May 13, 2020
Tekoa
Yesterday’s
After we completed yesterday’s post, Rachael went back through her video footage (actually, footage must be an anachronism. Byteage?) and decided we should take a better look at the delightful Chatcolet Lake Bridge. And, as long as we’re looking at yesterdays, it gives me an excuse to slip in this wonderful Stan Getz version of one of my favorite standards that Frank passed my way.
So, we’ve got a lot of video today - four of them! But that’s OK. You’re probably all sitting around indoors trying to figure out how to fill up your day anyway.
Video sound track: One More Bridge to Cross, by The Supremes & The Four Tops
Today’s
The day begins with the resolution of a minor difference of opinion Rocky and I have been tossing back and forth for the last month: should we finally remove our Obama/Biden bumper sticker? Rachael makes a good case that it’s unnecessarily provocative in country like this, and fears harassment, flattened tires, or broken windows. I counter this with a more idealistic wish to stand up for what I believe in and not be pushed around by the forces of darkness in this horrible time. Resist!
Yesterday’s news about the insane harassment of people wearing masks was the final straw. Rachael wins. Off comes the Obama/Biden sticker, revealing the Obama sticker from his first campaign, before he’d selected his running mate. Off comes the Obama sticker, revealing the John Kerry sticker from his failed 2004 run that I’d forgotten had been there. That’s the bottom layer though, since we got Old Paint in 2001.
We briefly discuss whether to let John remain. It’s so long ago that people have probably forgotten about him; and he’s arguably less controversial since he has a less threatening pigmentation. But then, he goes too. Definitely though we’ll be back soon though, with Biden/Harris or Biden/Klobuchar or Biden/Warren or Biden/Whitmer or even Biden/pet rock. We don’t care who it is - we’re all in.
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Fine, but can we finally get to the ride?
OK. Today we’re biking southwest to Tekoa (T-koh), back in Washington and the Palouse. We have a gallery of candidate rides to choose from, but given today’s west winds this looks best. We’ll fight them on the way to Tekoa and get blown home. Always better that way.
The ride begins with the seven mile stub of the CDA between here and Plummer. After leaving the lakeside, it’s a steady 3% climb through pine forest all the way up to Plummer. It’s an attractive, modestly dramatic ride that gradually climbs above Plummer Creek, passing beside basalt outcrops. Very pleasant, until the creek rises to cross the trail and we cross a small marshy patch and spot a large brown animal casually splashing around pulling up plants. Moose! OMG!
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Then a CDA moose-a!
What will be next?
Idaho ibex?
Or a sighting of Señor Macho Bruce-a?
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So that’s fabulous, of course. Now I can get over my resentment at Rachael for seeing a moose on the bike path yesterday.
The trail ends in Plummer, and we turn south on US 95 for two or three miles, still climbing. It’s just highway, not really interesting, but with a wide shoulder it’s a comfortable ride. Ten miles into the ride we leave the highway for quiet Lowell Valley Road, and immediately start dropping. Soon we’re back in the familiar Palouse landscape, gradually dropping for the next eleven miles until we arrive at Tekoa. We’re biking into a fair headwind the whole way, but it’s well offset by the descent.
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Tekoa is quite an attractive place, with a warm community feeling about it. We stop long enough for a decent first look, a snack, and a stop in their surprisingly well stocked store to pick up some groceries to take home - a loaf of bread, coffee, artificial sweetener for Rachael’s coffee - and for immediate consumption, a small piece of carrot cake.
Tekoa began life as a railroad town, at the junction of three rail lines. The town largely dried up with the coming of the roads of course, but it still supports a stable population, a respectable sized school, and even a regional performing arts center. In the window of the Empire Theater a poster of Mildred Bailey, a renowned jazz singer from the 1930’s. Known as the Queen of Swing, she performed alongside Paul Whiteman, the Dorsey Brothers and Benny Goodman, and was married to Red Norvo. She was born here in Tekoa, and her mother was a member of the Coeur d’Alene tribe. She must be one of the most noteworthy of our Native American artists.
I’m sure we’ll get another look at Tekoa before we leave here. Like Colfax, it’s one of those towns with attractive rides radiating out in several directions.
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The ride back is a breeze, literally. We’re blown back east across the apron of the prairie, climb back to US 95, and then coast all the way home. The final seven miles gliding down CdA back to the lake are a particular delight - alone in the woods, effortlessly coasting along at 17 mph. Join us in reliving it, through Rocky’s video.
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Video sound track: Happy, by Brandi Carlile
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Ride stats today: 43 miles, 1,800’
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