Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Colorado July 2009 - Part 3

(for more images from this trip click HERE)

Sunday, July 26, 2009
Estes Park CO

It had rained Saturday night so we decided to sleep in until around 8:30 or so on Sunday to let things dry out a bit. An amusing breakfast of huevos rancheros served with flour tortillas instead of corn, and we headed back to Bills Hacienda by the river to determine the days riding itinerary. One of the thoughts was to ride up the Old Fall River Road again, Gary really liked that ride other than the auto traffic, and Bill and I would have liked to get another picture of the bikes at the top to complement the two from ’07 and ’08. Mother Nature seemed to be hinting us in the other direction this Sunday morning however, as the skies over the continental divide did not look inviting. The more appealing heading was towards the Cache La Poudre River and Stove Prairie Road. When riding Stove Prairie in the past, there was a dirt road that broke off towards the southwest that Bill and I had always wanted to take. The Honda was simply not up to the task, so this venture had always been forgone. Not this time. As the Goddess of the Earth was directing us away from the park and it’s pavement, we decided to heed her advice and explore this pathway built of more natural materials. When we got back to the house Gary had decided that after 7 solid days of riding, and a 800 – 900 mile ride planned for the ride home tomorrow, that he was going to forego today’s ride and sit back and enjoy the surroundings of Bills house. I can’t say I blame him. I have been to Bills several times, and have had plenty of opportunities drink a few beers, kick back on the porch, hang out by the river, and just enjoy something we do not get a lot of chances to do living in an urban outcropping of streets, buildings, and concrete.

The ride started off great, what better way to get to a riding location than to burn up the twisting, curling, hairpin turns of Stove Prairie Road. The road that broke off was Pennock Pass, it was mostly grated gravel, but was very scenic. Nothing a car could not drive on and nothing GS could not travel comfortably at 30 to 40 MPH (easily faster if you wanted to). We kept finding all of these trails that would break off of the main road and head up the mountain, we took off on one of them only to find that it was the entrance to a ranch, so around we turned. At on point, we saw a dirt bike coming back down one of the trails; we summoned him over to converse for a moment. He said it climbed for about 7 miles and then came back down. We asked if we could take our GS’s up the road and he said “sure, why not”. That is one thing I find that is quite subjective. Until you ride it yourself, you really do not know to trust what someone is telling you or not. If they tell you no, it is to rough for a 500 lb motorcycle and then you merrily make your way up the mountain, they fear you will think they are a wimp. If they tell you, sure you can take that bike up there, they are insinuating that “they” could do it, because “they are a bad-ass”. It’s still good to ask, but you just have to realize that the info you get is relative. As this particular road goes, the guy said that it was not really a jeep trail, by that I assume he meant that it was because it was so narrow. It was a very fun trail. More difficult than Last Dollar, not as difficult as Crystal River, and probably just a tad bit easier than Pierson Park. It seemed to have a little more sand with some rocks mixed in, and several more whoops as it climbed through the trees at a pretty decent incline. There were a few narrow switchbacks, the nemesis of the 1200… but I seem to manage them all right as long as I took them wide and kept my momentum up. I was handling the trail really well, and Bill was following behind me about 50 or so yards behind. As I was climbing a steep part of the trail, up ahead it appeared that the trail was shifting to the left, there was a rocky wash in the center of the track, so I shifted to the right side to approach the left turn at a good angle. When I got to the turn, to my sudden realization the trail bore quickly to the right across an outcropping of waist high boulders. The boulder outcropping was not an obstacle that couldn’t have been easily overcome; it could have been fairly easily avoided by maneuvering to the left. However the approach would have had to been made from the left side of the trail, not the right – and I of course was on the right. By the time I saw this devilish outcropping, I did not have time to make a judgment call. I was already fairly hard on the throttle, so I picked a spot I thought was the path of least resistance and gassed it. You could see the two-foot long tire mark in the dirt where I hit the throttle, evidence that led to my demise. I am quickly learning that this big GS is a pretty amazing bike, but I guess there are just some things that it is not meant to do unless it is being piloted by the likes of Jeremy McGrath. Crossing a waist high boulder field is probably something this bike was not designed to do under a rider of my skill level, not yet anyway… As I momentarily lay there under my 500 lb dirt bike, Bill came riding up, thinking exactly the same thing I did, that the trail went to the left, he went to the left, saw me laying there, tried to stop suddenly and put his foot down. When he did he fell victim to the age old “no ground under the foot” syndrome, and down went the 650. His first drop, laughing the whole time – a virgin no more. No damage to the 650 and damage to the 1200 was minimal, a broken hand guard, and a loosened side view mirror (very cleverly designed by BMW by the way). Mirror easily fixed, and hand guard easily removed on the trail. Trail repairs/removals were made among evidence of prior mishaps, judging by all the bits of broken glass and plastic embedded in the ground and dirt at that particular corner. Afterward, we made our way back towards Pennock Pass as it looked like the afternoon showers were starting to threaten to make their appearance. After getting back on the main road, we finally hit the pass itself. I have to say that Pennock Pass is a really fun dirt/gravel road, not in the off-road trail riding sense, but more of an off-road race type sense. The road is an auto road for certain, but it has a rather steep grade over several switchbacks, under the guard of giant pine trees that refuse to change seasons because they are in the constant view of the Never Summer Mountains. You can race up these steep inclines only to slow down on the gravely switch backs to shift your way through the gears again in the straight-a-ways to the next switchback, all the way to the summit at around 9,200 ft (have to check the GPS for the exact elevation). The road reminded me a lot of Old Fall River, only without all of the traffic.

After the Pass, we turned right to go the 12 miles to the Poudre Canyon as opposed to the 4 miles left to Pingree Park. Once we hit Hwy 14 more fun was to be had. I had rafted the Cache La Poudre a few times before, but have never been this far up river. THIS is the part of the river we needed to be rafting, the Poudre River in what they call the Lower Narrows is magnificent, it squeezes into canyons that are a kayakers paradise and then broadens into breadths that are a fly fisherman’s wet dream. All of this on a road that convertibles, motorcycles, and bicyclist call home to tell mama about. And we saw them all, I believe the Colorado State motto is “Nothing Without Deity”, but they need to change it to “Outdoorsman’s Paradise”

But wait, it’s not over yet… As we exited Pennock Pass in the Poudre Canyon well above Stove Prairie, we got to ride Stove Prairie back to 34, and then the canyon back to Bill’s house. I won’t continue about S.P any longer, I think by now you get the drift, however the ride up the canyon was rather interesting. Bill knows this canyon; he drives it twice a day, to and from work. There were a couple of Harleys in front of us, nothing against Harleys, but they tend to be a little slow – enjoying the scenery. We thought the two we together and as a passing lane approached we passed one, but the other decided he was going not going to be passed and gave it some throttle. I have to say he was moving pretty good for a Harley. He looked like “The Gentleman” from the movie “Hell Ride”, jacket open and flying, arms up, but this bike was shaking in the corners as he was trying to stay ahead of Bill. It probably did not help matters much that I was standing on my pegs the whole time as we winded our way through the canyon, but after about 150 miles of riding, probably 70 of it on dirt, I had to stretch and the canyon was a perfect place to do that. Eventually we passed The Gentleman and continued our way back to Bills, a last day of Estes Park area under our belts. By this time Bill had 601 miles on his new GS, time for the 600 mile service and ½ of those miles off-pavement. A perfect way to break in a brand new GS.










Monday July 27, 2009
Estes Park, CO – Plano, TX / McKinney, TX

I’m not sure what constitutes an “iron butt” ride. I think technically it is supposed to be 1,000 miles in a single day. We did not do that, but anybody can get on an interstate and burn up 1,000 miles in a single day fairly easily. We did 865 miles in 16 hours, but they were miles with a purpose, they were miles planned out not with the intent of burning up miles, but with the intent of getting from point A to point B. The route was chosen based on past experience as the most scenic, yet most direct route that allowed us to bypass rush hour traffic in any of the major cities we had to travel through. I had made this route several times before, but never in a single day. On past rides I had always stopped in Childress TX, about 650 miles or so from Estes Park. Our original intent had been to do the same, stop somewhere along the way and arrive home, today – Tuesday July 28, 2009, some time before noon. A few days ago, Gary had proposed we ride straight through. Based on making the ride in past years I knew I could have easily made Wichita Falls, another 100 miles or so past Childress, but figured if I did that I may as well just go all the way home since Wichita Falls is only a couple of hours from home. So I always just stopped in Childress and made an easy ride home the next day. Gary proposed riding straight through for a couple of reasons. One, his wife needed to go to work the following day, so he kind of needed to get home on Monday instead of Tuesday, and 2, for the adventure of it. I’m always up for the adventure part of it, and I was ready to beat my record of 650 miles so the decision was chipped away in stone. We sat up Sunday night watching Jesse James bust his ass trying to ride a KTM across the desert, packed up the bikes and said our goodbyes to Bill (he wasn’t getting up that damn early to run down the street waving us bon voyage…). 5:00 rolled around as early as it had the entire trip, and we had the Beemers fired up and rolling down the crushed granite driveway at 5:15 sharp. The ride down the mountain road of hwy 36 in the early morning light was a very crisp 42 degrees. We made our way along 36 through Boulder to Table Mesa where we picked up 93/6 until we hit C470 to I-25. We did not stop until we got onto I-25, where we stopped at a Starbucks for some coffee and a quick breakfast. We made really good time on I-25, running at speeds that were likely exceeding the limits as the officer parked on the side of the road was seemingly indicating as he tapped his brake lights when I flew past. I heeded his advice for a while, and we continued our way to Raton. Nourishment guised as lunch was consumed in Raton at around 10:30 Mountain Time, or 11:30 CDT, and we were back on the road by noon Dallas time. Again we were making good time, each year when making this ride I am like a machine, a man on a mission, focused on a goal – eye on the prize. This year was no different, only that there were two machines and two eyes on the prize.

Some times I wonder why Amarillo is not a rain forest. It seems that every year, every time I ride through Amarillo on may way to Colorado, or my way from Colorado, it rains somewhere around Amarillo. This year was no different, nor did I really expect it to be. I think I am just going to install a rain suit app to my GPS, and when I get in the vicinity of Amarillo, it will automatically pull my rain suit out and dress me in it. Native American Indian Organizations should consider changing the name of their rain dance rituals to the Amarillo Dance, if they moved the Sahara Desert to Amarillo, it would be called Brazil. I have to admit that this years offering was rather weak by the time it hit us, but it rained in Amarillo nonetheless.

One of the things I was attempting as we made our way through Amarillo was to make it from Dalhart to Childress on a single tank of gas. I have not had my 1200 long enough to get a real good feel for the gas mileage. My 650 was a piece of cake. I could figure an easy 70MPG at 70MPH; to be safe I figured 50MPG when running around 80+MPH. I more or less figured I could get about 200 miles out of a tank on my 1200, but I cannot remember if I “completely” topped of the tank in Dalhart. And at 187 miles, 6.2 miles from gas in Childress, the engine died. Damnit. I had just passed a gas station about 20 miles earlier in Memphis and thought; maybe I should just stop here and play it safe. But we were determined to see how far I could go on a tank, and as Agent 86 would say; “missed it by that much”. Gary rode the 6.2 miles up the rode to the gas station, and came back with a little over a gallon. In the mean time, I sat by the side of the road and tried taking pictures of my bike, dragging the shutter as big semis drove by. When Gary got back we put the gallon in the tank, rode into town and filled up. We thought about eating in Childress, but decided to beat our way on to Wichita Falls, knowing we would have to stop for gas at least one more time before home and figured we could kill two birds with one stone. By my calculations, if we could keep our last stop to less than 30 minutes, we could be home by 10 PM. So off we went into the waning sunlight. We stopped at an Arbys in Wichita Falls, but there was not a convenient place to get gas, so we pushed on another 40 miles or so. The last stop, was the last 100 miles to home, and was probably the most precarious of the ride. When we got onto the highway from the gas stop, a truck was barreling down on us, not a big deal, we just gassed the engines, then immediately afterward another truck in the right lane had a blow-out - bits and pieces of the giant tire flying everywhere, all of this in the dying light of the day under an increasingly cloudy sky. By the time we made it to Hwy 380 in Decatur, it had started to rain. Gary had been talking to his wife Rachel several times throughout the day, and each time she had said it was still raining in McKinney. We kept looking at the weather on Gary’s iPhone, but thought the rain would be moving as we were riding, apparently the Amarillo Dance was working quite well in McKinney and vicinity as the rain stuck around to welcome us home. In Wichita Falls, we thought we might run in to spotty showers, so we both slipped on our rain jackets, did not bother with the full gear, as we did not think we would need it. This would have been a big mistake if we were still going to be on the road, and we probably would have stopped and put on the full gear if we were still going be traveling a few more days, but as we were on the very last leg of our epic ride, home awaited and so did dry clothes and washing machines. So onward we pushed. As any last leg of a long trip goes, this last 60 miles of 380 seemed to never end. While our speeds really did not decreases that much, the torrential rains did not seem to make the time pass and quicker, and the stop and go traffic of Denton did not wile away the hourglass either. At the intersection of 287 and 380, Gary and I gave each other a high five and said “good ride”, when we approached the intersection of the Dallas North Tollway where I would turn south and Gary would continue west, we honked, waved and made the last 10 or so miles on our own. I pulled into my garage in Plano at 10:15 PM, exactly 16 hours after pulling out of Bill’s garage in Estes Park. 865 miles collect by the 1200 cc’s of the big boxer engine that day. Another great ride to Colorado, and more great memories stored in my mind and on the flash drive of mine and Gary’s camera cards. I’m already looking forward to next year.


Saturday, July 25, 2009

Colorado 2009 Part 2

Thursday July 23,2009

Dillon Co - Estes Park CO


Todays ride was a short ride in comparison to the past few days. About 175 miles or so. We slept in a bit and got a late start knowing we did not need to be in a big hurry. The plan was to be at Bill’s house in Estes Park around 2:00 PM. I had talked to Bill the evening before and he was going to ride the Old Fall River Road (more later on Fall River), in the morning and then be home around 2:00 to meet us. As plans go, the plans did not exactly go as planned. The hyperspace ride through the Johnson side of the Eisenhower Tunnel, the ride up Hwy 40 through Granby, lunch in Grand Lake, all of those well laid plans, fell into place as were they placed the evening before, however the ride through the park on Trail Ridge Road is where the plan was cleanly removed from its well laid tracks. It seems that the National Park Service, in it’s infinite wisdom, had determined that the the middle of the 3 or 4 busiest months of it’s operation would be the best time to repave the only road that runs through this area for hundreds of miles. A two hour delay was the result of this planning, which ultimately affected our plans and we pulled onto the bridge that crosses the Big Thompson River to Bill’s front drive at around 4:00 PM. Our Destination had been made, and the next few days we would add another BMW, a brand new G650GS to the F800GS and R1200GS that had just completed the journey from North Texas.


Friday July 24, 2009

Estes Park CO


Our First Day in Estes Park started off with a ride up the Old Fall River Road. The Old Fall River Road is a one way dirt road that travels from the north entrance of the park off of hwy 34. It used to be the only road that went to the top (which, by the way is only 12, 172 ft, the Trail Ridge road actually climbs to 12,223 ft - it is not marked in any way, so I don’t know if anyone is actually aware of this or not), now it is kind of a novelty, scenic road that travels to the top. It is a beautifully scenic, tree lined, river bordered, road of gravel switchbacks that slowly creeps it’s way 11 miles from the bottom of the park to the Alpine Visitor Center at the summit. When you get to the summit, there is the common tourist attracting gift shops, information centers, $2.37 bottles of water, and restaurant. There was even “Mr. Buckles”, a rather eccentric older gentleman who used to work at the Grand Lake Lodge before it shut down a couple years ago. Traveling up Old Fall River is a great ride, however I have to warn, it has a lot of traffic. Most of the auto traffic is courteous enough to pull aside and allow motorcycles to pass, however on occasion, you will get a Prius, or Hummer wannabe, who just not get it. Once you find the opportunity, you can fly past, but those opportunities are far and few between. The ride back down Trail Ridge from the top was much better than the day before as the road work was on the Grand Lake side, not the Estes Park side.


After our Old Fall River Road excursion, we headed out to Stove Prairie Road. Stove Prairie Road is a fantastic road for a sport bike, and having a dual sport, it was right up our alley. The only problem we had was that it started to rain. That tended to show us down a bit. The rain was scattered, and hence the wet roads were scattered. So we were able to ride some of the road as intended. Our intention was to ride Stove Prairie, then grab a quick afternoon snack a Hooters in Loveland, and then head back to Bill’s. Rush hour traffic in Ft. Collins and Loveland, more or less changed those plans and we ended up having dinner instead of a snack and headed back to Estes Park.





Saturday July 25, 2009

Estes Park


What a fantastic day of riding. Sometimes I don’t understand why every single individual who owns a motorcycle, does not own a dual sport. The weather was threatening to be less that cooperative today, so we got up a bit early to beat the afternoon showers that were posed to be eminent. A quick breakfast at Ed’s Cantina (served by my “muggs” our waitress), and we were on our way to Pierson Park. Bill had camped there a few times in the past, and we had driven my Xterra up a little bit of it several years ago, but a lot of the forest access road would be a first for all three of us. This was a fantastic off-road trail for 3 of BMW’s finest GS models. After the ride today, I am even more impressed with the off-road capabilities of the 1200, it easily ate up the rocky terrain. Perhaps not as easily as Gary’s F800 and Bill’s G650, but I was able to keep right with both of them. In fact there were times I had to stop and let them get a little ahead of me, not so much that the bike more suitable, but more because I have learned over the past few days of off-road riding that I need to keep the RPMs of the big boxer up and the momentum of the big bike moving. I can not creep up some of the terrain the lighter more capable bikes can take on. I have been watching Gary ride the 800 in our back country excursions for a few days now and have grown accustom to his and the bikes abilities, I was very impressed with Bill’s ability off-road - he took his newly acquired beemer up this mountain road like he had been doing it for years. We spent a few hours riding up and around the mountain, ended up making a big loop and headed back to Bill’s house.



After we took a quick break back at the house, we headed out to an unknown road we had found on a map in one of the shops we made our way through a day or two earlier. All we knew was that there was a hiking trail head called Cow Creek. The trail head was just down the road from the Gem Lake Trail Head. A few years ago, I had hiked up to Gem Lake and kind of had an idea of where the road would be if we knew which road it was off of. We did a bit of research, and figured it was off of the Devils Gulch road. Devils Gulch is a great motorcycle road between Estes Park and Drake that runs through Glen Haven. This was perfect. We found the road we were looking for, it was really just a graded gravel road, but scenic none the less. Gary and I had switched bikes so it was interesting to ride the 800 for a while. After riding the gravel road, we switched back to our own bikes and hit Devils Gulch. Once we got to the road, Bill looked over at me and said, “tear your ass”, I obliged, Gary followed in quick pursuit and we downshifted our way through the hairpin turns. The only thing holding us back being a Honda and a Harley.


After straightening out all of Devil Gulch’s twists and turns, the next item on the agenda was to make a quick visit to the BMW dealership in the Ft. Collins/Loveland area, and a quick lunch. While the guy behind the counter seemed pretty cool, the dealership itself seemed to lack the character of the dealership we are used to in Dallas. North Dallas BMW is more of a neighborhood motorcycle shop, they bring pizza in for lunch on Saturdays, and you can really just more or less hang out and shoot the shit for a few hours if you want, this dealership - while very nice, and knowledgeable, seemed more like a car dealership. Of course that did not stop us from picking up a few items. On the way back through the canyons on hwy 34, we got a bit of rain, and pulled into Bill’s driveway around 4:30. During the rain, Bill and I had passed a couple of cars, Gary was not abel to safely make the pass, so he fell behind a bit. As Bill and I pulled onto the bridge I decided to wait for Gary - knowing he may not know where to make the turn because he had only been this direction up the canyon once. While waiting on the bridge in the falling rain. Because my camera was occupying the tank bag, I decided it would be wise to put the rain cover on. When doing so, I shifted the bike to neutral, and started to lean the bike onto the side stand. As the bike leaned just past that point it should have stopped it’s decent, it continued it’s downward travel toward the ground and continued it’s journey of demeaning my self esteem. A great day of riding topped of by dropping the bike on a rain covered bridge over a roaring river. Truthfully not a big deal, a 500 lb bike is really much easier to pick up than you think it would be, and it was just a simple momentary lack of reason, in the end - another great day of riding under our belts.







Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Colorado July 2009 - Part 1

Colorado 2009 - GS Adventure


The past two years I have made a solo journey to Colorado, since then, it has been a highlight of my year. This year the sojourn would not be solo, this year Gary and I are making the trip together, and in fact we are writing this blog entry while on the road, in Dillon Colorado, to be exact - 4 days into the ride. We will try to blog more, but we will be in Estes Park tomorrow and I think it may be a while before we have access to the internet again. Here is a brief summary of our stories to this point


Sunday July 19, 2009

McKinney TX - Taos NM


We departed around 7:30 in the morning with the intent of making Raton NM, but hoping we might be able to make Taos. The ride was about as relatively uneventful as any ride can be when riding through this part of Texas, however much to our satisfaction, the 105 degree weather had calmed down to the low 90’s on Sunday. So the riding was bearable with mesh gear. Just past Amarillo, the long straight flat roads gave way to a little more interest as we bypassed Dumas for a more direct route to Dalhart. When we got into Dalhart we saw that storms were starting to build up in the direction of Taos, so we decided to just make Raton and call it a day. That plan held weight until Clayton NM, when we looked at each other said “Taos?”, at which point we promptly headed west. Good call, unless you don’t like riding in storms. The storm did not last to long, but it came in strong for a while. After the rain, we rode through Cimmaron and I don’t know if it is because it was the first of the trip, or if it is really that grand, but the road between Cimmaron Taos, is some of most beautiful riding I’ve ever done.


We pulled into Taos 670 miles and 14 hours after leaving Gary’s house in McKinney, and around 8:30 Sunday (time change) evening completed our first days ride.







Monday July 20, 2009

Taos NM - Telluride CO


The morning was crisp and bright and the coffee was hot and black. Our dual sport Beemers would take us through northern New Mexico, over the Rio Grand Gorge, and past the Dr Seuse looking houses that lined the long, straight, undulating roads that vanished into the horizon. We made our way north towards Colorado where more adventure would await. The as we sat at the bar in Taos the evening prior, we had decided to make our way through Durango, up 145 to Telluride, spend some time in Telluride and then ride a road called the Last Dollar Road the next morning. The only change to that plan was that the GPS took us to a rode through the Purgatory Ski Resort that did not exist. Gary thought 145 broke off of 550 in Durango, but the GPS was saying to keep going, and like a robot wired to the technology which it was built upon, I blindly followed. In the end, we had to ride through Ridgeway to get to Telluride, about 70 miles out of the way, but it was a nice ride up 550, Silverton, Ouray, and the Million Dollar highway. One of the options was to take Ophir Pass from Silverton to 145, but I had not been feeling well the entire day and thought the wise decision was not to make my first off-road mountain pass on my new 1200 under those conditions. In the end, it probably would not have saved to much time by taking Ophir, so it was probably the right decision although not the “adventurous” one. We got in to Telluride around 7 PM, checked into the hotel, and had a really great dinner at a restaurant at the top of the mountain. While Gary had been to Telluride before, I had never been and I’m glad we wanted to go - Telluride is a great little town. Population, 2,500 we were informed.


Tuesday July 21,2009

Telluride CO - Glenwood Springs CO


I think the very first words I spoke Tuesday morning were “you want to ride up to Bridal Veil Falls?”... When we rode into Telluride about 12 hours earlier, we rode to the end of town and Gary showed me Bridal Falls, pointed at a gravel road and said “I think that goes up to Bridal Veil Falls”. I don’t remember if we really discussed riding up there - as I said, I was kind of out of it on Monday, but I remember waking up thinking, we could ride up there after breakfast and then head up Last Dollar. I was feeling much better this morning, and after a quick breakfast, we aired down the tires a bit, left all of the luggage in the hotel room and made our way through the nostalgic buildings towards the unpaved road we had spied the evening before. They say the F800GS is a more capable bike than the R1200GS off-road. Today, the proof was in the pudding. Gary easily made his way up the switchbacks while I struggled. I can chalk some of this up to inexperience with the new bike off-road (other then the off-road around the Dallas area), but this was Gary’s first off-road on the 800 as well. It got a lot easier as we continued to ride up the rocky road, but I was not exactly looking forward to coming back down. To help avoid an extra dose of prilosec for the day, the low gearing of the big GS made the descent a non event, I even got the switch backs under control after a couple.


After Bridal Veil, we loaded up the bikes with all the gear, checked out of the hotel and headed to Last Dollar Road. Last Dollar is a really fun and easy road. There is about a 5 or 6 mile section in the middle that is a little more narrow and challenging (and fun), but most of the roads 20 miles is just gravel. The road winds it’s way through, Aspens, crosses streams, overlooks grand vistas, and grasslands. While we rode it in the summer, they say it is one of the most scenic and photographed places in Colorado in the fall.


The next stop on our agenda was Marble Colorado and the Mill in Crystal. We made our way North on 133 until the turn off to Marble. Winded our way to Marble and stopped at the General Store. We went inside to get a cold drink and talk to the locals about the road to Crystal. What we got was “it’s rough”, and “my brother can come and get you if you can’t get out”. Then we met some really nice folks from Kansas on the porch while sipping on our cool beverages. Ironically, one of the guys names was Gary... (easy to remember). They gave us some advice on the road as well, and even offered to store our gear at their house so we could lighten our bikes for the ride. We took Gary up on his offer, took the side, case, top cases, etc... off the bikes and headed out towards Crystal. Long story short, we did not make it to Crystal. We made it almost 1/2 way. If it had been earlier in the day and we would not have had to rode back in the dark - maybe we would have continued... maybe not. This was a pretty rough rode. Having ridden to Bridal Veil earlier in the day certainly helped, and all of the ridding we rode on our 650’s certainly helped, but personally, I had been in situations where I would cross one obstacle, think it was the last, cross another - then get in too deep and have to cross all of them again to get out. At one point we stopped and I told Gary that I thought if we kept going the last 3 miles, I may be in to deep for me to handle getting back out. He said that he was kind of thinking the same thing and we decided the best thing was to turn around and make our way back out. One thing I can say is that we were told that it would probably take us a couple of hours to make it one way, to Crystal and then another 2 hours to make it back out. We had actually made it to almost 1/2 way in about 15 minutes - but of course on a bike, especially a 500 lb bike - you have to commit, you can’t creep. When we got back to Gary (from Kansas’) house, we stopped and chatted for a while before making our way to Glenwood Springs. We were going to stay in Carbondale, but figured Glenwood would have more hotel options with wi-fi so we could update this blog. In the end, a full day of riding, with all of the off-road included pretty much zapped up and after dinner, no blogging was to be done.
















Wednesday July 22, 2009

Glenwood Springs CO - Dillon CO


The continental breakfast of coffee and danish at the hotel in Glenwood Springs served purpose of sustaining us as we burned up the 40 miles of southbound highway 82 towards Aspen. A more substantial early morning meal was devoured at a popular Aspen Cafe. Although it was just the house fare, the coffee was quite aromatic and flavorful. After leaving Aspen, it was on to Independence Pass. I had ridden this stretch of twisted, happily misshapen highway before, and it is one of my favorites for its tree lined, river following, mounting hugging winding turns. At one point we caught up to two riders, one on a Harley, and one on a Gold Wing. I found an opportunity to pass the Harley and when I did the Gold Wing rider hit the throttle and I have to say that I was quite impresses with the Honda. As the Harley fell away, I would have really had to push it to pass the Gold Wing, and an opportunity never safely presented itself, nor was I seeking one, I was happy to fly to the top under the gold wings of the Honda.


We wanted to do a little more off-pavement riding today, and I remembered a spot a couple of miles from the Continental Divide at the summit. There was a river crossing that I wanted to do on my 650 that I chose not to attempt due to being solo. When I found the access to the road, Gary and I pulled off of hwy 82. We stopped and analyzed the crossing for a few minutes. Plotted out the best path to cross the 20 or so yards of rushing water, and decided that Gary would cross first. Gary rode across the river, water cascading up both sides of the bike, and made his way to the other side. I was looking forward to my crossing, it looked easy. However, when he got to the other side, he had a different story. He said that it was not that easy and that he almost busted his ass. Evident was the fact that he did not take the path we had discussed, I thought it was just that he decided to go a different way. He said it was because the loose rocks on the bottom of the river forced him that direction. We spent some time discussing it, and ultimately it was decided that the wise call would be for me not to cross. The dilemma was that Gary would have to get back to my side of the river. After discussing options of removing the luggage and walking it across Gary decided to just ride back across slowly and be ready to stop if he needed to. The 2nd crossing was a bit slower, but successful. After Gary got back across we talked about it more. I had been thinking about crossing this river since not doing it two years prior, and after making two crossings already I think Gary decided that it may not be as hard as it was the first time, so we made the executive decision to push on, cross the river and see what was on the other side. The road after our agua adventure was not so rough under wheel as it was rough on the handle bars and side cases. I remember this from two years ago as this ended up being a different part of the road I had taken an excursion on from the other side. Over all it meandered its way back to the highway after a couple of miles through the forest. Another adventured logged under the engine guards, and logged by the GPS.


The remainder of the day was spent riding from Independence Pass through Leadville to Dillon, fairly uneventful, if you can call fantastic scenery uneventful. Which brings us, her. Dillion Colorado, sitting behind the keyboard of an apple laptop blogging about our Colorado adventure - while still in Colorado. More to come....







Thursday, July 16, 2009

adventure awaits…

Preparation for an imminent two-wheeled venture is always an exploit to be both revered and dreaded. The excitement of organizing the gear, buying the items you didn’t know you needed until you thought “I may need…”, deciding what to take and what to leave behind. Laying down the groundwork of where to go, what to see, when to go, how long… Dreading what you may be forgetting to pack that you did not realize you needed until you needed it. Both worrying, and being excited at the same time, about running into bad weather, or about how difficult that mountain pass is really going to be on a 500 lb fully loaded bike. The cycle of preparing and procrastinating, planning and pondering, and just simply getting more energized about the ride, the journey, the yet unlived memories, as each day passes.

adventure awaits…

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Independence Day

Our forth of July adventure was an example what good riding is all about. With a basic plan to explore some of North Texas best roads, take some pictures, capture video, and grab a bite to eat, we accomplished it all.

Given that I'm a noob at this blogging stuff, I'm going to ease into this. So first, it was great to meet y'all, and thanks Rego for the momentous suprise with ice cold beer. Per the request, here are some visuals from our ride. Cheers,

The herd


The bridge


The gang


The footage


Doug...

Quatro de Julio

The 4th of July is a celebration of freedom. The independence of a nation, the freedom of free will, and the liberty to ride any road we damn well please. We spent this national holiday by mounting four German made motorcycles and exploring a part of north Texas that our forefathers and so many thereafter fought for and died to protect. All together we were on four BMW GS’s, an R1150GSA, two R1200GS’, and an F800GS. It was a rather unique experience riding with three other bikes of such similar capabilities. While our riding skills ranged, the bikes themselves were fully capable of handling any of the roads we would ride. There was no need to slow down after a stretch of twisties and wait for anyone to catch up because they were dragging floorboards trying to keep up. That, in combination with the roads and the scenery made for a great day of riding in celebration of our nations birth.

The riders were Rego, on the 1150, Gary on the F800, and Doug on his 1200, forming a set along with mine. We headed out a little after 0730 from McKinney. It was a little later than we usually ride on hot humid days in Texas, but early enough to beat most of the heat. The first stop was in Whitewright, a small settlement to the north and east of Dallas. A couple of miles north of Whitewright hwy 697 twists and turns its way into your mind, making you forget you are still in Texas. The closest comparison I can make to this Fannin County road, is Stove Prairie Road just north of Masonville Colorado. To enhance our riding experience, Doug mounted his video camera and filmed Gary and I riding. The suspension on my R1200GS is much more adept at handling a road like this than my F650 was capable of in conjunction with my riding skills. I took full advantage of it and road what I felt was a relatively quick pace. It was fantastic, I have never ridden on a track, but it has to be something similar to this – sans the scenery. The bends in the road just kept piling up as it meandered its way from Whitwright to Sherman. It was so much fun, we turned around and rode it again – a twofer on the 4th. At some point I hope Doug will either post the video here, or put a link on Smugbug or Youtube. (will keep you updated…)


Rego and Doug arriving for the ride


Doug and his R1200GS


Rego decides to ride bitch...


After riding 697




After a quick breakfast in Whitewright, we decided to head to the Texas, Oklahoma boarder. There is an old bridge that crosses the Red River in an area called Carpenters Bluff. The bridge was originally built in 1910 as a railroad crossing, and eventually became a single lane traffic bridge some time in the 60’s. I don’t know if it is the influence of the Red River that winds its way west to east forming the state line, but once you get into the Red River Valley, the roads seem to start following suit. We had a great ride to the bridge. We stopped on the Texas side of the bridge and lingered under the big trees that lined the river for a while. Then we were back on the road again and road 120 all the way back to 75. Our intent was to just take 75 back to McKinney, however when we pulled off the highway in Anna, we decided to continue west for a while along 455 until we got to Celina to have some lunch. There is a little country restaurant in Celina called Lucy’s. I have eaten there several times either after a morning dove hunt, or while riding 455. The last two times I tried cure my hunger at this cool little café, it has been closed. I guess the economy had taken its toll in the small towns of America as much as anywhere else. After a few more failed attempts at finding a small town eatery, we ended up at the La Hacienda Ranch in Frisco for some really good Mexican food.

Breakfast in Whitewright


biker gang?







After lunch we all parted ways, each to enjoy his own sense of freedom, liberty, and the pursuit of twisting roads that intertwine, connect, and encompass the land that some 233 years ago, a small group of men decided was their own.