Big Montana, Big Crashes and New Friends
This entry was posted on 8/11/2006 5:27 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
Aug 9 24 miles to Seely Lake (Motel)
We had a four mile ride on a narrow, rocky ridge at the edge or rock
slides going downhill circling an alpine meadow appropriately named
Grizzly Basin. Riding on sharp rocks is hard for us Michigan
riders used to sand. I'm glad I have some experience mountain
biking in Arizona. Again, we were in an area closed to all but
foot or bike traffic and we got the idea that there wasn't much traffic
except a few Great Divide riders. Not that we are paranoid, but
we saw MANY piles of fresh bear scat. Our comment-keep Grizzly
Basin for the Grizzlies! At one point I was negotiating a narrow
turn on foot when my bike and trailer and I went tumbling down a rock
chute and stopped when my left knee (remember that when you read the
next day) embedded in the rock. Jon had to extract my bike and
trailer from on top of me. Later, trying to hurry down a long 3
mile downhill because of the bears and being tired and hungry, I
crashed twice more, both on my left knee. Plus, with all the
bouncing over rough terrain, I lost a water bottle from my trailer, my
washcloth that was tied to my top tube, and my mirror that got plucked
from my helmet by a tree. I was bummed about the mirror, as that
was the one that I bought with my first bike way back in 1980. Oh
well, time for change.
Don't think everything is bad. They say Montana is Big Sky
country. Well, I say it is big scenery country, big mountain
country and big animal country. You can't look anywhere without
seeing beautiful scenery. At the end of every road, at every turn
is a mountain, a valley, a vista. Wait till we get home and you
see my pictures. I'm afraid my little camera just isn't doing it
justice.
Aug 10 27.5 miles to Ovando, population 50 people and 100 animals (that's what the sign said).
Afton has a habit of wiggling in the trailer. When we are behind
(which is most of the time), she leans from side to side looking to see
how far Lander is ahead of her. When we get too far back (which
is often), she cries like a calf crying for his mama. I tell her
she sounds like an animal in distress and the bears or mountain lions
are going to come eat her. All this tends to throw my bike back
and forth. I've been dealing with this the whole trip. Nine
miles into today's ride, we were going down a gravel road, fairly
fast. I looked at my speedometer afterwards and my max for the
day so far was 18 MPH. I don't know if that's what I was doing
then, but for dramatic effect, we'll say I was going 18 MPH, and
whether Afton wiggled or I just lost it, but anyway, I went down hard,
and let me say, it was not a pretty site. Shock, nausea, the
whole nine yards. The whole right side of my body is scraped or
shredded, plus several fingers on my left side, including one I
basically removed the knuckle from. Jon was a great nursemaid, as
I laid on the gravel for about an hour. The abrasions we can take
care of. I am more concerned about my left thumb which is either
jammed, or sprained or dislocated. Hopefully not
worse. Somehow I also shredded the nipple on my camelback,
leaving my high and dry had not Jon brought along an extra one.
He's always prepared. Oh, during all this, Afton came out sitting
right next to the overturned trailer, still leashed to it, and not hurt
at all. And she still wiggles.
I managed to climb back on my bike. I can't grip the handlebars
with my left hand. I just lean my palm on them. I can only
brake with three fingers. Luckily that is my front break. I
can downshift with my fingers, but upshifting takes my thumb. I
have learned to do it awkwardly with the back of my hand. If my
thumbs not much better when we get to Helena in a couple days, maybe
I'll go to the hospital. For now, I'm all bandaged up (TJ and
Steffany, I used the Strawberry Shortcake bandages) and using the good
collagen wound care treatment that we have been using on the dogs pads.
All my mountain biking friends know I am known for some spectacular
crashes. This was one of the better one. Luckily, I have
some prescription strenght ibuprofin left over from my broken ribs from
doing an endo last year.
We camped that night on the lawn of the museum at Ovando, MT.
(Jodie and Todd, think Mitchell OR). There was a general store
across the street, a cafe that closed at 3 PM and a couple knick knack
stores. Can you imagine camping at the Museum in Gaylord?
Or even a city park? We stayed with other bikers for the first
time. Ira and Andrea were a young couple who started from Chicago
3 months ago and have a year to go all around the US. They have
no schedule and no planned route, only go from day to day. I'd
like to be that carefree. Really felt like we were back on the
Old Transam trail, visiting last night. A couple of brothers also
pulled in for awhile to visit, then continued on. They are doing
the first part of the Great Divide in a week and will be done in
Helena. They had heard about the couple that was traveling with
their dogs. During the 98 trip, we were known as the "family on
the TransAm". Now maybe we will be known as the "people with the
dogs on the Great Divide".
Aug 11 25 miles to Lincoln. Private campground
We cheated (no, not doping). We took Mt highway 200 all the way
from Ovando to Lincoln, instead of going up and over a mountain pass on
gravel. It was all paved and cut 8 miles off the day. It was
fairly flat and followed the Blackfoot river all the way. Had
some beautiful views we would not have seen up in the mountains.
We justified it by saying I was still recovering from injuries.
The point is to get to New Mexico and have a good time,
anyway. It also got us here early enough to take a shower
(yea!), do laundry and blog in an internet cafe.