Tanya Lake, Yosemite |
My kickstand was up and there was no
evidence of the coming dawn. The map programs all said it would take me twelve
hours for the day’s ride so I set myself up to push off between 5 and 5:30 a.m.
I hit the sweet spot at 5:15 as I left the Pahrump Nugget Hotel and Casino,
heavy on the casino. The hotel seemed to be an add-on. The smell of the casino
smoke permeated my non-smoking room and I couldn’t get out of there fast
enough. It served its purpose and that was about it.
I’d ridden up to
Mount Charleston and back the day before but didn’t feel like writing it. The experience was
anticlimactic. I’d built it up when writing the scene for my character with all this wonderful twisty riding to be done. Don’t get me wrong,
there were a few miles of it and the views were fantastic. But, I’ll have to rewrite
the scene because the lodge is nowhere near the top or close to the ski runs.
The Rueben was tasty though.
Back to today’s ride, a fantastic
experience. I hope I can do it justice here. For the record, I rode up through
the Death Valley National Park then north on Highway 395 to Lee Vining, up into and
through Yosemite National Park, and down to Fresno for the night – 446.3 miles,
KSU to check-in.
Leaving as early as I did put me
in the darkest of desert nights riding along unfamiliar roads. This was the
time of night all the creatures are out, both predator and prey. I worked hard
at not outrunning my headlight. Once I was out of town and rolling down Bell
Vista Ave. toward CA 190 which took me into and through the Death Valley
National Park, locals started to catch me. You can tell locals because they
drive the roads like it’s nobody’s business and you’d better get out of the
way. Want to increase you’re speed at night on unfamiliar roads? Stay on a
local’s six and you pick up five to ten miles per hour. You only really need to
keep your light on their tail and you’ve increased visibility of the road by the
length of their high beams. Nifty.
The beauty of heading northwest is
when the sun comes up it’s not in your eyes. The bad part is the fantastic
sunrise is behind you and you can only snap a helmet cam photo in the mirror.
The locals all dropped off the road at various mining pursuits and some mysterious concern going on under a huge tent. By then I had light and got
into some twisties that lead into Death Valley. This is my favorite time of
day in the desert, when the sun is low and the harshness of the environment is
muted to the point I can be seduced into thinking it’s that lovely all the
time. Evenings somewhat restore those thoughts but can’t quite erase the
reminders of the blistering heat of the day.
I stopped at Stovepipe Wells for a
quick drink and then pushed on out of the park after periodically riding by ‘Flooded’
signs and skirting around standing water that lent credibility to the signs. I
was just as happy to be above sea level again and working my way up the
Panamint Mountains. All the way through to Lone Pine I thought back to one of
my favorite group-rides where we’d ridden the opposite direction I went today.
In Lone Pine I refueled man and
machine at a Shell/Carl’s Junior. I just made it to the head of the line as the
place was invaded by Germans, at least three 7/8-passenger SUVs full of them,
each vehicle flying a German flag. And they were having a blast fooling around while
filling the SUVs and washing the windows until they found out Carl’s didn’t
carry espresso, then things got serious.
The run up Highway 395 was
uneventful during a lightly travelled Wednesday morning. It was easy going and
I set my cruise control at a reasonable speed so as not to attract attention
and still be able to eat the miles only slowing for the periodic town that straddles the
highway; Lone Pine, Pines, Big Pine, Bishop… The temperature started dropping
into the low 70s as I rode along after being comfy in the mid-80s all morning
long. I pulled off at Mammoth to refuel and gear up for the climb into
Yosemite.
I had a brief moment of panic as I
saw sign out of the corn of my eye about Highway 120 being closed after
September 9. It must have been the eastbound route because westbound was open
as was the Tioga Pass into Yosemite. (note to self: vet all roads before departing)
High clouds and water in all the places meant for Yosemite to have water made
for a spectacular ride through the park. I did it non-stop, but regretfully so.
My little family has done some amazing day hikes and rock climbs and I was
pining for those days a bit, especially riding by Bridal Veil Falls where Cindy
and I once climbed up to the pool at its base and swam with our two kids who at
four and five climbing like mountain goats.
Let me bring this to a close with a
review of a fantastic ride full of endless variety. I left one of the most
desolate of places in the predawn hours, traveled through lowest place on the
continent with its other-worldly landscapes, traveled along a highway at the
base of the tallest peaks in the continental U.S., climbed into and traversed the
first of our National Parks, wound my way down the other side into foothills of
oak trees and open grasslands peppered here and there with a vineyard or two.
At that point I fully expected to see Boss Spearman and Charley Waite
(Postalwaite if you want to get formal about it) riding down the hills to round
up their free grazing cattle.
Having ridden through such
environmental diversity with extremes such as this will have a lasting impact
on me. And tomorrow I will complete my end-to-end ride of CA Highway 41 and see
the Pacific Ocean.
Keep the iron side up,
jerry
Somewhere in there is Mt. Whitney |
Facebook comment from Betty White: What a great ride! So happy you share with us "house-bound" creatures! It's the next best thing to actually being there in the flesh! Thanks for another delightful ride, Jer!
ReplyDeleteThanks mom. This what I like to hear, that my writing invites people along and they enjoy it in some way. BTW, after doing this long ride, I'm convinced I could make up to your place on the bike in a day and maybe some time I'll give it a go.
DeleteFacebook comment from Shawn Frausto: Awesome Jerry! Fun read. I wish I was with you riding it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Shawn, I wish it too. I felt the same way seeing your posts and photos of the SW Meet a couple of weeks ago. I need to get the next one of those in.
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