Category Archives: PEOPLE

DAY 96 -12/19/2012 A Scots Treat, still at Rocky Hill Ranch, Smithville, TX

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The Rocky Hill Ranch bathhouse and registration center. Long previously a bar and grill, now the perfect place to finish a ride (Food available on weekends only).

After yesterday’s good ride and a Curry Chicken supper with J-P in our “kitchen” Jane and I settled in for a quiet night’s sleep up on the hill at Rocky Hill Ranch.  The tent sites looked nicer, had trees, were further from the road and were just plain nicer than the field where they put RV’s during busy race days. Tonight, there was no one but us in the campground.

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We slept hard, Mt Biking hard!  Awoke and had a casual breakfast before preparing to leave for points West.  I decided to have one more shower at the bath-house despite the dark,  as the power was turned off.  Into the lot pulled a small car.  Out hopped a fit young man, surely ready to do a ride here, maybe awaiting a meeting with another or a group.

I greeted him and was blessed by his wonderful Scotch Brogue and one of the nicest guys you could meet.  He’s really straight here from offshore oil in Scotland, now in Houston with his family for work.  Inside I was wishing I was about to start a ride, but Jane and I had perused the map and had our loose plans in mind.  Another rider appeared, getting ready to mark a course for a qualifying race, who didn’t seem to have much time to explain the trails or lead Robbie the Scot around at all.

Jane selflessly chimed in, “You need to take another ride David”, “You need to ride with Robbie”…  I tried not to sound too overjoyed as I made sure Jane had a book and all she needed while I spent a few hours.  With a big smile and hug, she gave her blessing and off we went.  I showed Robbie some of the best trails Jean-Philippe had shown me the day before.

We two traded leads on those hardscrabble trails.  The smoother windy bits were a joy as well and we ended up riding back onto the North end of the property right off of the map.  As we guided our way back in, trails like Tris Cross and Longhorn wore us down.  Climbing the last few hills before finishing, I announced “right after we crest this hill or the next, we’ll see the parking lot”.  I’m always so relieved when I know the end is in reach.   After about three hours on a bike you need to be in a an energy conservation mode.  Concealing my fatigue, I was crawling out under my long-ride mantra and shared the thought with Robbie: “Never sprint-never brake”.

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That is my favorite way to connect to a new friend.  Perhaps in a few years I’ll give a shout to Robbie while visiting Scotland.  I hear it’s nice there.

– David

Robbie is a great new friend! If you’re reading this now, Robbie, I hope I don’t embarrass you by saying that your accent is marvelous and I could listen to it all day!

Robbie has a beautiful family, with two adorable little girls. He shared their picture with us. I hope, someday, we might meet them, too.

– Jane

DAY 94 12/17/2012 Texas Tour de Quebecois

In our long road West, we just had to visit Jean-Philippe in College Station, Texas.  Since he moved from Baltimore, we have missed him and his wife Anne.  They are temporarily apart by career investigation needs. Anne is now teaching in Sackville, New Brunswick. J-P is finishing projects here in Texas and abroad in Chile.

In them we found an intellectual curiosity that piques our own.  An ability to work hard, like it, and still have joy to throw into life after work.  In them we find laughter and a hope that earth is a pretty good place to live.  We looked so forward to visiting J-P that we drove hard from New Orleans.  Our one Walmart stop in Lake Charles led to being surprised by the Toys-For-Tots inspiration (see previous post), then back on the road!

The rural roads and dreaded Interstate in these big Southern states have 70 and 75 mph speed limits!  We just Tramp along at 55-60 and let our bright LED tail and marker lights, reflectors and red triangle warn everyone to pass at will.  They do.

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J-P, center, the laser physicist in his instrumentation lab with, from right, Travis – mechanical engineer, David, and two undergrad students. Real-life Big Bang Theory!?

College Station, of course, is the town around Texas A & M.  A multi-specialty University with everything you’d expect supporting and surrounding it.  J-P is a gracious host and guide.  He claims we hosted him with more cooking and feeding.  I’m not so sure, but we do like bringing our own kitchen and bedroom.

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We were treated to several Texas treats.  Mostly we learned Texas has a lot to offer!  It is a more beautiful and varied place than we could have imagined.  There is a lot here and the people couldn’t have been warmer or more friendly.  We ate a fresh grilled Texas steak, oh yeah, delicious!  Sampled fried pickles at a bar and grill named Crickets.  We ate Tex-Mex at Los Cucos and enjoyed really their scrumptious enchiladas, relenos, and then the next night we also ate at a great Texas BBQ, J Cody’s.  There may have been an excess of mounted deer on the walls, but the friendliness was real and the food as moist as a treasured family cookout.  Jane and I especially liked those fried pickles at Cricket’s, now slices instead of spears.

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Jean-Philippe brought us mountain biking too.  First we went to Waco, where any of my own preconceived ideas disappeared at a delightful riverside park, Cameron Trails.  A slow level river ride was a nice warmup that led to a mix of old and new trails with names like Hale-Bop, Cedars, Slinky,  and Highlands.  There were trees and hills!  Lots of trees, cedars, pines and a generously thick thicket.  There were smooth buff twisty single tracks.  Lacing them with roots and rocks added the treat we bikers love.  Jane enjoyed the bulk of our ride before insisting I take off with J-P.

He’s  been club riding regularly, racing a bit and is as slim, svelt and fast as ever.  He complimented me in saying no matter what we do, we are always the same speed.  I can’t say I’ve been training, but I also won’t pretend the voyage life isn’t a great diet of play, light good food and Very Regular activity.  We chased each other gleefully up and down for an extra hour and a half!  Aerobic exercise just isn’t work when the trail beckons and a friend is in reach.  Nice to know I still have that “old-guy-strength”.

A rare day of rain led us to rest, go see The Hobbit at a local theater and plan the Tramper updates.  Saturday I bought new tires for the trailer.  Without getting too technical, I wanted a bigger margin of safety.  In Maine, the trailer weighed in at 3460 lbs.  The original tires I selected during rebuilding are “C” rated for ~1800 lbs. each.  They also only held 50psi and seemed to be wearing badly at the inside edge (as seen in the Greensboro, NC posts).  I found wider, slightly bigger tires that are “E” rated for ~2800 lbs each and can be run up to 80 psi.  This should be MUCH better!100_7441

I had also noted that even though the 4Runner brakes were new when we left Baltimore, the truck now pulled slightly Left under hard braking.  A cursory look showed no particular problems.  Closer inspection did reveal an anti-squeal shim that had slipped and seemed a little off.  I knew doing nothing would change nothing.  I also couldn’t be sure whether a new pair of brake pads ($30) may or may not solve anything.  The hydraulics seemed OK, no leaks and no obvious signs of a stuck caliper.  (I had cleaned ’em and bled ’em in Baltimore, evacuating and flushing  ALL old brake fluid with over a quart of fresh Castrol high boiling point fluid).

So there I was with a possible way to improve it without going overboard.  The new brake pads were higher quality, better fit, and infused with ceramic.  I figured the odds trying something were better than the odds of doing nothing and just wondering what was wrong.  Then the guys I met at Napa were super nice too.  Apos is a Geology major and suggested lots of cool stops on our way West in addition to helping out with car parts.

I cleaned things up, popped in new pads and Voila!  It works, No More Pulling!  Sure is nice to pay for parts only.  I solved the problem for about $30 total.  Then on Tuesday morning, I paid someone else do our oil change.  I didn’t want to buy a big drain pan and deal with recycling the oil and cleaning out a pan…just pay the guys at Shell to take care of that.  They too became enthralled with our journey and added a few good suggestions.  Mostly each to a man wished us safe travels!  “Safe travels” spoken like they meant it; it rings so deep when I hear that.

Lastly, Jean-Philippe followed us down near Brastop to a small private mountain bike park called Rocky Hill Ranch.  They host 24 hour races and run the admission fees by honor system, keeping maps available at the “restrooms”.  We had yet another good shared ride, starting with scrambling up Fat Chuck’s Demise (rumored to have brought on an early end to its namesake).  The only bad aspect of this particular start is right off the lot, it is climbing.  Clawing up and around a handful of twisty roots,  laced heavily with egg and potato-sized rocks is a tough way to start.  Mountain bikers sometimes call these loose nodes “baby-doll-heads”.  Altogether they are much easier to roll over on downhills.

When J-P and I added our boy-time ride to use up the last of the light we headed deeper into the forest, finding a great piney narrow sinuous place of middle-ring/middle gear aerobic glee.  We traded leads again and again as we rode hard and steady.  Sometimes I miss racing.   But really, I miss riding hard and steady with such a good host and great friend.  Besides, our non-race rides now often last 5 or 6 hours and we snack and laugh much more than racers ever do!

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J-P gets ready to ride at Rocky Hill Ranch.

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Fun trail at Rocky Hill.

 

– David

DAY 91 – 12/14/2012 Toys and Toys and Toys for Tots, Lake Charles, LA

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We had camped in a Walmart parking lot again. It was morning now and time to hit the road. One last quick stop inside the store and off we would go.

But, an unusual sight at the checkout line stopped us cold.

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A group of men and women buying multiple bikes and carts-full of toys.

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Something was up. Something good. We had to slow down and find out…

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All these toys and bikes were to be donated to the local Toys for Tots campaign, run by the US Marine Corps.

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These folks, out on a busy Saturday in the run-up to Christmas, were from a company called SASOL North America in Westlake, Louisiana.

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Tens of thousands of dollars were raised within the company. Employees, participating in a Safety Program, had prompted monetary donations from SASOL (and a match from a contractor) to fund this toy buy.

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So, here they were, on Day 2 of buying for kids they will never meet who are in need at Christmas. In need of joy. With parents in need of knowing someone cares.

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A small army of loving hearts and generous souls were working hard, and using their precious time, to help the Toys for Tots campaign make Christmas brighter for needy folks.

We watched as this little band marched out to the parking lot with their toys, loaded them in their own vehicles and drove off to the donation center.

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Once again, we were privileged on the Tramper Voyage to see people with love in their hearts, acting on their commitments to help others.

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– Jane

DAY 68 11/21/2012 We are in Georgia (Jaw-ja) Now!

After the relaxing walk enjoying Foxfire (see Jane’s post), we needed a place to camp.  Seems like a theme doesn’t it?  Soon, we’ll slow down and camp in one place for more than one day and do trips from that base.  But this night, just before sundown, we crawled the 4Runner up a perilously steep and narrow road leading into Black Rock Mountain State Park.  I even drove right past the gate sign that read “campground full”,  on up to the 3640 ft summit where a narrow campground was perched.

The tradition for RV places is to drive around the loop once and select your site to back or pull into on the next lap.  I often don’t like this, preferring to park and walk through.  Right away, the camp host drove over in his golf cart.  Even in this busy park I “was in luck if I only wanted one night”.  Allen showed us which sites we could choose from and then offered us turkey dinner.  My brief polite refusals were met with insistence.  Jane and I were, of course, hungry.  Not bike or hike hungry, but dinner was on our minds just the same!  My final denial, was met by Allen saying “now don’t you all be hateful”  “sit right down and fix yourself plate of this”.  The freshly cooked turkey, baked beans and biscuits were a delight as the early chill of darkness commenced.

Jane and I were still in single layer long sleeves and not too cold, but laughed later to note some college co-ed campers in hats, gloves, snow pants and parkas.  Kind of reminded us of when we see Maine-ers not wearing a coat while we get cold, except we were the ones who didn’t need extra layers.

Nice time to wake up

Nice time to wake up

Sunrise beginning to look like a volcano. I had no idea exactly where it would rise so this was a nice surprise

Sunrise beginning to look like a volcano. I had no idea exactly where it would rise so this was a nice surprise

My day started in time to take pictures of sunrise from our campsite.  The hardest task is to decide which one to post, so I picked three.

What a way to start the day!

What a way to start the day!

I almost made a “slideshow” of dozens and posted that.  After crawling back to a warm bed until 8, we got up, feasted on eggs-in-a-hat and planned our hike.  It has gotten noticeably warmer as we move South.  The sleeping bag-as-quilt is too warm now, and we’ve noticed massive Rhododendron that seem to have set a second set of blossoms.

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The James Edmund Trail had come up in at least 3 prior conversations so we figured it would be a scenic challenge.

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A view from the trail

A view from the trail

Jane has really built herself some trail legs, hardly stopping throughout our 4 and 1/2 hour hike.  Metrics: a little over 7 miles including 2290′ of ascent, and 1995′ of descent bely the nice feel of the trail.  We both still prefer going up to walking downhill, even if it is a little faster.  Our boots are getting some use and the single pair of trekking poles are presenting their own pros and cons.  (I use ’em like ski poles a lot going down making turns all the while.)

Awe in the sanctuary of nature...

Awe in the sanctuary of nature…

The trail drops down into a valley, climbs to Lookoff Mt, drops down in again, then has to climb all the way back up onto Black Rock Mountain. The peanut butter and jelly feast at the Overlook at Lookoff Mt was a feast topped off with clear cold water.  Boy, we are LIVING!

– David

Funny Phrases From the Road

How many huckleberries does it take to kill a cow?

explained: (not technically from this road, but heard in a McDonalds near Hagerstown)  Several men speaking freely across the dining area. One says, huckleberries are poisonous.  The other asked; How many…

A man’s gotta love a woman who smells like bacon.

   explained: Jane helped Gordon making a breakfast feast including hash-browns, eggs, and bacon.  The large grill was really rolling under his restaurant-trained hands.  After preparing and eating the meal we changed out of pajamas for the day. That night, unfolding those PJ’s and getting ready for bed…my Jane smelled like bacon.  We both roared with laughter when I told her with a lear.

You don’t need a map to get to Sackville, you just go straight.

explained: While driving on Provincial Highway 1 in New Brunswick, Canada we stopped for coffee and directions.  After filling the thirsty 4Runner I found the coffee was free.  No Mega-store selection with the drowning gulp sizes, just a simple pot, small styrofoam cups and creamer in the fridge.  Jane asked about maps.  Oh, the nice grey-haired man said; you don’t need a map to get to Sackville, you just go straight.  And, infact you do.  Highway 1 runs right into 2, the Trans-Canada Highway which then runs straight into Sackville, New Brunswick home of the prestigious Mount Allison College, where Anne is teaching.

Bring a flashlight, you don’t want to surprise a skunk.

explained: pretty much self-explanatory, heard from a resident camper at New River Provincial Park, in New Brunswick

We had some good maps here; seems they are are torn out of the guidebooks.

ezplained: Heard after chasing the elusive “?” information symbol for miles to the end of a peninsula at Black Harbor, a helpful employee seeks maps in the little guidebook from one of those big racks of tourist pamphlets.

I feel like I have someone else’s teeth in my mouth.

explained: David after biting his tongue and/or cheek for the umpteenth time

You two must really like each other, if my wife and I did this we’d be at fisticuffs.

explained: Jimmie’s reaction upon stepping into the Tramper for a tour at Tsali Recreation Area Mt Biking trailhead, North Carolina

I have lost control of my batter

explained: Jane while making latkes for breakfast in Hayesville, NC

-David