Epic Western Ramble

Ride Report


Days were getting longer, warmer, and closer to the solstice.  A northern route was proposed with an AI assist, one that I found useful, however inaccurate at times.  This route ended up disappearing from glitchy technology while on the ramble.  The paper map back-up also disappeared somewhere along the road from Vernal to Torrey Utah.  Somehow we managed to enjoy seven states (CA twice) in eight days without navigation or incident and I quietly celebrated my birthday…

Albert Reservoir and the Albert Rim in Oregon
The Sawtooths from Stanley, ID
Flaming Gorge lake, UT
The Escalante, UT
Mono Lake, CA

Per the usual trip highlights, we rode through amazing landscapes, quintessentially western and met interesting locals and travelers, who like ourselves, were curious about these iconic western locales.  And for at least three days, it was technology free rambling.  Cellular coverage is weak if not totally absent from many of these rural western locales.  Our Cardo comm devices defied spotty cellular coverage so we could at least converse about the scenery and whether the route resembled the plan.  Columbus didn’t need cellular coverage.  All he had to do was shout an order from the deck.  Though, he might have made it to India if he had…

Sisyphean Ramble Planning Criteria (SRPC)

Our “absolutes” when rambling include roads that follow the Butler Motorcycle Map descriptors:  

Butler Motorcycle routes are graded with descriptors such as G1, G2, and G3, where G1 indicates the best combination of twisty pavement and scenic views. Additionally, routes are marked for features like “Paved Mountain Trails,” which indicate roads with no center line and uncertain conditions or “Lost Highways” roads with faded center lines, crumbling shoulders, and long lonely miles, i.e., a “blast from the past” feel.

If you read the SRPC (Sisyphean Ramble Planning Criteria), framework in the preceding post, File this Under:  The Old Dog Learns a New Trick (A Cautionary Tale) the Butler grading system explanation reframes the AI conflict from “old man yells at chatbot” to an interesting navigation philosophy clash.  Especially in light of losing the digital “Drive” routing as Google Maps disappeared on the third day while on the bike.  As did my iTunes.  On more than one occasion, Google and Apple were yelled at, I might add, often in vain…

This presented one of the difficulties while planning in convincing AI that avoiding highways of the Interstate variety or freeways in populated areas would necessarily lengthen the day’s ride beyond another absolute, limiting 300+ mile days.  Since we were motelling this ramble, our preferred camping mileage of ~250 mile days, was suspended as setting up and breaking down camp has more moving parts than checking in and out of a motel.  And there are showers.  I used AI in selecting lodging for the first five days, on the recommendation to do so as the post-Memorial Day vacation fury was about to convulse.  Apparently motels, like campgrounds, aren’t the only place to seek refuge in an unfamiliar place that gets hoarded by anxious travelers on January 1. 

Bon Voyage

Day 1 – Monday, June 15

Merced to Susanville ~303 miles

CA-59/J59 → Jamestown → CA-49 → Angels Camp → CA-4 → Ebbitts Pass → Markleville → CA-89 → CA-88 → Minden, NV → US-395 Eastern Sierra → Carson City → Susanville → Diamond View Motel

Departing the Central Valley on CA-59 and stepping onto the historic J-59 foothill corridor, the journey climbed steadily into the rugged heart of California’s Gold Country.  The landscape traded flat farmland for rolling, oak-studded hills as we arrived in the historic hamlet of Jamestown.  Forget the pork, the historic chicken wing of Jamestown, home of the Chicken Ranch Casino.  

Joining the iconic CA-49, we wound north through the heart of the Mother Lode to Angels Camp, a town steeped in frontier frog lore and the Mark Twain Vrbo.  At Angels Camp, the route pivoted east onto CA-4, launching a dramatic ascent into the High Sierra.  The road narrowed to a “Paved Mountain Trail,” and twisted sharply as it conquered Ebbitts Pass, a breathtaking, white-knuckle alpine crossing that tops out over 8,700 feet amid granite crags and sweeping wilderness vistas.  Be sure not to miss a shift down to first gear, thus hitting neutral, on a 10 mph hairpin.  I speak of experience.

Descending the eastern slope, the highway brings you into the quiet mountain outpost of Markleeville.  Like most small mountain towns open all weekend, it was pretty much rolled up on a Monday morning.

SMAP enjoying a spot of Markleville’s shade as Sisyphus stretched his nalgas

From Markleeville, you pick up CA-89 and link up with CA-88, dropping out of the high alpine forest into the wide, sweeping ranch lands of Minden, Nevada.  Turning north onto the historic US-395 highway along the Eastern Sierra flank, the route passed straight through the heart of Carson City.  Cruising through Reno, the final, long northbound stretch carried us back across the California line and through the arid sagebrush plains of Lassen County.  

The SRPC motel criteria has evolved.  We prefer classic motor courts or motels.  They must, however, not be decrepit.  For instance, this is an example of a place that would be rejected by applying the SRPC:

Sorry Doyel, we’ve got miles to go before we sleep

Not because it was a Hotel and not a Motel, not because the towels probably weren’t transparent, but because it was in Doyle, California a town decidedly not on the rise.  Towels notwithstanding, gas was a bargain at the Doyle Grocery Hotel where the red pump was retired long before the proprietor and long after it had lost its sheen.  Back on the bikes, some 42 miles short of our destination, we ultimately brought the day’s long ride to a close at the faded (and presumably lighted by a series of extension cords) marquee of Susanville’s Diamond View Motel.  

The sign sums it up

Just prior to departure, I decided it would be best to secure reservations for lodging for the first half of the trip.  I did so because Claude, my AI assistant, recommended confirming reservations as this was prime vacation season in the direction we were headed, particularly for moto-ramblers like ourselves.  However,  discovering that I had the wrong dates for each of the four reservations I had hastily made, rather than call back and rearrange and possibly lose a booking, I revised our departure date.  I did this without Claude’s assistance.

Susanville, CA rivals Chama, NM, long the gold standard of Sisyphean overnight stops

In making the reservation for the Diamond View with Ming, the sole proprietor of the place, on the Friday prior to our intended departure on Sunday, June 14, I accidentally booked the room for our first night on the road, Monday, June 15, my birthday.  Along with reservations for the Silver Spur Motel in Burns, OR, the Mountain Village Resort in Stanley, ID, the Swiss Mountain Motel in Thayne, WY, the Patriot Stay Motel in Vernal, UT and the Rim Rock Inn in Torrey, UT, all were subsequently a day off too.  So, rather than risk losing any of the aforementioned lodging, I simply rescheduled the departure.  I didn’t need Claude to figure that out either.

Ming sounded to be a nice, if somewhat, non-fluent English speaker over the phone.  Upon checking-in on our arrival I requested, politely with a touch of snark, the “presidential suite.” To which she mumbled in response, something like, “What a president?”  Her perplexed look, staccato English, and my embarrassing explanation that it was a joke concluded our only contact with her.  She retreated to the laundromat across the driveway, further mumbling, unimpressed by my sarcasm.  

Check-in now achieved, we unpacked and cranked up the room’s air conditioning. It was in the mid 90’s by mid-afternoon.  The air conditioning, noted on the marquee along with HT (heat?), worked fabulously.  I guess that was compensation for not having “coffee in room or WIFI”.  It all began to make sense.  The motel appeared to be populated by a group of “eccentric” folks of questionable sobriety and means.  The sheer number of security cameras attached to the office eves and the room decor explained everything.  Maybe Ming preferred viewing the motel’s parking lot tableaux to “Direct TV.Latino”.

Room #1  was the “Curious George Suite” with a bidet

And Yes, Susanville, California is considered the definitive textbook definition of a “prison town”

Little did we know that local business owners, including multi-generational motel operators, openly state that their properties rely directly on business from families traveling across California to visit incarcerated relatives.  In spite of such transparency, Ming neglected mentioning when I arranged the reservation that The Sierra View was just such an establishment.  Our first impressions were confirmed when our immediate neighbor in room 2 emerged from her room as we rolled up.  She sat down, a woman who painted her toenails while chain smoking.  We later found her with two young children who appeared from the room.  This was likely an inmate’s family visiting.  In the spirit of Bill Maher, we didn’t know it was a fact, we just knew it was true.  

Since all of the rooms were Non-Smoking, we soon became familiar with mom and her family.  While putting the finishing touches on her toenails, her young son, maybe 10 years old, came up to me with a can of soda and invited me to, “See a great prank to pull on someone.”  Was I being set up? 

Pointing out that the tab of the can was intact, and by all appearances looked to be a full can of soda, he demonstrated the can was empty.  He did this by dropping the can to the ground to emphasize its emptiness.  Summoning empathetic amazement I asked how in the heck had he done it.  He explained, “I just pull the tab a little bit then supersuck the Sprite then I push the tab down.”  I wasn’t sure if this was the pre-dinner show — I probably owed him a tip.     

After dining next door at the Mazatlan Grill, we retreated to our camp chairs, as is our routine, outside of the room, to enjoy beverages procured from the gas station across from the motel à la the 3R’s:  rehydration, relaxation, and reflection on the day’s ride as well to gain some sense of the rhythms of Susanville as the sun was setting.

Sisyphus in reflection, literally, and SMAP (right) studying the menu as the guest (left) reflected, figuratively, on what I was doing

About that time a group of Latino laborers showed up in a pickup shouldering a 36 pack of Budweiser and other packages, likely take-out. They appeared to eye the parking space we had planted our bikes in that was likely theirs on nights when the only room, Room 1 not rented by the week or month, isn’t occupied.  They quietly retreated to the room attached to the motel’s office, presumably the proprietor, Ming’s residence.  Odd, thought we, but perhaps this was the nature of the Diamond View perfectly aligned with the rhythms of Susanville.  We then surmised that not all of the guests were inmate visitors.  We raised our beverages in salute to the working men and they quietly acknowledged our gesture.    

Pete, bilingual, later found out they lived in what was the motel office manager’s apartment, all five of them, and they spent their days in the mountains above Susanville harvesting pine cones.  Pine cones that are used in making wreaths, flower arrangements, and anything else requiring little pine cones.  Other guests at the motel wandered back and forth throughout the evening, joining them.  Perhaps they were little pine cone mules.  Perhaps that explains why Ming retreated to the laundromat across the parking lot.

It was an interesting community made up of folks who managed to endure what Sisyphus and SMAP take for granted:  secure in our intent to ramble, willing to risk some of that security in pursuit of a little sketchiness.  It all must have made interesting video alerts for the security cams:  Smokers, children doing magic tricks, laborers enjoying a 36er, and two blokes in camp chairs taking it all in.  One of the guests who appeared to be familiar with abusive substances commented that our little camp chairs would be ideal for using while fishing.  We didn’t leave them out that night. 

Day 2 – Tuesday, June 16

Susanville, CA to Burns, OR ~299 miles

CA-139 → Alturas → US-395 Oregon Outback (New Pine Creek → Lakeview → Wagontire → Riley)  → US-20 → Burns → Silver Spur Motel

California’s Loneliest Road

An early start guaranteed we’d be spared the afternoon heat.  Sort of.  SMAP suggested we depart from US-395 to make our way to a breakfast stop in Alturas taking CA-139.   This state highway 139 from Susanville to Alturas takes you through one of the most rugged, isolated, and untouched volcanic corridors in the American West.  Officially ranked by data analysts as California’s “loneliest road,” this two-lane highway averages fewer than 1,500 vehicles a day, carving a quiet path through vast high-desert basins and dense pine forests.  Perhaps where the pine cone harvest takes place.

Because CA-139 actually runs northwest toward Oregon, traveling from Susanville to Alturas requires driving CA-139 north to the town of Adin, then merging onto CA-299 east to complete the trip into Alturas.  The Susanville Climb & The Volcanic Rim  Ascent begins just east of Susanville, where CA-139 splits from CA-36. It immediately hits a steep, winding mountain grade as it climbs up the rugged slopes of Antelope Mountain.  This was a brilliant detour from the planned route.  SMAP recalled having taken this road in the opposite direction on a ramble a few years back.  Who needs Google maps when SMAP is on board.  If only Columbus had a SMAP on board the Santa Maria.  

The first 60 miles out of Susanville are notorious among truck and RV drivers for being exceptionally narrow and “skinny,” lacking shoulders or large breakdown lanes. It features continuous roller-coaster ups and downs.  As the road crests the rim, it descends into the spectacular Eagle Lake Basin. The highway skirts the eastern edge of Eagle Lake, California’s second-largest natural freshwater lake offering sweeping high-desert lake views and premier opportunities to spot nesting osprey and bald eagles.  We saw some mallards.

Eagle Lake visited a couple of times back when I attended Chico State

A breakfast stop at the historic Niles Hotel in Alturas punctuated the beautiful morning ramble up CA-139.   As with most rural small towns, this Tuesday morning was peaceful with an easy feeling.  We were tryin’ to take it easy.  (Hotel Niles isn’t the Hotel California)

SMAP enjoying the peaceful easy feeling of the Niles (not California) Hotel in Alturas, CA

Heading north from the California border toward Burns, the landscape is defined by the Great Basin high desert.  The terrain is an open, desolate expanse of sagebrush plains, dry lake beds, and volcanic rims.  Landscapes we would be seeing throughout this ramble.

Lake Abert, not currently a dry lakebed, and the Abert Rim, currently an ancient lava flow

The Abert Rim is one of the most visually spectacular and geologically significant ancient lava formations in North America. Located right along US-395 south of the Valley Falls junction (on the southern approach toward Burns), it is not a fresh, black lava flow like Devils Garden a few miles up the road near Wagontire or Hell’s Half Acre or Craters of the Moon in Idaho, but rather a massive, 30-mile-long tilted block of ancient flood basalt layers that has been thrust thousands of feet into the air.  Oregon seems to have won the volcanic dunk competition. The Albert Rim makes the lava flow in our neighborhood from Dardanelle, near Sonora Pass, to the Stanislaus Table mountain, near Copperopolis, appear puny, a mere volcanic layup.  

At Valley Falls a brief stop for hydration at the Valley Falls Store afforded the opportunity to meet a couple, she on a Harley, and he on an Indian, who, by their own admission, were headed to Winnimucka-ish.  It wasn’t getting any cooler but they looked worthy of making the miles.  Apparently the Indian-Harley kerfuffle hadn’t soured their relationship.  The Lowdown Show by ADVrider

From here, you enter an incredibly isolated 140-mile stretch.  You will pass through the tiny outpost of Wagontire—famous for having a population of fewer than five people and this fellow…  

Sasquatch sighting in Wagontire!

US-395 is long, straight, and empty. You must watch out for “Open Range” signs, as cattle frequently wander onto the unfenced highway. Maybe at times, even other large hairy mammals.  At the tiny community of Riley, US-395 merges with US-20, turning east for the final hot flat stretch into Burns and our destination for the night, the Silver Spur Motel.

Dreaming Big In Burns

We checked in at the Silver Spur first by startling the attendant at the desk as I introduced myself, “Hi Marisa, I’m Sysiphus and you know why we’re here.”  It wasn’t a question.  It was declarative.  She was the person I had arranged for the room a few days prior.  I guess I didn’t make much of an impression in that initial phone conversation, by not declaring why we were there.  She replied, “Because you need a room?”  Snap, as young people used to say…

Moving along from my second lame conversation with a motel front desk person, I redirected,  commenting on the retro flagstone sign and mid-century modern low pitched roofline, attempting saving grace by striking up a conversation about the place.  She told us that a local rancher had purchased the motel and was in the process of restoring it to its lustrous past.  

After Marisa apologized for the in-process renovation I asked if said renovation had impacted air conditioning.  She replied that there wasn’t any.  Snap again!  She had two-upped me!!  We pretended to assure her that was not an issue.  She giggled admitting that I would stand with a slight lean as one leg had been pulled twice. She then recommended a walkable Mexican restaurant down the street and so we unpacked and made our way to El Toreo where we had a delicious chicken mole.   

Early and Mid Century Dreaming Big in Burns Oregon!

We somehow managed to find a shop willing to sell us our customary beverages enjoyed while relaxing and rehydrating as we reflected on the day’s ramble.  The landscape through which we traveled this day was wide-open, with arid vistas of the Oregon High Desert and the northern limits of the Great Basin.  Thirsts needed quenching.

The evening concluded as the sun set and 3-R beverages were enjoyed while the day was revisited  It appeared the motel was full given the parking lot had no empty parking spaces.  Despite the sign, there was nothing to apologize for.  The Spur Motel was decidedly less “eccentric” than the previous night’s Diamond View stay.  At least Marisa understood my sometimes obscure sense of humor (and I hers) and the Mexican cuisine was better too. 

 A couple we met who roomed next door had been traveling for months across the US in their Subaru Outback.  They departed after dark to check out the night skies, just outside of town, away from the city lights.  The region boasts some of the clearest and darkest skies in the country, offering an unparalleled stargazing experience.  That reminded us of how much we missed the night skies usually reserved for camping.  A comfortable mattress and air conditioning eased our nostalgia as the waxing crescent moon, Jupiter, Saturn, and the Evening Star, Venus appeared over the horizon;  Mercury was too faint for our geezer vision.  

The Pronghorn Suite, with original pronghorn artwork painted on the wall above my bed, easy to see

Day 3 – Wednesday, June 17

Burns, OR to Stanley, ID ~286 miles

US-20 → Juntura →Vale → US-26 → OR-201 → Ontario, OR → US-30 → SW-18th St → SE-2nd St → US-30 → OR-72 → Hamilton Corner → OR-52 → along the Payette River → Horseshoe Bend → OR-55 → Banks Lowman Rd → over Grimes Pass → Lowman → ID-21 the Ponderosa Pine Scenic Rt → Stanley, ID → Mountain Village Resort

There’s More to Idaho than Potatoes

Leaving the high-desert hub of Burns, the route rolled east on US-20 through a vast landscape of sweeping sagebrush plains and dramatic rimrock cliffs.  The highway hugs the Malheur River canyon, passing the quiet outpost of Juntura before opening up into the ranching valley of Vale.  From there, a quick transition onto US-26 and OR-201 lead straight into Ontario, the final border town on Oregon’s eastern edge.

After navigating Ontario’s local grid via US-30, SW 18th, and SE 2nd streets, the journey crossed the state line into Idaho. Jumping onto OR-72 through Hamilton Corner and transitioning to ID-52, the terrain shifts dramatically. The road wound along the lower curves of the Payette River, trading the arid high desert for lush green riverbanks, whiteish-water rapids, and irrigated fruit orchards, alfalfa, and potato fields.  The route followed the river canyon to Horseshoe Bend (not the Utah one), briefly heading north on ID-55 to the rafting hotspot of Banks where some 31 years ago I along with several knuckleheads doused ourselves on a brutally hot bicycle ride across Idaho under the bridge over the Payette River. 

Here, the journey turned onto the twisting Banks-Lowman Road, taking a rugged backcountry detour over the historic, winding heights of Grimes Pass. But not before we encountered a delay.  A portable, variable message sign warned of a road block. It had been placed a quarter mile down from the actual road block, some 15 miles from where the one-way only route to Stanley intersects with ID-55 WHERE SUCH A SIGN SHOULD HAVE BEEN PLACED!  It was a Boise County project doing shoulder maintenance.  You’d think they would have thought about the signage placement.  Maybe they had…

We were the third group who had just missed the golden lunch hour transit window.  The electronic messaging sign indicated that the road was closed from 8:00 am till 12:00 pm.  It was open for one hour 12:00 till 1:00 pm then closed from 1:00 till 5:00 pm.  Of course, we arrived at 1:15 pm.  Besides the sign, virtually at the location of the road block, was obscured by being on a curve.  There was no way to read the closure schedule, even at legal speed.  We witnessed several vehicles that had to engage ABS to stop at the road block, apparently not seeing the signage either.  

Pete and I decided to kill time and return to a small village on the Payette River, Garden Valley, to get fuel and a snack for the final push into Stanley.  When we returned to the roadblock at 3:00 pm, several dozen cars, RV’s, and trucks were queued up awaiting the 5:00 pm opening.  We did the only sensible thing and headed to the front of the line.  We were certain of not inciting hostility since we would not hold up any traffic following us when the road did eventually open.  Several of the stranded motorists came forward to chat and use the small adjacent pull out for answering a matter of internal urgency in an unscheduled pit stop to water the sagebrush.

Donovan, our fellow stranded self-described, squid and my feeble shade structure

We met Donovan who rolled up after I had constructed a shade structure.  Since it was just after Father’s Day and Donovan was young enough to be my son (if I had a son in my mid 50’s),  I thought about my Dad and had one of those “Let’s compare our lives” conversations I often invented.  “So pops, what did you do when you were younger?”  He would say something like, “I survived the depression and WWII.”  I would reply, “I once built a shade structure.”  Feeble shade at that.

Donovan was a recent high school graduate from Boise who was headed to Stanley to join a group of friends for some summer fun at Redfish Lake  Since he had no plans to continue his education beyond graduation, he seemed excited to be heading towards and endless summer.

Donovan had just acquired his Kawasaki Ninja and his only protective gear was a helmet and the boots that came with the bike.  He was a nice kid and we shared lots of laughs about his being a jack Mormon, new to motorcycles, and the uncertainty of the friends he was ostensibly meeting at Redfish Lake, wearing nothing more than a tee shirt and sweatpants, boots and a helmet.  Fortunately for his sake, there would be no frost on our motos the next morning.

After several false starts over the next couple of hours as the crew doing the shoulder work one by one departed, a county Sheriff rolled through the roadblock.  He said he had ticked several impatient travelers who went around the roadblock.  That made sense.  It was a collaborative project involving county road maintenance and local law enforcement.  Maybe that’s how they paid for the road maintenance. It was likely the reason for the electronic message sign placement…

The last County Road Maintenance truck finally pulled up and retired the road blocks at precisely 5:00 pm.  From the preceding stream of worker’s vehicles, I’m sure they were done by 4:00 but the pickin’s for the Sheriff were too easy.   Donovan, SMAP, and I jumped on our bikes and headed up the road, only modestly in excess of the speed limit for we didn’t want to hold up the parade behind us, hoping there would be no automated message boards that we might miss before encountering another road block or a second Sheriff in waiting.  

Dropping down into the mountain pocket of Lowman, where in 1995 on that bicycle ramble mentioned earlier with that bunch of knuckleheads, there witnessed this shameful spectacle.

L to R, the perplexed investigator Don, Mike the victim, and Dale the violator

From Lowman, the route joins ID-21—the Ponderosa Pine Scenic Byway. This stunning road climbs deep into pure alpine wilderness, cresting the 7,056-foot Banner Summit before descending into the spectacular mountain basin of Stanley, where the jagged wall of the Sawtooth Mountains rises sharply behind the Mountain Village Resort.  We had lost contact with Donovan around Lowman, but saw him whip by as we were unpacking.  He must have stopped for fuel.  Hopefully not for a Sheriff.

The Rodeo Comes to Stanley

The Sawtooths (Sawteeth?)

Remembering the much more modest accommodations back in 1995 where the Knuckelheads spent the night stoked by the epic climb over Banner Summit and now inspired by a wee bit of California viticulture…

… it was rodeo time in Stanley, time to raise a glass to the past, and embrace the future.

Dino seemed to enjoy my spirited, back to the future arrival in Stanley 
Sadly, I departed with no buckle and my parents remain married in perpetuity
The Sawtooth Mountains in reality look nothing at all like their depiction on the van

The following morning was clear and coolish, not cold.  Several groups of motorcycles were traveling through Stanley mostly “adventure” types, with a smattering of Harley baaaaggggerrrrs.  Demographically, we pretty much fit the mold of the two-wheeled geezer “adventure” ramblers suited up in ATGATT resembling the Michelin Man.  Even the Harley guys had traded their leather vests for jackets. A couple with fringe.

The resort was also the launching point for multi-day raft tours of the Salmon River.  Given the volume of gear each rafter was hauling, I began to feel as though the additional 50 pounds of camping gear I could have brought wasn’t that much of a big deal.  Except it was.  

Day 4 – Thursday, June 18

Stanley, ID to Thayne, WY ~290 miles

ID-75 → Challis → US-93 → Arco → US-26 past the INL → US-20 → Idaho Falls → E-49 N → US-26 → along the Snake River and Palisades Reservoir → Alpine, WY → US-89 → Thayne, WY→ Swiss Mountain Motel and Lenny

The Salmon River Canyons to the Volcanic Desert

Our journey began on ID-75, carving northward through a dramatic, steep-sided canyon carved by the Salmon River. Several hot springs lie adjacent to the river.  The terrain here is highly vertical, defined by rocky cliffs and the towering peaks of the Salmon River Mountains. 

Sunbeam Hot Springs on the Salmon River
Salmon River Mountains and one of tens of thousands of acres of irrigated ag

As we reached Challis, the landscape began to fracture and turning southeast onto US-93, the narrow canyon abruptly opened into the sweeping, wide-open expanse of the Round Valley.  To your left and right, massive mountain walls hem you in, with Idaho’s highest peak, Mount Borah, dominating the eastern horizon.  Continuing south toward Arco, the rugged mountains begin to recede, flattening into the northern fringes of the Snake River Plain. 

Willow Creek Summit with Mt. Borah in the background

Leaving Arco on US-26, the terrain transitions into an otherworldly, barren expanse as you roll directly past the Idaho National Laboratory (INL).  This segment is characterized by vast, flat sagebrush desert, underlain by ancient, black basalt lava flows that stretch out seamlessly toward the horizon.

What is now Idaho National Laboratory in southeastern Idaho began its life as a U.S. government artillery test range in the 1940s. Shortly after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, the U.S. military needed a safe location for performing maintenance on the Navy’s most powerful turreted guns. The guns were brought in via rail to near Pocatello, Idaho, to be re-sleeved, rifled and tested.   As the Navy began to focus on post-World War II and Cold War threats, the types of projects worked on in the Idaho desert changed, too.  Perhaps the most well-known was the building of the prototype reactor for the world’s first nuclear-powered submarine, the USS Nautilus.  Form the kiosk display.

Idaho National Laboratory info kiosk, lavatory, and layer removal station
The perfect place to develop nuclear submarines

The Upper Snake River Plain

As US-26 merges into US-20, the road carried us straight into Idaho Falls, a bustling urban hub built over the roaring-ish waters of the Snake River.  Leaving the city, we transitioned onto E-49 N (locally known as the Bone Road or Hitchen Cemetery Road), rolling momentarily into rolling, agricultural benchlands.  These irrigated, high-elevation farmlands feature sweeping fields of grain and potatoes and an occasional antelope, undulating gently before dropping us back down to meet US-26 East.

The Caribou Mountains and Snake River Canyon

Heading east, the terrain transforms dramatically.  The flat plains vanish as US-26 enters the Snake River Canyon, tracking the path of the river as it cuts through the heavily forested Caribou Mountains.  By the way, we saw no caribou. The road huged the contours of the canyon floor, squeezed between rushing water and steep, pine-covered slopes.  Soon, the river widened and calmed, opening up into the spectacular Palisades Reservoir. For several miles, we rolled along a shelf carved into the mountainside, looking out over a massive, deep-blue body of water framed by timbered ridges.

The Palisades Reservoir along the Snake River looking south  from US-26

The Star Valley Descent

At the southern tip of the reservoir, we crossed the state line into Alpine, Wyoming, where the Snake, Greys, and Salt rivers all converge.  Picking up US-89 South, the canyon walls fall away entirely, revealing the pristine alpine floor of the Star Valley.  Known historically as “Little Switzerland” due to its lush green summer pastures and dairy farming heritage, the valley floor is wide, flat, and remarkably pastoral.

SMAP pointing out the obvious
Thayne, WY, aka Little Switzerland

We cruised south along the vibrant valley floor, flanked symmetrically by the dramatic crest of the Salt River Range to the east and the Caribou Range to the west. The terrain remained a smooth, scenic flatland all the way into the quiet town of Thayne.  On the north side of town, set against the backdrop of these towering green mountains, day four concluded at the vintage, ground-floor property of Lenny’s, Swiss Mountain Motel.

Our original plan was to stay in Jackson, WY that night. After contacting eleven motels in a 50 mile radius of Jackson, none of which had an available room, it was recommended that we try the Swiss Mountain in Thayne. “Remember that sometimes not getting what you want is a wonderful stroke of luck.” ~ Dalai Lama.

No Vacancy at the Swiss Mountain Motel in Thayne, WY, population 389

We’ve learned, having rambled through two dozen of these adventures, that the landscapes speak deeply to our appreciation of the natural beauty of the West — but it is invariably the folks we meet along the way who resonate long after the mountains, rivers, plains, and forests have blurred into one.  

Lenny and Sisyphus neither of whom know where the lens is on the phone

The owner and operator of the Swiss Mountain Motel is Len Roman.  He originally purchased the vintage property in 1995 with his late wife, Cindy.  Following her passing in 2019, Len has continued to run the day-to-day operations. He’s the room servicing maid, the front desk attendant, gardener, and general maintenance man.   It’s a one man show. Unlike Ming, he didn’t retreat to the laundromat when I attempted humor.

He frequently interacts directly with guests as the primary host and property manager.  Lenny, as we came to know him, was a fellow biker.  Short in stature, tall in opinion, large in generosity, and plentifully, yet cordially sarcastic, Lenny is my kind of motellier. 

Lenny’s pride and joy, a Honda VTX and a Harley V-Rod low rider, and the Swiss Mountain Motel

Besides being an affable host, Lenny had something of a snarky vein too.  Not much slack was cut for the pretension of a Moto Guzzi.  After losing the ATGATT and donning my yellow plaid button up shirt and khaki shorts, Len stops me and points north saying, “That’s the way to the golf course…”   I later convinced him of my authenticity as a khaki shorted moto-rambler, in a yellow plaid button up shirt, beer drinker by lifting my pinky as I brought the can to my lips.  

Lenny’s Swiss Mountain Gardens

Lenny is also something of a collector on the verge of being a hoarder.  He operates The Salt River Trading Post as he tends to his motel garden of bleeding hearts, petunias, hostas, and columbine with obvious care, then runs a floor-to-ceiling emporium of organized chaos open by appointment only.  The garden says curator.  The Trading Post says accumulator. Lenny himself seems somewhere in between.  

One man’s collectables is another man’s objets d’art

In researching background, I found a scathing review of the Trading Post that was posted on the local Chamber of Commerce website back in 2022:  

So junky most items cannot be easily seen or viewed. The owner does not deal on prices at all even though by his own admission he’s not been open due to family illness.  His things are overpriced for condition and he talks to customers like they know nothing even when it is clear from conversation that they do. Take home-junky overpriced and impossible to navigate to see anything.  Stop to look but don’t expect decent prices.  He’s selling to tourists.

The Chamber review was written by someone who, besides having grammar issues, wanted to buy something and couldn’t, or wouldn’t at Lenny’s price. That’s a transaction that failed. Their Lenny is a difficult vendor with inflated prices and a chaotic inventory.   Every complaint is probably accurate.  I personally found the collection to be worthy of awe.  Now my wife would have made some disparaging comparison to our garage.  IMHO, ours is a garage filled with objets d’art.

Our Lenny is someone we weren’t trying to buy anything from.  We were just two road-worn bikers who passed the pinky test and got the private tour. That Lenny — the one who tends bleeding hearts outside every room door, who knows exactly where the 1957 Hamm’s Beer sign is buried under the Roy Rogers lunch pails and the taxidermied badger and changes sheets and towels — that Lenny is a genuine eccentric, not a shyster.

A hoarder thinks everything is precious; a collector knows why everything is precious.  Lenny sounds to me like the latter.  It takes one to know one, eh?  He talks to customers like they know nothing because, in his estimation, they usually don’t — and he’s probably right about his inventory if wrong about his bedside manner.  (I hope my wife doesn’t read this…)

Wyoming has interesting rules regarding 3R’s beverages

The Pines Bar is the only place in Thayne that one could procure 3R’s beverages that could be taken out.  So, we sampled the merchandise before entering the beer cave to procure our rehydration, relaxation, and reflection selection for the evening.

😋

The barkeep, Liz, upon learning we were staying at the Swiss Mountain, asked us to remind Lenny that he needed to come by and get a smoothie (upper right above).  In fact she then asked if we would take him one, on the house.  That tells you a lot about the good folks in Thayne, looking after one another.  We dropped off the smoothie and Lenny, in fine curmudgeonly fashion, expressed his gratitude by complaining that it wasn’t his favorite berry, but coconut… 

Both Liz and Lenny recommended Dad’s Bar and Steakhouse for dinner, right across US-89 from the motel.  Each recommended getting in early as the place fills up pretty quickly around the dinner hour.  

Khaki shorts, yellow plaid shirt, and Big Buddy Ben

SMAP had a burger and I had a Lil’ Buddy prime rib sammy from the bar menu.  Even though I was flashing a Benjamin, we opted for the modestly priced bar menu rather than the full on steakhouse menu.  One doesn’t exactly burn a full measure of calories sitting on a motorcycle all day.  Dad’s bar menu was also recommended by Lenny.  

Our dinner mates at the bar were a fellow and his wife who had sold their property in Sonoma, CA, purchased a large motorhome and trailered their Kawasexy Vulcan bagger around using it to visit sites of interest in the vicinity of their chosen RV park for the day, week, or month.  They too had chosen Thayne rather than Jackson for reasons similar to ours. 

Nomads on a Kawasexy Vulcan

Back at the Swiss Mountain après dinner garden gathering we enjoyed trading stories of our travels in the company of a couple from the Midwest who had checked in to the Swiss Mountain on their way to National Park points north.  Around the Swiss there were always chores to be done.  Lenny was mowing the lawn. 

A group of six or so young men piled out of a car, one of whom mistakenly entered our room thinking it was his.  His friends berated him and apologized profusely.  I suggested a $20 fine, citing obscure Wyoming trespass law.  They hastily made their way to their actual room next to ours. A pickup pulled into the lot towing a commercial dog trailer.  Seems that in Afton, down the road, a big herding trials competition was happening and this Wisconsin couple, though not competing, had brought beautiful border collies, perhaps to watch and learn. They are smart K-9’s. Probably bored watching K-9 trial YouTube videos.   

As the sun was setting, Lenny joined us having finished his yard work.  The conversation began to warp a bit as Lenny described his conspiracy mindedness.  Once again evidence of the pervasiveness of doing one’s own research on the internet. It was mostly innocent and those of us less inclined to subscribe to some of his notions, in good cheer, listened respectfully, suppressing our scepticism, only allowing for an occasional chuckle so’s not to offend.  Indeed, there was no vacancy at the Swiss Mountain Motel.   

Wait, just what kind of poppies is Lenny growing?  Could that be the source of his conspiracy mindedness?  Tee, hee…

Day 5 – Friday, June 19 

Thayne, WY to Vernal, UT ~263 Miles

WY-89 → Smoot → Geneva → US-30 → Cokeville → Diamondville → US-189 → WY-412 Carter Cutoff Rd → WY-414 at I-80 → Mountain View, WY → Lonetree → Wyoming/Utah border and UT-43 → Manilla, UT →  UT-44 → US-191 S Flaming Gorge All-American Road → UT-44 Red Canyon → US-191/US-40 → US-6 Price Canyon → Patriot Stay Motel

The route from Thayne to Vernal wasn’t complicated.  Since my phone was virtually useless as anything but a phone with text, both important functions to keep my wife posted of our location and well-being, and then only intermittently, with no functional navigation or internet search.  I won’t get into SMAP’s use of maps.  He’s an Apple Maps guy.  I’m a Google Maps guy.  It’s like he’s a Dodgers fan and I’m a Giants fan. 

Full disclosure:  I’ve reconstructed the following, as most of the preceding, from memory and our photos and have post-trip internet capability to check the maps and routes I’ve noted for accuracy.  Yes, I did my own research and it is factually accurate. SMAP is my fact checker. So much for the Giant-Dodger rivalry.

The Mountain Valleys & High Deserts (WY-89 to Diamondville)

Our journey began on WY-89, winding through the Star Valley—a green, high-altitude alpine haven hemmed in by the Salt River Range. Passing through the quiet community of Smoot, the road climbed and dipped past pine forests and rolling pastures. As we crossed the state line near Geneva, Idaho, and headed east onto US-30, the scenery began to dry out.  The lush valley gradients slowly gave way to the rugged, sagebrush-speckled hills of Cokeville.  Following the path of the old Oregon Trail, the terrain stretched into wide-open Wyoming ranch land, flattening into a vast, high-desert plateau of stark beauty as we approached the historic coal-mining town of Diamondville.

Open Pit coal mine tucked away near Diamondville (courtesy of Google Maps street capture)

The Sagebrush Steppe & Badlands (US-189 to Manila)

Turning south on US-189 and cutting across WY-412 (Carter Cutoff Road), we entered an isolated, wind-swept landscape. This is classic Wyoming basin country:  wide horizons, oil rigs, and rolling hills blanketed in low brush.  At I-80, we picked up WY-414, heading south toward Mountain View and Lonetree.  Here, the flat plains began to ripple. Striated badlands and red-dirt bluffs peeked out from the soil, signaling our approach to the Uinta Mountains. Crossing the Wyoming/Utah border onto UT-43, the expansive ranching country dropped down into the small, oasis-like valley town of Manila, Utah.

Yes, those would be bullet holes in the “life elevated” sign

The Flaming Gorge & High Uintas (UT-44 to Red Canyon)

Leaving Manila on UT-44, the landscape shifted dramatically as we climbed into the Ashley National Forest, now on the US-191 Flaming Gorge All-American Road, surrounded by thick stands of ponderosa pine and Douglas fir.  The climax of this stretch is Red Canyon.  The forest suddenly dropped away into dizzying, vertical cliffs of vibrant, fiery-red quartzite. Below, the deep green waters of the Green River and Lake Flaming Gorge snake through the bottom of the chasm, creating one of the most stunning color contrasts in the American West.

Red Canyon
Lake Flaming Gorge, blue and not green like the river or red like the canyon
SMAP posing bullet free (and not pointing at the obvious)

The Uintah Basin to the Desert Canyons (US-191/US-40 to Price Canyon)

Descending the southern slopes of the Uintas, the pines vanished, and we spilled into the arid Uintah Basin.  Traveling the shared stretch of US-191 and US-40, the landscape turned into a sun-baked desert of exposed sandstone and gray shale hills.  

Sun-baked sandstone road cut on US-40

On to Vernal, the first leg of our Utah ramble looped back into the heart of the Uintah Basin, concluding on the historic Main Street of Vernal at the Patriot Stay Motel. This family-owned property features a distinct patriotic theme and puts you just steps away from the heart of the Right Petunia Triangle of the Patriot Stay Motel, the Utah Field House of Natural History State Park Museum, and the Vernal Brewing Company.

The Patriot Motel, located in one of the vertices of the right Patriotic Petunia triangle of Vernal, Utah
With a side of what many Utahns believe to be antediluvian critters, some brightly painted

The folks who market Utah’s natural history have definitely done the deep dino dive.  Utah is deeply, single-mindedly obsessed with dinosaurs, treats them like local celebrities, and practically makes them the state’s entire personality. It is the only place where you can drive down a highway, spot a massive fiberglass Triceratops, and not even blink because you just passed three others outside a gas station. 

The state boasts the highest concentration of Jurassic bones in the country, and locals treat these ancient fossils less like scientific anomalies and more like treasured family members. In fact, Utah loved dinosaurs so much they designated the Allosaurus as the official state fossil, because apparently, having a state bird just felt too mainstream. 

From roadside dino parks with roaring animatronics to actual towns named “Dinosaur,” the state’s prehistoric fixation proves that while the beasts may have gone extinct millions of years ago, Utah is doing everything in its power to keep the spark alive.  

Here are the more evidence-based recreations of these spectacular beasts…

And those the Chamber of Commerce distributes about town…

Dinosaurs have NIL contracts?

Apparently the rodeo was happening on our Vernal day through the weekend.  We opted for procuring nourishment, a beet salad with chicken for moi and a salmon salad for SMAP at the Vernal Brewing Company, across from our motel, and a return trip across US-191, the Main Street, to the 7-11 for 3R’s beverages thus completing the Patriotic Petunia Triangle of Vernal, Utah.  Since the Stanley Rodeo was a bust I wasn’t going to take any chances in Vernal.

Patriotic petunias and dinosaurs… Jurassic Park could have avoided the mess with petunia power

The Sisyphean Ramble Planning Criteria (SRPC) gave the Patriot Motel a three of five star rating. The air conditioning, luxurious towels, and proximity to mangia e bevi and the Utah Field House of Natural History State Park didn’t quite live up to the gold standard of motels, the Y in Chama. Because it wasn’t raining, there were point deductions. The parking lot cancelled the rain deduction. Hence, a 3 out of 5 star rating. It’s a complicated system.

Note the sign on the wall in the parking lot
We assumed it meant for each parking spot

Day 6 – Saturday 6/20    

 Vernal, UT to Torrey, UT ~280 mi 

US-191 → Ft. Duchesne → Duchesne → Castle Gate → Price → UT-10 → under I-70 → UT-72 → Fremont → UT-24 → Lyman → Torrey → Rim Rock Inn

The Uinta Basin and Energy Corridor (Vernal to Duchesne)

The journey on Day 6 began in Vernal, a green valley oasis, somewhat less green because of persistent drought, famous for its dinosaur history. Leaving town heading west on US-40, the landscape opens up into the vast, arid expanse of the Uinta Basin. To your right, the distant, pine-covered peaks of the Uinta Mountains rise along the horizon. 

We passed through Fort Duchesne, the tribal headquarters of the Ute Indian Tribe, marked by sprawling ranch lands and cottonwood trees along the Whiterocks River.  By now the digital (Google Maps/Apple iPhone) navigation was completely kaput.  Taking out the paper map (California State Automobile Association) we made a slight error in taking the road to Ouray.  It would have been one of those serendipitous errors had we gone on to Ouray.  Just northeast of the community lies the Ouray National Wildlife Refuge, an oasis established in 1960 that covers nearly 12,000 acres along the Green River.

Ouray, Utah (photo courtesy of USFWS)

Once we discovered we were headed away from Torrey, after a quick CSAA map check discovering that the turn we wanted was down the road a bit further at Duchesne (without the Fort prefix), we continued west as the highway cut through rolling clay hills and oil-field country until we reached Duchesne, a quiet river town sitting at the junction of the Strawberry and Duchesne rivers. With no fort.  

Through the Canyons to Coal Country (Duchesne to Price)

From Duchesne, we turned south onto US-191, beginning a steady climb out of the basin. It was here that the magnetic clasp on my tank bag let loose and that was that for the paper map.  It went flying off to the side of the road.  At that point, it was fate that we would navigate from fading memories and road signs.  Until SMAP purchased a map in Torrey. Maps, once prolific in gas stations, have conceded to the digital world.

The road wound through Indian Canyon, where Sagebrush flats gave way to juniper trees and eventually thick groves of aspen and pine as we crested the summit. Descending the southern slope, the canyon narrows significantly. We emerged at Castle Gate, named after the famous, towering rock formation that resembles a medieval fortress guarding the canyon mouth. Turning onto US-6, you enter the rugged Price River Valley and arrive in Price, a historic mining and railroad hub dominated by dramatic, book-cliff mesas.

Castle Gate in Price River Canyon composed of the Castlegate Sandstone of the Cretaceous Mesaverde Group ( Photo courtesy of Utah Geological Survey)

Over the Volcanic Plateaus (Price to Fremont)

Heading south from Price on UT-10, we traveled through the Castle Valley corridor. To our right, the massive, flat-topped wall of the Wasatch Plateau kept us company for miles. We passed quiet farming communities like Huntington and Castle Dale.  

As I was turning onto the I-70 on-ramp our hunch to make it to Torrey based on SMAP’s Apple Map, he urgently demanded I STOP! over the comms.  He then investigated an underpass eventually diving south under the concrete spans of I-70 near Fremont Junction.  Again, comms compromised by the concrete underpass, he’s shouting for me to STOP, STOP!  I was stopped.  Against my better judgement, I made a quick U-turn going in the wrong direction off the on ramp.

I then joined SMAP on the route that transitions to UT-72 and ascends the high, windswept expanse of the Wasatch Plateau. This section is a dramatic wonderland of alpine meadows, deep forests, and black volcanic boulders, offering expansive views of the San Rafael Swell to the east before dropping gently down into the high valley town of Fremont.

Old school navigation
San Rafael Swell from Hogan Pass

Into the Red Rock Country (Fremont to Rim Rock Inn) 

From Fremont, a short roll connects you to UT-24, where the scenery changes instantly. The green mountain pastures vanish, replaced by irrigated fields and the brilliant, sun-baked red dirt and white sandstone of Wayne County. We passed through Lyman, a peaceful valley community where on the last Knucklehead bicycle ride in 2015 we had breakfast before tackling the road up to Hogan Pass.  

We followed the Fremont River as it carves its way toward the spectacular Waterpocket Fold. The road leads into Torrey, a tree-lined gateway town shaded by massive historic cottonwoods.  Just east of Torrey, sitting high on a panoramic plateau with unobstructed, jaw-dropping views of the towering red cliffs of Capitol Reef National Park, our journey concluded for the sixth day at the Rim Rock Inn.

The Rim Rock, near the entrance to Capitol Reef  

The arrow on the sign points to the Rim Rock Inn.  The buildings pictured in the background, given the conestoga wagons, must be a Latter Day Saint pioneer dormitory.  “Go West young man and grow with your country!”  Wait, that was Horace Greely and not Brigham Young who famously said, “This is the right place, drive on” about the Salt Lake Valley.  

There seems to be something of a “reverence gap”

After checking in, we ambled down to the Rim Rock Patio for a well-earned whistle wetter—cold, crisp, and exactly what seven hours of Utah highway demanded.  From there, a quick errand into Torrey for the 3R provisions, before we drifted back to the Patio and let a wood-fired pizza seal the day.  Following the tip Lenny gave us in Thayne, we opted for the “bar” menu of the Patio pub, a decidedly less formal restaurant than the fancy steakhouse attached to the motel.

Fine dining in Torrey

The servers were as spicy as the pizza.  Well, as spicy as Utah pepperoni permits.  Maybe that’s what’s meant by SPAShetti Western Cafe.

Dining just fine in Torrey

The evening turned into one of those rides-within-the-ride: red rock fading to purple-is alpenglow, then black, while we nursed our refreshments and let the desert sky do the rest.  A waxing crescent moon hung low and thin, with Venus, Saturn, and Jupiter keeping quiet company beside it—the kind of sunset that makes us glad we stopped riding when we did.  We still couldn’t see Mercury.

In my best anthropomorphic rabbit voice:  “Goodnight Moon!

Day 7 – Sunday, June 21

Torrey, UT to Caliente, NV ~282 miles

UT-12  → Boulder, Escalante, Cannonville, Bryce Canyon City, → US-89 → UT-14 → Cedar City → UT-56 to the Nevada Border → NV-319 → Panaca → US-93 → Caliente NV → Shady Motel

Our day began as the asphalt was calling, and our tires were about to get a serious workout. Only a little disconcerting since my front Micheline Anakee had upwards of 12,000 miles. This exact route is a legendary mix of twisties, high-altitude sweeps, and pure desert throttle.  Here is how that stretch of blacktop felt on two wheels, of the moto variety and a nod to the pedal variety.

The Apexes and the Abyss (UT-12)

Croissants and coffee in Boulder

Boulder is at the intersection that leads to the Burr Canyon from UT-12 on the E. Burr Trail Rd.  Featured in yet another Knuckleheads’ bike across Utah post and a previous moto post about our ramble through the canyon, there was no time for a revisit as we were headed west.  Leaving Boulder, our tires were barely warm before we hit “The Hogback.”  Not to be confused with Hell’s Backbone road (Hell’s Backbone with DJI Mavic) a few miles northwest of Boulder.  

On a bike, The Hogback isn’t just scenic; it is an adrenaline shot straight to the heart. You are riding a knife-edge of asphalt with a 1,000-foot drop on either side and crosswinds that love to test your counter-steering.  The challenge is to keep your eyes on the exit of the turn, not the canyon floor.  

Highway 12 — A Journey Through Time Scenic Byway

In 1997 I found myself pedalling for life as an afternoon thundershower struck while crossing The Hogback on the Tour de Ute.  Channeling Tennyson:

The smell of ozone hung in the air, lightning to right of them, lightning to left of them, hail in front of them volley’d and thunder’d; Some one had blunder’d:  Theirs is not to make reply, Theirs is not to reason why, Theirs is but to do and (hopefully not) die: Into the valley of the Burr Canyon rode ten Knuckleheads…

Since 1997, the weather subsequently crossing The Hogback has been benign.  The drop on either side, not so much…
Smokey skies over the Escalante

We dropped down into Escalante, shaking the tension out of our wrists, before leaning into the sweeping curves toward Cannonville. The temperature climbed as we carved through the red rock canyon walls.  Finally, a steady twist of the throttle up the climb into Bryce Canyon City, where the air got crisp, SMAP grabbed a sammy, and the tourist traffic got thick. Watch for rental RVs drifting into your lane.

Read the sign
The Outlaw Trail (photo & description courtesy of visitutah.com)

The trail is the same one the notorious Utah-born Butch Cassidy used to evade the law, and it would become part of what was known as the “Outlaw Trail.” The area was also the primary filming location for the 1969 movie “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” with Robert Redford and Paul Newman. Redford himself followed the Outlaw Trail in 1976 for a National Geographic piece.

Local legend has it that Cassidy, whose real name Robert LeRoy Parker, got into a fight over a woman at a dance in nearby Panguitch. Having thought he killed her jealous lover, Cassidy fled along the trail. But the injured man was simply knocked out, and upon regaining consciousness he organized a posse to chase Cassidy through these hills. After successfully evading his pursuers, Cassidy would later return to this area — with his the Hole in the Wall Gang and later his Wild Bunch — to hide from the law after a stagecoach robbery or other heist. 

Red Canyon Arch

Lava Fields and Brake Dust (US-89 to UT-14)

After a quick, straight blast on US-89 to shake out the kinks, we leaned hard into UT-14. This is a sport-touring paradise. You lean the bike left and right through tight canyon switchbacks, climbing rapidly up to nearly 10,000 feet. You will definitely feel the chill as you cruise past pitch-black lava fields of the Markagunt Plateau.  Then comes the descent into Cedar City.  It is a steep, brake-burning drop through Cedar Canyon. Keeping an eye out for loose gravel in the corners and deer standing on the shoulder is right there with inattentive tourists stopped on the roadside, taking pictures. 

Pitch-black lava flow along UT-14 of the Markagunt Plateau

The Big Throttle Open (UT-56 to NV-319)

After a slight navigation error (despite the map acquired in Torrey, go figure), we stopped in Cedar City for something to give us wings as we were approaching Nevada.  It was time to shift into sixth and set the cruise control.  UT-56 out of Cedar City is a straight, lonely shot through the high desert.  The wind will buffet your helmet and the June heat will have you looking for the nearest water faucet to soak your cooling vest. 

And yet more signs to read

We crossed into Nevada as the road became NV-319, rolling past the stark, white clay spires near Panaca. The pavement here is wide, empty, and fast. It is just you, the drone of your exhaust, and seeing a small patch of shade in front of the LDS church, a place to stop and stretch the nalgas.  Ah, across the road from the church, a Post Office with a spigot and hose.  Worthy of the likes of an inspiring Greely or Young quote, from Sisyphus:  “Soak me with your hose Panaca!”  

Cooling vests were now charged for the run into Caliente, Spanish for HOT.

Our oasis has a Zip Code
SMAP enjoying the evaporative cooling vest charged from the Panaca Post Office hosing

Fueling up at the Shell station on the outskirts of Panaca, we met a couple, two up, on a Harley Roadglide, Streetglide, Road King or one of those badass HD-Baaaaggeeeers…  They were from New Jersey and had rented the bike in Las Vegas and were on their way to Yosemite.  They were “hard core” riders, not by way of appearance, but miles, each on their own bikes back home and two-up touring. They had come from Zion and we recommended Tonopah or Ely, masters of navigation that we are, for their Sunday destination.  Another chance meeting with curious like minded ramblin’ folks with stories to tell and good cheer.

The Cool Down at the Shady Motel (US-93)

A sharp left onto US-93 brought us down into Caliente. After hours of gripping the bars, the historic shady streets (at least one side of the street) of this rail town felt like a sanctuary.  It was warm, in the 90’s, but the Shady Motel had top-shelf air conditioning.  Kickstands down, helmets off, and jackets unzipped, soon the afternoon heat would abate. There is nothing quite like the feeling of peeling off riding gloves and boots after conquering the Hogback and the high passes of Utah and sagebrush plains of eastern Nevada.  

The perfect perch for watching Caliente culture

As we finished checking in, a fire truck showed up with Utah licence plates.  A young firefighter entered the office.  We had noticed smoke in the air from earlier in the day and were in fact rolling into more dense smoke enroute.  Curious fellow I am and a proud papa of two firefighters, I asked if the smoke in the air had something to do with their showing up in Caliente.  The young man said that they were dispatched from Utah to cover the Caliente area that had earlier dispatched engines to a couple of wild fires, the Grapevine and Kane Spring fires south of town.   They were anxious to see fire and not just the smoke.  

Screen shot from the app, Watch Duty captured on July 9, 2026

I imagine our Utah firefighters got their shot on the Cottonwood fire back home.

An early dinner at The Side Track, spaghetti and meatballs for SMAP and a well executed fettucini alfredo for me at one of our all time favorite ramble restaurants.  Cold rehydrating beverages were procured next door at the All Aboard Liquor Store, and we returned to the motel, set up our camp chairs facing US-93 on the walkway, and watched the locals cruising the main.  Curiously a bus roamed up and down a couple of times filled with students, with whom we exchanged waves. This is how one enjoys the small town vibe as the desert sun set.  

The economic engine of Caliente near smokey-sundown
The golden hour looking west in Caliente
Free Biker, Free Rider
Chair ✔️, ice ✔️, an R ✔️ 
The Caliente Station at sunset
The Caliente Station in darkness
It’s not that something was missing, we had achieved “vacancy” a desired form of relaxation
(From the archaic: absence of activity; idleness)

Day 8- Monday, June 22

Caliente, NV to Merced, CA~466 miles

US-93 N → NV-375 Extraterrestrial Highway → US-6 Tonopah → Benton, CA → CA-120 → Lee Vining → CA-120 → Tioga Pass Crane Flat → CA-120 → Smith Station Rd → Coulterville, CA-132 → Merced Falls Rd → Snelling Rd → Merced → Home Sweet Home

Two Bikes, Two Nalgas, and One Intergalactic Highway

The odometer told us we had 466 miles to cover to get back to Merced.  Another day was planned for somewhere between Independence and Bridgeport on the East Side of the Sierra.  We talked about it.  On a motorcycle, 466 miles is not a distance.  It is a dynamic physical test of how long a human being can tolerate vibrating metal between their thighs before their spinal column permanently fuses into a solid rod.  We were also feeling the other 2,000+ miles of the previous six days, the most recent in heat and now smoke.  Besides, SMAP had to be back before Wednesday for a memorial service. That’s it, let’s iron-butt it home and save the East Side for the fall when temps have relented along with the smoke.

We pulled out of Caliente, me on my Moto Guzzi V85TT, a bike built by Italians who clearly believe that adventure should involve a lot of character, a six gallon fuel tank, and an exhaust note that sounds like a sophisticated tractor. SMAP was aboard his Suzuki VStrom 650, a machine engineered by the Japanese to survive a tsunami, an alien apocalypse, 85 mph all day on deserted Nevada highways, even a skipped oil change.  Although, I must say, SMAP religiously attended to his chain lubrication daily, prior to dinner and the 3R’s.  With my shaft drive and his superb chain maintenance we had nil issues with our bikes.  

A’Le’ Inn Territory

Once over the border on the previous day, we pointed the front wheels toward US-93 North, which quickly dissolved into NV-375. This is officially designated as the Extraterrestrial Highway. 

The Scenery: Dirt, sagebrush, and a horizon so flat you can see the back of your own head.  The Physics: The crosswinds here do not just blow.  They try to slap you across the face and throw your bike into a ditch full of radioactive tarantulas.  The Aerodynamics: On the naked-ish Guzzi with boxy panniers, I was a human sail.  On the VStrom, SMAP sat in a pocket of calm, Japanese-engineered serenity, looking entirely too comfortable.  

Like the Bagdad Cafe, everyone is welcome at the Lil A’Le’Inn

More cattle die on this godforsaken road from being hit by vehicles than by all the alien mutilation attributed to the unidentified flying objects (AKA unidentified aerial phenomenon) common to the Rachel area.  In fact, we rolled through the graphic tractor-trailer-highway- jay-walking-mutilated-cow art, that had been committed earlier in the day.  Perhaps it wasn’t a tractor-trailer, but something from Area 51…

The latest themed kitsch at the Little A’le’Inn

After a fine breakfast at the Little A’Le’Inn Cafe, we set off on the next uninterrupted basin and range, mile-after-mile of nothing more than mile-after-mile landscape. 

Eventually reaching Tonopah, we conscientiously observed the speed limit  through town on US-6.  Tonopah is famous for a hotel filled with terrifying clown dolls and as a Nevada State Patrol speed trap.  Our only stop was for fuel.  We weren’t entirely sanctimonious.  If a clown tried to steal the Moto Guzzi, nobody wins.

SMAP had to have a pic of the VStrom in front of the Tonopah Test Range entrance
The California Welcome sign kind of pales next to Nevada’s “see ya” sign
(Both relatively bullet-hole free)

Up, Up, and Vertigo

Eventually, we crossed into Benton, California.  The landscape changed from “barren moonscape” to “vertical wall of granite.”  At the Benton Station Store energy drinks were procured for wings to make the whoops enroute to Lee Vining before the hump over Tioga.  But not before appreciating Boundary Peak to the east, from where we came, the highest peak in Nevada.  

We merged onto US-395, 70 miles south of where we joined the Three Flags Highway earlier in the week, so named to recognize its role in linking Mexico, the United States, and Canada. 

Rolling into Lee Vining, a town that exists purely to sell gas to motorcyclists who suddenly realize their low-fuel light has been blinking for 30 miles.  That and the Whoa Nelly Deli where packages of meat can be purchased (SMAP is evidence of someone wanting a protein boost with nitrites) that cost almost as much as a gallon of 91 octane, (Guzzi’s favorite).  I had sunflower seeds.

Shade, at a premium at 6,784 feet
Negit (left) and Paoha (right) Islands in Mono Lake

Then came Tioga Pass  

The Elevation: 9,943 feet.  The Temperature: Dropping faster than my investment portfolio.  The Curves: Sweepers that would make a track-day racer weep with joy, followed by sheer drop-offs that make you pray your brake fluid doesn’t evaporate.  The Guzzi loved the thin mountain air, chugging up the switchbacks with its vertically opposed twin cylinders thumping happily.  The VStrom 650 just whined its predictable, ultra-reliable whine, carving through the corners like a surgical instrument.  The only thing slowing SMAP down was an APS (Arizona Pork Sled) trudging its way up the pass. 

We summited the pass, five bars on the fuel gauge and bypassed Crane Flat.  From there, more sluggish traffic and temps were rising by a degree, every 500 feet of elevation loss.   Normally on this long descent your front brake lever becomes your closest personal friend.  A brief stop at the Coulterville Public Pool to dunk our evaporative cooling vests for a somewhat muggy, but cooler final push to conclude the ramble.  

Back Home and a Couple of Weeks of Reflection

Sisyphus, as the myth goes, was condemned to push his boulder up the mountain for eternity, the futility being the point. Sisyphus and SMAP, by contrast, spent eight days pushing two motorcycles across six states (seven if you count California twice) with unreliable technology, navigation largely by fading memory, hunch, and road signs after losing a paper map, and no plan beyond the SRPC and a shared faith that the next fuel stop, motel marquee, or roadblock detour would sort itself out—and it always did, which either disproves the myth or confirms that Sisyphus’s boulder was never the point either way. 

The other two-wheelers in our stables

What lingers isn’t the mileage, though 2,500-plus miles is nothing to scoff at from a saddle. It’s Ming’s bewildered “What a president?”, Donovan’s sweatpants-and-a-helmet optimism, Lenny’s coconut-smoothie curmudgeonry, and a busload of pine-cone harvesters saluted with raised tallboys in a Susanville parking lot under a bank of security cameras that captured, more faithfully than any GPS could have routed us, exactly what this ramble was actually about. 

The Hogback, that tried to kill me 29 years ago, tried gently, the way it does if you take your eye off the center line; Tioga Pass reminded two aging knees and chaffed nalgas why long distance (and elevation) is a young man’s game; and somewhere on the Extraterrestrial Highway, there’s a graphic tractor-trailer-highway-jay-walking-mutilated-cow art and a ditch full of radioactive tarantulas. 

We came home sunburnt, saddle-sore, no more technologically literate, and thoroughly rehydrated, relaxed, and reflected upon—three-R’d into a vacancy most evenings by sunsets that made the whole exercise feel less like punishment and more like the reward Sisyphus never got. 

Same time next ride, boulder willing.

July 9, 2026

All photos unless otherwise noted were taken by Sisyphus and SMAP. AI was used in planning the ride, with modest accuracy and edited frequently once on the ride. Unless AI learns to ride a motorcycle and enjoy the 3R’s, Sisyphus will have employment indefinitely…

Of This Specific Emptiness

No Italics Necessary

Almost… On Cunningham Rd.

It’s been two weeks of fog and I don’t know what to write about. The holiday season is pressing in with its expectations. The motorcycle has been quiet and to ride the bicycle is a challenge in enduring the cold. The blog is waiting. All of it creates this particular kind of hollow that needs filling.  As I gaze out the window I see a redbud that has retreated into dormancy, stripped of its life affirming leaves.  An acer holds fast to its red-orange leaves drained of chlorophyll.  The redwood towers over all of this drabness, ironically, taking succor from the moisture that flattens the light.

The last of the citrus, Persian limes and Meyer lemons, have been harvested.  The annuals and perennials that provided exuberant blush to the landscape just a few weeks ago have collapsed into a damp, dreary withering beneath leaves shed by the crepe myrtle, now barren.  The last gasp white flowering begonias and lantana with enduring lavender or orange, yellow, and red sepals and leaves of deep green await a chilling frost to join its flowerbed mates. The azalea, ferns, and hearty primroses whose blossoms are only now awakening, give some relief to an otherwise fading landscape. 

Living in an area surrounded by almonds, pistachios, walnuts, and other assorted deciduous fruit bearing orchards, dormancy is overwhelmingly apparent. Ornamental trees both native and cultivated non-natives, are taking on their winter semblance, stripped of energy producing leaves as well. Only the conifers that we barely keep alive during the brutally hot summers by inundating with the remnants of the previous winter’s snowfall that comes from their native Sierra Nevada appear to thrive.

Gardners revving leaf blowers and leaf collection machinery dispatched by the city to harvest their efforts break the muted neighborhood sounds.  Dog walkers are shuttered in their warm homes, rather than brace the cold dampness.  Even the playful cries of children at recess attending neighborhood elementary schools is vague, only occasionally do the high pitched squeals of little girls, likely chased by little boys, break through. 

Crows squawk on their morning journey northeast and again on their return flight southwest before sunset.  Flickers peck for insects on the dead birch branches.  Sparrow hawks dispatch cedar waxwings down from the mountains – the waxwings drunk on fermented pyracantha berries, excreting everywhere.  Squirrels from Rascal Creek scamper about storing the last of wild pecans in flowerbeds that become deeply rooted nuisances as they forget their larder and I try to extract them come spring. 

Birds getting drunk, squirrels being squirrels, nature carrying on messily despite everything. Yet for all this dormancy and dampness, something else is happening.  Even in the gray stillness, there’s an impulse to create light and warmth and community when nature withdraws. It shows up at Christmas, and exists across cultures. It’s what humans do when it’s dark and cold. It punctures the fog.  People have been doing this for thousands of years. When it’s cold and dark, we light fires, we gather, we feast, we make noise and music. Decorating, celebrating, gathering is a kind of gentle rebellion against the dreariness. We refuse to just hunker down like dormant trees and wait it out.

Familiar carols and seasonal music create a soundtrack that the fog can’t quite muffle.  Christmas has absorbed and carries forward these older winter traditions of light-making and gathering.  Squawking crows, orchards of naked trees, bone chilling cold that penetrates, and those forgetful squirrels cannot stifle a spirit that the Christmas season evokes. I may find myself toasting the cedar waxwings, acknowledging that my spirit can be warmed by a yule log from without and a cup of eggnog from within. 

Cheers and season’s greetings!

Sisyphus 12/5/2025



2025 Ruby Mountains Ramble

September 2025

What does a lost wallet, Coors Light, more cows than people, and Theodore Douglas Willer have to do with an epic adventure?

Lemoille Canyon

I, as SisyphusDW7 (my nom de plume), posted Chasing the Perseid’s; An August 2025 Ramble in the Sierra. The ride was a warmup for our fourth ramble of 2025 as we plotted a seven day, six night tour of the Ruby Mountains in Northeastern Nevada.  

With a taste of the billions of galaxies filled with billions of stars as viewed from the Sierra, I figured there was at least as much to view in northeastern Nevada, notwithstanding a full moon, and so the plan to ramble to the Ruby Mountains began to take shape.  

Sisyphus was aboard Bella Rossa, a Moto Guzzi V-85TT and his associate Pete was on his Suzuki V-Strom.  Pete’s not as romantic as Sisyphus and so his moto is nameless.  His imagination an appetite makes up for any other deficiencies.

We packed up and departed on September 7 venturing forth on CA-140/CA-120 bound for a Sierra crossing at Tioga Pass.  I’ll use excerpts from the itinerary to introduce the daily “chapters” of the ramble.

Day 1 / Sunday Sept 7 – Merced to Fallon, NV

Merced to Fallon, NV ~284 miles

  • From US-395 take CA-182 (Sweetwater Rd) in Bridgeport to NV-338 to junction with NV-208 near Smith Valley to the junction of NV-208/NV-339.
  • Continue on NV-339 through Yerington to the junction with US-95 to Silver Springs.  
  • From Silver Springs, ~26 miles to Fallon on US-50
  • Reservation at the Super8 by Wyndham  

Tioga Pass or CA-120 is a familiar Sierra crossing.  Along with Sonora Pass (CA-108), Sherman Pass (Forest Rte 22S05), and Walker Pass (CA-178) we have seasonal options.  In winter Tioga, Sonora, Sherman Passes are closed with the first winter storms.  Walker Pass in Kern County will occasionally close in winter due to snow and regardless of weather, it beats crossing the summit in Tehachapi (CA-58) which is a major commerce route from Bakersfield to the Mojave, US-395, and Interstates 15 to Las Vegas and and I-40, the offspring of Route 66, The Mother Road, all featured in previous rambles on my blog, sisyphusdw7.com .

The Mother Road from a past ramble
Tioga Pass and Lee Vining Canyon en route to the Ruby Mountains

The vistas up Tioga Pass were somewhat obscured by smoke from wildfires burning in the Western Sierra that resulted from recent monsoonal lightning strikes.  Since the fall colors were only beginning to show, there was no great disappointment on what nature had wrought by way of wildfires compromising the views.

We stopped at the Mono Basin Scenic Area Visitor’s Center on our route along CA-395 to Bridgeport to “de-layer” as the cooler temps at elevation gave way to the late summer heat on the East Side of the Sierra.  The smoke gave a muted hue to the otherwise clear skies. 

Muted skies from the parking lot at the Mono Basin Scenic Area Visitor Center
Un-Muted skies from the Mono Basin Scenic Area Visitors Center Overlook 
(How did they do that?)

Once in Bridgeport we took CA-182, Sweetwater Rd north, crossing the CA-NV border where the road became NV-338 following tributaries to the Walker River to Smith Valley then NV-208 & 339 to Yerington where we fueled up at my favorite petrol shop.  Loves me the Dino. 

Dino Love

Passing the Anaconda Open Pit Copper Mine on Alt US-95 from Yerington following tributaries of the Carson River through dairies and onion fields, we then headed east passing the Lahontan State Recreation Area on the Lincoln Highway, US-50.  Soon we reached our destination for Day 1, Fallon Nevada.  

Fallon is known for being home to Naval Air Station Fallon.  Built in 1942, is located southeast of the city center.  Since 1996, NAS Fallon has been home to the U.S. Navy’s Navy Fighter Weapons School (popularly known as TOPGUN), using several flight training areas and practice ranges in the area.  

In 1963 there was an underground nuclear test known as Project Shoal that took place ~30 miles from Fallon.

I’m no hydrologist, but it seems planting onions in soil irrigated from ground and surface water from a nearby Superfund open pit copper mine or detonating a nuclear bomb in the middle of the potentiometric ground water surface near Fallon was potentially, well, I’ll let you consider the implications*.  It’s kind of how Nevada does environmental things. Needless to say, we drank bottled water while in Nevada.  

*Did I mention I once submitted ten puns to a contest to see which one would win.  No pun in ten did… Well what did you expect?

I chose Fallon for our Day 1 destination, not because of fighter jets, or radioactive water but for the D = ST (distance = speed × time) calculus essential to motorcycles.  Its location on the Lincoln Highway, the first transcontinental thoroughfare,  passes through Fallon from east to west (and vice versa), following the original Pony Express trail.  Today it is designated U.S. Highway 50, and eastward from Fallon is popularly known as The Loneliest Road in America, as it passes through only two towns (Austin and Eureka) and one small city (Ely) between Fallon and the Utah state line, over 400 miles distant.  

Hence, lodging options between our destinations for Days 2-4 were limited.  

Moonrise over the Super 8 and Bonanza Casino by Wyndham Fallon 
Pete and I concluded the blue sphere above the moon was an alien mothership
3 R’s smoke free Fallon Style

Day 2 / Monday, Sept 8  – Fallon, NV to Elko/Spring Creek, NV and the South Fork Recreation Area 

Fallon to Elko and South Fork Rec Area ~338 miles  

  • US-50 through Austin to NV-278 N to US-80 at Carlin to Elko (~24 miles).  
  • NV-227/NV-228 to the South Fork Recreation Area (~16 miles from Elko). 
  • Nevada State Parks South Fork State Recreation Area – East Campground – RV or Tent with E Utilities 
  • Confirmation Number: 1057754  Camp host, Theodore (Ted) Douglas Willer Arrive: Mon 09/08/2025 – Depart: Thu 09/11/2025 (3 nights Site 5 #1057754 reserved 9/8-9/11)
  •  Get Supplies in Elko or Spring Creek.

A long day in the saddle, we rode past the Saloon and Shoe Tree at Middlegate and turned off of US-50 on a route we discovered on a previous trip to Austin, (Austin Nevada that is…) on NV-722/2 that took us through the ghost town of Eastgate.  

US-50 art or artifice?
Looking west from East Gate Station aka Gibraltar Gate on NV-722
Eastgate Station, now
East Gate Station, then (image scrubbed from the interwebs)

From Nevada Expeditions: First called Gibraltar Gate, Eastgate was named by Captain James Simpson in the same manner as nearby Middlegate and Westgate. While it never served the Pony Express like the other two ‘gates’, a station and vegetable garden were located here by the Overland Stage and later sold to George S. Williams about 1876. A tufa-block home was built in 1879, leading to the place being known sometimes as “White Rock House”. In 1908, the current tufa-block home was erected. With the formation of the Lincoln Highway in 1913, Eastgate’s importance grew as a new store and gas station were established to service travelers. It probably lasted until around 1967 when the highway was rerouted, bypassing Eastgate completely.   And just like that, Eastgate’s fate, like those along the Mother Road, was determined by a highway realignment.

For a deeper dive into Eastgate and Carroll Summit Stations in Nevada, check out the YouTube video by Two Guys in the Middle of Nowhere The Ghost Town of Eastgate Nevada.

A fuel, nalgas relief, and snack stop in Austin found us eastbound to Eureka where we departed US-50 north on NV-278 enroute to Carlin through arid landscapes interrupted by alfalfa fields quenched by Pine Creek and the Humboldt River.  From Carlin, it was a short leg on I-80 to Elko through the Carlin Tunnel.

Interstate 80 and the shortest distance between two points

The Carlin Tunnel is a collective name for a set of four tunnel bores in the Humboldt River’s Carlin Canyon, east of Carlin in Elko County, Nevada, United States. Currently, two of the bores carry Interstate 80, while the other two bores carry Union Pacific Railroad’s Overland Route and Central Corridor.

The South Fork State Recreation Area Campground

Zipping through Elko we made our way to Spring Creek and our home for the next three nights on the South Fork of the Humboldt River known as the South Fork State Recreation Area. 

From there we would explore the Ruby Mountains, Secret Pass and the Hastings Cutoff on the historic California Trail, the Ruby Valley, Jiggs, and the Owyhee River, Wild Horse, Mountain City and Owyhee on the Nevada side of the border with Idaho.  

Upon our arrival, within minutes, the camp host, Ted (Theodore Douglas Willer), introduced himself.  When Pete asked where we could get a cold beer, Ted retreated to his mobile abode and produced a pair of Coors Lights.  He explained that he no longer drinks and some fellows on motorcycles had left him an unsolicited tip that he decided would purchase a twelve pack of beer for just this circumstance:  Two parched blokes having ridden hard to reach camp as the sun was setting.  

It only got better from there.  Ted also recommended we switch our campsite reserved on the interwebs for one that was more accommodating for two tents and two bikes.  

Ted was a fascinating character.  A native of Northern Nevada, he had spent his working years in mining, ending his career at the Jerritt Canyon Gold mine.  A true outdoorsman, Ted hunted, fished, backpacked, snow-mobiled, and dirtbiked all throughout the wilderness of Northern Nevada. As a reference for two “born to be mild” adventurers, his local knowledge was gold.  

After touring the facilities that included hot showers and flush toilets, we were quite impressed as Nevada continued regaling us with parks the likes of Kershaw-Ryan State Park in Caliente, and Red Rock Canyon near Lost Wages, NV, with modern, clean, and well maintained accommodations.  In addition to cold beers, we even had electricity at our site!

Sunset at the South Fork State Recreation Area
Camp Sisyphus and Associate

Day 3 / Tuesday, Sept 9 – South Fork Recreation Area to Lemoille Canyon Scenic Byway, Secret Pass, Arthur, Ruby Valley, & Jiggs Loop

Lamoille, Halleck, Arthur, Ruby Valley Loop ~132 miles

  • From the Lamoille Scenic Byway, return to Lemoille and take Crossroads and Clubine Rds to Ft. Halleck marker (dirt).  
  • Continue on dirt to paved NV-229 at Poverty Gulch.
  • At the junction of NV-229 dirt road, head south to Ruby Valley to the junction with NF-113/Old Harrison Pass Rd (dirt). 
  • West on NF-113 to the junction with NV-228 (paved) to Jiggs and NV-228 back to the South Fork Recreation Area campgrounds.
  • Get supplies in Spring Creek.

Our intent for the day’s ramble was to explore the Ruby Mountains.   The range reaches a maximum elevation of 11,387 feet on the summit of Ruby Dome. 

To the north is Secret Pass, part of the historic Hasting Cutoff, and the East Humboldt Range.  From there the Rubies run south-southwest for about 80 miles. To the east lies Ruby Valley, and to the west lie Huntington and Lamoille Valleys. It’s alleged that the mountain range was named after the garnets found by early explorers. 

The central core of the range shows extensive evidence of glaciation during recent ice ages, including U-shaped canyons, moraines, hanging valleys, and steeply carved granite mountains, cliffs, and cirques.

Pre-sunrise view of blossoming sage and the Ruby’s
The view east of the Ruby’s from our campsite with the park HQ in the foreground 
and Ruby Dome towering in the background
The Lemoille Canyon Scenic Byway, entering Lemoille Canyon
Classic glaciated amphitheater in Right Fork Canyon
Glacial cirques

Having gone over the route with Ted, our camp host, a virtual guide with extensive knowledge of the local terrain, we felt confident that what amounted to our longest stretch on gravel was doable.  The route took us into Lemoille Canyon following Lemoille Creek.  An out-and-back then took us through the village of Lemoille where we met the first 18 miles of gravel road leading to NV-229 and Secret Pass into Ruby Valley.  

The Donner Party passed through the southern end of the valley in 1846, heading for the Overland Pass route across the Ruby Mountains – part of the Hastings Cutoff.  A sentence in Hastings’ guidebook briefly describes the cutoff:

The most direct route, for the California emigrants, would be to leave the Oregon route, about two hundred miles east from Fort Hall; thence bearing West Southwest, to the Salt Lake; and thence continuing down to the bay of St. Francisco, by the route just described.

The cutoff left the Oregon Trail at Fort Bridger in Wyoming, passed through the Wasatch Range, across the Great Salt Lake Desert, an 80-mile nearly water-less drive, looped around the Ruby Mountains, and rejoined the California Trail about seven miles west of modern Elko (also Emigrant Pass).  
For a detailed account of the route, see Salt & Snow Lansford W. Hastings the Donner Party and the Haste to Blame by Eugene R. Hart, a friend and colleague, for a well researched history of the Donner Party’s ill-fated route on the California Trail.

What did Hastings cut off?

The next 50 miles of pavement on NV-229 took us through the small unincorporated community of Arthur to the junction with NV-767.  

Ranching is the main economic activity in Arthur and the Ruby Valley in general. Most of the ranches have remained in the same families for generations.  

Cattle outnumbered humans by 10,000x 
The Long Lonesome Ruby Valley Road

There weren’t may vehicles on the road, but there was infrastructure.

I don’t think Pete was doing what it looks like he was doing

At its south end lies the Ruby Lake National Wildlife Refuge. The valley includes a series of hot springs, known as Ruby Valley Hot Springs, with multiple pools reaching up to 30 feet in diameter and 100 degrees Fahrenheit in temperature.I

NV-229 passes along the northeast edge of the valley, and Ruby Valley Road (NV-767) runs along its western edge. 

Our next dirt section was Harrison Pass Road (CR-718) for 14 miles crossing the Ruby Mountains near the center of the valley at an elevation of 7,247 feet . Much of the floor of Ruby Valley lies at elevations near 6,000 feet. 

Franklin Lake looking Southeast (photo credit:  Wiki)

At the entry to Harrison Pass Rd we encountered a local rancher and his wife. Perhaps perceiving our born to be mild countenance, they cautioned us about being on point because Harrison Pass Rd is a popular 4-wheel drive road on which speeding vehicles and tight blind curves with sandy washes that can be treacherous.

Fortunately we didn’t encounter any speeding side-by-sides or other ATV’s but the sandy road conditions made for a squirrelly crossing.

We reached pavement on NV-228 that took us through the small unincorporated community of Jiggs.  In addition to the Jiggs School and Skelton Hotel, two historic buildings from the early 1900’s, there’s the Jiggs Bar, which we regrettably didn’t stop to visit. 

Jiggs schoolhouse on the left
The Skelton Hotel
It’ll just have to wait for our next trip to the Rubys.  Cheers!

The town was featured in a 1965 Volkswagen advertising campaign in which the entire population (5 adults, 4 children and a dog) was shown comfortably seated inside a VW Bus. 

Grandma doesn’t look to be having much fun

Upon returning to the campground, Ted met us with two cold Coors Lights.  In exchange, we offered our enthusiastic reflections on the day’s ride that he had recommended before heading into Spring Creek for bites and beverages.

Another sublime sunset looking west

For a visual record (with soothing soundscapes) of our Ruby Mountain Ramble, check out the video from our day of cattle, canyons, passes, and dirt roads:

Lemoille Canyon and The Ruby Mountains Ramble

Followed by a sublime moonrise over the Ruby’s

Day 4 / Wednesday, Sept 10 – South Fork Recreation Area to Owyhee and back  

South Fork Rec Area to Owyhee Loop ~236 miles

  • From the campgrounds, NV-225 N to Owyhee through Wild Horse and Mountain City, then NV-226 S back to Elko 
  • Lunch at The Star Basque Restaurant and beverages in Spring Creek.  
  • Return to the South Fork Recreation Area campground 

Weather was our consideration for how to approach our ramble to Owyhee on this our fourth day of adventure.  Consulting with Ted we decided to forgo a dirt section that would take us through the Duck Valley Reservation on NV-226 that might be iffy in the rain that was forecast for the afternoon.  Remember, we were born to be mild, having outgrown the wild birth stage of our lives…

It’s perhaps a shame that I didn’t break out the GoPro for yet another view of the road from my handlebars.  I figured the Ruby Mountain Ramble video was enough of mile-after-mile of monotonous, but at times breathtaking, scenery.  And, if you’re not a music nerd, there probably aren’t enough of dramatic cinematic dopamine triggers keep you engaged. That and I don’t own a drone. So the few still photos we took will have to give you some perspective of the landscapes. 

The Owyhee River near the Wild Horse Crossing campground
Volcanic remnant off of NV-225 looking northwest  
Yep, born to be wild horses
Wild Horse State Recreation Area

Not much to see in Owyhee, a small reservation town on the vast volcanic lava flow plain. After a stop for a snack and some nalgas relief, we turned tail to make our way back to the South Fork Recreation campground, but not before stopping for a water bottle leak in Pete’s top case, absorbed by the roll of Scott Shop Towels he always carries and a few interesting sites along the road.

A pioneer’s cabin across from Four Mile Creek, a tributary to
the North Fork of the Humboldt River, on NV-225
Peek-a-boo
Back at’cha
The Independence Range whose watershed irrigates the foreground pastures

I have mentioned in prior blogs my associate, Pete’s, heritage.  He’s Basque by way of his father.  Nevada is renowned for its Basque population, especially in the Elko area so naturally we sought out the best Basque restaurant in town, The Star.  

As with many Basque restaurants, there was usually lodging associated with the family dining area to accommodate migrant shepherds attending to herds of sheep and this was true of The Star.  We had a wonderful lunch including a Picon Punch I first learned about in Los Banos, near our home in Merced, at the Woolgrowers. According to 23andMe, I have just under 1% Basque heritage myself (that is likely attributed to my promiscuous Neanderthal ancestors).

The of the scenes of what would become a frenzied search for a lost wallet…

Making our way to the campground south of Elko, we stopped for fuel in Spring Creek, a suburb of the growing Elko population and our commercial base of operations where fuel, both fossil and fermented, were acquired.  

As I pulled up to the pump and executed the fueling ritual of removing gloves, removing the tank bag, inserting the key into the cap, and reaching for my wallet, I realized it wasn’t nestled in its customary chest pocket.  

Needless to say, panic struck!  I’m on the road in the middle of a seven day ramble and have lost my wallet somewhere during the day. I last remember using my credit card to purchase fuel at the very same Sinclair gas station that morning. I naively thought to inquire at the station’s convenience store if anyone had turned in a wallet. 

The disinterested cashier yelled across the store to another employee who mumbled something and said there was nothing in a basket resembling a wallet.  

After I paid for the fuel with cash and was given $4 and change, I asked, “So you think I can make it back to California on four bucks?”

She replied, “You’re screwed.  Look around.  Do you think someone would turn in a wallet?”

I should have known better.  This is the only Sinclair station we had stopped at that didn’t have a Dino.  There was a pad for the Dino.  Apparently Dino had been abducted.   This did not ensure confidence.

I dialed the Star restaurant and a bit more reassuringly the attentive staff remembered us and stated that after a search there was no wallet near where we were seated.   

I had enough cash to make it home on our remaining three days but it was the drivers license, credit cards, insurance cards, and god forbid, my National Parks Senior Pass that would have to be cancelled and replaced.  I then called my wife after using the app on my phone to put a hold on my Citi credit card, which, as it turns out, I later hastily canceled.  Toni works for the local School Employees Credit Union.  She took care of my backup CU Visa and reminded me that I still had my Apple credit card in my phone’s wallet.  A small measure of relief. One of many fringe benefits to my marriage…

As we made our way back to the camp that afternoon, Ted with Coors Lights awaiting our arrival, I was somewhat crestfallen after what was otherwise a beautiful day on the moto rambling through exquisite terrain. Not much for celebration, I opted for a shower to wash away my woes. 

While stowing my armored jacket and pants, that I had by this time searched in every pocket multiple times, I felt the small rectangular form of my wallet that I had perhaps in haste earlier mistaken for CE armor.  A flood of relief overcame me.  I unzipped a vent on the front of the jacket, opposite the pocket in which I usually stored my wallet, and guess what?  Lost wallet frenzy extinguished!

Fortunately the mesh liner inside of the jacket held the wallet in place.  

Wallet firmly in grasp, we made our way back to town for dinner. After grabbing a bite to eat in Spring Creek at the counter service Mexican restaurant attached to the Casino, we returned to camp after an exhausting search for wine for my pompous palate, where I eventually enjoyed a glass or two of Pinot and Pete a cerveza o dos.  We then set about on a stroll about the campground, a warm campfire, some stargazing and our fourth day of adventure and misadventure was complete.

On our evening ritual of a walkabout the lake
A Ruby Mountain moonrise warmed by campfire

I have an app on my phone called Skyview that identifies constellations, planets and other objects in the night sky placing virtual images of those objects in the direction the phone’s camera is pointed relative to their position in space.  

As is a familiar ritual, well into the night I was up to see a man about a mule and it just so happened that Saturn, Uranus, Jupiter, Mars, the Moon, Venus and Mercury were all visible by way of the app, though not all without magnification to the naked eye throughout the night.  

Top left clockwise Skyview images: Saturn, Venus, the Hubble Space Telescope and International Space Station, Mars, and Mercury. Jupiter was visible too.

Often on our campouts, we see satellites, like Starlink and others. We jest about them being UAP’s. Earlier in the evening we saw the Hubble Space Telescope and the International Space Station streak across the sky just after sunset. They’re only briefly visible as the rotation of Earth and the angle of the setting sun reflects off of them in their transit about the planet.

Day 5 / Thursday, Sept 11 – South Fork Recreation Area to Tonopah, NV

South Fork Recreation Area to Tonopah NV ~294 miles

  • Retrace US-80 W from Elko to NV-278 S to Eureka.  US-50 to the junction with NV-376.  South on NV-376 to junction with US-6 W to Tonopah.
  • Get room at Best Western Hi-Desert Inn in Tonopah across the street from Tonopah Brewing
  • Tour the downtown and the Mizpah and Belvada Hotels

BTW, have I mentioned I never met a sunrise or sunset that wasn’t spectacular. 

Another stunning Ruby Mountains sunrise…

We enjoy documenting our rambles.  I with my monotonous videos and inspired landscapes. Pete too, works hard at photographically capturing the essence of our motocamping experience.  He composes each shot, carefully choosing the angle and composition, especially the backdrop for a photo, setting up and tweaking a tripod and fussing with the timer to express a pictorial narrative of epic adventure. 

Then I come along to tell another version of the tale.

Okay, phone and glasses in hand
Wait, Do I have my wallet?
The feeling when you realize your wallet is safely in your pocket

Soon we would be leaving our outstanding experiences in northeastern Nevada. After exchanging pleasantries with Ted, whose excellent campground oversight and generosity will be the standard by which all future camp experiences are measured, along with my sharing contact information, we bid adieu to the South Fork State Recreation Area.

A shameless plug for the blog I leave at the first sign of interest… Actually, I don’t even wait for a sign before stuffing a card into the hand of an unwitting addition to my 82 fans!

It was on to Tonopah as our destination for day five via the Nevada Scenic Byways of NV-278, US-50, and NV-376.  All with great views, some with vistas reaching over 50 miles in this basin and range geography in Nevada that is second to none. 

 But first we needed to fuel up for those long lonely stretches of pavement awaiting us.  We stopped in Carlin for breakfast, passing a fuel stop we used earlier in the week happening upon a great retro looking cafe, The State Cafe, Bar, Casino

Carlin Nevada’s finest… No joke!

Though intriguing, it was too early for an eye-opener, with too many miles before us, or slots, so we opted for breakfast at the adjacent cafe.

Ahh, biscuits and gravy 
Almost as good as my wife’s, Toni’s

I’ve noted in past posts that Pete has an outsized appetite for his svelte appearance. I, on the other hand, given my hillbilly genetic predisposition of loading on excess caloric storage (fat) have to work hard to even maintain my semi-svelteness. Pete ate half of my breakfast in addition to his. Thanks Pete. I’m able to throw a leg over the motorcyle because of your help with my calorie restriction.

Back on the road again, we stopped briefly for nalgas relief and some hydration at the junction of US-50 and NV-376.  We could see the clouds forming above the Toiyabe Range that augured thunder showers. 

Cumulus Pete and cumulonimbus Sisyphus

Adorning rain gear, we encountered foretold showers and a little hail between Kingston and Carvers for maybe 20 or so miles.  It was all refreshing until we saw ground lightning strike at the base of the Toiyabes, not that far from the road.  

Once out of the thunderstorm we dried quickly in the warm afternoon temps.

Near Carver we passed the Round Mountain Gold Mine, operated by Kinross Gold, which produced approximately 324,277 ounces of gold in the financial year 2020.  Another example of the boom and bust cycles in Nevada.  The mine has a long history, having first opened in 1906 and transitioning from underground to open pit mining over the years.  Its projected annual production (2025): Approximately 2.0 million gold equivalent ounces (Wiki).  Consider this, the price of gold at $3,855.00 per ounce as of this writing x 2 million ounces would be worth $7,710,000,000.  Before expenses.  

Round Mountain Gold Mine (Image “scrubbed,” to use AI parlance, from the interwebs)

Interestingly, when I asked Ted, our camphost with the mostest, what he figured in his responsibility for overseeing gold extraction in his mining career, he had never thought about the value of his work in those terms.  In fact, he called an old mining buddy to discuss this unanticipated quandary. 

I hope to hear from him about what toiling underground for thirty six years for, “sixteen tons and what do I get, but another day older and deeper in debt…”   (For my younger readers:  Sixteen Tons by Tennessee Ernie Ford  Yeah, yeah, it’s about coal mining, but you get the point, right?)

Of course gold prices have fluctuated over time, but it seems that there is a reason the Discovery Channel still produces episodes of the reality show, Gold Rush and the half dozen spinoffs the show has generated.  A guilty pleasure for this environmentally conscious denizen. 

Happy campers anticipating a good night’s sleep on a soft mattress up off the ground

We arrived in Tonopah in mid afternoon.  After unpacking we embarked on a walk about downtown to shake off the miles in the saddle.  Upon entering one of the most acclaimed buildings in Tonopah, we discovered the role of the Cline family, Sonoma California vintners through their Cline Family Ventures, of the restoration of the Mizpah and Belvada Hotels built in the early 1900’s. The Family Ventures was responsible for the establishment of the Tonopah Brewing Company too.  You can read about the family in the article, Vintners breath new life in historic Nevada Town  by John M. Glionna, from the Las Vegas Review-Journal, February 7, 2016.  

Booming majestically once again

At the time of its opening, the Mizpah was the tallest building in the state and featured modern luxuries such as an electric elevator, steam heat, and hot and cold running water. The hotel quickly became a social and business hub for miners, investors, and visitors. The Belvada originally opened as a bank in 1907 but shuttered four months later as yet another classic example of boom and bust mining economies.  After closing in 1999, the Mizpah and Belvada remained vacant until 2011 when Fred and Nancy Cline, with deep family ties to the region, purchased and carefully restored them.

Why stop at restoring one historic property in Tonopah when you can add a pip
Pete with a burrrgherrr and fries and me with a grilled chicken bacon sammie with cole slaw
accompanied by well rounded, lightly hopped, Mucker Reds

The Cline Family venture added to their Tonopah trifecta by creating the Tonopah Brewing Company right across the street, US-6,  from our Best Western Great Basin Inn. After solid pub grub, we settled in for the evening relaxing, rehydrating, and reflecting on five days on the road.  Tomorrow, a short romp to Bridgeport and the Paradise Cove Campground.

Day 6 / Friday, Sept 12 – Tonopah to Bridgeport

Tonopah to Bridgeport ~160 miles

  • US-95 to US-6 to Benton and CA-120 to US-395 N to Bridgeport.

Our route for this day’s ride is well known.  We’ve collectively traveled over this portion of the basin and range a couple of dozen times, in fact I once rode over the very same road on a bicycle in 1993 (See:  The Tour de Life A Tribute to a Dear Friend, Larry Johnston).  A favorite stretch on the moto is the CA-120 leg from Benton Hot Springs to Lee Vining, something of a roller coaster with broad sweepers.

By noon we arrived in Bridgeport.  We set up our campsite and enjoyed a refreshing beverage as we contemplated the weather.

After briefly retreating to our respective ripstop abodes as a squall passed through, we emerged deciding when and where to have dinner and whether we needed to gear up for the weather

After a brief discussion, it was decided that we head into town and have dinner at the Bridgeport Inn.  Famished, as we hadn’t had breakfast sustained only by a cookie from the motel lobby in Tonopah as we left, it was comforting to see meatloaf on the menu.  I am a comfort food sorta guy as is my associate so we both ordered the meatloaf, mash, and a salad. 

It was a Friday night in Bridgeport and as we were dining the skies let loose.  That’s also when we noticed a large number of “Adventure Motorcycles” from that Bavarian manufacturer looming about.  It turns out that an informal group of ramblers from Southern California were on a weekender and were staying at the Inn. 

Perhaps it was because of fatigue or the weather that I didn’t snap a picture of the motorcycles that were parked near ours in front of the Inn.  Nor did I document our conversation with a member of the group who shared his ride up from SoCal.  That or I am guilty of making fun of those pictures of motorcycles taken in front of Starbucks.  The Bridgeport Inn is no Starbucks and so I’m modestly apologetic for making fun of gratuitous motorcycle shots in front of Starbucks and equating that to the Bridgeport Inn. Oh, and for not having a photo.

The campground host and hostess were a delightful couple who hailed from Ohio.  The camp was readying to close for the winter.   We decided to purchase two bundles of wood and were determined to hold out for some stars as we anticipated two of the three R’s over a campfire.  Recent storms had soaked the wood, even though wrapped in plastic film.  My associate and I had a real struggle to start a fire, at one point resorting to using my battery powered tire inflator to oxygenate the paltry flames.  I was frantically splitting kindling from the larger pieces as Pete knelt over the flames, blowing to bolster the single element necessary of the three to make fire.

Though we are born to be mild, there was just enough of our neanderthal genome present such that our quest for fire finally generated enough heat to sustain a blaze. The red filter of my headlamp cast an eerily hue of Pete’s hyperventilation of the puny blaze.

“Ughu,” translated from Neanderthal, “Victory!” We were intent to burn every last log before retreating to our tents. The skies cleared, somewhat, allowing for a spectacular star studded moonrise.  No ambiguity there…

Billions of galaxies of billions of stars only slightly obscured by magnificent clouds…

By now you have noticed I try to bracket the beginning and ending of each day with a sunrise and sunset photo respectively. I would be remiss to not suggest a reasoned explanation of the cosmology to which I have such regard and awe.  This is not something I do just on these motorcycle rambles. It’s a bit of my “spirituality” I try to practice regularly having abandoned, And now I lay me down to sleep…

I offer you Dr. Sagan and invite you to enjoy a moment of respect to stand at the edge of forever… You must understand, I am forever an educator and though retired from the occupation, I continue to cultivate an enlightened understanding of the very phenomenon that produces my regard and awe to which I retire at the end of the day and embrace each new day.

CARL SAGAN COSMOS Episode 10 The Edge Of Forever

Day 7 / Saturday, Sept 13 – Bridgeport → Home

Bridgeport –> Home ~152 miles over Sonora Pass, 168 miles over Tioga Pass

There’s not much that’s complicated about our homeward leg of this seven day Ruby Mountain Ramble. We did need to wait for the sun to rise and dry things out.

Imagine awakening to a fog bank.  Crawling out of our tents, we were met with wetness from within (condensation) and wetness from without, (drizzle).  But the ever-ready JetBoil mochas took away the chill warming within as well as without.

Fortunately, though fall was in the air, the sunrise went to work drying out our gear as we packed for our last leg of the Ruby Mountains Ramble, homeward bound. 

As we were breaking camp, a conversation with a dad we’d briefly encountered the afternoon before, who had that faraway look in his eyes as we shared our journey, turned into what has become a frequent discussion of motorcycles past and present with new acquaintances.  He was with his family of five children, wife, and dog who late in the day before, expertly backed their gigantic 38 foot trailer behind his heavy duty pickup into a narrow RV space.  He saw that Pete and I watched intently, feeling pressure, but performing like Mac Jones in Brock Purdy’s absence in three divisional wins… (I’m composing this some three weeks after the actual ramble).  If that makes no sense, we awarded him straight 10’s.

He shared that he too had motorcycles, an enduro and a Harley, that were gathering dust as soccer, toddlers, and a soon to be high schooler preempted dirt and wind therapy sessions on two wheels.  For now it was 10 wheels and RV park therapy with his family.  We were both impressed and expressed our admiration for his familial commitment.

We bid adieu to our campground neighbors, Bob and Marge across from us who got into an argument the day before as Bob tried well in excess of the number of tries to back his truck and trailer into their site for his fragile pride.  There was the cigarette smoking veteran who shared his experience on baggers across the basin and range of Nevada, along with our committed dad and his tribe, as well as our camphosts who were very attentive to the Paradise Shores infrastructure during our brief stay.


…and to the family of quail who resided along the shore of the Bridgeport Reservoir. Just how many quail qualify as a covey?

After a quick gas station refuel and breakfast of tomato juice for me and a cup of joe and deli sandwich for Pete, we decided to take CA-108 back over Sonora Pass.  Overdressed for the ride over the pass, we stopped briefly at Kennedy Meadows to de-layer before arriving back home a few hours later, all the better for our mild ride or epic adventure.  You can decide for yourself. 

Born to be mild…

Epilogue

1,444 miles on the trip meter.  Another ramble that I hope my sometimes rambling narrative provides inspiration to get out and do it because as Stephen Bruton sings in World’s Fading Man,

Has anybody here

can you find my shadow

Like a slow burning candle

I thought it would last

Seems like I’ve lost

What was too hard to handle

Now there’s less of my future and more of my past

Just ‘cause you can’t recall

don’t mean it didn’t happen

Just ‘cause you can remember

don’t mean that it did

And while you’re at it, Take it Easy