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Author Topic: Sensory Indulgence...  (Read 543 times)
DDT (12)
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Sometimes ya just gotta go...

Winter Springs, FL - Occasionally...


« on: May 01, 2017, 07:38:50 AM »

WOW! I’m often asked what is my favorite of all the places I’ve been… Tough question that, as God doesn’t do sloppy work. It’s all beautiful to this devoted viewer of all there is to behold! However, I do seem to have a special fondness for mountains, and the rugged earthen and stone mounds of the Rocky Mountains also exhibit a unique and elevated draw… for a couple of reasons.
 
As hard as it is to attempt to narrow the choices down to just one or two favorite places… well, I do have an answer… Just a personal opinion, though, and not one defensible with objective or scientific evidence.
 
I hesitate to make such a statement, as you can imagine, because that may appear to exclude other magnificent options, or to somehow diminish the ‘luster’ of other locations in comparison… Just one trekker’s thoughts here, and I do make this with all due appreciation for everything else, but to me personally, Utah, particularly southern Utah, and Colorado offer the most dazzling stimulus to my senses… and here I am…
 
I don’t often make it here, but that is partly by design. Each time I do venture into this magnificent realm, I find myself reeling and aweing as if I were seeing it all for the first time! It is one of the most unique and special places on this verdant orb we call earth, and it never fails to amaze and dazzle yours truly with its incredible variety of scenery, the sheer majesty of it all, and the wonderful variations of shapes, sizes, and colors of everything!
 
As is often the case, I changed my plans and route on the fly the other day… I mounted ALI in Payson, AZ, presumably headed for Kingman on the first leg of our ride to the cabin… At the turn-off, I just couldn’t bring myself to retrace the route(s) we’d been on just a short time before… Routine is the scourge of adventurous types, and repetition is the bane of the curious…
 
I stopped for breakfast and to ponder this enormous thought, but the need for another plan only got stronger. My lack of enthusiasm was the first hint something just wasn’t right… The thought of alternatives has an almost magnetic pull on my internal compass needle, and at times it simply cannot be ignored… like this time.
 
Two buildings in the middle of nowhere were all I saw of the very tiny, so-called hamlet at the turn-off that would take us to Flagstaff instead of through Prescott. More than an intersection, it was a choice point between two entirely different experiences for the following week or so… One of those two buildings happened to be a café…
 
Heavy-duty stuff, this innocent seeming but huge decision, and things of this magnitude deserve proper consideration over bacon and eggs! Besides, I was cold, having underdressed for the thousandth time on recent rides!
 
Elevation changes more than anything can cause rather impressive swings in the mercury level of thermometers out here, and my flatland, deep south roots bring with them as standard equipment, predispositions to misjudge and underestimate what might lie just ahead…
 
The breakfast was great! I was introduced to Cholula Sauce… it's like Tabasco and other spicy sauces, but not as hot, and to me it actually tastes better. I like it! The bacon was sensational, too, and this was easily the best meal I’d had in a while… The coffee was hot and just the right strength, so ponderment and consideration were handsomely facilitated…
 
I will admit the choice had already been made really, but it just seemed proper to give something of this enormity due consideration… That, predictably, only led to my original inclination being confirmed… we would go in the ‘new’ direction!!!
 
Cloudy day so far, but the road did not disappoint. Nice curvatude and plenty of undulations provided a vigorous ride and a much-needed distraction from the temperature miscalculation recently made. The Gerbings did their good work, however, and this compensated for the continued oversight of having failed to add my neck collar/warmer that had been already placed in a convenient location but ignored nevertheless…
 
By the time we cruised into Flagstaff, the sun was out and the day had taken on an entirely different complexion…  Cool but no longer frigid, this clean, new-looking yuppie haven is very impressive… also quite expensive, I imagine, and a bit too upscale for the tastes of this simple rider. No sweat, I wasn’t thinking of actually staying there anyway.
 
We stopped just on the northern outskirts for motion lotion and hot chocolate… A couple of conversations happened as passers-by indulged their curiosity about the scruffy looking old dude on the filthy overloaded bike. I do enjoy these brief encounters… Folks just naturally get excited in such an atmosphere, and they (we!) do like to share the feeling.
 
We arrived at our most recent ‘planned’ stop for the night in Page, AZ, in early afternoon… I inquired of the clerk at the motel the price of a room… "With senior and biker discounts, it would be $195.00 plus tax," he responded. Oppps!
 
I had anticipated stopping at this isolated tourist destination would be a budget-buster, just not by that much! This very nice person, who had the look and manner of someone who had twisted a throttle or two, asked me if I had another two hours left in me… If so, Hurricane, UT, would have rooms for half that amount… I thanked him and headed that way…
 
When we arrived in Kanab, UT, it was time for another stop… I’d figured the motel rates there would be similar to those in Page, and I was almost correct. I asked at a motel, just in case, and was quoted a very reasonable price. WOW! An unexpected but very pleasant surprise…
 
I then asked if it would be a problem for me to stay another night or two, and was told it would not be… but… The rate, however, would double the next night to weekend rates! The simple but irrefutable law of supply and demand does drive things like this, and it is no mystery to this eager wanderer why so many folks want to venture here… Also, this not being a year-round destination, owners and investors must make a year’s worth of income during the much shorter ‘tourist season’…
 
No one to ‘blame’ for any of this, it just is what it is… For those of us with limited resources, the vast majority of us, life is a constant series of choices, and 'value' to us individually determines what we decide. Where the lines of cost and benefit on our ‘personal graph’ intersect is our unique point of determination…

For this imperfect being, the trade-offs so far in my life have all worked out. Sure, I could have done many things differently and had very different outcomes… I have few regrets, though… I’m just proud to be here doing what I do!!!
 
DDT
« Last Edit: May 06, 2017, 04:47:41 AM by DDT » Logged

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See ya down the road...
GiG
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« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2017, 08:37:37 AM »

Biker Discount?!?  Roll Eyes
Must be applied to riders of very expensive machines that enjoy paying  $200/night.
Doesn't seem to apply to any bikers I know...
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Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2017, 09:41:00 AM »

The first year I went to Zion I stayed in Springdale.

A few years later I returned to the same motel to find the rates under new ownership had more than tripled.

I then rode back to Hurricane and found a much cheaper and equally accommodating motel.
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Ice
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« Reply #3 on: May 01, 2017, 09:48:59 AM »

Bruce, thanks for sharing another great adventure  cooldude keep em' coming.
We hope to see you on the road...
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DDT (12)
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Sometimes ya just gotta go...

Winter Springs, FL - Occasionally...


« Reply #4 on: May 01, 2017, 10:12:24 AM »

Biker Discount?!?  Roll Eyes
Must be applied to riders of very expensive machines that enjoy paying  $200/night.
Doesn't seem to apply to any bikers I know...




Apparently consistent with overall prices there... That quote was from a Days Inn... I learned that even the Motel 6 had rates of $150. + or thereabouts... I reckon it might be the electricity rates... huh? I mean, with Tom Bodet leaving the light on for us and all...

DDT



The first year I went to Zion I stayed in Springdale.

A few years later I returned to the same motel to find the rates under new ownership had more than tripled.

I then rode back to Hurricane and found a much cheaper and equally accommodating motel.



I spent that one night in Kanab, then I rode over to Hurricane and found rates I could handle... just like you did... Did my pre-cabin layover there.

DDT



Bruce, thanks for sharing another great adventure  cooldude keep em' coming.
We hope to see you on the road...



Thanks, Yuri... I'm having a ball out here! Hope to see y'all too down the road...

DDT
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Don't just dream it... LIVE IT!

See ya down the road...
Thunderbolt
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Worthington Springs FL.


« Reply #5 on: May 01, 2017, 01:03:49 PM »

We spent a week in Hurricane in 2010 ar Willow Wind RV park when we visited Zion and Bryce.  The locals told us when we used our normal pronunciation of the town name that it was not hurricane but something like hericun.  We left there and went to Moab and Arches.  I kinda liked Arches and the Needles better myself.  The rock shop on the end of town near the park in Moab was very interesting.  Iris didn't care for all the " rocks and dirt".  She was happy when we got to Mancos Co and some pine trees and grass.
I also enjoyed Mesa Verde where the cliff dwelling Indians lived.  That was also the year that we went to the Valkyrie rally in Tucumcari.   Great time there but lots of straight roads and 90 degree turns.  Oh and of course we both rode our bikes in Route 66.
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solo1
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New Haven, Indiana


« Reply #6 on: May 01, 2017, 01:25:28 PM »

Bruce, a really great road trip commentary!  Part of your comments reminded me of Psalm 121:1

I have been West and hunted the Black Hills of South Dakota and also on a ranch near Sheridan Wyoming (wow!, the smell of sagebrush up close)  but that was only a taste of what riders here, including you, have done and seen. All of my riding was done in the near Midwest.

I, too, have a big problem with hotel rates. When room rates approach 100 bucks before taxes, I have a problem with them.  Also at my age, it's becoming hard to sleep at home and almost impossible to sleep in an over pillowed, over comforted, and overpriced bed.

Again, thanks for the story.  It helps me remember what it's like to ride solo and meet all kinds of people and see many sights AND sites that I wouldn't have done in a group. I like riding solo.  After all, my handle is

solo1
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Oss
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« Reply #7 on: May 01, 2017, 02:19:13 PM »

Bruce back in 2014, I went from Gallup at dawn, to Flagstaff/Page ( a good place to buy a piece of fruit a sandwich at the trading post and some gas but thats it) to Kenab then thru Zion ending in St George around dusk.    It was a wonderful day  perhaps the best day of riding scenery and weather of my entire trip

Was  the bridge still out south of Page that makes you detour to 20? that was a great road and was the water at Lake Powell still way down ?

and thanks for the PM the other day.

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Robert
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S Florida


« Reply #8 on: May 01, 2017, 05:51:26 PM »

One of my fondest memories was being in New Mexico at the foot of the mountains. Did a tour through New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and your writing brought me back to that area with a description that brought back these memories.

Its so different on the road when you are not frequently in an area. The sites, smells, ques all different and sometimes a bit uncertain. Your approach to situations is enjoyable and the deliberate consideration you give to details that may pass others makes this interesting. I think I like the thought process in your stories as much as the tour.

Thanks for the visual/verbal tour.

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J.Mencalice
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« Reply #9 on: May 01, 2017, 08:23:09 PM »

Kanab.  Home of Best Friends Animal Sanctuary, one of the great places for the caring of all creatures great and small.   The folks who operate it have a mission of love and kindness for those that have been cast aside and given them a place to live out their lives in peace and harmony with humans who truly care for their well-being.

A visit gives one hope that some people exude kindness to our fellow beasts. angel

http://bestfriends.org/sanctuary/explore-sanctuary

https://images.search.yahoo.com/yhs/search;_ylt=A0LEVi13.gdZvL4A2yknnIlQ;_ylu=X3oDMTByMjB0aG5zBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzYw--?p=Kanab+Animal+Sanctuary&fr=yhs-mozilla-004&hspart=mozilla&hsimp=yhs-004
« Last Edit: May 01, 2017, 08:51:30 PM by Jmencalice » Logged

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wiggydotcom
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Yorkville, Illinois


« Reply #10 on: May 01, 2017, 09:24:41 PM »

Another great story that I thank you for, Bruce. I don't know if you or Wayne have ever written any books yet about your adventures, but I would highly recommend you both take the time to do so---at some point.

Of course, my request is for selfish reasons but I know they'd be very good---and captivating. Both of your writing styles are a gift that, in assessing my own abilities, I admit I must have traded in for something else. Smiley

Ride safe!
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DDT (12)
Member
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Posts: 4120


Sometimes ya just gotta go...

Winter Springs, FL - Occasionally...


« Reply #11 on: May 02, 2017, 05:05:09 AM »

We spent a week in Hurricane in 2010 ar Willow Wind RV park when we visited Zion and Bryce.  The locals told us when we used our normal pronunciation of the town name that it was not hurricane but something like hericun.  We left there and went to Moab and Arches.  I kinda liked Arches and the Needles better myself.  The rock shop on the end of town near the park in Moab was very interesting.  Iris didn't care for all the " rocks and dirt".  She was happy when we got to Mancos Co and some pine trees and grass.
I also enjoyed Mesa Verde where the cliff dwelling Indians lived.  That was also the year that we went to the Valkyrie rally in Tucumcari.   Great time there but lots of straight roads and 90 degree turns.  Oh and of course we both rode our bikes in Route 66.




So much variety out here! And, us humans being like we are, we all have personal favorites and preferences... I thoroughly enjoyed Arches NP, but more than anything it was the Visitors Center there... and a display they had of the natural history of the area and explanation of the geology. I learned so much from reading and digesting every word of that!!! I sort of go with Iris on this one, though... Actually, my personal favorite is Zion NP, but that's just me... Different strokes for different folks... Glad y'all are still 'doing it'...

DDT



Bruce, a really great road trip commentary!  Part of your comments reminded me of Psalm 121:1

I have been West and hunted the Black Hills of South Dakota and also on a ranch near Sheridan Wyoming (wow!, the smell of sagebrush up close)  but that was only a taste of what riders here, including you, have done and seen. All of my riding was done in the near Midwest.

I, too, have a big problem with hotel rates. When room rates approach 100 bucks before taxes, I have a problem with them.  Also at my age, it's becoming hard to sleep at home and almost impossible to sleep in an over pillowed, over comforted, and overpriced bed.

Again, thanks for the story.  It helps me remember what it's like to ride solo and meet all kinds of people and see many sights AND sites that I wouldn't have done in a group. I like riding solo.  After all, my handle is

solo1




Yeah, for an easterner, the 'shock and awe' of viewing the western mountains is incredible! I never tire of it. I've 'discovered' solo riding, all right, but it was more by accident! It came down to a choice to either go alone or not go at all... It was hard for me to find anyone who could make the trips I wanted to undertake... Anyway, I've come to prefer it, but that's a long story... I do, however, understand what you mean!!! Thanks for your comments on my compositions...

DDT



Bruce back in 2014, I went from Gallup at dawn, to Flagstaff/Page ( a good place to buy a piece of fruit a sandwich at the trading post and some gas but thats it) to Kenab then thru Zion ending in St George around dusk.    It was a wonderful day  perhaps the best day of riding scenery and weather of my entire trip

Was  the bridge still out south of Page that makes you detour to 20? that was a great road and was the water at Lake Powell still way down ?

and thanks for the PM the other day.






You've certainly done your share of riding out here, and you do know your way around... Thanks for the info and insights, they do spark ideas and notions in my mind! Yes, the water level in Lake Powell is way down... No, no detours that I recall the other day...

DDT



One of my fondest memories was being in New Mexico at the foot of the mountains. Did a tour through New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and your writing brought me back to that area with a description that brought back these memories.

Its so different on the road when you are not frequently in an area. The sites, smells, ques all different and sometimes a bit uncertain. Your approach to situations is enjoyable and the deliberate consideration you give to details that may pass others makes this interesting. I think I like the thought process in your stories as much as the tour.

Thanks for the visual/verbal tour.






Thank you so much, Robert... your feedback and comments are much appreciated! Yes, the total sensory overload one experiences out here is amazing in itself, isn't it? See ya down the road...

DDT



DDT
Kanab.  Home of Best Friends Animal Sanctuary, one of the great places for the caring of all creatures great and small.   The folks who operate it have a mission of love and kindness for those that have been cast aside and given them a place to live out their lives in peace and harmony with humans who truly care for their well-being.

A visit gives one hope that some people exude kindness to our fellow beasts. angel

http://bestfriends.org/sanctuary/explore-sanctuary

https://images.search.yahoo.com/yhs/search;_ylt=A0LEVi13.gdZvL4A2yknnIlQ;_ylu=X3oDMTByMjB0aG5zBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzYw--?p=Kanab+Animal+Sanctuary&fr=yhs-mozilla-004&hspart=mozilla&hsimp=yhs-004




Among the many attributes of solo traveling is the fact ones interactions with others are always with strangers... One can learn so much that way! Traveling with others is good, too, and I do a good deal of that... However, when I'm alone, I'm tuned into the actions and attributes of the folks in new to me areas... One of the major take-aways from that experience is just what you point out... good folks doing good things... Yes, my faith in our species is always buoyed when I spend some time wandering around... solo...

DDT



Another great story that I thank you for, Bruce. I don't know if you or Wayne have ever written any books yet about your adventures, but I would highly recommend you both take the time to do so---at some point.

Of course, my request is for selfish reasons but I know they'd be very good---and captivating. Both of your writing styles are a gift that, in assessing my own abilities, I admit I must have traded in for something else. Smiley

Ride safe!





Thank you for those kind comments! Feedback is important to anyone who wishes to improve his offerings, and positive, reinforcing feedback is also most pleasant to receive!!! I doubt I'll ever publish... Not interested in a new career or labor intensive avocation... I just enjoy sharing my thoughts and observations with my friends... especially with those who seem to  appreciate me doing so...

DDT
« Last Edit: May 02, 2017, 06:11:08 AM by DDT » Logged

Don't just dream it... LIVE IT!

See ya down the road...
Willow
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« Reply #12 on: May 02, 2017, 06:02:43 AM »

...
No one to ‘blame’ for any of this, it just is what it is…

And therein lies the life perspective that contributes greatly to a more peaceful journey.  So few seem to have learned that benefit or even care for it.   Wink

Good ride.   cooldude
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