April 9, 2020
Beech Creek
The weather is incredible today. Sunny and even warmer than yesterday, it will top out in the low seventies. It’s warm enough that we could start riding mid-morning, but we wait until noon for the big commercial action for the day - 1188 Brewing Company is open for growler sales again, from 12-3!
Today’s big business decision - if we can only get refills once per week, should we invest in a second growler? That works out to a pint per day for seven days, so the decision is easy. Besides, it’s nice to invest in the local economy, and getting a bit of variety in my beverage diet is good too.
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For a nice change, today’s ride begins right from home. We bike west along Route 26, a stretch we’ve never ridden before, and then turn south on US 395 to climb up Beech Creek.
The ride between John Day and Mount Vernon is probably the least interesting part of this highway. It’s more developed, it carries more traffic, and we don’t really leave the outskirts of John Day for about two miles. We ride the nine miles to Mount Vernon nonstop, not stopping for photos even once before reaching the turnoff for Route 395.
US 395 is a minor interstate highway, running roughly from the Canadian border north of Spokane to the Mojave Desert. It doesn’t carry much traffic though, even in normal times; and today it is of course very quiet. I’ve ridden this piece of it before, on a five day figure eight that began and ended in Spray and took in Condon, Heppner, Mount Vernon, and points in between. Did I mention this short solo tour before? I forget. I think it’s the last solo tour I’ve taken. I didn’t keep a journal but I think I have a few photos stashed away in our storage unit. I should write it up some day.
So, once more up US 395, direction Long Creek. We won’t go anywhere near that far today, and have only mapped a route on the GPS for as far as the low divide at the head of Beech Creek. I remember the road further north though where it passes through Fox as being a great ride. I’m sure we’ll be back up this way to cover that stretch before leaving town at the end of the month.
As usual Rachael goes on ahead, not to be seen for an hour and a half. I do a better job staying on task today though, keeping a good pace and stopping less often for photos. By the end of the day she’ll clock in with 43 miles but I’m not that far behind at 39. Nearly a normal length ride, and the leg feels great.
The ride itself is very pleasant, if not quite up to the five star ratings the last two days earned. Today it’s greatly enhanced by the balmy conditions. It’s so warm that we shed all of our outer layers at the start, and we’re helped up the fairly modest climb along Beech Creek by about a 10 mph tailwind.
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This looks like it might be one of the caramel corn subspecies?
4 years ago
4 years ago
Perhaps 90 minutes later Rachael shows up, a bit sooner than I’d expected. She cut the ride a bit short of what we had mapped. It stiffens toward the end and the road takes a sharp bend so that for a few miles she’s biking into a headwind.
We stop by the roadside for the usual set of breaks, enjoying sitting in the warm sun and watching butterflies flit around us. Then, it’s a relaxing semi-coast back to Mount Vernon, downhill but into the wind.
At Mount Vernon, we separate again. I stop to take a photo of a cherry tree in bloom by the church, and she bikes on ahead. I find a few more reasons to stop along the way back home, so it’s just as well she continued on or I’d have tried her patience.
Not far from John Day, I stop to photo an old house I’ve admired when we’ve driven past it before. The house itself is interesting, but I’m also drawn by the overgrown rail fence in front of it. While I’m standing across the road taking my shots, a male voice shouts out to me from behind the fence. Uh, oh. Someone doesn’t like this.
I walk the bike across the street to see who’s calling and explain what I’m doing. He walks to a clearing where I can get a good look, and I see a big, brawny, shirtless guy with wall to wall tattoos covering his torso and a black squarish tattoo covering the crown of his shaven head. In this conservative country, it’s just a tad intimidating.
It’s all good though. He’s proud of his place, and likes the fact that I admire it too. He’s new in the valley, having moved up from California a year and a half ago. He said the place, built in the 1930’s and uninhabited for years, was a complete wreck when he moved in. He’s been busy restoring it ever since he arrived. He cautions me to be careful about the traffic on this highway, but I tell him the real risk is the dogs and describe my encounter last week. He sympathizes, hopes the owner was well insured. He asks where we’re staying, and immediately recognizes the place - one of those vacation rentals right by the fairgrounds.
When I state that dinner is calling and go to leave, he introduces himself by name - David. I’ll watch for him around town now. I’m sure I’ll recognize him, even with his shirt on. Small towns!
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https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/49920-Nymphalis-californica
4 years ago
4 years ago
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Video sound track: Let the Sunshine In, by The Fifth Dimension
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Always nice to hear about encounters that soften our initial perceptions of people.
4 years ago
4 years ago
Glad you can take some enjoyment out of our misfortunes! We’ll see if we can’t arrange a mechanical breakdown at a remote location to keep you amused.
4 years ago