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Hester - Packed & Ready to Roll Home |
This day started like every other in the Alaskapade; I woke up. I looked over at my phone to see what time it was and to try to figure out why my alarm didn't go off. It was set for 6:30am, but it was only 6:00. Had I been at home, I would have rolled over and slept the extra half hour. But like food, sleep just didn't seem to be something I needed on this trip. I was living on the adrenalin rush of just being out here. Well, that and 5 Hour Energy shots.
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Where Did All This Crap Come From? |
I took my time rolling up my sleeping bag, deflating my air mattress, and generally sorting out crap to be packed for the journey home. After just two days in this location, I had spread out and made a huge mess. The ride to Dallas would be about 1,200 miles south through South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and into Texas. My goal was to pack so that I could take just one small bag into the hotel wherever I decided to stay. To be honest, I considered making the 1,100 mile trip in one day. Lord knows if I did 1,000 miles across the terrain I did when I left Fairbanks, I could do 1,100 on highways standing on my head. I thought better of it. I was only going home and was in no rush to get there. It was Monday, July 4th and I figured the traffic inbound to the cities through which I would have to pass would be stacked up with cagers returning from their long weekend. I decided to stop halfway in Wichita, Kansas and had made reservations at a hotel there the night before. Wichita was a short 722 miles from Sturgis and the ride from there to home would be a breeze.
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Home of Arbor Day. Wow. |
Hester was packed and ready to roll. I walked over to Ed's camp to say goodbye and to express my thanks to him for the riding company and for cooking dinner last night. He was planning to hang around another day or two in Sturgis and then pack up and head off somewhere, but I don't recall where. Actually, I'm not sure he knew where he was heading next either. Despite all the adventures I had just experienced, I was envious of Ed. I saddled up and headed east on Interstate 90. My southbound route through South Dakota took me through such thriving metropolises as Winner and Bonesteel before crossing into Nebraska. It struck me that I had never ridden in Nebraska. After a few miles, I realized why. No offense intended to any Corn Huskers who might be reading this, but Nebraska was little more than just a state to get through. The welcome sign said "Home of Arbor Day". I wondered, don't they need trees for that? The view in Nebraska never seemed to change; just flat fields and railroad tracks as far as the eye could see. Fortunately, I had vivid memories and images from the previous weeks dancing in my head to keep me sane. I found myself actually looking forward to gas stops so I could actually see people. Interestingly enough, the people in Nebraska - as boring and absolutely unremarkable as it was - seemed happier and more content to be there than did the people of Sturgis.
The 270 mile southbound trip through Alaska was as quotidian as was Nebraska itself. I saw no motorcycles, no law enforcement vehicles, and for that matter, very few cars at all. It seemed like mere days past since I entered Nebraska and I was already seeing the sign for Kansas. I had driven through Kansas before and I knew that it would set a completely new standard for tedium on today's ride. I stopped for the obligatory photo at the welcome sign and tried to adjust my eyes to seeing in black and white. About twenty miles from Concordia, I noticed Hester's ride felt squishy. I thought I was just tired. Then I noticed I was turning the handlebars to the right just to keep her straight on the highway. The erudite in me realized that this wasn't normal. I pulled over to look her over. I had a flat rear tire.
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Only Flat on the Bottom |
I had ridden over 9,000 miles through the worst terrain imaginable and I got a flat in Kansas? I had put 19,000 miles on Hester's original tires when I arrived in Fairbanks and I got a flat on a new tire with less than 5,000 miles, in Kansas. KANSAS! I looked the tire over and didn't see any visible tear and figured it was just a puncture. That would explain the slow decline in handling as the tire lost air. I was carrying a tire plug kit, so I decided to try to find the hole, plug it, and move on. I removed the saddle bags and closely examined the exposed parts of the tire, then pushed Hester forward a few feet to look over another area now visible after the roll. I located what appeared to be a small puncture, dabbed some spit on it, and saw bubbles. Encouraged, I broke out the plug kit and got to work. The plug process was pretty simple. I had successfully used plugs before and they held up well. I reamed out the puncture wound and inserted the mushroom-shaped plug using the clever insert tool in the kit. I stretched the piece of the plug protruding out to seat the plug against the inside of the tire and used my CO2 cartridges to inflate it. After two cartridges, the tire was full. Success!
Not so fast. I heard a faint hiss emanating from somewhere in the wheel well. Upon closer inspection, there was another puncture. I repeated the process described above and used the remaining two cartridges to inflate the tire again. No hiss. Success! Well, semi-success. The tire was only half full and I was out of cartridges. My GPS indicated there was a gas station about three miles down the road, so I decided to slow roll Hester there. It was closed. Not just closed; closed down. I slowly rode another twelve miles to a convenience store in Concordia and paid a dollar to use the air compressor in the parking lot. All I had on me was a hundred dollar bill, which the guy at the counter said he could not accept unless I was buying fifty or more dollars worth of merchandise. I tried my meanest look (which wasn't difficult to generate), I tried my nicest voice. I was about to break down and ask the guy to just loan me a dollar when I realized I has a two dollar Canadian coin in my left vest pocket. I kept my Canadian currency in my left pocket with my passport and my US currency in the right. When I exchanged currency back in Oak Harbor, they wouldn't take my coins. I offered the guy the $2 Canadian coin and you would have thought it was gold. He opened the register and handed me four quarters as he called someone on his cell phone to tell the good news. I had about $9 in Canadian coins in that pocket. Judging from his excitement, I bet I could have walked out of there with a case of Monster Energy and Slim Jims in trade for it.
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A Rare View of Hester on a Trailer |
I checked into the hotel and when the lady at the desk saw my Rockwall address, she asked me if I knew where Wylie was. Wylie was minutes from my home. I replied that I rode through the back roads there often. She and her husband were from Wylie. Her husband used to work for Nortel Networks. I used to work for Nortel Networks. Her husband worked in the Technical Assistance Center as dedicated support to the Global Crossing account. Global Crossing was my account. I even knew his name, but we had never met in person. Still, what were the odds? As thrilling as those coincidences were, I was still whipped and quickly made my way to my room and after a much-needed shower, hit the sheets. I laid awake listening to an endless barrage of fireworks and screaming voices seemingly right outside my window. I peeked out and realized they were right outside my window. Apparently, Concordia has no laws against fireworks because dozens of kids were running around going crazy with bottle rockets, roman candles, and sparklers. I was reminded of my days as a kid when we used to shoot bottle rockets at each other and chase each other around shooting fireballs from roman candles on our bicycles. Fireworks were cool. My kids got jipped.
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Hester Meets Phil's |
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Harley Davidson Rotax MT-500 Special Forces Bike |
I was back on the road by late morning heading south in I-135 towards Salina, KS. There was a Harley dealer there that I had considered taking Hester to had she made it that far with the two plugs I installed. I wouldn't have considered trying to ride the remainder of the trip home on that tire, but it was irrelevant now. I was riding without any leathers now. It was hotter now than it had been on the entire trip. Texas and much of the southwest entered an extreme heatwave after I left back in June. Other than rain here and there, I had enjoyed great riding weather. Now, I was melting.
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My last night in Sturgis while sitting atop "Mount Rodney" in the the RV park, I began musing about the past few weeks; the miles Hester and I covered and the places I had seen. This trip was many things to me. In fact, it was many more things than I planned for it to be. My attitude before I left was piss poor. I needed to get away. I felt like with the exception of one or two friends, nobody seemed to get me. I left with no fanfare. No one at home even bothered to get up to see me off. I was OK with that and realistically didn't expect them to. This was my dream and it had been made clear to me from the beginning both directly and indirectly that it was a selfish and risky endeavor that I had no business taking. I agree that this was somewhat selfish and that there was a degree of risk. I was also fully aware that I am genetically prone to wanderlust. I wrote about it months ago and I've always managed to keep it in check. That mindset notwithstanding, I was somewhat angrily looking forward to being alone; just an anonymous guy out on the road on a bike with no responsibilities and no sense of commitment other than to realize a long suppressed dream that few who really mattered to me seemed to understand. I got to experience those moments of solitude and they were wonderful in a liberating sort of way. I wouldn't trade the feeling for anything.
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Fat Shrug - December 4, 2010 & Slimmer Shrug June 21, 2011 |
Speaking of feelings, this trip took a physical toll not just on Hester, but on me. I had worked hard for six months to condition myself and be ready. I was in the gym at 5:00am doing heavy cardio five days each week and had altered my diet considerably. The hard work paid off and I dropped almost fifty pounds before I left. The reality is that no amount of gym time could have prepared me for the pace I maintained while I was out there. I began at almost 250 pounds in January and weighed 186 when I returned. I've been reviewing the video I shot while out on the road and I think the transformation my viewers will see when we're finished editing it is astounding. There's a tremendous amount of footage to review and edit, but when it's finished, I believe it will yield some exciting stuff and provide a pretty insightful view into my head and my heart; dangerous places - not for the weak.
I sat looking out over Sturgis and considered the people I met along the way. Hermann and Joanne in Jasper, Alberta graciously hosted me and cooked a wonderful meal for me in their home. Jeff in Fairbanks let me use his corporate rental as a base of operations while I was in Alaska. He also gave me encouragement and invaluable information about the Dalton and pipeline weather conditions. Christian from France riding Mustang Joe; his months-long south-to-north journey was an inspiration. Meeting Scot at the Arctic Circle and then again on the road in the Yukon Territory and getting to ride two days with him gave me someone to share the experience with after being alone for days. Ed from Florida in Sturgis helped me to remember to slow down and enjoy the view. He cooked a great steak too.
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Pastor Jerry & Shrug at the Circle |
I met a guy named Jerry while sitting at the Circle. He and his friends had commented that somebody forgot their hat, pointing up at Martin's Harley cap I had left there moments before they arrived. I replied that it belonged to a friend of mine who "couldn't make it." Jerry walked over to me and mentioned that he was a Pastor for a biker church and added "I think there's more to this hat than that." I related Martin's story to him and he seemed genuinely moved. I was already somewhat emotional having finally reached the sign, having kept my promise to Martin's widow, and having had time to contemplate things. I'm not a religious person, but this was indeed a spiritual moment for me. Well-timed compassion and understanding are powerful things. Jerry emailed the the photo on the left that one of his friends shot after he returned home.
There were countless others who were along from a distance tracking me via the web page. There were times when I felt very alone and insignificant out there and I would then realize there were thousands of eyes looking down at me, watching my every move. I received a phone call at my hotel in Great Falls from friends who tracked me using Google Earth, saw the hotel, called it, and had the front desk ring my room - just to tell me they were watching and were hoping the best for me. I loved it. I received hundreds of texts and emails from people telling me they were living vicariously through my adventures and my writing. When I was in the parking lot at Yukon HD in Whitehorse, the parts guy came out and asked "Are you Shrug?" I answered and he said, "You gotta phone call inside." A reader from New Zealand tracked me to the dealership, called their number and jokingly asked me to pick him up a t-shirt. Again, I loved it. I saw a passenger in an SUV staring me down as I passed them. A few moments later, they sped up next to me honking their horn and waving. The passenger was waving her arms and pointing to her iPad which had the Alaskapade page on it. They told me at a gas station hours later that they saw the logo on the back of the bike and "tuned in". They emailed me the day I got home congratulating me on the trip's success. I received an email from a group of soldiers in Iraq. They were all Harley riders who were tracking me and commented that they would be proud to ride with me any day, anywhere. I was humbled beyond description. My point isn't that I was gaining notoriety. My point is people really cared. What started out as a simple means of on-line self affirmation and a dream to deliver a stupid hat somehow grew into something much bigger than any words I could write or photos I could post.
I considered all of what I just described and compared it to the times I spent alone and it occurred to me that I needed people more than I thought I did. I was ready to go home. I missed my family and friends.
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Crossing into the Lone Star State |
I rode the last hours through Texas genuinely excited to be getting home. A close couple of friends who had been tracking me since I left were on the road waiting to follow me in and videotape my arrival. They had actually gotten up the morning I left, met me on the highway forty miles from home, and taped my departure. Here they were again to support me and share the experience. About fifteen miles from home, I spotted a Harley rider on the side of the road and I remember looking over at him wondering if he needed help. He waved and started rolling as soon as I went by and then rode up to me at a traffic light and yelled "Welcome Home! He added something along the lines of "You and Hester are famous". He told me that California Phil in Kansas was a friend of his, had read my page, told him I was coming through, and that he was moved to join me on a triumphant ride in for my last few miles home. I have to admit I was glad I was wearing goggles. I rode down my alley and into my driveway feeling a sense of accomplishment that I still can't pin words on. The reception at home was about as warm as the one when I left. Zeus was happy to see me and the friends who taped my departure were there. Otherwise, the attitude at home was as if I had never left. I accepted my role at home of being financially necessary but otherwise emotionally insignificant long before I left. Perhaps that's one reason this journey was so important for me to make. This journey wasn't for the readers. This journey wasn't even for Martin. This journey was for me.
Five years of dreaming and eight months of planning came down to 18 days and 9,764 miles for one man on two wheels. It was more wonderful on every level than I could have possibly anticipated. It was also much harder than I thought it would be. The triumphs were great - crossing into Canada, reaching the Arctic Circle and slapping that sign, riding a thousand miles in one day, crossing back into the States, and the people I met who I'll never forget. The trials were plenty also - horrible roads, motorcycle malfunctions, losing gear along the way, the flat tire, intense storms, and unplanned detours. I wouldn't trade the triumphs or the trials for anything. The events in our lives - be they good or bad - make us who we are. Before I left, someone told me that this journey would be a good opportunity for me to find myself. Since I returned, a few have asked if I feel it changed me in any way. I'm pretty sure that although I wasn't looking, I indeed found myself. The guy in the photo below is the guy I found and I hope I never lose him (hair notwithstanding). I wonder a bit if the people who really know me will like that guy. The answer to that last question is yes because before I left, I would have actually cared whether or not those same people who really know me like that guy.
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Alaskapade! Over & Out. Stay Tuned for the Video, Coming Soon. |