Day 2 completed. This turned out to be a long tiring but
exciting ride. We left Pocatello, UT at 06:30 am heading to pick up the TAT
around American Falls 25 miles away. No motels available at American Falls therefore
the 25 mile detour to Pocatello. This added that 25 miles to an already long ride
to become 220 miles total. We weren’t too sure what the terrain would be on
this stretch, but it turned out to be much more demanding than we expected.
The TAT from American Falls to Arco is around 100 miles of
rolling hills, dual track road full of ruts, sand and occasional gravel. There
is absolutely no people, buildings or civilization in these 100 miles. The scenery
was great, but the amount of attention required to stay out of the ruts and
deal with the other hazards wore us out so that when we met up with the support
tuck at Arco, most if not all the riders just sat in the shade and tried to get
their strength back. We knew we had another 100 miles to ride through the mountains
and I for one would gladly have put that off for the next day. We got snacks
and drinks at the gas station since there wasn’t any fast food places in Arco.
After getting gas and resting a bit we headed out for the 2nd
half of the ride into the mountains. This section was totally different with
lots of mountains, switch backs and steep docents. I
I’ve included a pic of our track and the elevation change
for the 220 miles. You will notice that all the steep terrain was on this 2nd
half of the ride. We went over Bear Creek pass at 7500 feet and though that
would be the highest for the day; wrong. We then climbed a second mountain pass
(no name) that topped pout at 9000 feet. The wind was chilly and blowing a gale
at the top. Considering we started todays ride around 4500 feet you can
understand it was an interesting ride.
I took lots of pictures and have posted a few so you get a
taste of what the overall ride included.
Some key events:
I’m in trail position 6 on a narrow dual-track with foliage right
up to the trail when a big animal (looked like a badger) ran out of the weeds
right in front of my bike. I could see the look on his/her face and it was as
surprised as I was. I slammed on my brakes and it dodged my front tire and ran
into the weeds on the other side of the trail. Close call.
A short time later we were passing some wet lands and I look
over to my left and there was a Moose standing in the water. 100 feet later I
see another larger one in the brush. I’ve seen Moose next to the road in Alaska
and Canada, but this is the first time for the lower 48.
Lots of cows in the free-range areas and one almost got
Jason. At another time a bull was right in front of the cattle guard we needed
to use and wasn’t really worried about letting us pass. Finally, it slowly
walked away so we could get buy.
Rode through the Craters of the Moon park so captured some pics of the large lava flow. Impressive.
We had a couple of water crossings but nothing significant except
Woodrow managed to get his bike across the water ok then sank it up to the axle
in a mud filled rut in the road just past the water.
We have a 155-mile day tomorrow through the mountains and
expect more of what we saw today. We end at Boise tomorrow and hope the ride is
relatively easy, so we can get a needed rest. So far Idaho has been a beautiful
place to ride with lots of different terrain.
We did have our first bike dropped at the water crossing.
Matty was fooling around in the grass and got into some very wet, muddy spots
and the bike was just laid down in the grass. It took both Matty and Woodrow
pushing to get it back on the trail.
Enjoy the Pics.
Ride Safe!



Guys,
ReplyDeleteThis riding looks like a beautiful, challenging adventure! Wish I was with you! Enjoy and stay safe!
This is Darrell next post will have my profile attached
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