BamaJohn
Active member
Barely! In every sense of the word. :helpsmilie:pps:
Been there more often than I care to admit....Glad you survived that night!
Barely! In every sense of the word. :helpsmilie:pps:
Day 12.
The 0530 train started my day. Refreshed by a good night’s sleep, I breakfasted on trail mix washed down with tap water. A review of notes revealed that Dan Armstrong resided in Fairbanks, not Anchorage. Good Grief! I packed up, made a right turn escape maneuver, and headed for Fairbanks a third time.
Inside an industrial supply store, I asked to peruse a Fairbank’s telephone book. No Dan Armstrong or shop was listed. The store’s counter lady asked, “Where would Mr. Armstrong buy his parts?” Duh!
The Harley-Davidson service manager gave me Dan’s telephone number. Dan gave directions to his home and garage-based shop.
“I can’t turn left,” I said.
“Really?” Dan shook his shoulder-length hair and began a ten-minute-long probing. “Eureka!” He fetched a magnet from his shop, taped it on the end of a wooden dowel, stuck it where the sun didn’t shine, and recovered an errant bolt.
Dan returned the bolt to its original hidden home and torqued it down. He spent the morning replacing missing bolts and tightening loose fittings. After a bath, an oil change, and a new set of tires, my Vstrom was ready for more adventures.
I don’t know if Dan is still in business, but contact me via PM if you want to know where I found him.
A super-sized Chef’s salad became brunch. I tooted the horn as I sped past Neanna and its museum. The hills located between Fairbanks and Neanna dribbled out onto a flat, scrub-covered plain. Far to the south, bumps appeared on the horizon. As I traveled, the bumps seemed to grow. The road snaked along the side of the Neanna River, between immense rock-sided canyons. I was in Denali country, home of Mt. McKinley, the highest mountain in North America.
An illegal roadside plywood sign led me to a unique motel. I rented a ten-foot, slide-in, cab-over, camper shell for $31. A shower, bathroom, and laundry perched a hundred feet away. A nearby café provided food that my body craved.
Day 13.
I ate, rested, did laundry, ate some more, took a nap, and ate, again.
I rode to the town of Denali and enjoyed eating a twelve-inch cardboard-flavored pizza for $27. Denali is a huckster’s paradise. Thousands of tourists arrive in tour buses, rented motorhomes, automobiles, and astride an occasional motorcycle. Hundreds of boutiques and small shops sell everything. If you need a yak-skin hat, or a glass globe containing brine shrimp―a Denali shop has it.
I needed to head south. The air was downright nippy. Trees have lost their colorful leaves. Tomorrow I ride.
Day 18
At some point in the past twenty-seven years, the Cassier Highway received a coating of asphalt. To keep things interesting, the engineers left a slew of potholes for drivers to sashay around.
For the first thirty miles, trees beside the roadway were blackened by fire. Bleak black. From the top of a rise, green trees appeared in the distance. Unfortunately, they were crowned by a plume of smoke indicating another fire was actively decimating the terrain. I later learned that the new fire had consumed over 5,000 acres. It would burn until extinguished by snow. Available firefighters worked fires closer to towns.
The Cassier is a two-lane black ribbon primarily lacking fog lines, center divider stripes, and signs announcing curves. Few guard rails block scenic views. A rider must adapt to ever-changing conditions. The road twists, turns, dives off ridgelines, swoops into canyons, curls along lakeshores, bores through tunnels, and leaps rivers on metal-gridded bridges. If God had money, the Cassier is the highway she would build.
Glancing sideways, I saw pesky glaciers slipping their way down mountainsides.
What a day! Good weather, a great road, little traffic, and my body not complaining. The bike felt like an extension of my body as we swirled through the curves and danced down the straights. Two Toyotas appeared in my rear-view mirrors. Evening was approaching, motels and resorts lay fifty miles ahead. I didn’t want a couple of cars to disrupt the rhythm I’d established.
The cars began tailgating. Well! Coming out of the next curve, I kicked down a gear, twisted the throttle to the stop, and rocketed down a straight-a-way. Braked hard, maxed out a curve, and accelerated again. My mirrors showed an empty road. I maintained a healthy pace for the next thirty minutes.
I pulled into a gas station for fuel. While filling the gas tank, the Toyotas arrived. A man from Japan leaped out of the front car. “You some rider! I ride Japan. I very good. You fast. Faster me.” I removed my helmet. His eyes appeared to grow. He shouted at the men sitting in the Toyotas, “Oh, you see this fast rider. Not a kid. He old man!”
They followed me until I pulled off the highway onto a road leading to a resort. The drivers honked and waved. I heard them cheer as they passed on down the road.
The resort offered me a tent site or the use of a cabin with a kitchen and bath en suite. I soaked my tootsies (and the rest of me) in a porcelain tub for an hour. Dinty Moore and Captain Morgan joined me at the dinner table.