The first
thing I noticed was that my bike felt heavy. Not heavy in the sense
that I was on a heavy bike. I wasn't. I was on my ultra light race bike. The heavy
sensation was that of adding 25 lbs. of camping gear and snacks to my ultra
light race bike. It was heavy in weird places, and felt both oddly
foreign yet familiar to my touch, like a seasoned lover wearing a wig
and playing a role.
Following the sliver
thin western edge of the continent south, I would find myself staring
off into the great abyss of the Pacific Ocean, trying to imagine the other
worlds that lay beyond its vast expanse. Traveling across terrain under ones
own impetus and exposed to the world changes perspectives. It's the great
cliché of bike touring. Travel by bike shows us what is truly there, and necessarily
requires complete immersion in the environment through which we
pass.
Day
three things got interesting. A long descent into a military base greeted us
first thing in the morning, and once we had a solid three hours under
our belts we stopped to consult the maps. Option A was
legit, long and probably very nice. Option B was questionable. Being the type
of fellows Carl and I are, we went with Option B. I can't really say exactly
where we went, but there was a lot of fence hopping, ducking for cover, high
ridge line "roads" that haven't seen humans in a long time and an
eventual Mach speed descent back into civilization.
After
drifting off to sleep early that night, I was awoken a few hours later by Carl
bolting to the bathroom and ejecting whatever was left of his
cheese burger, plus some other stuff, out of his mouth. It wasn't a pleasant
night.
The
next day we headed out on a route that the Rangers had described as
"brushy", and soon became aware of what that meant. After passing
through an old quicksilver mine, the route became much less traveled,
and very overgrown. Luckily most of it was poison oak and stuff with
thorns, so there’s that. I decided to approach the situation in full high speed
attack, reasoning the oak and thorns couldn't touch a moving target.
Carl chose the graceful ballet method, dancing and diving away from
any and all plant matter along the route. Neither of us got Poison
Oak rash, so both seemed affective.
Carl's
friend Jay owns a house in Ojai, with a pool, so the decision was
made to stop there for the day. Stripping naked in the driveway
we washed the remaining poison oak contamination from our belonging
and headed for the pool. We soon found Jays hover board, and spent
most of the afternoon trading off lounge chairs for smooth glides to the fridge
for more beer.
Scouring the maps
I found a faint line dotted through the Angeles Crest National forest
labeled as the Rincon Truck Trail. By my quick fingers measurements
we could ride about 90 miles and camp by a creek before a final days
push of 40 miles to get things finished off.
The Starbucks at
4pm on a rainy Thursday afternoon in Tujunga, CA is a surprisingly
happening place. Carl consumed his only caffeinated drink of the entire
trip, we made sure our flashy lights where charged up and began an urban
assault across the metropolis of Los Angeles.
I
felt the tug of the familiar state, but wanted to cling to the feelings
of wildness that had permeated me during the journey. We did some
wheelies across the finish line, then broke out the last of
our food stores and the jet boil and made some lunch.
Those
minutes spent on the curb, sharing a bag of freeze-dried cherry
chocolate moose with a close friend where the best of the trip.
It was in that moment that the enormity and surreal beauty of the trip
set in. We rode form my house to the stupid race, and it was awesome.

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