This is one segment chronicling my family's bicycle tour through the northwest, and Paula's continuation beyond Montana. If you came here via a Web search, you might want to back up to the index page to start with the overview.
June 2003
June 30th
[Ric here] This was the longest of days, and the shortest of days. At 0000 EDT, we were home - and still
packing! Paula and I finally finished at 2 AM, and I had a quick shower before going to bed.
The alarm clock was set for 3:45 and a friend was going to pick us up to go to the airport
at 4:30. Hey, an hour and a half of sleep is better than none!
The flights out were uneventful, I was by myself and Paula and Hannah on a different one and arrived in Portland around 11 AM (PDT). All the panniers arrived fine, we had packed them in sports bags, we made it the UPS store, where the bikes were in good shape. Whew. By the time they were all reassembled (handlebars, seats, pedals, rear racks, front racks, water bottle carriers), it was, well, I'm not sure.
We reached NW Portland, and decided the most sensible thing to do was crash at a hotel instead of pushing forward and running into accomodation problems. So we stopped at a local chain that has free internet access, and that's why this is here!
July 2003
July 1st
The first day of real riding will put us on Rt 30, apparently a very busy road, at least here, but
said to have bike lanes or somesuch. I think my concerns about a serious headwind will come
true, that can be a serious demoralizer. We'll see!
July 1st-3rd
[Ric Here]The route from Portland to Astoria is US 30, apparently much
beloved by truckers, the logging industry, and diesel powered pickup trucks.
Near Portland and other substantial towns are marked bike lanes and in
between are decent shoulders. Well, except where there are hills big enough
to rate a passing lane. Along with the traffic is a huge amount of noise.
All in all, not a road I'd recommend. I've bicycled on Interstate highways
in Montana that were more pleasant.
Along the way the road goes through a few towns, and some places that seem to exist by name only (e.g. Boyce NH is part of Canterbury, but no one driving through would realize it as a "place."
July 1st was our first real day, spent getting out of Portland (one flat tire in the "industrial scrubland", and the rest fairly easy going and getting used to biking with all the traffic. We camped at a semi rundown RV site with a boat launch and pier, and no real place for bikes except by the picnic tables. Good showers, worked fine.
After that, things were pretty easy, we stopped at a store and bought one of my old instant energy sources - a squeeze bottle of honey. Hannah and Paula did pretty well after that and we stopped soon before the third hill. After a good rest and a commitment to climb it, I just hunkered down and kept rolling. Hannah and Paula decided to turn back, and tried to call me on the cell phone. I had thought of stopping and turning mine on, but decided to just keep grinding away because there was no decent place to stop.
The only wildlife to visit us were a couple of 6 inch slugs that
checked out an old moss covered campfire spot. I kinda expected to find
them on our tent in the morning.
We hoped to make it into Astoria fairly early, but were tired from the previous day and had to deal with a couple 300' climbs, headwinds, etc. We are at the Astoria Library, barely in the center of town, after lunch and laundry. I guess we'll try to find an inexpensive motel or campground and make it an easy day overall. |
July 7
[Ric here] We're at an Internet Cafe ($5/hour, so don't expect much editing)
in Pacific City OR, a ways south of Tillamook. We spent the night at Cape
Lookout, a
state park just north of 850 foot hill which we did in the morning. Not much
warm up, not much appreciated, and pretty steep (rates 3 arrows on OR's
bicycling map, their steepest indication). That has really slowed us down,
and we haven't had much to eat either.
Also at the camp (I'm recalling backward here), was a large group of kids riding from Seattle to San Francisco. They were at our previous camp too at Nehalem Bay, another state campground. Both have a biker/hiker area seaparate from the main campground and big enough for just one more. It's a good idea, as both activities involve the travel, not the destinations as the main interest of the trip. Also, there tend to be more kids at the main campgrounds with a day's worth of energy to burn off at the campground, whereas hiker/bikers are interested in food, shower, and sleep.
July 16
[Ric here] Hmm - 9 days since the last update. Well, we've been busy.
We arrived in Bend at my brother's home a couple days ago. Doug's home is a
lousy place to relax - my sister's family is here too and yesterday we all
went kayaking in a lake a ways out of town. Eight people, we only had to
rent one two-person kayak. Doug and Cheryl have enough stuff to open an
outdoors store. Fortunately the Tour de France is going on, so that demands
a fair amount of television time!
The last update was from Pacific City on the coast. I have a map with me to help recall the chronology so this will be more coherent than the last update.
We continued on to Neskowin, where we needed to spend the night. No campground, motels were full, but then we realized that what looked like one motel was really two and the other had room at $99/night, more than we wanted to spend, but we walked in and found it had a kitchenette, so the savings on restaurant costs made it a good deal after all. A river flows into the ocean here through the beach. The motel has a foot bridge over the river and I wandered down to the ocean after dinner to poke around and watch the incoming tide deal with the river's flow.
The next morning we left the coast. The chronology continues on the Western Oregon page.
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