Catch up on the earlier Chapters: 1, 2
Day 3
Yesterday’s winds were gone, the air was clear and cool, and I was looking forward to a nice day of riding. Traffic was light and I could spend time looking for landmarks that I could remember. There were not many of them as the whole area has built up over the years.
I was in awe as I followed I-10 to I-5. I had never seen such roads! At Claremont there was a triple flyover; four levels of road in one place! I had never seen such sights!
I had also never seen grooved pavement and the wiggles gave me a bit of worry as I tried to get used to it.
On the way to the exit that I needed I passed one for “Olive St.” Later that trip I would encounter the sign for “Roscoe St.,” exits with the names of my paternal grandparents.
The low fuel light had come on sometime back and, as it didn’t look like I was going to make it to the Sunland Blvd exit, I pulled off the freeway and promptly got lost. I refueled and figured my way back to the freeway.
In an apparent effort to discourage gasoline use, California has a new type of nozzle on gas pumps and they do not work well with motorcycles, shutting off too early and not allowing any further fill. The entire time I was in the state I was always about a gallon short of a full tank after gas stops.
At last! Sunland Boulevard, and many memories of the area came rushing back, such the gas station on the corner at the exit. As I made my way up the road I could see many familiar sights. Often the only difference was that the area has grown up over the years. The Viennese-styled restaurant is still there and the Von’s supermarket is in the same place, even though it’s now called “Ralph’s”.
The intersection at Mt. Gleason St. was unchanged, right down to the convenience store on the corner and the restaurant across the street. Hill was a couple of 4-way stops away and there I was at 7743. I’d made it.
Lynn had given me directions to get there and I followed them right to the house. 7743, that was the address. I pulled into the driveway and shut off the engine. I’d made it.
* * *
I parked across the street from the former von Groff house and rested while I took some pictures and lit a mini-cigar in celebration. Sadly, no one was home and I had to be content with photos of the outside.
When I knocked on the door Lynn’s mom, Mona, answered. “Lynn’s still is school,” she informed me, “She’s got one week left.”
I was flabbergasted. In my worldview, school had already gotten out. All schools had already gotten out. I had not considered the possibility that hers had not.
While Mona went back to her vacuuming, I tried to decide what to do.
I was now officially halfway through my trip and had made my primary goal. I had a nice ride up Big Tujunga Canyon ahead of me but first I wanted to get some lunch. I had passed the Jack-In-The-Box where Lynn and I shared our first kiss so I decided to eat there.
I didn’t know what to do. I had planned on spending only a few days with Lynn, then on to Frisco. I had arrived on Monday so I decided to spend the week there and play the trip back by ear. Again, I had planned to camp out, but the von Groffs graciously allowed me to sleep on their couch.
While Lynn finished her semester I spent the next few days riding around the Los Angeles area, taking in the sights. One day I took the Universal Studios tour, another I worked with Lynn’s dad, Jim, at his mechanic’s shop.
Afternoons and evenings there was Lynn, adorable, lovable, Lynn. One of the first days I helped her practice for her track meet on the upcoming Saturday. We’d ride the San Fernando Valley, stopping in at Jack or Shakey’s Pizza for something to eat, with kisses in the parking lot.
That weekend the family attended the track meet where both of the daughters were participating. Here was taken the only photograph of the entire trip, with me, Lynn, Mona, and Lynn’s sister Cheryl. Lynn was quite the runner. While in high school she set the state record for the 440 yard run for high school girls.
The von Groffs had a bathtub instead of a shower and I was so shy that I declined to bathe the entire time that I was there. I must have had some pretty good BO by the time the weekend rolled around!
Saturday evening there came a phone call. Jim’s old friend, Al, was calling to see if there was an extra boy hanging around. Jim handed the phone to me and Dad explained that Mom was worried about me and, wasn’t it about time that I came home? I meekly protested that I hadn’t gone to Frisco yet but Dad convinced me to head back. I started back the next day, returning over the same route.
The last time that I had ridden a motorcycle up Big Tujunga Canyon I managed to run out of gas and Mona had to rescue me. This time I fueled up before the ride but had a different worry. Severe forest fires had devastated the national forest the year before and many roads in the area were closed. Checking the web I could find no specifics and, starting up the canyon, I didn’t know if the road went through to Palmdale or not.
Much of the ride was familiar as the road climbs from the canyon bottom. The road quickly climbs up the steep sides, several times crossing impressive bridges spanning deep ravines. Lots of curves and very light traffic enhanced the pleasure of the ride.
Evidence of the fire was everywhere. I had recalled a pine/juniper forest but most of the landscape was barren, testimony of the intensity of the conflagration. To me, though, the scenery was reminiscent of the desert and held a stark beauty of its own.
And the road was mine. I only saw a few cars on the entire trip. I felt a bit of sadness when the curves came to an end and I encountered the traffic of the Antelope Valley. After a bit of traffic I entered I-15 to Barstow and my hotel for the night.
When traveling I like to eat well and avoid the “greasy spoon” type of places. Criss-crossing the west as I have over the years, I have started a running joke; someone will mention some out-of-the-way place and I’ll pipe up, “Dell, Montana? I know a good place to eat, there!” Well, Barstow has one of the best steakhouses in the west.
I returned to the motel and once again sat outside sipping a drink and smoking a cigar. No one came by so I turned in for the evening.
Day 4
Another disappointing breakfast at the Days Inn, but I had read about a place in Amboy that was semi-famous so I figured I could grab an early lunch there. No such luck. The grille was shut down, as I guess it was past tourist season. I had my choice of candy bars and soda. I chose a bottle of water and went on my way.
As I mentioned, I prefer to take loop trips, this year, however, I wanted to ride the original routes. I-40 ended at Newberry Springs in 1970 and picked back up at the mountain pass above Needles. After topping off fuel I exited the freeway onto Historic Route 66.
Of the four trips that I made between New Mexico and California in 1972-73 only the last was over the newly-completed freeway from Barstow to Seligman. One was over the 89A/I-10 route and the other two were over old 66 in California and Arizona. The biggest frustration was the traffic behind trucks on the two-lane and traveling at night was iffy because of the lack of 24-hour gas stations at the time. When crossing the newly-completed I-40 in the early summer of 1973 the traffic was so light that I was able to stop on the middle of the road in the middle of the night to take a leak.
Almost immediately I ran into trouble. The macadam of the road had deteriorated and was badly in need of repair. Many tire-sized cracks were in the road and I continuously had to watch for gaps that could break a sidewall or bend a rim. I decided that if the road was this bad past Ludlow then I would have to abandon this portion of the trip by necessity and return to the freeway. To my great relief, the road conditions improved greatly at Ludlow.
In the ghost town of Bagdad I found another Whiting Brothers station surrounded by a fence and junkyard dogs. It was in pretty poor shape and the demise of Bagdad was one more example of a small town vanishing.
Back in 1970 I had first noticed the displays beside the road. The white sand of the flat desert of the dry lakes along the road had messages laid out in the black volcanic rock from elsewhere. In later years I’d seen the same thing in the salt flats along US-50. Most were of the “John loves Mary” variety although there were a few political messages (“End war now”) and even an enigmatic “RP fuck it”. I thought of leaving my own statement but I didn’t collect any rocks from elsewhere and I didn’t want to disturb any of the other messages. Some were obviously old, some were shrines with cairns and crosses but most were made of local rock. Surprisingly many were obviously made of stones from elsewhere, brought a large distance to make a statement.
It was on this stretch of road that I realized that I was in the perfection of enjoyment. I could see the road before me, going over the hill twenty miles hence. I was stopped in the middle of the highway and not a single soul was coming or going. “I like this,” I decided. I want to do more.
The road connected back with Interstate 40 at the top of the hill above Needles. I was low on gas and had planned on fueling there but as I approached I decided that I could make Arizona handily and could avoid one final encounter with the worthless California gasoline nozzles.
I had to backtrack slightly to get to the turnoff to old 66. The road from the freeway was a winding track, over hilltops and across arroyos towards Oatman.
Another great ride! Turns and dips through the arroyos and no traffic! Oatman is known for the wild burros that inhabit the town and there were several burros (and considerable burro-droppings) in the center of town. I had looked forward to a cold beer in the local version of Los Ojos but the intense density of tourists dampened my thirst. I pushed on.
Tight turns around ridges and ravines, with spectacular vistas all the way. When researching the road I learned that travelers in the 1930s would often hire a local to drive their car down the road, as the hard turns and drop-offs were too intimidating. Today, even on a motorcycle, one has to be totally aware of the road as the turns are frequent and the drop-offs are steep.
Too soon I reached the end of the mountains and crossed the valley towards Kingman. Taking the back way into Kingman I was reminded that I-40 bypassed one of the prettiest little canyons in the area. Old 66 wound through the valley next to the train tracks and into the original downtown. A few of the buildings looked familiar as I turned onto Andy Devine Blvd, following the original route.
The traffic was light heading up the valley and I could take time to enjoy the view. The area was growing and it was easy to see why; clean air, mild climate and glorious vistas.
Every time that I had driven the US-66 loop I passed by the Grand Canyon Caverns and each time I told myself, “I’m going to stop one of these days.” Well, this trip was the excuse that I needed and I booked a night at the local motel. The ads on the Internet looked promising, the motel featuring a bar and cable TV, and the local restaurant advertised buffets for dinner and breakfast along with a full menu to choose from.
I pulled into the motel parking lot under a banner that proclaimed “Bar Open.” At the front desk I told the girl, “You’ve got my two favorite words on your sign outside!” She looked uncomfortable and replied, “Well, the bar is only open on Fridays and Saturdays.” Disappointing, but she did have some package beers available so I could wash the down the dirt from the road.
Got into the room and discovered surprise #2. Not only did they not have cable TV, the local channels were barely viewable. Not a big problem, I had plenty of music on my computer to listen to for the evening’s entertainment.
By now it was dinnertime and I was ready for some good grub. The restaurant was at the top of the entrance to the caverns a mile or so from the motel. On the road there were signs proclaiming, “Steaks!” I was looking forward to a large piece of dead animal flesh.
I knew that things were not as I had been led to believe when I entered the dining room and saw their advertised buffet totally empty. In fact, the whole place was mostly empty except for the bored guy behind the counter.
“What’ll ya have?”
“A steak and a beer?”
“Well, the only steak that we’ve got is a chicken-fried steak.”
“I’ll take a burger. You got the beer, right?”
“Yeah, that we’ve got.”
While waiting for dinner I looked over the place and saw the board with the prices for the cavern tour. The number that I saw was $49.95. Fifty bucks for an hour’s walk? I reconsidered my plans as I munched my dinner.
Again I sat outside of my room smoking a little cigar, waiting to visit with my neighbors. As this was off-season, I had no neighbors and I went inside to bed.
Delightful story. I miss bike touring.
I miss bicycle touring. There, fixed it for you.
Says the “man” who failed his Turing test.
Ah, that last picture…
Thanks, Hobbit! I’ve really enjoyed this series!
Thanks, glad you’re enjoying it.
That was my desktop wallpaper at work.
Great write up Hobbit.
Shakey’s Pizza
I remember Shakey’s. There was one in Durango CO back in the day and is the place I discovered that thin crust pizza is the only pizza worth eating.
Also, nice bell bottoms….hahaha
Thin crust is as (insert preferred deity here) _______________ intended.
https://goo.gl/images/PVvNYs
Has “thin crust” shifted in meaning to mean the opposite of deep dish? I understood it to mean crust thin like a cracker, with regular-old Neapolitan pizza well thicker than that.
While a “real”/neopolitan pizza crust is thicker than a cracker crust, I do like a cracker type crust too. The abominations of crust the likes of pizza hut or papa johns do is a sin against humanity.
They’ve got fun at Shakey’s, rarely pizza.
I was maybe 8 or 9 and had never seen such a mess of cheese and grease as a Shakey’s pepperoni pizza. It was glorious. My mom was an eat your oatmeal and like it sort of woman so I was living a sheltered life.
Shakey’s is truly a childhood memory.
Nice short shorts on Lynn.
A great story and a great adventure, Thanks Halfling!
Lot of solitude and melancholy. My kind is trip.
One day soon, I’d like to get my sister and dad together for a repeat of our week-long ramble around southern New Mexico. We visited White Sands, Lincoln (site of the Lincoln County War and made infamous by men like Billy the Kid), the catwalk in Glenwood, Little Fanny mine, loads of long-gone ghost towns, and more I’m forgetting now, almost twenty years later.
Las Cruces: worst Walmart in the world
you were warned
I had also never seen grooved pavement and the wiggles gave me a bit of worry as I tried to get used to it.
AKA the cheese grater.
grooved pavement, fresh oil, and open grate bridge. Theses words are motorcyclist profanity.
Ill add one…..”emergency lane”
That’s a new one to me.
Forced into or as a result of construction?
Oh, I was forced over once by a semi-driver coming into my lane. I hate the ‘breakdown lane’ cause that where all the rocks, glass, shredded tires, starter bolts, lugnuts, etc. end up.
yup: that is the heart of my discontent with bicycle lanes
yup: that is the heart of my discontent with bicycle lanes
Ok. I understand. I have been directed around an accident or two in the emergency lane. I forgot deer and moose crossing. I had a few deer in front of me yesterday they were treating the road like a path. I thought they were cyclists at first.
Who is that young punk? Looks kind of anti-establishment to me.
I love this series. Thanks for contributing, Hobbit!
Really enjoying the story, nice writing style.
Fun read Hobbit Thanks
I could drive forever on roads like that.
This is a great story. Thanks!
The Viennese-styled restaurant is still there
You ate there, right?
When I knocked on the door Lynn’s mom, Mona, answered. “Lynn’s still is school,” she informed me, “She’s got one week left.”
I was flabbergasted. In my worldview, school had already gotten out. All schools had already gotten out. I had not considered the possibility that hers had not.
The first time I was out west, I went out with my one set of grandparents in their RV. I was 11 or 10. We arrived in Sedona sometime in late August, after the locals started school, as I found out thankfully not the hard way.
My grandparents and I were wandering around Sedona. We stopped in one store, and the elderly woman running the store glared at me the whole time we were in the store. At some point, she said to me, “Why aren’t you in school?” I said, “School hasn’t started for me, I’m not from here, I’m with my grandparents.” The woman didn’t believe me, and my grandmother had to bail me out (figuratively, not literally).
It’s good that your future wife’s parents were cool about you showing up like you did.
The macadam of the road had deteriorated
I didn’t know anyone outside the Mid-Atlantic used “macadam”.
The cigars you had were good?
Thanks again for writing this up!
“I didn’t know anyone outside the Mid-Atlantic used “macadam”.”
Try laying ‘bitumen’ on someone, just to see the confused looks.
Speak English! We are in America!
/Asphalt
I got enough when I used “macadam” around New Engalnders.
It’s what they put on their rotaries.
Whatever term you use somebody is going to pitch about it.
What an Oleaginous Way to put it……………….
You know, as much as we both love German food, I don’t recall ever eating there.
As I mentioned about my father, they pretty much figured out what was going on. Her dad once told me, “Once she met you she pretty much lost interest in other boys.” Still, it was pretty cool that they’d allow a teen-aged boy around their teen-aged girl.
I enjoy a cigar now and then but a full-sized one tends to be a bit much. I discovered the Macanudo Ascots that have the flavor but you have to remember :DON’T INHALE. I forget sometimes. The past few tins of Macanudo were lacking in quality so I tried some Partagas puritos. Very fine, and are probably my new favorite.
Thanks again to all for your comments. You all have re-kindled my writing bug.
… Hobbit
Don’t let an Austrian hear you call their food “German food”.
It’s been quite a long time since I had a cigar. I made the mistake of inhaling only once.
Kennedy looks Good here, FBN
https://youtube.com/watch?v=ovtQ7B1qaoE
She always looks good.
I see she is still trying to talk all the fucking time.
Not as anorexic as i remember.
Babies! Making Skinny Women Thicc, For a Million Years!
*swoon
The future is now !
I.Cant.Even Fuck, People put themselves on Camera with Uniformed views? How embarrassing………
well they are willing to believe there are multiple genders.
I honestly wished that shocked me. Sadly, it was exactly what I expected.
Enjoying taking the ride with you, Hobbit!
Concealed Carry saves the day again.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/07/08/watch-pistol-packing-waitress-defends-george-webb-co-worker-during-attack.html
Avett Brothers cancel sold-out Troutdale show after man enters venue with gun
Buried lede:
The comments quickly descended into the usual gun arguing, completely ignoring the usual cop behavior exhibited.
They were being overly cautious due to stalking concerns. They had an incident a few nights back at Red Rocks Colorado which caused the band and crew to run off the stage.
Unrest in Haiti
*Photo taken right before the unrest
That could just as easily be Detroit.
Thanks for the Ramos column link yesterday! I saw it later but I don’t think you were still around.
I wonder if these groups would be allowed armed escort?
I am sure they have that. Funny the story never mentioned what caused this ‘unrest’.
From the article:
Nice article Hobbit. I just got back from an all day ride with the Mrs to Lake Erie and back. A few hundred miles round trip. I wish more people rode just so they know how good it feels. Peaceful, freedom and contentment are 3 words that come to mind. I plan on making it out to the Badlands this year as long as the Boss doesn’t complain to much.