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northern california to colorado route?
Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 9:57 pm
by pjones650
Looking for some advice on what route to take from Sacramento area to
western Colorado on my KLR in late June. I'm meeting friends from
Minnesota for our annual ride. They have road bikes, so on the way
there I want to mix it up with some 2-lane paved and a little
gravel/dirt thrown in now and then to keep my interest up. Thinking
about taking 4 days to get there. Thanks for your input.
Paul
northern california to colorado route?
Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 10:12 pm
by Jud Jones
--- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "pjones650" wrote:
>
> Looking for some advice on what route to take from Sacramento area to
> western Colorado on my KLR in late June. I'm meeting friends from
> Minnesota for our annual ride. They have road bikes, so on the way
> there I want to mix it up with some 2-lane paved and a little
> gravel/dirt thrown in now and then to keep my interest up. Thinking
> about taking 4 days to get there. Thanks for your input.
>
> Paul
>
Lay down a groove of US 50, and riff on that.
northern california to colorado route?
Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 12:03 am
by C L Cooper
I agree - Hwy 50. It's been over 20 yrs since I drove from Reno to Grand
Junction on Hwy 50. The trip was very memorable. Great two lane black top.
Lots of cool little towns.
If you stay on 50 thru Delta, UT to Salina, UT, then on Hwy 50/70 to just
past Green River UT. Take 191 south to Moab, you can stop and say Hi to
Fred. Then on thru Moab southeast on 191, turns into 46 east, to 90 east to
141 north, up to Gateway, CO. There's a restaurant/inn in Gateway that's
very nice - you won't miss it, it's the only place in town. Excellent
Buffalo prime rib and Chile Verde.
If you keep going northeast on 141 you will run back into Hwy 50 at
Whitewater, CO. Grand Jct, CO and Hwy 70 is just a few miles north. Head
south to Delta, CO and Montrose. The ride up 141 from 90 to Whitewater is
something you won't forget.
Chuck C
San Diego, CA
On 4/1/07, Jud Jones wrote:
>
> --- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com ,
> "pjones650" wrote:
> >
> > Looking for some advice on what route to take from Sacramento area to
> > western Colorado on my KLR in late June. I'm meeting friends from
> > Minnesota for our annual ride. They have road bikes, so on the way
> > there I want to mix it up with some 2-lane paved and a little
> > gravel/dirt thrown in now and then to keep my interest up. Thinking
> > about taking 4 days to get there. Thanks for your input.
> >
> > Paul
> >
>
> Lay down a groove of US 50, and riff on that.
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
northern california to colorado route?
Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 9:27 am
by Michael Betcher
US 50, of course. Great road, little traffic, innumerable dirt road side trips. Between Fallon and Ely the only gas stations I recall are in Austin and Eureka, so don't pass any up.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
northern california to colorado route?
Posted: Tue Apr 03, 2007 12:52 pm
by Thomas Ingram
Check out
www.verlenelson.com for some ideas in eastern Utah & western
Colorado.
Tom Ingram
Montrose, CO
great scores for the tool kit - nklr
Posted: Tue Apr 03, 2007 4:44 pm
by takes2serious
--- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, 4_stroke wrote:
>
> You will be working there soon when they put your auto-dealership
our of business.
>
---
One of the nice things about relatively free markets is that there is
generally room for both, though the pendulum does swing back and
forth.
Interesting business news today about Dell manufacturer-direct to
consumer sales model versus Circuit City/Best Buy specialty retailer
model, versus Wal-Mart/Sam's Club mega-discount model versus Apple's
multi-channel model. All selling computers successfully. And still
there are local shops selling computer services, not to mention
Ebayers selling both new and used computers.
We just inked a free trade agreement with South Korea that looks like
it will remove virtually all tarrifs between the two countries; will
likely make Hyundais even less expensive in the U.S.
Better get used to it, 'cause it's the inevitable outcome of free
markets, and with China and India just getting started, we ain't seen
nothing yet in my opinion.