The bike and I made it back from a 10 day trip unscathed. It was long,
beautiful and hot and dry.
The first day I drove from Santa Cruz, CA to Carson City, NV. I got my
scariest moment over with right away that day, when, during a high-speed pass
of a big RV/trailer rig, the bike ran out of gas just when I was 2 bike
lengths ahead of it while in the oncoming traffics lane. There was a bumper
to bumper line of vehicles behind him, so my only choice was to
instantaneously swerve across his bow and into the emergency lane, where it
started right-up after switching to reserve. This was my fault, I
underestimated the lesser mileage one gets with a full load, headwinds and 70
miles per hour. I never let my tank get too low after this!
Going-over 8573 ft. Carson Pass via the 88 was gorgeous, with very large snow
drifts piled-up on each side of the road.
Leaving Carson City in the morning, I headed-out on the 50E. This was
what I had been waiting for, huge open spaces, with mysterious looking
mountain ranges in the distance. This is Basin and Range country, the ranges
run North to South, and one passes through many of them moving across central
Nevada. All of them had lots of snow on them, the Toiyabe's were especially
impressive. I couldn't resist stopping at every BLM historic site, etc. and
exploring the myriad of dirt roads running everywhere. Immediately, the
schedule I had planned fell by the roadside. It took me all day to get to
Austin, approx. in the middle of NV. I went to Bob Scott campground in the
Humbolt/Toiyabe Nat'l forest, where I had camped in the past, but it was
closed! Good thing I was on a dualsport, I blasted-up a dirt road on public
land and pitched my tent. As far as I was concerned, I was the only person in
the world at that time. This was near the "Top Gun" range, and that night,
multiple formations of jet fighters screamed overhead at low altitude, even
including manuvers where they were dropping chaff or flares which lit-up the
ground like daylight. Very impressive, don't mess with America.
The next day was another long, dreamy trek across the endless desert,
where you feel like you are standing-still at 80 mph. I did plenty of
exploring, including some very well preserved petroglyphs at the Grimes site.
I made it to Ely, NV and called-it a day.
In the morning I made the relatively short trek to Great Basin Nat'l
Park, where I spent the day and camped in Lower Lehman Campground (the upper
at 10,000 ft was closed for snow).
The brought back great memories of living in Utah, where my Dad and I would
come here and do the cave tour and climb Wheeler Peak (second highest in NV).
The following day, I took-off down the 21 in West-Central Utah and headed
SE towards Milford. Boy, talk about remote, the BLM reports that the Wah-Wah
mountains have less than 150 visitors yearly, thats less then half a person
per day! I hardly saw any other vehicles on the road, off-road there was
nobody and the remoteness and lack of facilities were high in your mind as
you cruised around by yourself. I left the pavement and explored the
ghosttown of Frisco, claimed to be the best preserved one in Utah. This was a
silver boomtown in the late 1800's for 10 years, where 23 saloons labored day
and night to quench the thirst of the hardworking miners. Gunplay was a daily
occurance in this rowdy town. One day, between shift changes, the foreman
delayed sending the crews into the earth because he heard some strange
noises, shortly afterwards, the main shafts collapsed with such fury that it
broke windows 15 miles away in Milford. Nobody was killed because of the
foremans foresight. It was creepy arriving there, you see the cemetary first,
with headstones amazingly intact. Sadly, most of the graves were children. I
didn't read anything about this, but I believe typhoid, diptherea, etc
ravaged populations during this time period. How sad to watch your children
pass away in such a remote and desolate place. Scary incident #2 occurred
after this as I rounded a corner at 55 and a large, horned steer was standing
in the other lane and shyed away from me violently. Only 20 minutes for my
stomach to calm down here!
From there, I went to Beaver, where I stayed in the worlds cheapest and
sleazyest hotel.
Sometimes it can be cleaner to just sleep in the dirt. At least the shower
worked.
Now I'm nearing canyon country! While I have done some exploring of the
general Moab area parks, I had always whizzed right by the Bryce/Zion area.
Red Canyon and Bryce were beautiful, and I had caught-it just before the
hoards arrived.
After spending the day exploring Bryce, I went to Kodachrome Basin State
Park, where the campgrounds were incredibly clean with the most incredible
location. Huge rock formations, with a high density of the type that will
make a girl blush. There must be a vein of Viagra running beneath this park.
I had a double size site with 2 bbq's, parking for a 30 ft rig and double
picnic tables. I managed to fit the KLR and my tent into this space. There
are these really cool and large birds called Chukar's cruising around, they
were not afraid of people at all.
In the morning, I explored part of the road which runs from Kodachrome
between the 12 and the 89. It is a good, high-speed dirt road which leads to
Grosvenor Arch and continues approx. 55 miles south to the 89. I'd like to do
the whole length, next time. Then, I left my gear in the tent and drove
unloaded to the Escalante/Boulder area and did some off-road exploring in the
"Hole in the Wall" area. This area is fantastic and lesser knowen, endless
dirt riding is availible. This was my slowest day, and I still did 125 miles.
I spoke with an Escalante sheriff who gets to ride a DR350 on-duty, needless
to say, he loved his job!
At this point, it was time to turn around and start heading back (sniff).
I headed back through Bryce on the 12, went South on the 89 and picked-up the
14 towards Ceder City. Now we are talking some snow. The summit is just about
10,000 ft, and there are huge meadows up there completely piled-up with snow.
I felt like I was going on a ski trip by motorcycle. At the summit, there are
incredible views of the cliffs of Zion in the distance. Cedar Breaks Nat'l
Monument was closed. On the way out of Utah, I visited "Iron Town," a where
raw ore was turned into iron. Most of the structures are still standing,
including the beehive ovens where they burned local pinon and other wood into
the charcoal needed to fire the furnaces.
I headed for the Extraterrestial Highway and drove through Caliente, NV,
but time was running short and I saved some distance by going South on the 93
where I stayed in Alamo, NV in a little hotel with a bunch of truckers and
construction workers, a rough but very friendly group. The next morning, it
was down through Vegas, where it was hot, dusty and very windy. As I
approached the town on the 15, an absolutely huge dust devil (more like small
tornado) appeared to my right and headed across the freeway at high speed.
This was going to put me right in the middle, and I'm telling you, this thing
was picking up pieces of wood, not just dust and paper. I had one choice, and
savagely rotated the throttle to full stop. As I hit 95, it crossed behind me
and I instantly lost 15-20 mph as it tryed to pull me back like a vacume,
then I was free and screaming down the freeway. I only stopped in Vegas for
gas, then headed for Death Valley. Here, on the 95, I encountered the worse
cross winds that I have ever driven on a cycle. Just brutal, extended driving
at a 45 degree angle. I saw Apache/Cobra helicopters performing manuvers off
to my right, lots of military test areas around here.
Death Valley was hot and beautiful. Afterwards, its tricky to get back
into my area because of all the passes closed by snow. So I headed to Lone
Pine (below Mammoth) which entailed a very twisty run through the mtns.
getting out of Death Valley. I was very tired and going west directly into a
setting-sun, at the time this part felt more like work then fun, but thats
all part of the game.
From there, I took the 395 So. to the 178 W to the 155 W via Lake
Isabella. Beautiful area, with lots of off-road riding availible, including
the BLM back-country byway "Chimney Peak." This area requires closer
scrutiney. Afterwards, it was just long, hot, high-speed cruising via the 99
and I-5, I hate interstates, but time was running-out. I made it over Pacheco
Pass just before sunset and did Heckor Pass in the dark. Back in moist and
cool Santa Cruz, where it was raining lightly, a welcome change to my chapped
and peeling skin.
The KLR was steller, never once did it complain. It handled the extended
freeway cruising, and was like a tractor in the dirt. I just about wore-out
the stock rear tire (3700 total, 2300 from this trip) and was very happy with
it. I think I'll replace it again with the stock Dunlop, the front is still
in great shape.
A great trip. It was hot and dry, and this is only in early April. Moab
attendees, I would recommend using sunscreen _before_ you burn, a tinted
visor might be a good idea also. I waited until I was already burnt, and it
was very uncomfortable for the rest of the trip.
An awesome trip, my first long-one on the KLR. Time to go back to work
and save that Timebank for the next excursion. Happy Trails.
Charles
utah/nevada trip report
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