Wednesday 18 May 2011

May 18, 2011 Glendale-Red Canyon-Bryce-Escalante-Capitol Reef


May 7, 2011     63.62km,  3.57 hrs,   16.4 km/h          Glendale to Red Canyon Park


I manage to leave at 11 am. The morning is pretty cold but eventually the sun comes out and warms me up.
First part of the trip is a gentle, sometimes not so gentle uphill for about 25 km to Long Valley Junction, where the 14 goes off the 89 to Cedar City. I have strong tailwind for a change and enjoy it thoroughly. There is quite a lot of traffic in the morning, big trucks and touring buses, which are actually the best drivers, They usually give me lots of space. It's the small RV's that are the crazy ones, they don't have a good judgment. Once 3 RV's are driving behind each other so close, that the second RV goes pass me far too close for comfort because he has no clear view of the road. And I also don't like the huge bus-like RV's with a car towing behind, sometime 2 bikes on that car. They are strong windbreakers and wind makers and no fun, when you are struggling up the hill!

There are those ripples just on the outside of the white line, which means it sometimes doesn't leave me much space between the edge of the road and these ripples. So I have to cycle sometimes on the white line. It's not easy to keep the balance, when it get's tight like that. Once I look to the side and end up in the soft sand and have to get off the bike.
The scenery is very pretty. A small river turns into a flooded valley, there are cows everywhere and horses. These 3 horses are so curious when I stop for a drink of water, they all come to the fence. So I walk over to them. Very pretty shy horses.
I see some not so pretty sights too. Several adult deer freshly killed by the side of the road, on even on the road and I see a little down the road a fawn, that hasn't even been born yet.
I meet 2 cyclists. He's pulling a trailer with a little dog in it. They come from Tucson, started in Colorado heading west to Cedar City. They left Bryce Canyon today and have strong head winds. They tell me there is a gas station with a little store on top of the hill.
 I have a long break there, waiting for Julia. It's windy but I find a spot in the sun, that's warm enough and enjoy my lunch. I see some mountains pretty close by with snow on them! When Julia arrives we chat for a bit, before I keep going. An unknown pleasure is ahead.
I'm zooming down the hill at 33-50 km/h. An hour of riding 30 km or more downhill with the wind! What a pleasure!
The river is getting bigger, more flooded areas and some red mountains in the background. Very pretty. Anything is pretty when you go downhill with headwind. It actually means there is no wind at all, because you go the speed of the wind. So the sun is nice and warm on my back.
In Red Canyon Town I turn onto the 12 towards Bryce Canyon. I pass the Red Canyon RV Campsite and go uphill towards the red mountains. These roads here are illusionary. They are so wide, that you think it's not much of an uphill. But when you look back you get the right perspective. It's much much steeper than it looks!
Once I enter the Dixie National Forest everything is red and green around me. I stop every few meters to take pictures. Eventually I make it to the camp site. Very pretty site. When I'm opening my tent I look at one of those red mountains.
I have some food and enjoy the rest of the sun. Julia is arriving at 8 pm, she stopped at the campsite in Red Canyon Town and got chatting with the owner there. He tells her a route we could take to get to Salt Lake City. I keep that in mind.

Red Canyon near Bryce Canyon

May 8, 2011    Red Canyon  to  Bryce Canyon     23.51 km ,  1.46 hrs,   13.1 km/h


It's really windy today. I leave before Julia. It's gorgeous through the Red Canyon. It's a short but extremely windy trip, especially the last few kilometer. I arrive at Ruby's campsite. The weather is getting worse, weather forecast predicts snow. Well, I don't want to wait for Julia to make a decision. I'm choosing one of the Tipis the campsite offers. I ask about the hole in the ceiling, if there is a cover for it. The lady tells me the Tipis are built in a way that it doesn't rain in. Take it with a grain of salt...

I ask a driver of a pick up truck, if she's seen another cyclists on the road, so I know Julia was not far. I dropped off my stuff in the Tipi, grabbed my swimming stuff and went over to the Hotel, where we are allowed to use the pool. I find Julia in the Hotel. she's joining me later in the pool. We have some good conversations in the hot tub. We get to meet Jon from Rhode Island. He's so impressed to hear we are actually sleeping in a Tipi, that he comes over for a beer and check out the tipi.  It lasted until the snow made its way through the hole in the top. We got soaked and Jon drives me to the other hotels to see if we can relocate to a dry place. Unfortunately all the rooms are over 100$, so we go back and Julia and I squeeze right to the sides of the tipi, where we hope the water, that runs down the wood doesn't get us.

May 9, 2011             Tour de Bryce


Our tipi in the morning

I wear everything I have!

I wake up with my sleeping bag soaked, Julia's is wet too.
I go to the reception, which was closed last night, and ask for a refund. They finally agree to it. Tonight we treat ourselves to a cabin with a heater! We will be nice and warm!
I go into the hot tub again to warm up and wait for noon, until we can move our luggage into the cabin. I don't want to sit on my bike in this weather, it's still snowing, everything is white. I am waiting in a snowstorm for the bus to take me into the park. I first go into the visitor center, where I watch a film about Bryce. By the time I come out it's sunny! April weather in May! At an elevation of over 7000 feet  no surprise it's still snowing in May.
 I go from viewpoint to viewpoint with the bus, once I walk along the rim from Sunset Pppoint to Sunrise Point, then I go back to the cabin, warming up. I've been 3 times in the hottub in the last 24 hours, each time for at least 1-2 hours my body can't take any more chlorine. So no hot tub for me today anymore.
The classic Amphitheater in Bryce



May 10, 2011    Bryce to Escalante     46.96 km,   3.24 hrs,  13.8 km/h


It has not snowed last night, but it is sunny and cold this morning.
I pack my things and leave before Julia.
The first 15 km is downhill. I stop on the way at a mossy cave, go for a walk, but walking back I get into a snow hale. It lasts for quite a while. I'm entering Tropic, which is not that tropic really but I am able to take off my Raincoat and my fleece.From here I start a 37 km uphill, it takes me 2 3/4 hours. It's so slight, that I first think I'm just tired, but looking back I realize the gradient I'm coming up and I get it!
I meet 5 female cyclists coming down from Escalante, not heavily loaded as we are. I let the last one know, to tell Julia that Escalante will be the place to stop and camp for the night. We will have cycled enough for the day by the time we get to Escalante. One of them tells me, while she easily is rolling down the hill " Good luck with getting up there!". That sounds like a long haul!
I cycle for about 1 hour through heavy snowfall, very beautiful, but cold and wet. I put on all my fleeces and rain jacket and keep cycling uphill. When you think you finally reached the top, don't always believe it. The real top is still to come. Actually, part of it is so steep, I have to get off the bike and push. And stop, and push, and stop and push..... I consider shortly the possibility of not being able to make it, my bike feels so heavy! Someone is reminding me later, that it might have to do with the elevation. At almost 3000 meter it is quite natural to have to rest more often. Eventually I make it back on the bike and push just barely to move forward. This way I can keep going longer without stopping.
by the mossy cave towards Tropic

This doesn't look too good!

me in the snow!

Just before the top I hear Julia hollering out of a car, they will be waiting on top if I want to get a ride down the hill.
Oh yes, I want a ride down the hill, or do I? That's the first for me! Why would I?! Because it is snowing like it is Christmas and I am cold despite having just climbed a pass! The lady giving us a ride pulls a horse trailer, that she had repaired in Cedar City, a 3 hours drive for her. The horse trailer of course is handy for our bicycles. She drops us off at the campsite in Escalante. We stay at the RV Park in a Cabin, we need to warm up!

May 11, 2011   Around Escalante    32.25 km,  2.15 hrs, 14.2 km/h


The weather is supposed to turn bad today, rain in the afternoon, so we decide to stay aother day. Escalante seems a nice quiet place.
I go on a tour around Escalante into Box Canyon, which is a nice ride up a gravel road with nice gorges going off to the side.
Midday I do some work on my bike. Frank, the owner of the Campsite, is lending me his tools and I can clean my chain with his chain cleaner. I have to get one of those! Very handy and I have a shiny chain at the end!
In the afternoon I go for another little ride toward the Petrified Forest. The Ranger tells me it`s not really worth paying the 6$, so I just ride along the lake and go back. The weather ended up to be very  nice and I was glad to have spend the day outside.
This is where I came from yesterday!

Alpine flowers

May 12, 2011     Escalante to Boulder, Utah    49.19 km,  3.59 hrs,  12.3 km/h


Sunny and blue sky, no wind! Great weather!
It's flat for a while, though it might be uphill too, not sure, but the talewind pushes me along and I know, why I'm doing all this. The views while riding are great! After about 5 km it gets steeper and goes steadily uphill for 15 km. I see a great viewpoint, leave my bike at the road and  run up the hill to take a photo and film of the view.
On another viewpoint lower down I meet some nice people from Holland. they have done a 2 month cycle trip through France last year.
It goes downhill at 8 % at times, great view again! And relentless headwind, as if it wasn't hard enough already!
 Eventually up and down into a gorge until I get to a Cafe in seemingly the middle of nowhere, that calls me in. Frank from the campsite reminded me to drink lots of fluid, do fruit, sugar. So I get a Strawberry Shake and drink it slowly, though soon asking for a hot cup of water!
As soon as I am going down into the bottom of the gorge the uphill starts! Pitilessly uphill! |There are 4-5 very steep parts, that I realize later are a 14% gradient!
Half way up these hills the fruit shake starts working. It bloats my belly until I'm not able to bend my knees on my bike anymore and I have to get off the bike. It's painful and as soon as I bend forward my belly feels like a cannonball. I see no other choice than stopping for a while. I lay on a rock head down and rub my belly, no success, except the sun feels so nice and warm on my skin. I get up and do some Tai Chi exercise, the turning one, with a great view at where I came from. After about 8 minutes it starts working wonders. It takes another 45 minutes for me to be able to sit back on my bike. All the air puffed out! Ready to go.
Just as I am taking some pictures  a cyclist stops and we start chatting. His name is Ian, he is from Boulder Colorado and on the road for a few months( sorry Ian, I don't remember exactly for how long) We arrange to hopefully meet in the next town. I take some pictures and follow up the hill. Even though the steepest 14 % parts are over ( it almost seems flat), it still goes generally uphill! Still sunny,  all day great views, the last part into Boulder is, of course, uphill!
I meet Ian on the road, he just checked out the camping possibilities, since there is no official camp site in town. We decide to have some food first and find a very good restaurant( there are only a couple anyway), that makes delicious, mostly organic meals. I don't have to spend money on accommodation tonight, so I splurge.
Julia arrives at around 8 pm, her bike is not working well and she had to push a lot. She's also having some dinner and meets us at the campsite out of town after dark.
 

Looking back where I came from


Don't I love this sign, if it goes the right direction...in this case I came from there!

May 13, 2011  Boulder (6593ft, 2010m) to Torrey (6843ft, 2085m)  16.85 km,  1.29 hrs,  11.3 km/h

We all go different paths from here.
Julia has decided to stop the bike tour and go to Denver. She is going back into Boulder to try and get a lift over the next mountain toward Green River.
Ian is taking the Burt Trail to get to Powell Lake.

And I start up the hill to tackle the 14 % gradients again and get over 9600 ft ( 2900m). After riding for an hour and a half I hear Julia calling out of a beautiful Oldsmobile from 1963, asking if I want a ride. The weather is great and sunny but I am pretty tired. I was thinking of getting a ride to the top, I'm carrying a lot of water and my bike is heavy. But we have such good sand fun together, stopping at viewpoints talking with other visitors, that I stay with them all the way to Torrey. At one view point I'm talking with a couple from Santa Cruz, who kindly invite me to stop by on my way down the West Coast. We get to meet a couple that gives us packages of Braggs samples. Before they left on their trip they visited their 80 something year old neighbour Patricia Bragg, who seems to be as fit as ever and very entertaining. She gave them boxes of samples to give out to stores and people. In Torrey we share the the goodies, thanking Gunnar for the ride I say a final goodbye to Julia.
I go into the Information Center and talk with Scott. He tells me the park Campsite is full and explains to me the route to Green River, where I was thinking of catching a train.
I go to the next camp site, Sandcreek RV Park, which is nice and quiet. Donna and her husband are very accommodating. It's not so quiet in the evening though, a large youth group arrives. They are very excited about setting up their tents! And another  group of 5 in their twenties arrive and noisily set up tent and pump up their air mattresses for hours. They chat at the fire about 3 Meter away from my tent. At midnight I finally ask them to be quiet.

May 14, 2011  Torrey to Capitol Reef (5500ft, 1676m) and back  42.07 km,  2.41 hrs,  15.5 km/h


At least I wasn't the only one complaining. People in the cabin and some in the campers are complaining to Donna the next morning about the noise. And they were far away!
It's been a cold night again, as almost every night since I've been in Arizona and Utah. Cottonwood and Zion Canyon were the only warm places on this trip so far.
I'm having trouble with my stove. It is most of the time so windy, that I need to build a barrier, so that the Propane flame is not blowing out. The pot keeps sliding, so whatever I'm cooking, I have to hold on to the pot for the whole time!
So this morning I spill my porridge! I pick up what I can, add a bit of water and oats and start over again.
At 9 am I'm ready for the ride to Capitol Reef. I talk with Donna, who even gives me her phone number, just in case I get stuck down there and can't make it back up before dark. That's a great back up. People are looking out for me here!
Just as I want to leave the office, it starts raining and storming. So I go back to my tent and wait for an hour until it's sunny again. It is spring weather so it actually does get sunny again!
I start riding to the info Center and talk to Scott. This time I ask him for the route going to Salt Lake City. Green River station doesn`t let me put the bike on the train, so I have to get to Salt Lake City for check in. The 350 km trip to Salt Lake City doesn`t sound very exciting and the last 150 km would be through heavy traffic.Scott offers to keep an ear out for anyone going that way and willing to take me and my bike.
Going to Capitol Reef is a blast! All downhill for about 20 km, 400 meter elevation drop! Again with great views! I was told it's a 2000ft drop, not quite.
I stop many many times to take pictures. In the park I go for a one hour hike. It goes up steep, then the temperature changes. It gets so nice and hot, I`m walking through a Cohab Canyon with side canyons going off. People are climbing into the side canyons, sometimes you only hear them, so deep are they in the rock! I could stay there forever!
I met some cyclists on  racing bikes earlier and asked them how long it will take them to go back up again, the 20 km. They say, oh about 30 minutes. My guess is, it will take me about 3 times that time.
Actually, not true. I make very good time and in about an hour I make it to the last hotel before town. A thunder storm is coming, it starts raining, lightning and thunder in the distance, though not too far away and coming closer! Looks pretty threatening. The wind is so strong coming from the side, that it pushes me several times right into the middle of the road. Once a car is just overtaking me and I stop dead in the middle of the road. Puh, that was lucky! Another car overtakes me, I`m kind enough to go as far to the right as possible and the idiot is overtaking me despite oncoming traffic. Not alone that, his trailer is carrying a boat, which passes my arm at elbow length! I shout uselessly at him!
The wind is getting even stronger so I go under cover at the hotel entrance, but the wind comes from the front so the roof doesn`t do much good. I put on my rain clothes and keep on riding  my bike through the wind. Whenever I see a car behind me I get off the bike and push. Finally the road turns into the wind and towards Torrey and I make it  safely in good time into town!
I get a phone call from Scott from the visitor center, telling me, he is still looking for me for a ride to Salt Lake City. He tells me he's working for the next 2 days in the Visitor Center and on tuesday he's going shopping in the next city/town. And if I like I can stay in his trailer for the 2 nights, save some money and rest. Donna assures me he's a very nice guy. A rest sounds good to me.

My lift

Capitol Reef



Cohab Canyon

May 15 and 16, 2011   7.85km,  30 minutes, 15.1 km/h     Around Torrey


Sunday morning I move to Scotts place. His dogs are excited to see me. I unpack and leave to find a cafe with internet access. The book store is a great place with lots of books, guitars, music, good coffee and wifi. Updating emails. I manage for the first times in weeks to do some Tai Chi sets!
In the evening we are going to a restaurant to meet some old friends of Scott's and have dinner with them.
Monday I do the washing, let the dogs out, write diary, email in the cafe... have great dinner in the evening.

May 17, 2011     Torrey to Salt Lake City - No cycling today

Scott kindly offers me to take me all the way to Salt Lake City. He hasn't been ther in 2 years! And it's a 350km trip one way! We have a good drive, though it is snowing most of the way and I'm so glad to sit dry in a car!  He drops me off right in front of Chris's house, who's expecting me. So good to see him again, last time we saw each other, we played tennis on Salt Spring Island. And finally I see, where he lived for the last 5 years!
We spend the afternoon in the Two Creek Coffee House close to his place. I catch up on emails.
He takes me to a pub, where I drink a Schneider Weisse, so good to drink good beer! The austrian restaurant, that Chris wanted to take me to, has gone out of business. So we go to this pizza place, where I have one of the best pizzas I`ve ever had.
Wasabi

May 18, 2011  Train from Salt Lake City to San Francisco

Slow morning, writing diary, breakfast with Chris and visiting the Coffee House again.

The evening is reserved for watching the Canucks play in a Sportsbar with probably 25 other TV screens.
Chris takes me to the train station at 10pm right after the game. They keep telling me, that I have to either carry on this huge bag or take the bags out of the white cover bag, its only purpose is actually to keep 2  bags together without a rope. They make me buy a box for 3$ but it doesn't fit all in, so I have to pay another 10$ for an extra piece of luggage. Funny thing is, that no suitcase is as waterproof as my bike panniers!
My train is 2 hours delayed because of floodings on the rail road tracks coming from Chicago. I have a really nice conversation with a young traveller, Steve. He's travelled in Europe, hitchhiking from Germany to Romania and back, travelled all over the States, often by train. But not the conventional way! When a train comes into a station, he finds a part of the train, that is open and he goes in, mostly cargo trains. Sometimes he even can get into the second locomotive at the other end of the train, which is often heated. Very resourceful! So tonight he's just taking a short 4 hour hitching- trip to get out of the snowy region.
The train is pretty empty, everyone has 2 seats available. In the moonlight I can see a little of the landscape we are passing by, like the Salt Lakes, which seem flooded in that light. I have a pretty good sleep, especially with having 2 seats for the night.

Friday 6 May 2011

May 6, 2011 Flagstaff- Grand Canyon- Zion-Glendale

April 22, 2011   Flagstaff- Walnut Canyon      41.59 km,  2.17 hrs,  18 km/h

I practice Tai Chi in the park. It's chilly, but sunny. Good to practice.
We want to ride some around Flagstaff. The Information Center tells us about Walnut Canyon. So off we go, it's sunny and windy. There is a great wide bike path directly in front of the Information center and it leads all the way out of town. We turn into a dirt road, which is actually pretty good. For a while. Half way into it, the gravel turns into dried up mud. I slide a few times into the deep tire track and once I don't make it out. Lucky there was a soft-ish bank on the side in which I fell. The next day I see big bruises in places I didn't know they were bruised. But hey, it was fun, we avoided the Highway and the Canyon was totally worth it.

In Walnut Canyon you can still see ancient housing of the native people. First thing you see as you come down is some great rock formations and houses in the opposite side of the canyon in the wall. You walk down many many steps following a path that loops around a large rock and all around the rock under an overhang are the walls.

It's a slow ride back against the wind.
relics of time long gone

rockart

April 23, 2011   
Flagstaff     10km,  0.31 hrs,  18.5  km/h    

I go to Tai Chi in the morning. We were 9 people, seems like a nice group. It was so good to go to class again. I wish I could go more often, I don't get to practice as much as I like.

In the afternoon I meet Julia. She is organizing her bike, needs parts. They go to a Motel while I cycle out to Alice, who kindly offered me this morning to sleep at her place. It takes me a little while to find it, but eventually I do. We have a nice evening together, a great meal, that Alice prepared and at 10 pm I am dead. Don`t know from what, but I sleep great! Thank you Alice for your hospitality!

April 24, 2011       Flagstaff    19.25 km,   1.17hrs,   14.9 km/h  


I leave Alice`s place after a great big breakfast, expecting to cycle it all off again today. We intend to start our trip today.

I left my cell phone at Alice`s and I just manage to call her before she leaves the house, so she will leave it under the door mat. I meet up with Chris, who takes me back to pick it up. At the bike store I meet a cyclist, who came up from Mexico only a week ago and wants to cycle in one day to the Grand Canyon. He tells me, that the wind is supposed to be really strong today and he will stay in a Motel tonight and start at 3 am. So I go to meet Chris and Julia to tell them about it and we decide to stay one more night. Julia needs to arrange a lot for her bike anyway.

I go out to a health food store and just as I turn at the corner I see another touring cyclist. Johannes from Switzerland, he`s taking a room in the same Motel, Motel 6, a great chain, clean tidy, well worth the money. We meet later in the afternoon to go for some food.

April 25, 2011   9 km just around Flagstaff

Again we want to start the trip today, but Julia needs to buy all kind of equipment before we go. So I pack and meet them at this amazing warehouse, they have everything for cycling. Bikehup. Great people, great service! When afternoon turns into early evening, I finally decide, it is too late to start, so we go back to the Motel. We have a great conversation for a while and manage to be in bed by 11pm.

April 26, 2011    Flagstaff to 20 km before Valle on 180    61.77 km,   4.49 hrs,   12.8 km/h    

Our time frame is almost met, wanted to leave at 8am, make it out by 9am. It`s 13 Degree Celsius and freezing  in the shade.

We have headwind right away. It`s up all the time, still traffic in the beginning, but thinning rapidly. It is fun riding on this road, becomes a quite country road through forest, pass mountains the San Francisco Peaks, climbing steadily to 8064 feet. At some point we decide, I will go ahead riding, instead of waiting in the cold wind. We will either meet at the last turn off in Kaibab National Forest, or at the Grand Canyon at the latest.

On top it is so cold, it goes down to 3 Degree. Even going to lower elevations isn`t doing much, because it is late and I have headwind all the way. It`s hard work! I find the turn off, wait for a while in the shadow of a bush for Julia, it is super windy. I don`t really want to sleep out there by myself, but it is still 20 km to Valle and it is too late now to ride there.  So I set up camp and try to make some tea. I notice my camp stove is leaking, so I can't use it. No hot liquid in me tonight! As soon as the sun sets it gets freezing! My mattress is great, but my sleeping bag definitely doesn`t go down to -17 Degree! It is 5 degree in the tent at some point. I'm wearing Longjonges, merinowool socks, 2 merino wool shirts longs sleeve, fleece, hat, fleece vest at the foot end of my sleeping bag, my silk sheet wrapped around my hips and legs, zipped up to the tip of my nose. And I'm still cold!
not too far to go

View down towards Valle

April 27, 2011    20 km outside of Valle to Grand Canyon   67.8 km,    4.04 hrs,    16.7 Average    


Well, that was a night! I wake up at 5 am after trying to find a way of keeping myself reasonably warm. Taking down camp is a challenge in the cold. The water in the waterbag is almost solidly frozen. Sunrise is beautiful and I try to be as fast a possible with my stiff hands. I set off an hour later. No cars on the road and no wind yet, a blessing. It's all a downhill.

I arrive in Valle at 7:15 am and have to wait until 7:30am for the Restaurant to open up. My feet are so cold, I need to take them out of my shoes and warm them up with my hand. They only have black tea so I drink one hot cup of water after the other until the heat starts warming me up from the inside. After an hour I dare going out to my bike and start riding. Immediately my feet get cold again. On the way to Valle I had tried to wear my goretex socks over my normal socks in the shoe, but it only made them colder I think. My right foot starts warming up in the sun, my left is in the shadow of my bike and stays cold. The 89 becomes very busy, but I have a wide shoulder to ride on.
I'm surprise to find Tusayan a busy place with big Tourist Information, an Imax, several Gas Stations and many Motels. I buy my Park Ticket here.
I find Mather Point Camp Ground and pay 6$ per night. The lady warns me, that other campers left early because it was so cold at night.
Grand Canyon is at 7120ft, 2170m.  I guess last night I slept at higher elevations. So this should be fine.
I talk with Dan, who has his tent set up in the walker-biker camp site. He's trying to get a permit to hike down to the bottom of the Canyon and camp there. Johannes' tent is also here. I set up my tent and walk to the rim of the Grand Canyon. ( My bum needs a rest!) The view is truly impressive! It's big, just big. And photos as usual can't reflect the vastness of it.
I spend the evening in the warm cafe-restaurant until closing at 10pm. Julia doesn't make it in today. I'm wondering, where she is.
Grand Canyon

April 28, 2011    Hermit's Rest, the west of the Grand Canyon 19.1 km,   1.16 hrs,    14.9 km/h  
  
Johannes is cycling to Hermit's Rest today and so do I. But I'm not ready, when he's leaving. I'm trying to fix my stove, but no luck, I need a new rubber ring I think. I have to buy a new stove, a propane stove, which is a lot lighter and smaller, but also uses a lot more gas.
I'm trying to reach Julia by phone, to find out, where she is and if she's save. We haven't seen each other for 2 nights and I got a bit worried. My cell phone has no reception here, the phone booths at the camp site don't work properly so I ask someone to use his cell phone. Julia is in Valle. She was so cold 2 nights ago that she was shaking all night. I'm hoping she makes it here by tonight.
 I do some laundry and sit on my bike to cycle to Hermit's Rest.

 A great ride. The first part I push and carry my bike up stairs, just to see to view. The cycle lane is shared with the bus which goes out to Hermit's Rest. At any time you can take a free shuttle bus back to town. Anywhere the bus is free and frequent. This is how the bus system should work in any city!

I take the bus back at the end. I have been wearing new cycle shorts and they haven't been as protective as I hoped for. So I needed a rest from cycling.
Julia is there, when I arrive back at the camp site. She had gotten a ride to the Grand Canyon.
I spend the evening again in the restaurant, nice and warm!
I had to take a picture of this, at the entrance to a supermarket.


Campsite at Grand Canyon

April 29, 2011    South Kaibab Trail

We take a bus to south Kaibab Trail and hike down into the Canyon. We stop constantly to take pictures. It's sunny and windy on top, but getting a bit warmer coming down in elevation.

I make it back to the camp site, get some food and rest. Another cyclist has arrived, Johnathan from Japan. He's been cycling all the National Parks for the last months, very impressive on his skinny tires fully loaded.
Restaurant in the evening again.

This is Grand!

April 30 2011    Grand Canyon to Desert View,  Elev. 7438ft, 2267m   41.54 km,   3.13 hrs,    12.8 km/h     

A great ride, up and down pass many great view points.
Desert View is again a big surprise. They have a gas station, a big supermarket with all the sweets I wish for and even a cafe. I buy a muffin and sit in the sun, out of the wind and finally heat up from the inside! I don't want to leave, I haven't even looked at the view yet! I spot Julia without her luggage. A few miles before the camp site the warden of the camp site at Desert View, Dick, took her luggage. We originally planned to keep going down to lower elevations, because this night is supposed to be -8 degree. But at Desert View I talk with a nice Bus driver, who tells me the cold air channels down that valley and even 1000 feet lower it will still be as cold as here. And here we can sleep in the Washrooms, nice and warm!
And Dick had offered Julia the same, we can sleep in the bathroom right next to his Camper, it's all clean and ready to go for May 2, when the camp site officially opens.
We look at the view, stunning. Actually almost more stunning, that at Grand Canyon. It's windy there and we go into the cafe to warm up and get some food. Dick appears on his bike and we sit together for a bit. He leads us to his camper the back way with all the best viewpoints you can imagine!

We have a cup of tea in his camper, Dick has retired 15 years ago from being a Throat-Nose-Ear Surgeon. He also had started a annual ride of doctors, which is still happening even after he dropped out into retirement. When we want to set up the beds, we notice there is a bright light in the bathroom, so Dick is very helpful in climbing up a ladder, inventing a shading system with black plastic bags and elastic. It works! We spend a good night in the bathroom, nice and cosy!
Julia and I at desert View

Finally warming up in the sun!

May 1, 2011    Desert View to Cameron       55.92km,    2.40hrs,     20.9 km/h   

It's hard to leave, it is so peaceful and Dick is such a good host. We pack our bags in the sun, Dick sits in a chair, watching, I guess amusing himself at how much luggage we carry! He used to be a bike mechanic and helped me with the brakes. Being a Surgeon he had to be an inventor too, which comes in handy with repairing bicycles. He also points out the names of all the birds, that are coming into the Juniper Tree, including hummingbirds.

Finally around midday we set off. It's almost all downhill from here with some tough uphill parts with headwind. It is a great ride with wonderful views, partly you can see the Little Colorado River, where we have a break at one of the Navajo Markets. Julia buys some pendants from a woman, who sells on this market regularly, but also goes to native Shows around the country to sell her jewellery.

It's late, when we get to Cameron. We go into the restaurant which is famous for their food, we have a Navajo Tacco, delicious!
The night we spent behind the Gas Station  in bright light, but I can sleep with my eye blinds.
5 am in the morning


Our night was spent in this Bathroom next to our friendly camp host

The landscape changes dramatically coming out of Grand Canyon area, Little Colorado River

May 2, 2011   Cameron to Kanab


We pack our bikes, ready to drop all the bags off the bikes in an instant, in case someone is willing to give us a lift through the Navajo Country. We where told by many different people, that it might not be the best idea to cycle through their land, as there are no camp sites and we  need a permit to camp. And the distances are too big to cross the land in one go. Also we hear about dogs on the road, chasing after cyclist sometimes, even Rottweiler! People in cars wouldn't notice, would they?!
So we decide to try and hitchhike.
We make a few signs with Page, North and Lee's Ferry. Cardboard from the store, Felt from the Post office. Whatever works!
We stand there by the Gas Station for less than 10 minutes, when a woman drives in, calling out " You want to go to Page?".
Sharon is driving from Sedona to Salt Lake City and is a most interesting woman. We get to talk about a lot of things and  we learn about her special gift being in contact with Fairies.  We have such a good conversation, that we decide to keep going with her to Kanab. We seem to have quite a special connection or maybe it is just 3 similar aged women together for a day! Just magic! In the park of Kanab she offers to read us the Fairy Cards. She is very intuitive and takes her time explaining. I can say I feel lucky to have met her. Thanks Sharon!

May 3, 2011    Kanab (4970ft, 1514 m) to Zion East Entrance    48.63 km,   3.51 hrs,   12.6 km/h  


Our Motel, the Red Rock Inn,  is great, it feels  good to have a warm night for a change. The owner David is a very young man with a 1 1/2 year old trying to make a living for the last 8 years with this Motel. It's old but clean and very spacious.
We again get a late start. It is so nice to have a room and it take a while to have everything packed. We are on the road by noon, a a slight uphill with changing winds. We rest at Mt. Carmel Junction (5308 ft), I have a Coconut Cream Pie, mhmh...
The next part of this trip is actually the hard part, it goes up, up, up... steep, not so steep, steep,....but mainly up, up, up...
Since we started late we have not much time left in the day, so we keep looking for  a suitable place to camp wild. Just before the park entrance we see a sign for Camp site. Great! It's a pretty site, quiet, no traffic at night.


May 4, 2011       East Entrance Zion to Springdale (3898 ft, 1188 m)   23 km,   1.18 hrs,   17.6 km/h   

We start off late-ish, since there is no rush, we don't have far to go, though we need to be in the Camp site in time to get a free site.
It's again uphill but the landscape is breath taking. I stop often to take pictures. The traffic is not too bad, so I can stop most times, when I want to. There is one short tunnel, through which I race through ( I have no lights on). But the second tunnel is long and we need to get a lift with people. Julia already is ahead and got a lift in a Van. The Ranger at the tunnel is asking drivers for me to find a suitable lift for my bike. It works smoothly. I drive through in a pick up truck and get dropped off on the other side of the tunnel. Loading my bags back on my bike and down I go. It's steep with a great view!
 I will have to check on my brakes again. Even though I had it in the store in Victoria for a tune up, the brand new brake pads seem to cut into my rim, there were metal pieces in my brake pad, when I checked the last time. And they still make a funny sound and don't brake well at all. So my back brake is my main brake.
We take a camp site at the RV Camp Site in Springdale, it has showers and a pool. 30$ for 2, not too bad.
We have to get a ride in a car through this tunnel in Zion

After the tunnel, this is the view of Zion

May 5, 2011  up to the North End of Zion "The Temple of Sinawa"    36 km,   2.04 hrs,  17.4 km/h   

We first take the bus to go to Emerald  Pools, but there are so many people already on the bus, that we changed plan, went back to get the bikes. I cycle all the way to the end of the road. I meet a senior man with his tricycle. He has had a flat tire, which he was able to fix, but he looked pretty exhausted sitting on a rock. His back wheel wasn't straight in and together we managed to straighten it out. And off he went with his little engine on it.
I stop for a short hike to look at the Court of the Patriarchs and go for a hike on the Riverside Walk to the beginning of the narrow Canyon. Unfortunately it was not allowed to go any further because of high floods.
It's a nice and hot day just as I like it, a slightly refreshing wind on the bike. I make it in time for a cooling swim in the pool. Perfect Day!
Comfort on the road

Cycle path in Zion

May 6, 2011     Springdale to Glendale( 5771 ft, 1759 m)    38 km, 2.19hrs, 16.4 km/h

We decide to get a ride up the hill since we will need to unload the bikes anyway to go through the tunnel. We stand for maybe 10 minutes in the park, when we get a ride with someone from Colorado. He takes us to the campsite at the East Entrance, where we load up and start riding mostly downhill to Mt. Carmel Junction. From there it goes slightly uphill again but with tale wind to Glendale. First time we are in a place, where there is no store!
I meet 4 cyclists who have been on the road for a year, cycling 49 States. For some reason they have a lot less luggage than we do?!
We fix Julia's bike, she couldn't change gears anymore and we figured out, that her disc brakes are constantly rubbing against the pads. Hopefully, this will help.

Our camp site in Glendale is sweet. Sweet smelling Apple Blossoms all around us! 2 Donkeys come to visit for a treat. A Llama in the back of the field is too shy.