In addition to
worrying about the caches escaping from my GPSr I was concerned about the
temperature starting out the second morning.
Milo and I had checked the weather
report the night before and it was supposed to be 40 degrees. That’s really cold on my motorcycle riding 75
mph on the Interstate into a headwind from the east. I was on the road at 6:00 a.m. and fortunately
the temperature was closer to 50 than 40.
Nevertheless, I did have the headwind and it was cold.
As I was heading
toward Mountain Home I felt a bump on my left foot and I immediately knew what
it was. Sure enough, I looked down and
saw my GPSr was missing from its clip on the handlebars. Deja vue all over again! Two years ago I lost one off my motorcycle in
Oregon. I stopped as quickly as I could hoping that
since it hit my foot on the way down it may not be smashed to smithereens as
the other one was and providing someone didn’t run over it before I could find
it. I got off my bike and to my immense
relief it was hanging by the cord about six inches from the pavement thanks to
the L shaped connector that I hate. I
have a new tank bag and it kind of pushes against the unit when it is in the
clip making it release. The rest of the
trip I was very careful to make sure it stayed securely clipped.
I had a list of
the caches sorted in the order of my approach and also by county in the map
compartment of my tank bag so I could see them without stopping. I use this method to navigate as my GPSr will
give me turn by turn directions. My
route took me to Mountain Home before turning south on highway 51 which would
turn to 225 when it crossed into Nevada. I stopped for a couple of caches before
hitting the Nevada
line – one to warm up and the other at Bruneau to get gas. I wasn’t particularly low on gas but it was
going to be a long way before the next town which was Elko. The Bruneau cache was a neat bird house cache
called “Buckeroo” that was conveniently located right behind the gas station.
This stretch of
highway 225 was probably the most fun one of the whole trip from a motorcyclist
point of view. It was hilly, curvy,
scenic and had virtually no traffic going up to Wild Horse dam where I logged
my first Nevada
cache of the trip. This was Elko County
and my goal was to get at least two caches, and preferably three, in each
county. I had already logged a cache or
two in Elko and Eureka counties the year before on the chukar hunting trip but
I wanted to do them all on the motorcycle.
At Elko I hit the
Interstate and headed west toward Winnemucca and down to Lovelock which was to
be my destination for the day. I think I
had a bit of a headwind but it was so minor compared to what I encountered later
in the journey that it doesn’t stand out in my mind. Crossing this part of Nevada (like most of the state) is flat
desert with distant bare mountains on either side and about the only vegetation
is sagebrush. There are also some
sagebrush-like bushes with thorns which makes for lots of fun searching for
caches in those. There are some shallow
lakes and alkali fields along the way to somewhat break up the monotony. I logged a half dozen or so caches along the
way picking up Eureka, Lander, Pershing and Humboldt counties with only one DNF (did
not find).
I arrived hot and
tired at 4:15 at the motel where I had a reservation in Lovelock, having covered
445 miles which was my longest day in miles.
I was greeted in the office by a note saying “Be back at 5:15”. I can tell you I was not in the mood to wait
around an hour so I left a note telling them so and went across the street to
another old motel. It turns out this 90
year old motel (The Super 10) had the same owner. However, the old Texas hillbilly manager was there and the
price ($37) was the same. Although it
was old, it was well built, well maintained and comfortable. There isn’t much in the way of restaurants in
Lovelock but I did get a good club sandwich at McDonald’s. My lunches each day were eaten on the road
and consisted of smoked salmon or sardines.
I had not slept well the night before at Milo’s
and after this long day on the road I went to bed at 8:30 and slept like a log.
The second picture is the base of Wild Horse dam and the last one is the Super 10 Motel in Lovelock. (To be continued) M/W
I'm enjoying reading about your trip! (Can't wait until you write about Las Vegas!! At least I'm assuming...)
ReplyDeleteWondering what "Super 10" means. Did it have 10 rooms? Was its address #10 Main Street? Doubt if it was the 10th motel in town. I've got it. There must be a chain of Super 10's. Or maybe the chain of motels is just one!
ReplyDeleteAt one time I imagine the price was $10 just like Motel 6 and Motel 8.
ReplyDeleteWhat? Was the original price of Motel 6 $6?
ReplyDeleteI just skimmed Wikipedia on Motel 6, and the article there confirms that the original price in the 1960s was just $6.00 per room. The price has risen with inflation but they claim they are the low price leader.
ReplyDeleteWhen Mike was planning this trip back in March, he said, "I'm having so much fun. Don't you want to go with me?" I said -- No! "But what will you do?" he asked. "Something else," I said, mentally adding "Anything else!"
ReplyDeleteSunday night (Day 2) Mike called me wailing about his untoward experiences. This is a guy who seeks experience, so my level of sympathy didn't run deep. I told him I didn't think his problems were the end of the world and that he would find solutions even if he did have to wait until Tuesday. Hallie was still here when he called. Her comment: "Aren't you glad you aren't with him?" Absolutely!
And I have an inflation calculator (website) that tells me $6.00 in 1962 is the same as $45.71 in 2012!
ReplyDeleteMotel 6 opened in 1962.