As
you may know, one of my goals is to get a geocache on my motorcycle
(motocaching) in each county in Idaho
and the contiguous states. So far, in
addition to Idaho I’ve done Washington,
Oregon, Nevada
and Wyoming. Son, Yancey, did Wyoming
with me last summer and we plan to attack Utah next month. Meanwhile I’ve been working on Montana a chunk at a
time. It’s a big state with 56
counties. Last year I did the northwest
corner and my latest foray was the northern top half of the state.
I
set out a little after 6:00 am heading north towards Coeur d’Alene. It was a little chilly and the heated grips I
had installed on my Triumph was a welcome addition. My first stop was the Mineral Mountain Rest
Stop in northern Latah County,
Idaho, just to take a break and
warm up as well as logging the geocache there.
I continued north to Sandpoint, ID, and then turned east around beautiful Pend Oreille Lake.
I stopped for a cache along the lake shore but couldn’t find it. By now it had warmed up and was very
pleasant. My first Montana
cache was in Lincoln County along the Clark Fork River
at the Big Eddy Campground. It had now
become downright hot and the shade was nice.
I
stopped down the road for another quick cache but by now it had REALLY become
hot so I stripped off some clothes layers.
I stopped in the shade of a lonesome pine for lunch and tried to call
Kathy but had no service. I went a long
ways after lunch before turning north toward Kalispell a ways past Thompson
Falls. My next stop was at a park on Flathead Lake where I found one cache and decided
to not go after another which would have required a hike. It’s a beautiful lake.
About
12 miles south of Kalispell I found a cache at a shady little park in a little
community. My geocaching handle is my
brand (M/W) and I have a stamp which I use to sign the cache logs. I have it tied to a pen with about a foot and
a half of fly fishing line. I believe
when I was leaving this cache which was in a bushy little tree that line caught
on a branch and flipped out of my pocket.
Of course, I didn’t discover it until I had unpacked at the motel and
was about to go after a local cache in Kalispell. I did not want to lose that stamp so back I
went to the previous cache. Luckily it
was there but off to the side of where I was which is why I think it flipped
out of my pocket.
So
back to town I went and picked up a local cache before going to dinner at a
Mexican restaurant next to the motel. It
was okay but nothing extra. I had traveled 394 miles for the day.
I
stayed at a Motel 6 which was satisfactory but I was really impressed with
their business acumen. You pay extra for
WiFi and it is contracted out to a third party that you call if you have
problems (and I did). Ice machines are
set up to just give a very limited amount of ice, shower heads give a very
controlled flow and they serve coffee only rather than a Super 8 type continental
breakfast. The rooms were nice and clean
but not fancy. I set my alarm for about
5:30 am and had a good nights rest. M/W
1 comment:
What would a geocache trip be if you didn't do some back tracking?
That's a neat little island in the lake.
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