Wednesday, June 22, 2016

cartour 33


Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, June 7th, 8th and 9th

After the float

Stanley, ID to Cascade Reservoir, ID




     Drive, drive but not too far from Stanley to Cascade ID and thence to a beautiful reservoir about the size of Rhode Island with a lovely sward of green grassland all around. Series of camps along the east side of which we took the first. Biked north for a ways wound up in golf course; bit disheartening. Windy on arrival but cleared and warm enough for a swim later.
     Much time on secondary roads in the Paloose; nice.
Paloose country without the wheat

     Next day to Walla Walla and a night at the Marriott Courtyard which was very new and pretty tricked out design-wise. Dinner was a starter glass of wine with a small but delicious pizza at one place (124?) followed by a sandwich and salad, both rated indifferent by S., at a place called Graze around the corner from 124.
     Off to Wenatchee next morning after breakfast at Bacon and Eggs in Walla. Great river loop bike path ride and off to Leavenworth and way up Icicle Road to camp. Walk next morning from near our camp (one of several on the creek) over river at last camp (Big Pine which S. liked best) looping back to start over two bridges.
     Home to island next day; long ferry line.

Note: spent a lot of time on trip listening to Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson; bit of a slough, never finished.








Thursday, June 9, 2016

cartour 32

Friday June 3, 2016

and then there was the float which was the goal of the rest more or less


     Only the Georgetown and the Montana left of the RV’s plus Patrick, Anita and Grace with their sleek road car and dome tent like us. Sharon spending serious logistical effort to move parts of the tent (fly, ground sheet and tent itself) to sunny areas throughout the campground to dry in the rising sun. Host eyed her with some trepidation on his drive-through. Dreamed of ending some camping trip accidentally inside some high security government facility manned by mostly 8th graders who were serious and conscientious but not too much so that they were unwilling to assist a random interloper out; just like real 8th graders.
     Drive, drive 4 hours or 5 down Idaho 95 to Idaho 55 at New Meadows on it through high up over a deep river canyon, the Payette.
Out to another highway north to Stanley our destination. Lunch with Judie, Tobie, Chris and Deon at Bridge St. Meet with tour guy Jared get dry bags and some basic info. Go to another drinks place. Got a cone with Tobie across the street from bar after first drink. Big ass meet with all boaters for wet suits, bootie, etc. Jared spoke succinctly but at length; put our names on cup, water bottle cap and side. Sub guide Bobby recited all 20-25 names of boaters at end correctly. Unreal.

     Sharon told me back at the hotel that we were not going down in blow-up rafts but in rowboats. I was aghast at this but she said she wasn’t sure. I couldn’t figure if we had to wear the wetsuits or we just could. I guess the orientation meeting left holes in our understanding; I hope we will be alright. I’ll have my iPhone and in the wilderness that is one thing you can rely on I heard on the radio on the way out. We have a 30 day trial of Sirius Radio that came with our new Subaru Outback. Surely we will be alri….

cartour 31


Lake Wenactchee, WA to Hammer Creek, ID

Thursday June 2, 2016



     More fire toast in the am. Back roads east - to Pullman, Colfax, Grangeville. Cherries and chips and cheese dip and all that. Safeway in Pullman looking for gasoline (not an easy town for gas stations). Shoestrings from Riteaid. Why did we go to Safeway? South of Grangeville on 95 to old 95 and a bridge over the lower Salmon and thence to Hammer Creek Recreation Area and a solid spot in the high grass beside the river on the last day of salmon season in these parts. Conversed with camper neighbors Patrick and Anita and their dog Grace. Several, say 7, RV’s in residence for the evening; a super cool one called Shadow Rider or ShadowLands or something left at dusk. We were concerned that the high clearance trailer in the next spot with the industrial generator right on the ground up front and no puller vehicle around might be a problem when they returned thus the planting of the tent in the high grass far from that business. When the fellows did return one was tempted to ask if Snow White was coming so white bearded and compact they seemed. A quiet and restful night.

cartour 30

Langley, WA to Stanley, ID

Wednesday, June 1, 2016



Out of the gate early; early afternoon.  Entertaining but time expensive side-trips looking for things lost or left somewhere on Whidbey. REI for gas and carabiners. I-90ed to Lake Wenatchee and Glacier View campground, set up, biked to Headwaters Pub for fish and chips and beer. Swam in lake after arriving back to camp; cold, cold, cold. Quick fire thanks to previous campers left wood and starter fiber. Odd assortment of campers. Beautiful trees and impressive blowdowns; ponderosa and douglas fir side by side. Box wine etc. bed in new tent, new sleeping equipment. Stashed bikes in bush. Experimented with various ways of making toast. All good but watch out for that taint of old grill.

Monday, May 30, 2016

cartour 29

Keystone/Marysville

New car
New Tent
New Cot
This is really my cot in our tent

     Tripped up to Keystone (jumping off point for the Port Townsend/Coupeville ferry for one thing) to grab a spot for the next 2 days at Keystone Campground ( of Fort Casey State Park?). Met Joan the camp host (ex cook at swa) took site 12 on the point, borrowed chair from Joan to mark.
Moved in next day with new tent and cot. Rode bikes to Coupeville, met ex-Langley cop who had opened a bike shop behind Engels dairy.
     Hosted Deon and John and Peggy in the evenings. New car emergency recalled for  steering failure possibility. Drove to Laurie's house, met tow truck and off to Marysville. Picked up Subaru Forester and headed for Columbia City rather than protest march at March Point. Biked to Zootopia at the Varsity and then S. got a resale ticket for Leon Russell at the Neptune and I caught the Link back to CC. Good time.

Monday, April 11, 2016

cartour 28

La Quinta Inn, Twin Falls, Idaho to Umatilla National Forest, Oregon

Sunday, April 10, 2016

all we are now

Tried numerous paved but perfunctory routes before being turned by 8 inches of old snow. Some of the little towns along the way were places we could maybe stay around for a while.  
Granite - wooden Lil Abnerville
Biked around some town that even had the tidy Grants County Fairground but the town I wouldn't want to really spend a while in. 




cartour 27

Cave Lake to Twin Falls

Saturday, April 9, 2016


10 miles on Emigrant Trail next to Winecup Ranch


Breakfast and drive corolla up gravel until it started to look sketchy and past sign stating road maintained only May to October.

Off toward Twin Falls.

Took lite lunch and a dos equis at Emigrant Trail sign 2 miles off 93 at Winecup Ranch entrance. Longish bike ride into the edge of the hills, jackrabbits plentiful.

Looked in vain for old wine bar in old town Twin Falls; old down dying (again)
Found swank joint on Snake Rive canyon called Elevation 487. Great setting, mediocre food. The wine was a white from the Kim Crawford winery and was real good I thought it tasted strongly of grapefruit.

We decamped so to speak to the La Quinta on Pole Line Road storing the bikes in a room behind the lobby desk which was a relief from humping them up the back stairs as had been the case on so many evenings previously.

the land itself is large


BLM on left, Wincup on right




















Saturday, April 9, 2016

cartour 26

Cathedral Canyon Campground, Nevada to Cave Lake Campground, Nevada

Friday, April 8, 2016



Ely, NV library - spent a quiet hour


Brooding above Cave Lake.



Good wood.


We breakfast and bike the desert loop trail I had ridden the night before.
State  Highway 93 all day. Steak and cocktails in Ely in the basement of the Palace Hotel. Back tracked to Cave Lake state thing. Good wood but hard weather, gusty, chill, low clouds, old snow, etc. Creepy but nice. We pedaled up a ways on a long gravel road into the hills. A plaque on a rock cliff above the road told of Billy's Rock with a picture of Billy in his gear and his dates. One or more families from Marin County took the site next to us but also below so it was like a stage what with their big old bright prison yard light. But they were very nice; we watched them. An adult female of their group and probably her child or nephew and a nice dog came up and she explained and apologized for the chaos and rumpus and we said something like "Oh, its entertaining!" which I was thinking afterward might not have been the right approach but in the long run it was trivial next to the people/things in the site above us. They never showed a light nor made a sound in their Cruise America RV and left before dawn.

Friday, April 8, 2016

cartour 25

Ely, Nevada

Friday, April 8, 2016 (actual)

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Page, AZ to Panaca, NV


Cathedral Cave, NV



     Leaped on the bikes after a breakfast at the Rancho Grill recommended by the Catalina guy over Denny's and proceeded to something called the Rim Trail at edge of town; not safe for us we realized very soon after starting out. Back to the Safeway. Mild but persistent panic over output of AC in Corolla. Phone calls and off to B and B Automotive for advice. Good guy explained to me about his son who was into championship off road quad-mobiling since the machine he rode was parked next to Corolla (really long-travel suspension). AC seemed to be working after guy put his hand around the cold tube from the compressors. Out of Page toward Cedar City, UT home of Southern Utah University.
     The two-laners we've been using would be a great test bed for the self-driving car. Over great snowy pass and down into the totally bustling college town for a mocha. French Bistro looked okay until S got close enough to read a short typed essay taped into the window presumably by the proprietor about evolution being bad science which turned S right around as though it was the mark of Satan, which it kind of was, you know? Found a huge coffee shop that seemed to cater to the students at SUU and among many, many random postings, quotes and classic photos was a sign saying, "You can't fix stupid." So I guess it was a wash, again.
    There are a lot of the washes, the seasonal flash creeks, around these parts also, by the way. We moved on to Panaco and the Cathedral Canyon Campground in which there was on site left which cost us $27 because it was electrified. Small largely unsung state camp with a strange topography of mud sculptured cliffs and a pleasant bike/hike trail loop often using the wash in the middle of the draw. Firewood the only drawback since it was green which I honestly could not discern not being very familiar with pinon and juniper; S questioned the ranger who showed up next morning, who admitted to running out of the good stuff. Guy two RV's down who said he had radar insisted late in the evening to the single woman sleeping in her car next to us that a big thunderstorm was 50 miles to the south and moving our way probably arriving around midnight. I was totally cool with this news since we had our tent under a ramada and I was losing patience with the fire by that time. S soon down and later me; some rain some time in the night.

Ramada after tent. Also bad firewood.

cartour 24

Ely, Nevada
Friday, April 8, 2016

Wednesday, April 6, 2016 (actual)

 

Down to the White House





     Out of Springerville on the way to Canyon de Chelly and Page, (Arizona, probably).
Canyon de shae or Tseyi is an area controlled by no doubt a fraught partnership of the Navajos and the Federals because I suppose of its astounding existence. I don't know if the Natives would have bothered though if the river hadn't been down in the bottom, likely not. Navajo teens and elders selling jewelry and pottery at the overlooks. Need a guide for all access except one trail from rim to ruin in the canyon called White House (built by the ancient ones before the Navajos showed up). S and I took that. Kids were very serious, the elder sellers tired of the job. Walk to bottom was pretty sweet (two tunnels!). Bought a cold Gaterade from NA near the ruin where all the guide pickups were parked. The orange flavored Gaterade was a more subtle even sophisticated beverage than I remembered from a previous experience a long time ago. Snatches of Navajo tongue were in evidence. One kid I spoke with concerning an etching on shard of some material, rock or clay, had a marble sized pink plastic rose earring that I thought was kind of sharp. I told him so but then didn't buy anything cause we had already gotten some good stuff earlier so it was maybe a wash for him.
     Page in the early dark. Passed a seriously popular converted gas station called Big John's Texas Barbeque on search for a motel. Saw a sign for cute old fashioned motel street or some such and pulled into a Rodeway Inn where S charmed an already super charming dude at the desk (I was watching from the car, not happily) who sent us to the Red Rock Motel on the street of cute old fashioned motels even though the Rodeway had this huge flashing neon sign saying "VACANCY" presumably under the control of the super charmer, I also observed, unhappily. The Red Rock was swell though, under the management of a guy born on Catalina, the island off Los Angeles; it had two rooms and was just a step away from the Texas BBQ. We had the brisket no bun (S) and the pork sandwich (me) (duh) plus some local beer at a table where the gas pumps had been. Salted in the shell peanuts in a bucket. Country western band out there too, fairly enthusiastically wailing away on J. Cash, et al.


Tuesday, April 5, 2016

cartour 23

Springerville, Arizona
Tuesday, April 5, 2016

   
Silver City public - not a big photographic day



     Said goodbyes to our people at the Gila Hot Springs and redid the long twisty back to Silver City in route to Canyon de Chelly national cliff dwelling. S invited the 29 year olds to Langley. Why just them?
     Back in Silver City things went a little haywire in the afternoon: in the library I was joined by an old woman wearing a cloth over her mouth and nose and one green glove who began to have trouble with her off brand tablet which led to a long series of people trying to help her get rolling past one digital snafu after another with ultimate goal of logging into a genealogy site; she was not the least a crazy but really naive with computers, S went off on bike to get coffee, an assortment of knives and some exercise and I met her a couple doors from the library at a Mexican place where the front door led into the kitchen and the back into the tables, S continued her bike wander so I moved the car under a tree and mounted the bike and visited a vape shop, 3 bike stores and many back streets with interesting old deserty houses finding the city's road layout bizarre. After 2 or 3 hours of this kind of thing including the inevitable ransacking of the car for things hidden long ago we took our two leftover tacos and hit the road to Springerville, AZ and this totally acceptable America's Best Value Inn where we finished those tacos and did laundry. Springerville feels more like the unvarnished West than even the Gila Hot Springs which except for the hot springs was pretty unvarnished.

Sunset on the high desert from the bathroom of America's Best Value Inn room 249

cartour 22

Gila Hot Springs Camp

Monday, April 4, 2016


5 miles up trail Gila dip spot

up one frame from dip spot

up two frames from d. s.

third frame up from d.s.


      Really fine outing today after the morning soak on foot 8 miles to a remote pool on the Gila River under towering cliffs. Lunch and a dip. Few hikers; I liked the couple with the snake bite gaiters and the nice pair of cattle dogs. Good section down in a deep canyon with a tiny tributary of the Gila.
     Hustled back in hopes of catching the Doc Campbell Post store open. Made it but Doc was mostly interested in selling souvenirs not food and really down on credit cards. Got two cups of ice cream and couple diet cokes plus a dozen eggs. Made coke float - real good.
     Kiwis on Surly bikes were there; discussed several important matters including Subaru autos; see previous heart break note.
     Emily the slender intense one looking for work was there also and when a forest service truck came up she leaped into action chatting them up re employment. Shared carrots and her issues regarding work search in the wild. Store had wifi and an impressive collection of stuffed animals. No alcohol though.
      Later, post soak, juggler gifted us with two brews; said he had been on the road for 17 years. Young couple next to him and us were also nomads, the guy a fly-fishing guide his girlfriend a food service manager at dude ranches. The latter move every 6 months to the next outdoor work opportunity; they were 29.


Yep

Looking at at least 3 k worth of machine here.

cartour 21

Gila Hot Springs Camp

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Silver City to Gila cliff dwellings 


In the dwelling


     Taking the bike out the back door of the motel 6 got in the way of an angry young woman with abrasions on her face. Similarly the night before at the Tre Rosat there was a hulking fellow bundled in layers of long worn coats nursing a mug of coffee concerning whom S ultimately asked if his bill could be added to ours which waitress seemed to accept but it never showed up on our ticket; that sort of thing was there in the background to the charming old west restoration for us passers-through that Silver City was working.
     Anyway they had cheap gasoline and we got a bunch of it and headed up New Mexico 15 to the ancient cliff condos of the Mongollon people; too bad we didn't get a bunch of food.
New Mexico 15 was a narrow, swoopy little thing that in 28 miles and two hours got us to this private campground beside the Gila River with 3 beautiful hot pools for the strange, even uncanny price of $6 per person per night. The place was run by a very hands-on woman in jeans and a cowboy hat named Carla. There were also maybe 100 goats half of whom were way capricious kids gamboling and throwing their little heads this way and that as little goats will. Fortunately all these were fenced.
     The guests at this never-never land camp were also interesting in their diversity and laid -backedness: next door was a family of traveling entertainers (I saw he juggled; not sure what else or what the wife and two little girls did), one night in the southernmost hot pool we listened while two animated young women in bikinis chattered on a really disparate number of subjects from the importance of following your heart to the problems one faced trying out the hula hoops at Walmart, a slender and intense young woman looking to find paid wilderness work, a couple New Zealanders on really nice bikes riding from Los Angeles to Florida who said Subarus were garbage, breaking our hearts and trampling on our recent car dreams.
      One of the many good things about this camp was that with the shared pools we met and chatted with many fellow travelers which doesn't happen in the state parks for instance since often the only community location is the toilet.
     The cliff dwellings were well supervised but resonant with the old people who built and used the nifty habitation for a generation and moved on.
     It was however another 3 coat, 2 pants night for me; I believe S has a better sleeping bag. 


Nighttime temperature datum

Hot pool at Gila Hot Springs Camp - one of three



Sunday, April 3, 2016

cartour 20

Silver City, New Mexico
Saturday, April 2, 2016



Cottonwood, Railroad Park, Wilcox, Arizona


     Trying to remember yesterday this morning lounging about the Motel 6; always difficult. Small roads, small towns of southeastern Arizona as mentioned. Tombstone more anomalous than tertiary what with the tourist trade but we didn't linger just the random sanican on a back street for me and out the back o' town on an even lesser road than the last according to map but it, as has been true, was smooth and swoopy . Drove northeasterly all day with a very pleasant interlude in the town of Wilcox which was incredibly bright: white sun, white vehicles, white pavement, low profile and not a lot of trees although the ones in the lunch spot in what they called Railroad Park were stunning.
     Hit the library and the Safeway, both comforting and satisfying in their ways except the bread selection was poor, at the Safeway. Got a Safeway card anyway. Went across the street after lunch in the park (see above) and straight into a wine shop. Courtly wine woman had terrible allergy but was inspiring and deeply into the vintages. Left with a bottle of something Rhone.
Entered New Mexico.
Arrived Silver City and began looking for bookstore cause S wanted a topological atlas of the state. Bookstores inaccessible so tried booking a room at the historic Palace Hotel; full. Cut to the chase and hit the Motel 6 for $50.
Savings on room resulted in dinner at Tre Rosat. Chose the Moroccan pizza with harrisa paste?
S mentioned evidence of human suffering at Walmart where she had shopped earlier, picking up such items as new earbuds and recently off-patent antacid for me (I had a little pain) and, yes, the topological atlas of New Mexico!

No walking and no biking but a good day nevertheless. I'd say Wilcox, Arizona was the highlight although there were more churches than I would have liked.


Wilcox library

Wilcox library solarium




Saturday, April 2, 2016

cartour 19

Wilcox, Arizona
Public Library
April 1, 2016


Patagonia Elementary and Museum


     Slave to the blog now. Tertiary roads and towns today but yesterday was a concentrated bike of Patagonia and surrounds. Back streets and the museum/elementary school. Eventually down a dirt road to the creek and cottonwoods conserved by the Nature Conservancy since 1966. Biked through the trees by the clear stream on the old railway route. Must have had lunch. Off to the 17 minutes away Patagonia Lake State Park where we had made a reservation couple of days before, or was it weeks; have to check with S. on that. Slotted into #14 ten feet above the lake. Set up and unwrapped the firewood, juniper pieces about 2 feet long and very pungent. Tried a trail after Keven the visitor center woman in the camp told me there were no legal bikeable trails around. As trail rounded end of lake it entered a cow hangout that S. found unpleasant. Looked good except for the cow shit but we turned back after a while to head to the Wagon Wheel Saloon mentioned earlier for dinner with the locals raucously at party.
     Two shots of third tier up from house tequila for me after some negotiation on the matter of hard liquor and 17 minutes of driving back to camp the upshot of which was S would drive and implicitly I would have two shots of the slightly high-tone liquor. One of the raucous stopped over to chat, name of Lars. Lars involved in local politics by virtue of wanting to quit his long term organization of the 4th of July events in Patagonia and the subsequent anxiety about who and what would happen after his exit form these duties; it got ugly. S. was sympathetic. S. said the tequila (she allowed herself one) had finally driven the stench of cow pies from her. A good but not great night in Patagonia. S. also wanted credit here for her earlier swim in the lake which is now given although honestly I can't see how it was that big a deal but I didn't do it so have no standing.
     Fire was worth it even though I dropped the top of the fire paste tube into the flames. I napped earlier probably while S. swam but the both of us passed a restful night.

Note: "Ovens of Patagonia" best cinnamon rolls and bread.


Patagonia Main Street

Old Patagonia train station

Creek and Cottonwoods as it once was more often around about

Immense old broken thing

Pretty but poopy although you can't see the pies so well but trust me

Patagonia Lake very sweet and, as mentioned, S. went in

Friday, April 1, 2016

cartour 18

Patagonia, Arizona
Thursday, March 31, 2016


Some of our new friends



Classic breakfast of fried bread, fried hard-boiled egg and Nando sauce; delicious as ever. Two hour bike ride on the 21 mile loop of Ajo Mountain Road, Washboard gravel but cool and exhilarating. Stopped at the Why Not market in Why for ice cream bars and diet coke which we deserved 100% also. Back on the occasionally necessary I-8 to big old Tucson and right on state route 83 and 82 into Patagonia to check it out and visit with Penny and Rob recently of Langley. Area has transformed from Sorona desert to something closer to southern California landscape. P and R treated us to a night in their guest house high on a hill overlooking the village. We went back to the saloon in Patagonia where S and I had earlier stopped in for a margarita. Good visit with P and R mostly on Langley issues including discussion about the chicken, duck, pit-bull dude off Bayview Road and what might be done. Also a good story about a single Quechua Indian woman and child who spoke neither Spanish or English who somehow made it from the border to relatives in Alabama.
Good tubbing and sleep and we deserved....


Patio Cabot

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

cartour 17


Yuma Heritage Library
Yuma Arizona
Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Not sure about the flying thing but the poached eggs were perfect
Breakfast at the Yuma Landing Bar and Grill was included in the price of the room at the historic Coronado Motel. Pretty yummy considering. Biked the wetland/river bikeway along the Colorado and shopped the Del Sol Market next to the motel. Got queso, chips, avocados, fruit but they had no pico. Stopped by the Yuma Heritage Library only after S. phoned them to ask if they were a real library; turns out they were.
Bounded onto the I-8 and rode it to almost Gila Bend, turning south on Arizona 85 toward Ajo which was way bigger than one might have thought. After Ajo came the village of Why and the turn south to seek a camp spot in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. On way met several Border Patrol checkpoints in this militarized zone that seems to arise from the dysfunctional government to the south. Reminds me of the phrase "Rotor burn" from the war on mj farmers in Northern California back in the 70's. Be that as it may, the camp at Organ was an exquisite example of the federal government doing right by its camping citizens in which we must include the RV people but really...
Did the 2 hour hike to Victoria Mine which walk included a large quail herd and some ants. We were damn hungry on return but fortunately had the means to deal with that in the form of rotisseri chicken, chopped salad in a bag with crunches and dressing, plus more of the giant bag of Dona Lupe's corn chips from the aforementioned Del Sol Market in Yuma next to the historic... with some chive cream cheese S. picked up somewhere. Couple more Corona or Pacificas with real lime. Well, it was great and we deserved it 100%. Not so cold but chill and S. insisted we sleep outside of the perfectly pitched tent which we did but I gave it up at 2 am for an additional pair of pants and return to the symbolic warmth of the tent. Also spent quite a bit of time at this juncture going to the beautiful restroom, finding and working my way through the security features of my pill box contraption and locating my wallet; all of which resulted in a good sleep until around dawn when I was called for coffee.

Someday we will go to all the libraries in America just to hang out and use their wifi



Water is under strict control in Arizona


words on bridge say "Ocean to Ocean Bridge". Don't know why, but nice bikeway.



Church in Ajo

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

cartour 16

Joshua Tree National Park
Ryan Campground
Tuesday, March 29, 2016

     Got out of Ryan camp briskly after a small fire and fired bread breakfast. Bid a tearful farewell to the Thai woman's boyfriend/husband who was also breaking camp (early). Children tempting fate on the giant boulders which in addition to the Joshua Trees are the defining attraction of the park. Took a nice bike on the Geology Tour road 5 minutes from Ryan. Got about 4 miles before road turned really sandy and descended into vast valley. Sharon turned around but I descended a ways and had to walk bike back up the grade. Guy in a high-tone four wheel SUV stopped twice out of interest/concern.
Finally left the park and hit the back roads to Yuma, AZ. Joshua was like a tropical jungle compared to the burnt desert leading to Yuma except for the BLM recreation area along the deep and sumptuous Colorado where we stopped for picnic.
     Called ahead to get a reservation at the historic Coronado Motel in Yum. This is what you give yourself after two nights in a flappy tent in the low 30's. Had din-din at an Italian place in old town served by a young guy waiter who knew how to engage. Biked back to historic Coronado Motel and S. did laundry, bought a bottle of red and a pack of junior mints which was cool because, guess what, we had a greek and a caprese salad for din; I've had four mints and counting.
     One thing we have noted in these desert towns are the wide straight streets with minimal traffic; we kind of like it but it is somewhat disorienting on the bike or on foot.

some sand is okay, a lot of sand no


BLM Recreation Area off hwy 78 and part of Cibola Wildlife Refuge


Our towels at the historic Coronado Motel in Yuma, Arizona

Monday, March 28, 2016

cartour 15

Joshua Tree (the town) Library

Monday, March 28, 2016

Hour walk up the nearest mountainette fighting the wind a bit not to mention finding a route up through the rocks and cacti. Sharon took many flower shots and we almost made it to the top.
Explored local area on bike, wind still strong or stronger. Checked Hidden Valley camp and Key View then to town and library. Wind howling, light clouds. Sharon off looking for supplies. Got coffee, firewood and 16 new tent stakes. Girl at outfitters shop said that the wind would soon moderate and the other dude behind the counter who was a tourist teaser said, "It's the desert."
Wind still strong tent flapping but holding; added a couple of the new stakes anyway. Went for an 2 hour hike around dusk, built a fire chatted with the Thai woman next camp who was pretty unhappy with the whole camping in freezing desert America thing, ate something, drank something and went to bed. Woke myself at 3am to add fuzzy pants over jeans below t-shirt and 3 coats visited the outhouse across the road and crashed again; maybe I had several items from the pill box; can't be precise on that. It was a cold high desert experience; don't know how those cowboys survived.

Looking west from the park and down on the Coachella Valley, Mt. San Jacinto and Palm Springs on the left of the valley floor.