May 23, 2020
The Tekoa-Garfield loop
After today, we have one ride remaining here before we pack up and drive to that coronavirus hotspot, Portland. After almost two months of empty roads, small towns and few people we’re both a bit apprehensive about returning to Portland, even if only for a week. We’re starting to feel antsy though, ready to move on.
Today’s not our final ride here then, but it is the last one in the Palouse. We have several ideas in mind for today’s route, but Ron Grumby settled it for us with his whimsical suggestion for the song we should have used for the video on our ride from Tekoa last week. It’s an idea too good to pass up, so we’re off to Tekoa again.
It’s warmer today, but still mostly overcast and of course still windy when we bike south from Tekoa on our way to Farmington. Nothing new here - it’s always windy over here, it seems.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lomatium
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Especially from soil that's so loessy.
But if you dig deep
A Palouse Earthworm you'll keep
In pockets of shirts that are droessy!
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We arrive in Farmington about an hour later, after weaving through the low green hills along the Washington-Idaho border. It’s the same remarkable Palouse landscape we’ve biked through for three weeks now, but we’re both both starting to feel like we’ve had our fill of it by now. I’d love to come back and see this country in a different season some year, but it’s feeling like we’ve had our look for this round.
There’s not much to see in Farmington, so we stop just long enough to review the next segment of the ride before continuing south to Garfield. Through a planning oversight, we forgot to load today’s route to our GPS devices. The route is in my head, but that’s less well shareable than the GPS route would have been. We talk over each segment as we get to it to make sure there are no mistakes - which could really be serious in this area with no cell coverage. Fortunately, there are almost no paved roads to choose from here. Get started on the right one, and you’re set for another ten miles.
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We arrive in Garfield at about 1:30, just in time for lunch. It’s still feeling chilly and windy (we’ve been biking into the wind all day so far), so we look through downtown for a sheltered spot to sit out of the wind and eat our turkey and cheese sandwiches. There are benches all over town, but somehow none is out of the wind. We pick the best of a bad lot, and I chivalrously sit on the windward side, doing my best shelter my chilled partner for a few minutes.
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Leaving town, we bike north On Route 27 on the third leg of today’s jaunt. This was the one part of the ride I was least looking forward to, because Route 27 is a primary north-south connector extending from Pullman to Spokane. I thought that on Memorial Day weekend it might be busy, but the highway is nearly empty today. It’s a surprisingly nice ride - we’ve got the wind with us now, the route is generally level, and there’s more of interest along it than I’d expected. Especially worth stopping for is the John F. Kelley cabin, an excellently preserved homestead cabin built in 1872 by one of the early settlers in the region.
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Video sound track: One Tekoa Over the Line, by Brewer & Ship (with thanks to Mr. Grumby for the inspiration)
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For the final quarter of the ride we’re back on the really quiet roads again as we cut back east on Warner Road to Tekoa-Farmington Road again, and then follow it north back to Tekoa. Not the most dramatic of rides, but a very nice last look from the saddle of the Palouse before we head west. Actually, if we’d ridden this three weeks ago I’m sure we would have been stunned by its unusual beauty, just as we were by any of the early rides we took from Pullman.
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Ride stats today: 45 miles, 1,400’
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