Project VELAIA

On the VELo cycling for and around gAIA


Tag Archive for 'environment'

End of news on VELAIA.DE

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  • german

My dear readers,

as you might have noticed, I don’t post any more on this travelogue of my great tour around the world. There’s still more than a month missing to the end of the trip in La Serena in Chile, where I finished together with my father at the beginning of December 2008.

Even if I want to, I can’t continue the writing, as writing about the adventures of a single day in sufficient depth took me about 2 hours for the English version alone. Then another 2 hours for the German version and some more time for picture post-processing and uploading.  The only thing I can tell you here is that I’ve had a superb time on the salt lakes in Bolivia, the lagunas and in the Atacama desert.

I have to look forward now, get to grips with the hardship of the economic crisis where the big tail is probably still ahead and find a vision for my life, how do I want to live it. There will be some lectures in the near future, two at the Special Bikes show on April 25th and 26th and probably some in the area where I live. If you’re at the Special Bikes show, come over to the lecture or meet me at the exhibition - I’m very curious myself about all the new inventions and talking to so many interesting people there.

I will start a weblog under www.BikeLust.de where I plan to keep everyone updated about what’s going on in my cyclist life, about new ideas and issues that are on my mind. I’ll try to spread the word about living in a sustainable and environmental friendly way and at the same time having a wonderful time. I’m cycling on a bike, taking the trains, eating vegetarian and trying to save energy, water and resources. Why? Well, it used to be because of my ideologies, but now I’m so used to it and to all the advantages that come with it and I have a really beautiful and happy life, that I don’t want to change. No way!

There are still a lot of things that I can and will do better, like for example avoiding airplane travel altogether. During the world tour I have made an exception to that because of my limited budget and amount of time and I feel really bad about it. Now I will try hard to stick to these goals of mine. For the planet, for all the interconnected species,  and for myself! Quality of life, that’s what matters to me. People matter to me. You matter to me!

I’ve come upon this wonderful series of fascinating lectures online, called TED - probably a lot of you have already heard about it. It’s my exchange for television. Now today there’s a TED wish from Sylvia Earle about the Blue Heart of the Planet that I want to share with you. I can’t do much more myself about it except for political lobbying and expressing my opinion, because as a vegetarian  I don’t participate in slaughtering the sea species and I try to avoid, reuse and recycle as much as possible. I have to do a lot more myself in other fields. Maybe you can make a change? And believe me, it’s not hard to be a vegetarian even if you have not cycled 40,000 km over 5 continents :-)

Ok, that’s it from my side. Thank you all so much for following my trip and enriching this great experience. I hope I have given something back with the stories and pictures and that I have motivated at least some of you to make changes for the good of humanity while having a fascinating time yourself.

Enjoy life and riding. Love, Peace and Great Adventures,

Daniel

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Schöne Pfade und seltsame Gesteinsformationen

Als die Nacht gut überstanden war, gab es erst einmal Frühstück. Dabei beobachteten wir ein für mich sehr erfreuliches Phänomen: Jede 2 Minute radelte ein Kind auf Fahrrad ganz in der Nähe vorbei. Alle auf dem dünnen Pfad neben der Straße in Richtung nächste Ortschaft zur Schule.
rock formations

Weiße Felsformationen stechen hervor

Wir hatten uns in dieser Ortschaft eingedeckt, da wir nicht wussten, wie weit es zur darauffolgenden sein würde - und sicher ist sicher! Noch eine kühle, bolivianische Cola für umgerechnet 20 Euro Cent getrunken, konnte es weitergehen. So sahen die Wege aus, wenn wir nicht die viel zu grob geschotterte “Straße” fuhren.

Bolivia: trail mania

Viel Spaß auf engen Pfaden

Und hier nun die Verpflegung Station am Mittag: Vier Frauen aus einem ansonsten ausgestorben wirkenden Dorf, die mit ein paar Styropor-Behältern und jeder Menge isolierenden Wolltüchern aus Eigenproduktion die Vorbeireisenden mit Nahrung versorgten. Das heißt, viel Verkehr gab es hier nicht wirklich. Das Geschäft lief gut, wenn alle 10 Minuten einmal ein LKW seine Staubwolke mit sich brachte und anhielt.

Bolivia women

Imbiss Stand an der Hauptstraße

Denn das Klima war trocken, Sonnenschein, dünne Luft. Da zog jedes größere motorisierte Vehikel seine Staubwolke hinter sich her. Wir Radler durften entweder Staub inhalieren oder mussten kurzzeitig anhalten … denn Luft anhalten und zugleich weiterfahren, daran war in diesen Höhen wahrlich nicht zu denken!

stone church

Steinerne Dorfkirche auf Bolivianisch

Plötzlich fanden wir uns in einer sehr skurrilen Felslandschaft wider, die sich über mehrere Kilometer unserer Fahrstrecke hinzog. Nur für die Straße wurde richtig Platz gemacht, selbst wenn sie sich noch immer in Schlangen-Kurven durch die Felslandschaft zog. Prima Klettermöglichkeiten für Entdecker aller Couleur gab es hier und ich nahm mir natürlich alle Zeit dafür - eine willkommene Abwechslung zu den langen Stunden im Sattel.

recumbent in the rocks

Skurile Felslandschaft am Abend

Das Zelt wurde mit prima Ausblick, windgeschützt und mit Sichtschutz vor den Blicken der ab und an Vorbeifahrenden errichtet, direkt neben einem Wegstück der ehemaligen Straße. Mit fast allen verfügbaren Spannseilen gesichert und “ruhig gestellt”.

camp in the rocks

Bei der alltäglichen Camping-Routine

Danach hieß es nur noch Kalorien bunkern und die überwältigende Landschaft und Atmosphäre auf sich einwirken lassen:

sun rays and dark clouds

Der Blick zum Rande der Hochebene

camp in the rocks

Camp inmitten der Felsen

Beim Nachverfolgen der Route bin ich diesmal auf einige Probleme gestoßen. Die Karten-Kacheln bei Google Maps waren leider nicht höher aufgelöst, so konnte ich den Weg nicht gut verfolgen. Ich hoffe, dass ich im nächsten Beitrag wieder Witterung bekomme. Bis dann.

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Ein neuer Tag in Bolivien

“La Paz, wo bist du geblieben?” … so oder so ähnlich hätten wir am Morgen singen können, denn weg war sie, die Millionen Metropole. Untergetaucht gewissermaßen unter einen Teppich samtweicher Wolken.

cycling on clouds

Über den Wolken

Trotz des Erstaunens über das plötzliche Verschwinden von La Paz kullerten wir nicht einfach von der Strecke, wie es dem folgenden Genossen en route passiert ist. Die gelben Männlein sind übrigens Straßenarbeiter, die dem verdutzten LKW-Fahrer beim Abfüllen des restlichen Treibstoffes helfen. Könnte ja geklaut werden.

Nebenbei eine an uns gerichtete Frage: “Habt ihr Wasser?”. Wir überlegen kurz, wofür die Männer wohl Wasser brauchen könnten und kommen zum Entschluss, dass es wohl nicht für den Eigenkonsum ist. Zudem neigen sich unsere Reserven der Erschöpfung; in nicht allzu christlicher Manier teilen wir also diesmal nicht.

yet another truck accident

Neben der Straße

Unsere ständigen Begleiter auf der Hochebene: Lamas. Dies sind die domestizierten Tierchen, die nicht gleich abhauen, wenn man sie mal schief anguckt. Nach uns gespuckt haben sie übrigens nicht, zum Glück.

first contact

Vorbei an den Lamas

Jetzt die Herausforderung des Tages: Geradeaus, schnurstracks geradeaus. Zig Kilometer weit immer geradeaus. Kurven waren bei dieser Etappe Mangelware und sehnsuchtsvoll ersehnten wir uns eine jede schon Kilometer vorher herbei.

altiplano trail 2

Ewig lang gerade aus im Hochland Boliviens

Die Schotterpiste oder pista de grava compactada, wie man auf Spanisch sagen würde, war technisch äußerst anspruchsvoll zu fahren. Selbst mit den breiten 2 Zoll Schlappen, die aufgezogen waren, “schwammen” die Räder manchmal geradezu im Schotter und Sand.

“Hinter dem nächsten Hügel wird es bestimmt besser”, sprachen wir uns Mut zu. “Jetzt aber wirklich hinter dem nächsten, garantiert!” Und wieder nicht. Dazu noch ein Platten am Hinterreifen des Mountainbikes.

long way ahead

Kleiner schwarzer Punkt = Elmar eine Minute voraus

Gegen Abend endlich Besserung. Zwar immer noch schnurgerade Strecke, doch wenigstens ein paar Wolken, ein bisschen Abwechslung wettermäßig. Weiter radeln wir mehr schlecht als recht durch Schotter oder auf engen Pfaden neben diesen. Radfahrer aus der Region haben diese Alternative erschaffen auf dem Weg ins nächste Dorf, zur Arbeit, zum Markt (mercado) oder zur escuela, Schule zu Deutsch.

Wir genießen diese Radwege, erstellt von Radfahrern für Radfahrer. Ein Hochgefühl diese mit 20 km/h entlangzuflitzen, scharfe Kurve links um einen Busch, dann gleich wieder Ausweichmaneuver nach rechts um einem Sandfeld auszuweichen. Action, hurra!

easy rider
Einsame Schotterpisten

Kampiert wird diese Nacht 200 m entfernt von der eh schon wenigst befahrenen Hauptverbindungsroute der Region, die in Deutschland locker als größtes Bundesland durchgehn würde … flächenmäßig.

P.S. Der erste Teil der Route im Karten-Feld unten ist hoch aufgelöst. Hier ist wirklich jeder Kuhstall zu sehen. Bei der Auflösung macht das Nachverfolgen der Route bei Google Maps richtig Spaß.

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Day 605 (2008-12-19): Mission accomplished, back home!

  • english

In Rüsselsheim I had an early breakfast together with my friend and host Jürgen, then he suggested that I should prepare a lunch package and gave me a hand full of bananas for the way. The day before he showed me a wonderful route through the hilly area called Odenwald. The route should be as short as possible, contain a minimum of height meters and little traffic of course.

Carfree shed equipped with Leitra velomobile, Birdy folding bike and other bikes by you.

Then I started at 7:30 am, outside the weather was warmer than the days before, maybe 3 to 5 °C, the streets were wet and drizzel fell from the cloudy sky. The yellow light from the street lights reflected in the wet street and also in the low hanging clouds. This caused a feeling well known to the people in the northern and central parts of Europe ,the feeling of having to leave the cozy security of a climatized home.

On the road to Darmstadt there were cars everywhere. The shoulder of the road was often pretty wide so I felt saver than riding really close to the cars. I often switched to the cycle/walking path when available but realized time after time that this alternative was in at least 50% of the cases a mistake, either slowing me down through massive detours or leading to dead ends. Having to cross the street in break of dawn didn’t increase my security in traffic either.

Reaching the city of Darmstadt I reached this important “kilometer stone” of my journey, symbolical for the successful end of the tour: the number 40 000 appeared on my kilometer counter. Mission accomplished! I could have missed the display of this number easily, there was no “magical feeling” or any other kind of signal from either the environment or my body, just the usual feeling of being packed in enough warm layers to master the last stage in winter Germany. My super VDO MC1.0 kilometer counter also didn’t give any signal at all: no beep, no vibration (as other devices would have done these days), no letter of congratulation or nice sentence from the tiny device mounted beside the 26″ rear wheel. Just a normal moment in a middle sized German city in another way too warm winter. Nobody took notice!

kilometer counter displaying the distance cycled in the last 600 days by you.

I was happy. Happy when looking back to this so rich part of my life, happy when looking at where I was now and happy when looking into the future. The smile appeared on my face again and the pedestrians passing often got infected when I greeted them kindly and smiled back.

Continuing towards the natural park Odenwald and slowly gaining in altitude on the way towards Reichelsheim I started to recognize the familarity of the landscape and architecture. These now brown, forest covered hills with the tiny villages, small streams leading downwards from every valley, the farms and wood processing plants, the cellar door sales from local farmers advertised near the road and of course the timber framed white-black houses or houses covered with tiny timber plates. This is the area I had explored for years on the mountainbike and in my early childhood together with my grandparents and relatives. This felt even more like home than the European way of life I already felt very familiar with during the last two weeks.

"Fachwerk" house in the Odenwald, Germany by you.

Cycling down from the “Wegscheide” crossing towards Hirschhorn was nice and fast riding and arriving at the bottom I reached the Neckar river. The water that flows down from somewhere in the Black Forest and passes my home only 50 or 60 km upstream. This navigable river led a lot of my cycling tours, it was always there with the lock in my home town Gundelsheim and sometimes even heavy floods. From now on I knew the route by heart, I’ve probably cycled it at least a dozen times and even more often from Eberbach, the town only 11 km from here.

first time  back at the Neckar river in Hirschhorn by you.

I chose the slower version, following the cycle path, to get to Eberbach and switched over to the B37 road that later changed into the B27 near Mosbach and brought me to Gundelsheim just at dusk time. Nice time for the finisher photo in front of the castle Horneck, after 40 115 km. I took all the time to put the tripod on the cycle path, adjust the camera settings and get the shot. I had the time, I surely was not in a hurry this evening. A lot of cars passed me in their hurry to get from A to B really fast and enrich the lives of their passengers. They are several times as fast as I have been during the last 600 days. What do they gain? What do they lose?

Now I visit this place where I’ve spent so many years of my life, the house where I had grown up in, the street where I had learned cycling and the center of my little world until a few years back. A strange feeling in my breast.

Daniel arriving back in Gundelsheim after a 40.000 km bicycle tour over 5 continents, 20 months by you.

I leave some stuff with my father who had reached home already more than a week ago, the tent and sleeping bag are drying in the cellar now. I shortly check the interior of my youth, my room, the kitchen and living room. A lot of memories are connected to these places, but I don’t feel like I had lost them, I don’t feel like I had missed them.

I start riding again and pedal up that “long” uphill from Neckarmühlbach to Siegelsbach; the high-brightness front LED lights are flickering when I reach the really steep parts with more than 10% gradient. I choose to take the even steeper shortcut towards Siegelsbach … and master it … of course. I am trained and motivated. Cycling through two smaller villages I reach Fürfeld and find the new home of my mother and sister immediately.

20 months no see! I park the bike at a bush beside the house, I ring the bell, I jump behind the bush! My wonderful sister Verena opens the door already expecting me, so I’m not very successful with terrifying her even only a bit! Now she’s falling me in the arms. I’m happy! During the trip there had often been a big distance and times with bad communication when the facilities were just not there. But now I’m back, back in a different NOW, but back with the people I love! I meet Andi, my friend and the longtime boyfriend of my sister, and my mother Martina only 45 minutes later when she comes back from work. And after lifting up the loaded recumbent bicycle many stairs I’m trained and able to pick her up. Even our dog Sydney is happy after shortly “talking turkey” with me :-)

A beautiful day and a condign and nice finish of the adventure.R

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Tag 402 bis 428 (30.05 - 25.06.2008): Von Cedar City nach San Diego … lange her

  • english
  • german

Well I thought I’d write about this stretch of my tour just after passing through Zion and Grand Canyon National Parks, but I was wrong. Whenever I went to a library the time was either limited to an hour or two (but still free, that’s great) or all my time went to shopping for the new DSLR camera and the equipment and all the trouble I’ve had with not having a VISA card with me any more (and the limits on the new one).

So finally now, near Villa de Cura in Venezuela (and afterwards), I finally get the time, sitting in my old Hilleberg Nallo 2 GT, which my father kindly brought with him to Caracas. It’s nice to type on this 5 or 6 year old iBook which I’ve had for years and years, which I’ve taken everywhere: to school, to CCC meetings in Berlin, Linuxtage in Karlsruhe and even to school. I’ll only write in English to spend more time on cycle touring, photographing and so on … maybe I’ll translate to German later some time - the content of my offline hand-written diary is in written in German most of the time anyway.

It’s hard to upload photos from this machine or to stitch panoramas at it’

So, now I have to tell ‘ya what happened after Cedar City - I hope I can recall as much and as accurate as possible after such a long time:

I left Cedar City after spending 2 days with Iain’s nice and very kind family. Going south I first cycled along the old highway which goes beside the new freeway, and had to jump on the freeway from time to time.
Once, just before leaving the freeway to turn east to Zion National Park, I found an iPod nano 1GB with 200 Spanish songs on the street. I checked whether it worked and it did! So from now on I could even listen to music when the battery of my 80GB iPod classic was empty! Mui bien!

Just before arriving in Zion National Park, a few kilometers from Placerville (at least something with *ville) I saw a car turning right to the riverside onto a sandy trail and as I was on the search for a camping spot myself, I followed.
And I was rewarded wonderfully: A nice campsite directly next to the small river and a lot of friendly Americans. With a group of high-school graduates I went for a short “swim” in the river and got a US special food: marshmallows with chocolate and cookies - tastes like pure sugar, almost!

Getting up early next morning I missed the Montana students as they were still asleep but had a good start into Zion National Park. Usually you have to pay $12 but the ranger at the gate let me in for free when I told him about my adventurous tour.

Inside I met a cyclist on a single speed: Michael. He talked to me and told me that I should definitely follow the main valley by bike as the views are stunning and there are no cars! And he was so right!

You’re sharing the road only with buses which go very slow and you have a lot of time to enjoy nature and to get stunned by the views you have in this valley. On the side the walls go straight up for hundreds of meters. They are all red and you’ll find a lot of overhanging caves inside. And I was lucky that the sky was covered in clouds so I could get a lot of details in the panoramas I photographed.
If you ever happen to go on a cycling trip through the US, make sure Zion National Park is on your list and also bring a few days more than I did!

Because I had to leave after only a few hours, cycling up a small side valley. From the bottom of the valley I couldn’t figure out where the street goes, but it’s winding up the mountain in quite some serpentines and the view is getting better the higher you climb. The tourist filled cars are going really slow so even you as a cyclist get the chance to enjoy the ride.

Then there is the tunnel where the rangers won’t let you through. They told me to go 2 turns back and ask a pick-up driver to pick me up. And that’s what i did. The second driver had enough space and took me for a short drive through the tunnel - thanks a lot!

And the countryside is so different when you’re at the top! Now there are a lot of red “waves” with wave patterns all through but as you’ve climbed up a few hundred altimeters there are no big walls any more. All red (sand)stone. But the peak heat of the noon and early afternoon stopped me from exploring more so I just continued cycling on and on.

Between Zion National Park and the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park I didn’t get to see a lot. The countryside was rather uninteresting after what I’d seen in the NP and so I just tried to get through pretty fast, learning Spanish while I was riding and listening to the recordings of my favorite internet radio station Soma-FM.

The climb up to the North Rim of Grand Canyon was tough! “Vejetariano i no como carne” were some of the new Spanish words I learned with the Coffee Break Spanish podcast while climbing up the mountain.

I then decided to even try to get as far as possible to the park entrance to either get an early start in the morning so I wouldn’t have to pay the $12 or to make it in the night. Well, the altimeters were too plentiful and the distance too far, so I just made it to the border of the park, turned left into a gravel trail that said “Arizona Trail” and continued off-road for another 6km until it got far too dark and cold.

The next morning after camping in the forest I found the Arizona Trail and continued over a lot of fallen trees and up and down many hills. I got frustrated as I wanted to be at the rim with the early sunlight to get nice pictures but the trail was so long and so difficult to ride - and it spit me out just a few meters inside the park where I could see the checkpoints 10m away! Lucky me!

But then it was another 20km ride to the rim and the temperatures in the valley even dropped down to below 0 Celsius! My hands were swollen from the cold allergy but I continued riding, sometimes freehanded to warm up the hands again.

Finally I made it and took a lot of pictures and panoramas at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. What and amazing natural wonder! From the rim to the bottom more than 1000m deep and at some places you can look straight down for hundreds and hundreds of meters - almost unbelievable how mother nature created this natural artwork through millions of years. Probably even the dinosaurs got to see a (much smaller) Grand Canyon during the millions of years they’ve been the emperors of planet earth … And the Grand Canyon survived. I guess it’ll also easily survive the uprise and short kingdom of homo sapiens on this planet. So instead of me just passing by for a few days, watching it, it’s kind of staying there watching kingdoms of different species and cultures just passing by like the highlights of my trip - a traveler through time it truly is!

Then I met a guy with a nice Nikon DSLR in his hand and I started talking with him. Jerry turned out to also know Janne Corax, who originally wanted to participate in Beijing to Paris, and who’s travelogues of trips through Tibet and over the Chang Tang high plateau in the north of Tibet have motivated me since years. I missed him by only 2 or 3 days in the “CYCLISTS’ INN” in Aksai Chin at the entrance of Tibet. Jerry has been to South America already seven times and has done a lot of rock climbing and climbing in the ice over here (where I am right now). We decided to spend the day together and went for a 4 or 5 hours walk along the North Rim to a not so touristy place where we climbed over a few trees and through some bushes to get directly to the rim with a wonderful view and this more adventurer like feeling :-)

 

Later on Jerry and I went to his camper which he had parked just outside the park. We watched “Into the wild!” and had a small dinner and a lot of chocolate cookies. Jerry’s a really cool guy: Retired at 51 he’s making something of his life right now, seeking the adventure and spending a lot of time in nature. Except for the two SUVs he’s traveling with I could really enjoy such a style of life, too, one day. One of his big plans is to get to Tibet pretty soon and I wish him all the best - maybe we’ll meet there or even cycle together, that’d be cool.

Then in the noon Jerry went towards Zion and I started a fast and wild downhill of almost 1000 meters into the valley of the Colorado river. The turns were a lot of fun to ride through and in some parts the cars couldn’t even keep up with me. As the valley opened I rode into a massive valley which dimensions I sometimes couldn’t grasp. The heat down here got worse so I forcedly had to rest in the noon. But with heavy tailwinds I decided to continue on towards the Colorado river bridge.

 

The green river made its way through the valley in the valley. Down at least 100m from the bridge I could see some boats going down the river far below. Obviously they were part of an organized tour. In the movie I had seen the day before, this young fellow explorer and traveler went down the Colorado without a permit, even crossing into Mexico without.

Well, my direction changed almost 180 degrees and so did my luck as now after several hours downhill and heavy tailwind cycling I had to fight at 10 km/h or less against the wind and even to go uphill. I stopped in the shadow of a small tree with massive thorns and learned Spanish while waiting for the temperatures to drop. And in the evening I continued, stopping at a Navajo indian settlement (with houses and big American cars) to get some water. A family was sitting outside, wondering what this strange looking cyclist wanted, but even though they hardly spoke English I managed to get my water bottles filled and continued later on through a tiny valley.

The following day I had to climb up to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon this time. During the noon time I rested for 4-5 hours in a Navajo indian sales shed, prepared a sign with my web address for the tail of my bike, played soccer, read in the Worldchanging - User’s guide to the 21st century book and again listened to my Spanish podcast.

The heat of the noon and afternoon was gone and I started out into the climb. Two American touring cyclists were flying down the mountain with tailwinds and stopped for a short time (Laisha + friend). I continued and continued and continued even into the night - my idea was to enter the National Park during the night as others had told me the checkpoint was closed and you could pass with $12 more in your pocket. And so it was. I arrived after a cool downhill at a South Rim tourist spot with a nice view over the canyon at about midnight. The Canyon was gently illuminated by the moonlight so one could see the contours and guess the magnificent dimensions of this natural wonder. I then put my sleeping pad on the bank directly at the front and had a 5 hours nap till the first red photons of the sun hit me in a dreamlike smooth red color.

Cycling along the South Rim I realized that it was way more touristy here than at the counterpart to the north. A lot of cars, SUVs and majestic RVs passed on the way to the Grand Canyon Village. Over there I stopped, rested directly at the rim and wrote some cards to friends and family. There I saw some mavericks circling above the deep canyon and felt the immediate desire to fly with them, to join them in their travels without borders. I’d love to change my bike for a few wings and fly around the world, if I only could!

Anyway, I continued rolling south towards Phoenix. The next day contained quite some downhill cycling first, but also way to much headwinds. So after 30 or 40 km I rested, put my bike beside the street and jumped into a (wash) pipe under the street.
Half an hour later a car driver stopped and screamed, so I decided to get out of my hideout and tell him that I’m fine.
Two hours later another car stopped, but this time not a normal car driver but rather the highway patrol. Someone had called the police and informed them that a riderless bike lay beside the street. Oh my god! I just wanted to get some rest and they’re freaking out immediately - at least now I know that you’re really safe in the US as long as you stick to the main roads.
The officer asked me for my ID and some questions like eye color, size, weight et cetera; seems I’ve been missing somehow.

I cycled a short stretch of the historic Route 66 through a small town called Williams. The street divides in front of the village, so the traffic going south drives along the west side of the village where as the north going traffic drives east. All along the street there are small shops, a lot of it quite touristy and in the original look, like in the Hollywood movies.

I stopped in Prescott to do some internet research on the new DSLR camera I wanted to buy. I was not sure whether to order the legendary D400 (aka Rebel XTi) or the new D450 (Rebel XSi) that was just released and got a good review on DPReview.com. I read for 3 hours and checked prices and accessories and then postponed the decision.
In town I got notice that a few riders of the Race Across America had passed through the night before so I decided to ask again in a bike shop, but the riders and employees there didn’t have a clue! I continued on a narrow and winding road through rough terrain, what a pleasure to ride up and down! And the road also attracted a bunch of other cyclists for their workout ride in the early evening. And I continued and continued riding, crossed another valley and climbed up a several hundred altimeters pass. Just after the top I could see the big desert and plain with Wickenburg pretty close and Phoenix far behind … it was a majestic view and now I knew I had found the right place to pitch the tent, even though there was no way to get the tent pegs into the stony ground, so I had to get a few big rocks and put them on the pegs.

During the night I heard voices outside the tent, I thought there must be some drunken people celebrating nearby or so. And even before the first sunlight hit the dry and thirsty ground in the morning I was up and enjoyed the silence and freshness of the morning. And again I heard voices. I looked down onto the street below and spotted a road cyclist with team car … and you know about the rest already from a posting I did that same day in the afternoon. I was so excited and full of positive thoughts and the infectious disease of extreme endurance sports again got hold of me - I’m sure that I’ll be in that race one day!

The temperatures were very hot during the noon and afternoon and I adjusted my daily schedule: Cycling early in the morning, resting during the day and cycling again in the evening. So I also always had to find a shady place to spend the noon, either a library or a tree or a culvert. And I had to pack a lot of water, the juice of life that tastes like the best wine when you’re thirsty in a 40+ °C environment. The tap water often tasted pretty ugly in this area and the sunlight heated the bottled water up to over 50 degrees centigrade - more like an ugly medicine that you’re forced to take and you believe that it helps than the cool juice of life :-P

Then one hot day as I had just cycled down a 200 altimeter stretch of the Interstate into Quartzsite and as I was looking for the library I recognized a book shop on my right just at the beginning of town. As I’m always looking for good books (I’m an addict) I turned around and stopped. I didn’t know that I’d stay almost half a day there, drink cool drinks, read a lot and talk to the legendary owner, naturalist and nudist Paul. I bought a book named “Der Schamane aus dem Allgäu” and the “Hyperion” by Friedrich Hölderlin and an English-Spanish and vice versa dictionary to be prepared for the time in South America. And what a bizzare feeling to read from a poetry writer, Hölderlin, who has been living in my area, born in Lauffen am Neckar, sitting in a kind of open air bookstore (without a/c) in 107°F (about 41,7°C) temperature. As a result my system weight (bicycle + rider + luggage) shot up more than one kilogram or about 1%!

In the evening at about 6 pm I started again and cycled a bit further where I pitched my small tent in the stone desert - what a mistake as I found out during the night: The stones had stored the heat of the day and slowly radiated it back into the atmosphere or better into my tent during the night. So I removed the outer tent and slept almost naked but was still wet from sweat all the time and of course I couldn’t get a lot of sleep.

Short after Ehrenberg - sounds pretty German, right - in Blythe, I went to the supermarket, read for a while in the new (old second-hand) books till the library opened and rushed in to get a slot on one of the computers with internet. There I almost died, as I got a message from amazon.com that something’s wrong with the payment information for the camera I had ordered. I was lucky to have ordered the stuff more than 10 days before leaving the US, so I could easily reorder and check the credit card information. And far too early in the afternoon I left the town and cycled south towards the Mexican border.

The next day was no better! I passed the last village before a 80 km desert ride much too early and couldn’t get any food or water. And today the temperatures climbed so fast I almost couldn’t believe it - at 9 am they were in their 30s and I decided to rest an check whether the night might be better. I ended up in another culvert 3 or 4 meters under the road surface and there I read, slept and before all else sweat! The temperatures reached the 113°F (45°C) in the shade and far more outside my cool heat refuge. I could have stayed in my pipe until darkness but my bike wanted to hit the road again and I agreed.

I had to find a way to get water and found a RV park just half a mile away from the road. But the water tasted ugly and even uglier when it got hot! My rear tire punctured just a few minutes before darkness and I found the hole on the inside of the tube again - something must be wrong with the rims and rim tape, but because of the darkness I couldn’t figure out what! So I replaced the tube quickly, put on my headlight with the 3 red blinking LEDs pointing to the back and set out into the night.

I’m used to cool nights and many people will tell you that nights in the desert get really cold, sometimes below freezing point. Not in this case, I tell you! 35°C was the coolest temperature of the whole night, 35°C! And the already horrible tasting water tasted even worse then. I stopped at a border patrol checkpoint in at about midnight after I had gone up several hundred altimeters and gone through extremely hilly terrain with steep climbs and descends, and was lucky to get cool and fresh tasting water from their water machine.

 

I passed a big military area to my left and right and sometimes it sounded like big jets were taking off, but I couldn’t spot them on the night sky. I stopped at a place that was shown as a market running only through the winter months and of course it was closed, BUT! Yeah, there’s a PEPSI machine running outside. What a pleasure to get a Dr Pepper and Pepsi tin cooled down to just above freezing from this heaven sent machine at 2 am. The tins fell down in the sand filled tin box at the bottom of the machine and they made me go again.

But far I didn’t come because the scenery was so marvelous! Cycling through moon lit colossal sand dunes I just couldn’t concentrate on the road any longer. I stopped several times to take pictures and opened the lens for 30 seconds; then I started playing with my LED headlights in front of the camera and decided to get one or two hours of sleep before setting out towards El Centro in the morning.

In El Centro I navigated straight to the library, just to realize, that my website’s been down again. Quickly I e-mailed my friend and webmaster Felix in Offenau and only a few hours later he had fixed the problem - a service worth gold! I also realized that the amazon payment for my camera still hadn’t been accepted … slowly I started feeling uncomfortable as the time was running out and you don’t want to buy a new camera in South America, especially not in Venezuela as I realized now. I wrote an e-mail or two to CouchSurfers in El Centro and within a few minutes I got a reply from Diana in El Centro … she arranged a meeting only an hour later for lunch and managed to get me a super comfortable bed with her grandmother. I spent the next day with her friend Corey playing World of Warcraft, finally successfully ordering the camera and watching YouTube videos - really put my feet up that day and enjoyed it, especially knowing about the temperatures in their 40s (centigrade) outside.

But the day came when I had to say my goodbyes to the friendly family, to super friendly and communicative grandmother Margaret and her grandchildren. I then had to climb the mountain range from the depression in El Centro. Half way through the 900m (or so) ascend I ran out of water even though they supplied water for the overheating radiators of the cars every few hundred meters. But I managed to get to the top somehow - had it been really serious I could have stopped a car for sure as the US drivers have been super friendly and helpful to me so far.

After passing a village located only a few meters from the Mexican border (with half the traffic on the road being Border Patrol vehicles) I stopped in a small Mexican restaurant for an early lunch break. Reading in the Hyperion and chilling out in the cool shadow of a few nice trees with a nice enlivening breeze I made out two touring cyclists passing on the street by their reflections in a restaurant window. I already knew about them as Diana told me there were two touring cycling girls coming to stay only a day or two after me. So I packed all my stuff in a hurry and caught them within a few km (all downhill). We chatted for a while and I hope I could give them some worthy tips for the time to come in the desert and on the way up to Zion National park - check out their website www.GirlsGoneWildlife.org (or .com).

Cycling back I passed the restaurant and stopped only 200m later at a side of the road supermarket to buy a Tetra Pak of chocolate milk. And again I didn’t advance but I rolled back and turned right into a 3 km detour as Christian, a German immigrant (when he was 9, from Berlin), invited me to a Yoga meeting place at a farm nearby. At this nice farm with meditation building, several pools, sauna, fitness rooms and a lot of other fun stuff I found a few recumbent bicycles (one even a recumbent tandem) hanging at the ceiling, slowly degenerating as the years passed by. I asked to check the bikes and got a few things done with the gearing system and steering systems. But the tires were hopeless - years too old and as we inflated, they blew up immediately. Damn!

In the evening the first guests and participants of the meditation week arrived and brought loads and loads of food to feed about 30 to 40 participants for a week. I met a nice and friendly girl, Lykke from Denmark, there, who arrived together with her boyfriend Brian from San Francisco. Together we had a wonderful time in the moonlit pool and sauna in the night.

But again I had to leave way too early. I didn’t even have the time to put the new 20″ tires they wanted to buy the following morning onto the recumbent bikes, but I’m sure that one of the participants could do so after my reviving start of the bikes.

Day dreaming about the last night I cycled up a small hill snail-like as I spotted two touring cyclists approaching from behind. Dan and his friend from San Diego caught up with me and together we cycled for another 3 or 4 hours, up and down a few times till they arrived at their final shelter - Dan had cycled across the whole US for 2 or 3 months and was now on final. A big party was planed for the next day’s arrival in his home city. We had lunch together and I said good bye as I had told my CouchSurfing host Tom in San Diego I’d arrive in the evening.

The way down to the Pacific coast was not worth mentioning, except that I punctured another time. Again the hole was on the inside of the tube and I almost got crazy because I couldn’t find out the reason. I arrived at Tom and Omar’s place in the evening, after a long and hot trip and was very happy to have a home away from home in such a big and car filled city. And in one of the previous postings I already told you about the nice time I’ve had in San Diego with Tom, his girlfriend Lynna and her family, Omar and a lot of others.

 

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Tag 396 bis 401 (24. - 29.05.2008): Von West nach Ost durch Nevada, Carson City bis Baker und bis nach Cedar City in Utah

  • english
  • german

Highway 50 is known as “The loneliest highway in the country” - so I was prepared for long and rather unexciting days. Definitely not what I’ve had the last 1.5 weeks.

The trip from Dayton to Fallon was still quite populated and a big shopping centre just outside of Dayton invited me in. The food in my bags was almost gone so I had to buy food; an additional 2l bottle would also make sense as the distances between services and markets should get longer and longer. Later on I stopped again at the Lahontan Reservoir in Silver Springs, went to the toilet and refilled the water.

Quite some showers came down from the sky by the time I had reached Fallon, so I locked the bicycle in front of the huge Wal-Mart supermarket and went in to buy good food - but somehow that didn’t work: I came out with way too many sweets, but also bought some salad and fresh French bread.

yellow school buses parked in line on cloudy day

touring cyclist resting beside the road - looking towards the dark clouds

 

With nice tailwinds I flew away from Fallon, cycled around Grimes Point on HW50 and stopped near a great sand dune. A lot of small dark spots were sprinkle over it and only with the 12x optical zoom of my camera could I make out quad bikers and 4WDs racing up and down over the massive loads of sand. And at the bottom of the dune a big village consisting of dozens and dozens of white RVs formed as a kind of base camp for the adrenaline junkies on their quads :-)

  RV village next to a giant sand dune in Nevada

In the early noon I arrived in Middle Gate the coming day after passing through a U.S. Naval Reservation. I got 4l of water from the lady in the restaurant and bought 2 cans of vegetables for the coming day. Then I cycled on, took the alternate route on road 722 through East Gate and up to Carroll Summit. But not so fast! First I got totally drenched by a heavy shower, decided to pitch the tent in the early afternoon and about 1.5 hours later took it down again and cycled for 1 or 2 more hours just to pitch the tent again to escape some more showers.

panda shot while cycling towards rain showers, HW50, Nevada

tent spot near Middlegate, NV - surrounded by orange rocks

 

I ran out of food that evening and didn’t know about the bad weather waiting for me the following day: It rained continuously till 5pm in the afternoon. What did I do during this time? I read in my 3 books:

  1. Digital Photography, Vol.2 by Scott Kelby
  2. Worldchanging - A user’s guide to the 21st century, by Alex Steffen and many more
  3. Lonely Planet South America

tent reflections in dirty sunglasses

And finally the sun came out, dried my tent within a few minutes and gave me a chance to at least move my legs a bit today.

 

 

It turned out that  I managed to do a lot of kilometers this evening, cycling till 9pm. I went over Carroll Summit with 7452ft, over the Railroad Pass (6431) and through the vast and flooded Reese Valley to Austin where I arrived at 9pm in the evening - a strong hunger and hope for warm food kept me going this evening and I was extremely disappointed that the local bar had stopped serving warm food by that time already. Additionally everything was totally wet again.

nice downhill in a beautiful green valley, Great Basin, Nevada

But I got rewarded plentiful for my efforts:

snowy mountains near Austin, NV

So I decided to go to the mini mart in the petrol station while it was still open and bought Pringles, a box of muesli and a Snickers bar. Then Scott, who had seen me in the bar, came to the fuel station and invited me to stay in the second, empty bed in his motel room - thanks a lot Scott!

biker Scott and Daniel in front of motel

In the morning after a warm and comfortable night we woke up at 6am - Scott’s schedule for the day: 700 miles riding his motorbike, all the way home to Colorado. Wow! I stopped only a few hundred feet after leaving the motel in a cafe and had a sweet but energy rich breakfast extended by the invitation of two French Canadians, a teacher and her husband, who shared their French toasts with me and afterwards put me 20$ in the hand! Thank you!

Canadian (Quebec) touring bikers in Austin, NV

From Austin to Eureka was a long long ride. The weather had turned to what I had expected it to be in a desert - at least after a first short shower. I spent half an hour under the street in a tunnel similar to the ones I’ve been a regular to in China and Tibet.

desert tree totally naked and dark rain showers in the background

 

Devils Gate, just before Eureka seemed to be the most impressive thing this day as I didn’t get many more pictures - all flat, long and empty roads. During the ride I was listening to several shows of M.O.B.E. (Mysteries of the Bicycle Explained), quite a strange podcast telling bicycle stories about how he cycled the through the paleolithic and “A Brief Encounter with the Surly Shakespearean Insult-Quoting Bicycle” as well as Coffeebike, talking about a cyclists addiction to various kinds of coffee.

Anyway, finally I arrived in Eureka, where a big sign in front of the village said “the most friendly village in Nevada” or something alike. I visited the shop and invested the 20$ I had gotten this morning to buy a lot of salad, dressing, tasty bread and 500ml of tasty cheese-cake ice cream! Yum!

Of course I got a little sick in the evening because I ate all the ice cream at once and continued cycling right after I’d eaten it and cleaned the chain with a piece of cloth I’d collected from the side of the road. But it was worth it, definitely!

Nickel - American touring cyclist on trans America tour

Nickel - American touring cyclist on trans America tour

Going downhill after the Pinto Summit (7351 ft) I met another touring cyclist, Nickel, from the US. Actually the first in days! He’s riding on a Schwinn bike and has a funny plush toy attached to the front rack, crossing the US East to West.

touring bike waking up in the morning sun

touring bike waking up in the morning sun (chain tensioner and Rohloff Speedhub internal geer hub)

cyclist's salad with dressing and tasty bread - served in a helmet

I pitched the tent just down the hill, even before reaching the bottom of the valley and had a wonderful salad which I prepared in a plastic bag in my helmet - lack makes creative! Even peanuts as a topping I had! What a luxury … I think I’ll be getting too fat if I continue like that.

Having a bear at ROBINSON PASS - elevation: 7607m, beer: Bud light

Arriving at the Robinson Summit (7606 or 7588 ft high, depending on which source you trust more, street sign or map), I had a Bud Light beer and had a nice but headwindy downhill later on.

 America's children wall painting in Ely, NV

Then I arrived in Ely and the first thing I did was to buy a replacement charger for my batteries, as I had forgotten the last one in San Francisco in Station 40 and I think it’s the cheapest option to bridge till my father arrives with the recumbent and dynamo hub charger (Forumslader) in Caracas. Then I went on to the library, checked e-Mails and printed much needed handout cards informing interested individuals I meet about my website and how to get and stay in touch.

Here in the US people are using a lot more gadgets (iPods, Blackberries, laptops, …) than anywhere else I’ve been to so far (except some European countries maybe) and therefore it’s often possible for them to check the website on the spot or when they’re @home. Quite a difference compared to western countries like Australia and New Zealand. They also consider internet access to be a right for everyone and therefore the internet in the libraries is free, everywhere I’ve been to so far here in the US and I find it great!

Leaving Ely behind me I camped a few miles outside, just above the Comins Lake and took some nice pictures of the birds and the lake in the evening, just after sunset. And the motivation I get from the tips in the Digital Photography book make me get up earlier, so I can get the pictures in the nice and soft light of the morning … here are the results:

touring bike heaven

gray-white bird on Comins Lake near Ely

And the following morning:

touring cyclists tent illuminated in the morning by sunlight

 

 On the way up the first pass, the Little Antelope Summit (7438 ft) I encountered two police cars blocking my way and already thought it might have to do something with the Iran visa I have in my passport. But fortunately there turned out to be a OVERSIZE convoy coming up the other side of the pass - good food for my camera!

  police stopping traffic / oversize truck crawling up a pass in Nevada - carrying mining machinery

oversize truck crawling up a pass in Nevada - carrying mining machinery

A few miles down the hill a ranger stopped me again with signal lights and I thought: But this time something must be wrong. But the only thing that was wrong, was me! He told me about another cyclist he’d seen in Carson City about a week ago and asked whether I had met him … huh, luck me!  And then it turned even more weird as a biker stopped me on the road: Randal fortunately also only wanted to talk and we had a nice little chat and I could take some pictures of his wonderfully sprayed Harley Davidson.

Harley biker Randal with his nice machine

reflections in Harley Davidson lightAmerican Eagle on Harley Davidson

 I then didn’t cycle over Sacramento Pass but took a short cut on sometimes pretty rough gravel road over the historical mining town Osceola and descended down towards Baker in the noon. In the Great Basin National Park visitor information center I met 4 other cyclists: Phil, Boris, Ben and Colin, who were just having a resting day in Baker before going on the long, 84mile no services stage to Milford. They were staying in the backyard of a restaurant and told me that I could stay there, too if I would get my meals from the restaurant.

 

But my plans looked different: I wanted to just stock up my water and food and continue on to get a big bite away from these 84miles nothingness. And that’s what I did. In the evening I left town and cycled for another 50km (30 miles) reaching Halfway Peak eventually. There I set up my tent in front of a magnificent scenery of red rocks.

preparing the camp for the night near Halfway Pass, Utah

 yellow flowers with 13,000 ft mountain in the Background (Great Basin National Park)interesting rock with 13000ft mountain in the Background (Great Basin National Park)

campsite with tent and drying sleeping bag on the Halfway Pass, Utah

After having dried my sleeping bag in the morning I set out on the remaining 54km without services. But that turned out not to be true in the end: Just before the last pass of the day, a driver stopped and asked me whether I need any help, water or anything.

Randy on his way back to Moab

I negated but we stared an interesting discussion. Randy turned out to be on his way back home to Moab and had a big DSLR camera with him. He’s a environmental writer and makes stone sculptures - that’s why he had half a ton of stones in the back of his car!

 D1579-A_2

D1572-A_2   D1571-A_4

And before he let me go he told me to visit him next time I come to the stated, and handed me over a pound of cashew nuts and 3 cool oranges! Thanks a lot, Randy!

touring cyclist with reflections of 3 other touring cyclists in his sunglasses - in the Utah desert

I continued on to Milford, met three other touring cyclists going the opposite direction and ended up in the internet cafe in Milford by 2 o’clock in the afternoon. There I realized that the inbox of my e-mail account was full! Damn!

touring cyclists invading supermarket - bikepar

Before I left the place the four cyclists I had met in Baker arrived in town and I decided to stay for the night, visiting the supermarket together with ‘em and pitching the tents in the local park for the night.

camping in Milford, Utah, in the park

 And as I was up early and the others took their time to get started, I set out to reach Cedar City by noon on my own. And I could have made it, definitely, if not for these really bad and heavy headwinds, that slowed me down tremendously!

I reached Cedar City by 1:30pm and made a long detour through the center of the city and up to the southern end of town till I realized that I was wrong and had to go back 6 miles to reach the home of Iain’s family. Iain, a fellow CouchSurfer and also on the touring cyclists WarmShowers list, agreed to host me for 2 days.

And I’ve really enjoyed the last two days here, to play with his little sister Adrianne, the conversations with his young sister and brother as well as with his mother and today’s photo shooting session with his father. I want to thank the Dalton’s a lot for letting me stay in their wonderful house and for helping me out a lot!

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