the vehicles keep blasting by me.

At last the exit is visible and I wave at the last vehicle approaching from behind.

I'm waving, I'm waving but they are still in my lane. Getting close and I'm trying to move right as they keep approaching in my lane. Eventually I'm riding in the emergency lane hoping there's no puncturing rubbish.

I am able to get onto the off ramp as the idiot in the black SUV goes by STILL in my lane.

Phew.

I pull up at the gas station just down the road from the motel and the young coujple on the other side of the pump tell me that they were concerned for me seeing the bike heeled over so far as they went by me.

The gas station also sells beer and I buy myself the largest can I can find. I deserve it.







« Last Edit: July 14, 2022, 04:55:20 PM by Britman » Logged
Valkorado
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VRCC DS 0242

Gunnison, Colorado (7,703') Here there be twisties.


« Reply #43 on: July 14, 2022, 05:13:29 PM »

Good writeup Paul. 

I can vouch for you.  The winds I've experienced around Moab and the in the desert southwest in general can be downright brutal.  I think the worst I've experienced was riding two up on a Shadow Spirit to Canyon de Chelly in AZ.  We were leaning into the wind so hard, I was afraid if it abruptly let up we'd go down hard.  Thank God it was a steady wind.
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Have you ever noticed when you're feeling really good,
there's always a pigeon that'll come sh!t on your hood?
- John Prine

97 Tourer "Silver Bullet"
01 Interstate "Ruby"

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Posts: 27796


Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #44 on: July 15, 2022, 07:16:27 AM »

June 20
Green River UT to Goodland KS

https://www.relive.cc/view/vYvEARYGPGv

https://postimg.cc/gallery/4VLkPRN


Most mornings I wake with a song in my brain. Why? I have no idea. They have no relation to the vivid dream I have most nights.

Having survived the crazy wind yesterday it could be why I woke with

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0oJ8_VTu3c

Too much wind, too much dust and sand, not enough green. Too many people in the parks. I am missing the warm arms waiting for me, the wag, thump, wag, thump of Joey the dog  and the soft verdant folds of southern Appalachia.

Taking heed of the wake up song I decide I'm homeward bound.

Packed and with a full gas tank I pop a morning breakfast mint into my mouth and I'm on the road early eastward bound.

I've never ridden all the way across Colorado on I 70 and have no idea what to expect.

The first section of I 70 in Utah is more of what I'd ridden through during the past few days. Rocks, rocks, rocks.

The transition once across the Colorado border is quite striking. More pine trees and mountains  

The elevated lanes of I 70



Eisenhower Tunnel





A section of rocks, rocks, rocks and then the long climb up from Glenwood Springs to Frisco. At one road construction site a Florida plated white Porsche SUV does try to occupy the same space as me when traffic has to merge into my lane. Everyone has been behaving and merging in plenty of time but there's always one. Not this time. I lay on my twin horns and the driver decides to pull in behind me. About 10 vehicles behind me decide he needs to wait.

Once through the construction it doesn't take long for the SUV to zoom by. I do offer up a thought that there could be a cop car ahead but no luck.

Fuel up in Frisco and back on the road resisting the temptation to ride south through Leadville.

Back on the 4 lane and here comes Denver. Ugh what a mess of lane merges and construction.

The wise government decided to take BOTH emergency lanes to make a revenue generating HOV lane. Good for me but the lane is nearly empty.

Now I'm on the section of I 70 I have ridden before. Eastern Colorado. If you didn't know where you were it could be Kansas, Oklahoma...........







Another gas top in Limon, CO. It's flat and now the wind is back. But NOT the trying to kill me kind from the past few days. This is just the normal kind experienced in this part of the USA.

Crossing the Kansas state line it's hot, I'm thirsty even though I've drunk at least another 120 fluid ounces of water today. Nearly a gallon.

A Motel 6 sign beckons me for the night.

There's a Walmart just down the road where I buy a salad and some fruit for now and the morning.
« Last Edit: July 15, 2022, 07:22:04 AM by Britman » Logged
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #45 on: July 16, 2022, 05:28:17 AM »

https://www.foxnews.com/us/dead-montana-massive-car-pileup-mass-casualty-crash
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #46 on: July 17, 2022, 08:54:14 AM »

June 21
Goodland KS to Independence KS
https://www.relive.cc/view/vYvEARYGPGv

Another early start and there's a big storm ahead and slightly to me left. I can again see swathes of rain greying out the air below the clouds.

Time to play “dodge the storm” again.

I 70 is running dead east right into the storm and I take the first exit I come to. County Rd 29 takes me about a mile before it changes to dirt.



Back track to I 70 and the next exit near Brewster KS. County Rd 2 takes me about 17 miles before it too goes to dirt. I can suffer the unknown road for about 11 miles to Winona or I can once again backtrack to I 70. I don't like going back so onward.

The dirt is well compacted apart from a couple of ruts that look like a large truck had an axle seize and the wheels gouge furrows into the surface.



I have to pull over a couple of times as cattle haulers fly towards me. No slowing down for them. Thanks. Each time I have to cross the furrows which makes for some interesting bike gymnastics as the wheels try to follow the furrows.

Now a few drops of rain and I wonder how much water has to fall for the dirt road to turn into a mud road AND I'm the tallest thing I can see for a few miles. No lightning please.

All is well and I make it back onto paved road in Winona

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winona,_Kansas

I ride pass the small high school and am blocked by road closed signs. A quick right turn down a dirt road into a farm complex does then take me onto Hwy 40 which I take eastward to rejoin I70.



After just a few miles I've had enough of the wind AGAIN so I turn south hoping this will take me out of the direct crosswind. It does help a little but the 18 wheelers are still pummeling me.

Hwy 23 is about 95 miles of straight with a left turn or 2. Straight with a right turn or two but it does allow me to rid at the same speed as if I was on I 70 or maybeeee a little faster when overtaking fast moving 18 wheelers.

Then I make a left turn onto my old nemesis KS 400. Aaaaaaaah. A quick stop for gas and some Chester's chicken south of Dodge City.



A pause whilst a windmill vane is wiggled around a left curve to a right hand turn.









Then KS 400 for the next oh so flat and straight 240 miles to Fredonia where I remember staying at a motel years ago. And 102F.

A loop through town and there's no motel I remember nor one I would stay in now.

Many of the small towns I rode through years ago have been cut off by the new 4 lane version of KS 400 and the couple of small towns I detoured through look like they are suffering because of it. Aint progress great.

Independence KS has a few promising looking motels and I settle on the Independence Inn. The room is clean and it's convenient to a WalMart for another salad dinner with some fruit and a couple of fresh tomatoes to add to the salad.

Another 100 fl oz plus day but Kansas is nearly behind me.

« Last Edit: July 17, 2022, 09:01:25 AM by Britman » Logged
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #47 on: July 20, 2022, 05:17:20 AM »

June 22
Independence KS to Grand Rivers KY
https://www.relive.cc/view/v26MXVAZLEO


Goodbye Kansas and the flat lands.

At one gas stop I bought a 32 oz strawberry slushie to help cool me down. I drank most of it at the gas station and then filled my handlebar mug with what remained. It was very refreshing.

Not much more to report apart from taking a detour when Google Maps told me there were traffic problems ahead.

A big fire off to my left. it was difficult holding my breath so that I didn't breathe any crap in  Cheesy



I had set Nashville as a target but the 100F plus heat was too much and I stopped just over 100 miles short but 500 miles nearer home.

The motel 6 I stayed at was big but in a terrible location so it was convenience store pizza for dinner.

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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #48 on: July 20, 2022, 05:38:14 AM »

June 23
Grand River KY to Maggie Valley NC – home
https://www.relive.cc/view/vZqNxy22g3O

A stop before Nashville for a Cracker Barrel breakfast.

The normal traffic snarl up that is Nashville



and then later a long sweeping bend and there are the Smokies. Soft folds of green and I'm zooming through the I 40 Gorge fingers crossed there are no accidents.

AND I'M HOME!
« Last Edit: July 20, 2022, 05:50:27 AM by Britman » Logged
henry 008
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BRP

willard, oh


« Reply #49 on: July 20, 2022, 07:11:00 AM »

Glad your home safe!  cooldude
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Safe Winds... Brother

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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #50 on: July 20, 2022, 07:37:41 AM »

Glad your home safe!  cooldude

I was too.
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RNFWP
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"What color blue is that?"

Greenville, SC


« Reply #51 on: July 22, 2022, 11:28:58 AM »

Thanks Paul!
Just went back through...
Lots of interesting details.
Great photos.
Entertaining links.
Tons of humor...
I like it  cooldude
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