Happy B-Day America!
Make America Great Again
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| Yeah, go Donald! |
OK, you came here to read my blog, not hear about loser politicians. Right?
We turn right today; north. Our route takes us through the coastal hills on gravel roads to the Cowichan Valley and Lake Cowichan. We aren't going far, only about 40 miles, but there is a bit of up.
It will be good to see how the wider tires that we're using this year do on the gravel as we expect to ride a lot of gravel this year. For the bike nerds, er, aficionados, we have ridden on Schwalbe Ultra Marathon Plus tires for the past 5 years and have yet to get a flat -- and that counts about 18,000 miles of road time. We have used 700c x 32 in year's past but this year we chose 700c x 35. These aren't performance tires, but then, we're not a performance bike (or frankly, performance riders). Fully loaded we are more like an RV so we appreciate the beefiness of these tires. Last year in Iceland on the 32s on the gravel we nearly lost it on numerous occasions. That wouldn't have been a good thing and I don't want to try it this year.
Did I
mention that we were pretty much frozen after yesterday’s ride to Port
Renfrew? It was maybe 20 degrees but
with the strong, cold headwind we got really cold. But we had yummy clam chowder, curry rice
soup and mussels at the Port Renfrew brew pub and that fixed things up.
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| The brewpub in Port Renfrew |
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| Looking south down the entrance to the port |
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| A sailboat heads into the harbor -- it was blowing hard out in the straits |
We also
got a good sleep at the Hobbit hole and were up early getting ready to
ride. Tomi’s, down the road, opened at 7
a.m. shortly after that we were filling our coffee cups. We also had English muffin egg and ham things
that were great and cheap and it made us dream up a special treat for the Solar
Eclipse pancake breakfast: Eggclipse Stacks; two pancakes with egg and ham
sandwiched between.
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| Breakfast at Tomi's |
We were on
the road to Lake Cowichan by 8 and we had a relatively short ride – 10 mile of
a basically flat road following the Harris river, then 10 miles of climbing,
and 20 miles of descending to Lake Cowichan.
It was a perfect morning, a bit chilly but no wind and the road was
narrow and smooth and not a single car on it.
The locals told us to watch for bear and a couple of wolf packs that are
in the area. We hoped to see both, but
at the end of the day had to be satisfied with a cute red fox that dashed
across the road in front of us – I think we scared the crap out of him as we don’t
make much noise.
The road
wound its way through beautiful forests and past lakes. But as we climbed we arrived at the logged
out areas that are pretty blighted
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| Lizard Lake |
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| A nurse tree in what we figured is a losing enterprise |
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| They leave a narrow buffer between the road and the clear cuts. Very considerate. |
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| Harris Creek Canyon |
We wanted
to take a stop at a monstrous sitka tree but we couldn’t find it – what we’d
read says that the tree has a 38 foot circumference. It would have been cool to see, especially
since much of the interior of the island has been logged many times over.
The climb
up to the top include 4 or 5 switchbacks that were tougher than we’d guessed,
but once over the top it was 20 miles of downhill all the way to Lake Cowichan.
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| The summit |
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| Clear cuts on the way down |
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Lots of floaters going down the Cowichan River
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| Red Arrow beer from Duncan |
Perfect- eggclipse stacks!! Looks like nice weather (except for the wind)!
ReplyDeleteYou guys crack me up!!
ReplyDeleteSince when are you "accomplished" fishermen?? Will wonders never cease? Ha!
Love the eggclipse stack idea. We need to super sell that!!
Hilarious!!