Tuesday, December 21, 2010

It never rains in southern California

I left Irvine and headed North. I don't know why, but I've always wanted to ride through Death Valley, and I'm a doer.

I came into the valley from Panamint Springs.

S7300009

Death Valley has good scenery,

S7300043

but on a note for a future trip, it would be better to camp there than just pass through.

Coming from Death Valley into Nevada, I got into Beatty, which is an interesting little place.

S7300047

While in Beatty I learned of Rhyolite: A ghost town just a few miles back the way I came. So I turned around to check it out.

S7300057

Rhyolite is a little more touristy than I hoped a ghost town would be. Not like there were vendors around or anything but I wasn't the only person there, and I was really hoping I would be.

It's pretty much what you would expect of a ghost town but with a few people walking around taking pictures. And while there is a house made out of recycled glass bottles, the strangest thing by far appears to be a giant lego "shemale" just off the main road:

S7300051

I really have no idea what they were going for, but then again, maybe I hit the nail on the head.

In Henderson, Nevada I saw my first scorpion up close that wasn't in some tank:

S7300059

Cute little thing, isn't it? It was promptly killed and flushed down a toilet. So long soldier!

While staying in Henderson, I took a trip out to the Hoover Dam.

Here's Lake Mead in all it's dammed glory:

S7300064

This is what a road runner really looks like:

S7300072

The cartoon was not true to life at all. We were all lied to by Warner Bros.! And there he goes!

S7300073

This is Hoover Dam:

S7300088

It is very large. For now that's all I have to say about it.

Outside Henderson, just past a donkey crossing, lies the fortress of Mt. Doom.

S7300108

Well, actually it's Red Rock Canyon. I was told not to miss it but again, this is a place you want to do some HIKING, not just ride through. Though I'm sure it's more majestic on a sunny day.

S7300117

As for everything else: "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas".

But no, actually I didn't visit Vegas proper. I'll have plenty of opportunities to go to Vegas later in life. I don't think I'll ever run out of people whom I can convince that is a good idea. Meanwhile I didn't have my walking shoes, or a confidence inspiring amount of cash on me, so I was actually just a few miles from Las Vegas and I didn't bother going to the strip or Freemont Street. Next time, people, next time.

So what am I doing now? When I left Henderson, it was raining. I rode all the way back to Irvine in the rain. And then it rained all the next day. All through it. It has apparently been raining here for the past 3 days or so. My friend said "In 5 years I've never seen anything like this."

Oh well, I'm supposed to be leaving.

I was all set to leave Irvine yesterday but a fellow rider, seeing me gearing up started talking to me and was telling me that "in the last 10 miles I must've seen 20 accidents." He's describing full size bumpers broken off and lying in the middle of the street and cars losing control and spinning out all over the place.

I'm not particularly scared of the rain. It's even pretty warm out here so while a little uncomfortable, the rain isn't that bad. The rain is friendly, with no lightning. Water falling from the sky is not going to keep me off my bike. It's drivers that scare me. And to me, the idea of a freeway full of SUVs that are all over the place because the people who drive them don't think they need to be careful in inclement conditions is terrifying. More terrifying than the thought of a pizza eating a baby.

So daring to be an inconvenience I called my friend and asked if I could maybe stay a few extra nights to wait out the rain at his place. He agreed. "Yeah, I would hate to have to go to a funeral for a friend because they came out to visit me."

It never rains in California,
but girl don't they warn ya,
it pours, man it pours.

S7300001

ATV cat says:
"Hell is other drivers."

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Southern California

I left Palm Desert for Irvine and took the Pines to Palms Highway (US-74). What a treat this road was. It twists and winds through the beautiful Mt. San Jacinto state wilderness.

S7300004

I think turning onto the Banning-Idyllwild Panoramic Highway (US-243) might lead to the route that's more fun, but even though I stayed on 74, I was treated to a beautiful sunset on a great road:

S7300007

I got in to Irvine and met up with my friend Alex who I haven't seen in quite a few years (like most of the people I'm visiting).

Alex works for a quaint little gaming company down here called Blizzard. You might have heard of them. Anyway, today I got a tour of their campus. Totally cool but I'm not allowed to talk about anything I've seen. It's all very top secret.

Most Wolf Raiders know to stay away from Ian, but some need to learn the hard way...

S7300019

Sunday, December 12, 2010

California, preaching on the burning shore

My last few days in Arizona were spent in Tucson and then Phoenix and in each location I stayed with an amazing adventure biker of whose passion for what we do impresses even me. I'm now seriously considering a dual-sport for my next bike. We'll see how that pans out.

Meanwhile, I made it out to California!

S7300010

Let's compare the view from where I'm staying now, to where I was 2 weeks ago:

Palm Desert:
S7300017

Sandy:
S7300001

Oh but it is good to be in SoCal.

Today I rode through Joshua Tree National Park.

If anyone tells you to skip this place, they are clearly a traveler who is only concerned with the destination. It's full of spectacular views, great big rock piles to climb on, and truffula trees:

S7300024

I also saw a dude who I can only describe as Jesus Of The Desert in his flip-flops, capris, poncho, and fly-goggle sunglasses. And the best part is, he was driving this:
S7300018

I love it here!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

I beat the cold!

The day after the Grand Canyon, I went out to Meteor Crater.

S7300003

The meteor that left this massive crater was about half the size of the parking lot at the bottom of this picture:

S7300010

About 50,000 years ago, this meteor hit the earth at about 40,000 miles per hour, and left that giant hole in the ground.

This is a picture of a rock. A rock that FELL FROM OUTER SPACE! How cool is that?!

S7300009

I decided to pass on the Petrified Forest. I was kind of close, but how much I've been pushing myself the past few days had been catching up to me and I just wanted to head back to where I was staying and relax. So I skipped the Petrified Forest and didn't bother stopping in Winslow, Arizona to stand on a corner and see if a girl in a flatbed Ford would slow down to take a look at me.

Yesterday as I was packing up my bike, I started talking to two other bikers on a couple of dual sport adventure type bikes. Turns out they're up from Argentina, traveling the world on their motorcycles and doing a documentary about water scarcity. It's a problem that a lot of the world faces that most people wouldn't imagine in this country. These guys are doing some noble work so check them out at www.motodestino.com.ar (most of it's in spanish).

It was lucky I ran into these guys though because it was Matias who pointed out that one of my bags was leaking. The side compartment of my luggage system was leaking a green fluid...that's where I've been keeping some extra radiator coolant/antifreeze since my radiator issue in Austin. Crap. Luckily it was just the cap on the bottle that crakced and not the bottle itself so it was just a mess instead of a disaster. He asks me what the bottle of mysterious green liquid is and I explain it's radiator fluid because I had a leak in Austin so I've been keeping extra but haven't needed it. He points out that Sebastian's bike needs antifreeze because he's been using water and they can't bring the bike anywhere where the temperature is below freezing.

Sweet serendipity! This stuff has been taking up space in my bags for the last few thousand miles and I've been looking for a way to get rid of it other than just throwing it out. I gave them about half my supply. I would have given them all I had but the rest was packed deep in Mt. Luggage and it would have been quite a hassle to get it out and then repack. I'm glad I could contribute to the cause though :)

I then rode from Flagstaff to Tucson via Sedona and Payson through the Tonto National Forest.

What a ride. I may have added an hour or two to my total trip, but it was so worth it. Sedona was such a cool place, even to just ride through, and the ride over there was amazing.

After hitting a whole knot of twisties I ended up in a canyon along a river that was just beautiful.

S7300003

S7300012

And then I entered the Tonto National Forest on my way to Payson and it was also amazing.

Now most of you probably picture the same thing I used to when I thought "Arizona":

Photobucket

But this is more like it:

S7300021

Now here I am in Tucson where it's 73 degrees out.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Morgue Anne

My friends and I film sketch comedy in our free time under the company name "Sick Kids Productions". It's an incredibly fun hobby. We even produced a DVD of our work entitled "Nuclear Justice". Behind the end credits on the DVD is the picture from the end of "The Shining", only instead of seeing Jack Nicholson in the crowd you see all of us. That photo editing job was done by Morgan, a friend of Kreg's [sic].

One day during this past year in which I had a job in Secaucus, NJ, I was hanging out with Kreg after work and he says to me

"Morgan said she saw you at work yesterday."
"...What? No. Must've been one of my clones." On a side note, I do have several clones running about.
"No she's sure it was you. She asked me where you worked and I said 'Somewhere in Secaucus.' She thinks you work in the same building."
"There are a lot of somewheres in Secaucus. Can't be."

And a few days later as I'm walking back in the building from lunch, someone driving by in a car yells out "SICK KIDS PRODUCTIONS! YEAH!"

Small damn world, huh?

Eventually, it falls on me to deliver Morgan's copy of "Nuclear Justice". After a few text messages back and forth, this process has quickly taken on the tones of a hostage negotiation. She was to get her DVD, and I was to get a pirate. I didn't really feel I needed a pirate, but it's important to not let people think they have all the leverage. I even decided to throw in a munchkin. I can't remember why there were munchkins in the testing room that day, but there were.

It was apparent that neither one of us wanted to be the first one on the scene. After all, if you show up first it gives the other side time to observe you and plan an ambush. So as I was furtively glancing around a corner into the hallway like I was playing "Time Crisis", I caught a glimpse of Morgan furtively glancing around a corner into the hallway like she was playing "Time Crisis".

Photobucket

We made the exchange and she gave me a packet of ketchup along with the pirate. That left me feeling pretty good. Did I miss my calling as a hostage negotiator? I think so.

When I found out that the pirate separated into two parts, and inside was a treasure map, I kept it a secret. If she didn't know there was a treasure map in there, and I told her about it, she could call dibs and get the pirate back. That's pirate law right there.

I figured I would find the treasure on this trip, and now you know my real reason for leaving. I told her about the treasure map while I was in Dallas, beyond the boundaries of any repercussions, but she knew it was there the whole time. Did she already get the treasure? Did she take the real map and switch it for a decoy that points to the other side of the country? It's too late to worry about it now.

Anyway, her blog is pretty damn funny and she is amazing as a special effects artist. Morgan will make a zombie costume that will have you convinced the end is nigh and looting your local grocery store (with apologies to the Walgreens in Alamogordo). We agreed that rather than compete for followers, we would just link to each other's blogs on the condition that I draw her as a turtle as a peace offering. Hence the button to the right. She decided to make an exchange of it. So we each created a custom avatar for each other, her being a real artist and me being an MSPaint turtle-artist. Check out her blog, The Asylum follow it, enjoy it.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Out of the cold

There was a break in the weather on Saturday and the temperature got up to 45°F which was the warmest it was going to get, so I took the opportunity to book it south as fast as I could. I spent a night in Cedar City in a party apartment with some very cool musicians/students.

Sunday, I left Utah behind

S7300003

and arrived in Flagstaff, Arizona where I'm staying until Wednesday.

On my way I ran into some trouble. About 100 miles out of Cedar City, I filled up my tank in Fredonia, Arizona at Judd Auto Service. As I drove away from the gas station I thought "What's that noise? And why is my bike all wobbly?...Oh crap. I have a flat tire."

I turned around and rode back in to the gas station where I asked them if there was anyplace that could repair a motorcycle tire around here. The guy behind the counter gives me like 6 different places to call, but all of them were closed on Sunday. So I ask if they have a plug kit or something and while they don't sell any there (or they were just out of them), Steve, the mechanic there had one. He found the hole in my tire, plugged it, and filled my tire back up with air. It looked like it was holding. He got me on the road again and didn't even ask for anything in exchange.

I've been checking my tire pressure every time I stop and it's holding steady. This is my personal thank you to the good folks at Judd Auto Service.

Today I went to the Grand Canyon, which has been a major destination of this trip.

The Grand Canyon is indescribable but for it's name. Sitting on the rim of the canyon, I just felt nothing. But the nothingness was vast. Talk about "mind blowing". There was wind and space and millions of years and me.

It is absolutely futile to bring a camera to try and take a picture of the Grand Canyon. It is good to have a camera along to take pictures of stuff you find in the canyon, and around the canyon, but no picture can do justice to the canyon itself.

S7300026

Hardly makes the cut.

Walking around the canyon rim for a few hours is just the smallest taste of it. Ideally, I would be here with enough gear (and proper shoes) for a 2 or 3 day hike down into the canyon. I'll just have to return one day for that experience.

Just remember:
S7300047

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Why Ian is still in Salt Lake City

Ethanol gasoline. To elaborate:

Well aware that winter is upon me and not wanting to be stuck in north Utah, I planned on 4 to 5 days here. I was told I could stay as long as I want, no worries, no problem and all that but I really wanted to get out of here before any major snow hit. I realized my bike needed it's 16k mile service, so I brought it in my third day here and got it back on my fourth.

Andy was leaving for 3 days and I didn't want to leave without saying goodbye, so I decided to stick around until he got back. Meanwhile, I got my bike back from it's service, and put it in the garage. The next day, as I went to saddle up, the whole garage reeked of gasoline.

There was no wet spot under my bike so I figured some gas maybe got moved around and spilled on part of it while they were adjusting the choke cable or something. I figured I'd ride it for 20 minutes to let it air out to see if the smell goes away.

It didn't. That's trouble. I could even smell the gas while riding. That's big trouble. So I bring my bike back in to the dealer. After about 5 minutes they bring me over with a flashlight to look up close at my engine. All of the seals on the carb heads have deteriorated and are leaking gasoline. It's pretty obvious looking at it up close, it just didn't occur to me to examine it.

They asked if I'd been using ethanol gas from the beginning of this trip and said that was probably the cause.

Simply put: Ethanol gas is bad for your engine . Stabilizer helps reduce the problems inherent in ethanol gas. I learned this in Maryland, and started acting on it in North Carolina by adding stabilizer every time I filled up (my bike already had over 12,000 miles worth of ethanol gas run through it).

I stopped using the stabilizer in New Mexico. While I was in Roswell, I started to wonder if I really needed to be dropping all this money in the highest octane gasoline. It was about 40 cents a gallon more than mid-grade, so if I could have been getting away with putting mid-grade gasoline in my bike, I could have saved myself around $110 on this trip so far. So I decided, rather than the 91 octane here, I was going to put in 88.

Big mistake. My bike just started making all sorts of complaining noises as soon as I set out for Santa Fe. Filling up on 91 (which is the high grade out here) after running her down only barely helped, so I had to buy Octane booster. I didn't know if it was ok to add the octane boost and the stabilizer. I figure, the less chemicals you're adding to gasoline, the better so I'll just put in the octane booster and after a couple of tanks, I'll go back to the stabilizer.

The octane boost worked great as far as getting my engine to sound right again. She might have even had less popping than back in New York.

I ran through about 5 tanks with the octane booster and then switched back to the stabilizer in Moab.

Now the damage is done and it's 1 of three causes:
1) Ethanol in gasoline is really bad for rubber parts in your fuel system. This is what the people who sell stabilizer will tell you.

2) Octane booster is really bad for the rubber parts in your engine. I don't think anyone will claim to know one way or the other.

3) Stabilizer, while good for preventing oxygenation of fuel that goes unburned for long periods of time and preventing moisture from building up in the tank, is actually really bad for the rubber parts in your engine. This is the opposite of what people who sell stabilizer will tell you.

When I return home from this trip, I'll try and look into this. Maybe I'll get to do my research in California so I'll know for the second half of my trip.

Meanwhile the work estimate came out to over $750, but before I told them to put the work in on my bike, I spent several hours there considering other options.

I test rode several bikes, mainly out of curiosity, but there was a bike, a Honda Shadow VLX whose price was pretty much the same as they were offering as trade in value for my Valkyrie.

Photobucket

Photobucket

It handled great, as a mid-size cruiser it had enough power that I wouldn't feel the need for more, it's engine struck a better note than the Valkyrie's, typically it gets better mileage than the Valkyrie, it probably can use lower grade gasoline without complaining, and they said if I wanted to trade in my Valkyrie I could just ride it home and we need not exchange any money. That would even leave me with almost $800 that I didn't have to spend repairing the Valk.

I asked them to measure the mounting space on the Valkyrie bags vs. the VLX to see if maybe I could bolt the Valk's larger saddle bags to the VLX. They wouldn't fit, but the VLX did look like it could hold the vast majority of my luggage, and with some creative packing or possibly using a fraction of the unspent repair money to purchase larger saddle bags, it might have been able to hold everything I had.

This was the sensible thing to do. Strip the GPS mount and heated gear hookup off my Valk, attach them to this perfectly fine motorcycle, and ride off into the sunset.

I've wanted to ride motorcycles all my life. As a kid, I would always pretend my bicycle was a motorcycle. In the fall of 2001, I did not yet have my motorcycle license and had never ridden a motorcycle, though I knew that I soon would. It was then that I first saw a Valkyrie and it stole my heart. It was love at first sight. One day, I would own that bike. That was when I started saving up for one.

For the next 6 years every scrap of money I made that didn't have to go to some bill or another, I saved tenaciously to put toward my eventual Valkyrie. Sure I spent money to have fun, but not particularly expensive fun. I certainly didn't take up any expensive hobbies. The Valkyrie was always in the background.

During those 6 years of saving I would photoshop different paint schemes onto a Valkyrie, and think up different customization projects and ideas that would turn this bike into the most beautiful creation ever to grace the pavement.

In 2007, I had enough money, I found one that had extremely low mileage on it, and I bought it. To me, that was an accomplishment. It really was the only material goal that I had.

Now as I said, it would have been sensible to ride away on that VLX, but as I was considering it, and before I could say "Ok, I'll take that VLX.", I could feel my heart breaking. The Valkyrie may not be the bike for me, and I don't like saying that, but the thought of not finishing this trip on it made me feel like I was giving up. I just may sell this bike when I return home, but I'll be damned if I don't make it all the way back on the Valkyrie.

So I told them to order the parts, and fix it. That was Saturday, November 20.

Turns out the parts are on backorder and are expected to come in this Wednesday.

Ok now since this blog was so wordy, here are some context free shots from around the area:

S7300001

S7300010

S7300018

Monday, November 22, 2010

Introspective Essay #2

"There is a madness needed to touch the gods, yes, this is true. Few mortals possess it, the willingness to step away from the protection of sanity. To walk into the wild woods of madness..."



I am 27 years old.

I have embarked on a journey to see this country, and all my friends therein.

I travel alone, on a motorcycle.

I have been on the road for almost 6 months, longer than I predicted I could be, and am less than halfway through this tour.

There is nothing particularly impossible about this journey, and while I have seen amazing things and been amazing places, what I have done and what I do is not out of anyone's grasp. It is merely uncommon. A thing not done. Does that make me "crazy"? At the very least I am not "normal".

I regularly entrust my person and my belongings to strangers (though I have it on good authority that the strangers who soon become my friends are trustworthy and hospitable folk). Sad to say there are many to whom that does render me reckless at the least.

The only remarkable thing I have done on this trip, or not done as it were, is that it has been five and a half months and I have yet to pay a single cent in lodging.

I quit my job to start the voyage, I have made precious little money on the road, but essentially I have staggered all over this country bleeding money everywhere.

I am going to have to get a job through the winter to finance the rest of this trip, which is preferable anyway because it is very uncomfortable to ride a motorcycle through the cold gray of winter. Having hopefully made my money in the spring, I'll set out again and continue to hemorrhage my savings until I return to the home of my parents.

I have been educated in the science of computers. I can do much with them. Though my skill and knowledge are admittedly a little rusty in many areas, I have at one time been educated in just about every aspect of computers and can learn it all again fairly quickly. Programming, software design, software testing, building computers, setting up networks...etc. Yet almost 6 months ago to this post, I walked away from my "career".

Walked away from my position staunchly planted in front of a monitor, plying my trade, and proceeded to enjoy every moment of every day; to leap from ledges high and wild with hardly any regard for what was or may be, but much and more for what now is. To seek out something far greater than myself.

Home and lodging. Where one returns to and where one lay's one's head. I don't rent my living space and I certainly don't own any. And where I am is in the company of generous family and friends old and new who do one or the other. And there I am laying down a long trail of all I manage to save. I live on other people's kindness and hospitality, for which I am ever grateful. People who have carved out a space for themselves in this world and share it with me. And I remain transient, flowing like water from place to place.

Yet I think this is the best way to exist. I think everyone should travel and see as much of the world as they can but I am only even able to do what I am doing because there are so many people who are not. I am living on other people's responsibility.

Does this make me ::gasp:: a "deadbeat"?

I certainly can't claim to contribute much to society overall. The only skill I can say I cultivated in my free time, outside of my "career path" has been drawing little cartoon turtles.

Photobucket

It doesn't come in handy much.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Salt Lake City

I have been in Salt Lake City for a little over a week now.

Andy and Lisa took me hiking on Antelope Island, which is something of a wildlife preserve out on the lake.

It is a home where the buffalo roam:
S7300012

S7300009

And the deer
S7300052

AND the antelope play!
S7300022

And of course don't forget the box turtles!
S7300004

HAHA! "Box turtles"! I'm hilarious!

I also went to Hill aerospace museum.

S7300096

It has a large collection of planes and contains a comprehensive history of planes in the military of the United States. Worth checking out, especially since it's free.

Have you ever seen a large plane up close and in person before?

S7300088

It is kind of mind boggling how these great metal titans actually get up in the air, carrying hundreds of pounds of cargo no less. Propeller planes I mean. Most people know jet engines are magic. But those propellers, doing nothing but pushing air, manage to give that plane the speed it needs to generate lift and carry it through the sky. It is kind of just a little amazing.

I went hiking in Little Cottonwood Canyon (I think).

S7300126

There is a lot of hiking available in Salt Lake City and it is all very pretty.

When I returned form my hike there was a covey (that's what a group of quail is called for all you trivia-nighters) of quail in my host's driveway!

S7300131

I've never seen a quail in person before. They are adorable.

People have told me not to miss the temple at the center of town. It's supposed to be a very impressive and beautiful building, so I went to the temple to take some pictures.

It is, in a word, a building.
S7300136

I don't think I have the right eye for architecture. I have never much appreciated the temples of man. I always just see a great and impressive effort and determination of dubious purpose and seemingly misguided intent. Perhaps it's not that I don't appreciate architecture, but my disdain of organized religion that sours me on it. I begrudge no man their faith as long as they do not begrudge me mine, but the organization of religion I find often gets people's moral compass all screwed up, and acts as a divisive force overall.


Meanwhile, on Antelope Island, there are rocks that look like bacon:

S7300032

But do not try and eat them. They do NOT taste like bacon.

Friday, November 12, 2010

The race is lost, winter wins, and everything is beautiful.

Apparently, one can boat-hitch-hike. Hanging out at Free Meal, discussing our plans for the immediate future, some of the people are going to try to hitch a ride to Hawaii. Intrigued by the concept of hitch hiking on a boat, we started talking about it and now the plan is for 5 of us or so to attempt to get to Hawaii in the upcoming weeks.

Lacking anything better to do that night, a few of us decided to go on a "tub-crawl". Starting at one end of town we get in to a hotel's hot tub, and if they kick us out for not being guests, we just move to the next one.

We get to the first one and it was a cool setting but it was more of a tepid tub than a hot tub.

S7300004

After standing around in it for about 15 minutes, we decided to just move on to the next one. Not before I grabbed a free cookie from the front desk though.

The next hot tub was a jackpot. The water was so wonderfully hot, it was outside, and it was right next to a pool. I did not go into the pool because every time I felt it was time to cool off, I'd stand up, and then not feel the need to jump in 50 degree water.

S7300005

Moon-bathing?
JabFw

We also never got kicked out until they had to close the pool area down. So we sat in this awesomely hot hot tub for about 3 hours. It was also right next to a Denny's.

From left to right: Me, Paul, Isaac, and Jen.
S7300006

Isaac and Jen are two of the people boat hitch-hiking to Hawaii so hopefully I'll see more of them.

The next day I promised to give a friend a ride down to visit her sister in Sedona, AZ. After just beating a storm out of Moab, we embarked on a chilly but not unbearably cold 6 hour ride and didn't quite make it. Just outside of Flagstaff, we started getting rained on hard. It was a serious rainstorm and when I saw lightning, I pulled into a lone gas station.

"Does your sister have a car? Because we can't ride through this..."

So we waited in the gas station for about an hour while her sister came to pick her up, and then I continued on to Williams, AZ where I spent the night.

The ride back from Williams, once the sun had set, was the coldest I have ever ridden in. It was about 29 degrees and while my heated gear was going to prevent hypothermia, it occurred to me I may actually get frostbite on my fingers and toes. It felt like I was standing barefoot in ice-water and holding ice, but I wasn't shivering. HotHands air activated heat packs saved my phalanges! I had happened to pick some up with my new sleeping bag just in case and had them in my bike. An hour and a half from Moab, I pulled over, opened up 4 of them, and put them in my socks and gloves. The ones in my socks only lasted about 45 minutes for some reason. The ones in my gloves lasted until I got back to my Moab couch, threw them in my sleeping bag, and were still hot the next morning about 9 hours later.

Wednesday, my friend Chris took me for a hike into Fiery Furnace. He's an avid canyoneer and climber and he said Fiery Furnace is his favorite place on earth. It is truly a mind blowing experience to be in there. It's a huge mess of rock fins and spires that claw at the heavens. There are guided hikes in there, but he likes to go in by himself and go off the beaten trail.

First we stopped to fill our water bottles at Matrimony Springs, which is a natural sandstone filtered freshwater spring by the side of the road.

S7300008

There used to be a pipe coming out of that hole off to the right but a short while ago the FDA decided that as an unregulated water source, it could be unsanitary and ordered the removal of the pipe. So now it just bubbles forth from the rock itself.

Fresh spring water is like the heel of civilization, and the FDA decided it is not ok to provide people with that. Guess how effective removing the pipe was at stopping people from drinking there.

Off we went into the furnace:
S7300020

S7300022

S7300049

S7300080

S7300082

Legend has it, Chris told me, that the spring is cursed. Anyone who drinks from the spring will not be able to get Moab out of their head and will have to return one day.

"Sounds like more of a blessing than a curse" I said.

Moab is something else. I have to pick and choose which things I see in this area because even if I lived here for a year, and every day sought some amazing thing to see, I would not ever fail in seeking it. The beauty of everything around is both humbling and uplifting. The place just seems to resonate tranquility, and that tranquility echoes through the hearts and minds of everyone here. Something great and wonderful sleeps in Moab and if you get nothing else from my writing, heed this message:

Get to Moab at least once in your life. Stay for a week.

I believe Johnny M put it best:
“Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in where nature may heal and cheer and give strength to the body and soul.” - John Muir

The next day, I rode from Moab to Sandy which is just outside of Salt Lake City. I think I rode through colder coming from Williams, AZ to Moab, but it was cold and it occurred to me that Winter is truly here. Once again I relied on those heat packs in my boots.

I'm staying with a friend and former employer of mine. It's a great skiing area and here too, is beauty. This is the view from the kitchen:

S7300103

There's not a whole lot of incentive to leave here but I'll keep rolling on soon enough.