Day 29 – New Salem to Bismarck

UPDATED

35 miles.

We got to Bismarck after going through our first rain of the entire trip! I got a hair cut!

our Warm Showers hosts, Ron and Joyce have been amazing and have kept us busy. Great meal and a tour of Bismarck including Fort Abraham Lincoln.

no wi fi so this will be short. Photos later.

on to Napoleon tomorrow.

We knew today would be short so slept in a bit  – we crossed into Central Daylight Time Zone (check out on a map where the dividing lines are between Mountain and Central zones and you’ll see they’re a bit crazy in North Dakota) and even though we reset our watches there was a glitch so the sleep-in was inadvertent. A little way outside of town we saw some nasty, dark clouds building up and could see the rain coming down to our left. We tried to outrun it but failed so had to stop and don our rain gear. The shower only lasted about 45 minutes and wasn’t  particularly heavy but we did get our shoes and heads wet. Then the sun came out for the rest of the day.

Ron and Joyce, our Warm Showers hosts, recommended that we stop at the North Dakota Heritage Center next to the State House. It is a great museum showcasing North Dakota history, dinosaur skeletons, a Native American wing and others. We learned, for instance that since the 2010 census, North Dakota is the fastest growing population state in the country. This is due in part to the workers associated with the Bakken Oil fields and that work has more or less stopped once the oil market collapsed. We also watched a fascinating video about chipping flint to make arrowheads.

Coming out of the center we were greeted by another line of dark clouds so beat a hasty path to Ron and Joyce’s house. They welcomed us in after taking our pictures for their album and fed us then drove us out to Fort Abraham Lincoln. This was the fort where Custer was stationed and from which he departed on his way to Little Big Horn. The fort sits high above the Missouri River and commands 360 degree views of the surrounding hills.  It is a little hard to imagine infantry and cavalry living there so far from the river and the city of Bismarck.

Ron also drove us to what is known in Bismarck as the Frank Lloyd Wright house. It certainly bears a Wrightian look from the prow to the fascia and the brick coursing but my web search of Wright houses says there are no buildings associated with Wright in North Dakota.  If anyone at Taliesin has an idea of the provenance of this house, let me know. You can tap on any of the photos to enlarge them to get a better view.

Tomorrow is a long day to Napoleon.

 

Day 28 – Richardton to New Salem

52 miles. No flat tires!!

We stayed with a Warm Showers host, Joel, who provided shower, bed and a good meal plus he’s an avid baseball fan. I even forgave him his allegiance to the Cubs!

We got on the road early and purchased breakfast at a grocery store as well as a sandwich for lunch later.  The first part of the ride was on a county road, newly paved with almost no traffic… Very nice riding. We rolled through Hebron, a.k.a. “Brick City,” and had a nice long break in the city park of Glen Ullin but shortly after that were forced back on to I-94.

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Break time and email check. (Also the latest Trump and Brexit stories)

Today’s experience was very much more stressful than our other rides on the interstate. Part of if was the road surface, concrete roadway vs. new asphalt, so the tire noise from cars and trucks was much louder and more sibilant. Another part was that the shoulder had almost full width rumble strips so every 20 feet or so we had a 12-18″ strip we had to navigate. But the biggest difference was the huge volume of truck traffic all whizzing by at 75 mph! So we had a not very relaxing 11 mile stretch on the highway before we exited back onto another small two lane road. Whew!

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This corn definitely qualifies as “knee high by the Fourth of July.”

We biked to New Salem to stay for the night. New Salem is Home to Salem Sue, the world’s largest Holstein cow sculpture – 38 feet high and 50 feet long. It rivals the world’s largest Bison and the world’s largest catfish sculptures in nearby North Dakota towns.

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Tomorrow we are on to Bismarck.

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The German Evangelical Lutheran church in historic Old Salem.

Day 27 -Dickinson to Richardton

29 miles.  Maja’s Birthday!!!!

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We had planned on a short day today since we had a package to pick up from REI, stuff to mail back and a quick visit to the local bike shop to see if the mechanic could fix a problem Maja is having with her rear shifter. Well … the REI package arrived a week ago or so and the post office has a 4 day hold policy so it was sent back!! We did manage to get the tent etc. sent back to PHX via UPS so cross that off the list. We got to the bike shop early hoping that someone could look at the shifting and Jason, the mechanic, spent 45 minutes or so straightening a problem with the cable and shifter then noticed that Maja’s chain had an issue so did some repairs to that, too. She took the bike out for a test drive and Jason tweaked things then announced that he wasn’t going to charge us anything! “It’s how we treat travelers,” he said!  Kindness of strangers department yet again.

Returning to our hotel to pack up, I found that my brand new rear tire was flat!  Over 3 weeks on the road without any tire problems and now 4 flats or so in the last 3 days. I pumped the tire up enough to limp back to Jason and he installed a new one that we paid for this time!

Our ride was uneventful and very short. We have been sitting in the local grocery store for an hour (they have wi fi) waiting for our Warm Showers host to get home.  We are bringing some food and a birthday dessert tonight to the raucous celebration!

Tomorrow we’re back on the road for real and hope to be in Fargo (oh jeez!) for the 4th.

 

Day 26 – Medora to Dickinson

40 miles.  Not bad for a rest day!

First, I’ll remind you to take another look at yesterday’s revised posting. Now that we’re in the sphere of reasonably good wi fi I have updated that day with photos etc.

Now to today. Late yesterday, after looking at the predicted winds, we decided to forego our rest day and take advantage of the westerly breezes to help us at least part way on our trek.  We have some things being shipped to us in Dickinson at the PO so we went ahead and packed up to ride. The first rude awakening was that we had two flat tires … one each.  I replaced Maja’s then started on mine. In the process of searching for the offending needle like piece of metal in my tire, I was shocked to find that the tread on my rear tire was worn almost all the way through revealing the bias ply just covering the tube!

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Early morning bike repair

Very fortunately, Medora has an “awesome” bike shop and, hallelujah, they were open on Sunday morning! Just over 100$ later I had two new tires and two new tubes.  The woman at the shop, Jennifer – who, it turns out, spends winters in the Phoenix area – said that the Continental tires that came with our bikes are not long lasting, something about the rubber compound being soft.

Needless to say, I would have been very nervous about riding on the nearly worn through tire so it was a huge relief to have found a solution before we even got on the road!

Jennifer also recommended a less traveled route that allowed us to get off of I-94 and enjoy a relatively quiet, wind aided ride into Dickinson.  Tomorrow we will pick up the items mailed to us and – big decision – ship back to Phoenix our camping gear. We have found the night’s sleep we get camping not as restorative as staying in motels or with our Warm Showers hosts so we are unburdening our load a little. Another thought is that as we proceed eastward and deeper into the summer, the days and nights will be increasingly hot making air conditioned motels all the more attractive.

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Our last tenting site

We pulled off the road to an overlook featuring a scenic vista of The Painted Canyon.

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The Painted Canyon in The Badlands. I learned that the term refers to a geological formation and not just to this area of North Dakota. The word is a translation of Mauvaises Terres so named because the soil is dry, crumbly and doesn’t hold together.

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Our bikes at the overlook. While at the bike shop, a passerby noticed the Wright Foundation logo and said to the owner of the bike shop, “Ask that guy if the inventor of Lincoln Logs wasn’t Frank Lloyd Wright’s son.” A cigar to that gentleman!

 

Day 25 – Glendive to Medora, ND

61 miles. Finally out of Montana.

We expected wind today in our favor so timed our departure to take advantage of it. Today our route had us riding on Interstate 94 and with the wind advantage we expected to make great time. At first the boost from the breeze was a little disappointing given that the forecast was for stronger wind but we still appreciated the all day help.

At first blush cycling on the Interstate sounds terrifying but the reality is that the shoulder is very wide and the road surface fairly smooth. It was a lot less scary than some of the seller roads we have been on over the past three weeks if only because the cars and trucks weren’t so close.

 

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Finally out of Montana

not good wi fi coverage so I’ll add photos tomorrow

one last thing. we’ll give details tomorrow, we want to the Medora Musical. Great experience and thanks to Jay and Carrie for the ride and conversation.

OK. I’m back with the promised details and photos. We are in Dickinson on day 26 and have fairly good broadband so I’ll update.

Medora is home to the Medora Musical, a 90 minute stage show put on every night of the summer in a beautiful amphitheater with the backdrop being the Badlands. The show has been described as “A high school musical for adults” and is a sometimes corny but still professional evening of song, dance, country music, patriotism and a little bit of history – namely the influence that this area of the Badlands had on Teddy Roosevelt.

Before the show, the tradition is a Steak Fondue Dinner and on this evening they served 1000 people! The steaks are put on the tines of pitchforks and dunked into boiling soy oil for a short time then allowed to rest then served.

imageSome of the 1000 12 oz steaks ready for the fondue

The strong wind that helped us get to Medora so fast this morning continued right up to showtime but the amphitheater shields the stage so on with the show! The opening featured horses and riders and the singing of the national anthem.  The MC had been a  child actor in the Musical years ago and now was in the spotlight.

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Medora Musical on stage

Among the acts such as a tribute to our National Parks, a country gospel segment, and a rodeo tribute was the featured performer, Todd Oliver and his dog Irving, a ventriloquist with an amazing way of making the dog open his mouth as though he were talking! This guy had been on America’s Got Talent and the Tonight Show and was really exceptionally good. The funniest bit was two volunteers from the audience on stage with Todd. It’s difficult to describe the schtick but he asked the volunteers to open their mouths whenever he squeezed the back of their necks. With their mouths open, he put sounds  and words in their mouths with his ventriloquist’s skill. As I said, it is difficult to accurately describe the routine. You can search Todd Oliver on YouTube and get a flavor of his bit.

The end of the show was a reenactment of The Rough Riders charge up San Juan Hill and after that a rousing rendition of Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the USA”and the evening was truly over.

Day 24 – Circle to Glendive

50 miles. Very pleasant riding … With one exception.

“Somedays are diamonds and some days are stones” J. Denver. Yesterday definitely was a big old, mud encrusted, worthless piece of rock and today, while not a perfect gemstone was fun biking on a cloudless day on a reasonable road. What more can one ask for?

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We leave the acres of farmland and begin into a different landscape.  The sky was a much paler blue today.

We awoke and got on the road by 7, taking a state highway south east to Glendive and the Yellowstone River. It was so nice to be running the ridge of this hill system instead of crossing numerous ridges against the wind, as we did yesterday.  Early on we met two cyclists heading from Portland, OR, to Chicago and they, too, attested to yesterday being (in his words), “The worst day of cycling I have ever had!” We were corroborated! Yesterday really was horrible … It wasn’t just us.

We cycled on nearly empty roads for many miles, the wind, what little there was, from our left. We ran through a new landscape, the precursor to the Badlands we will see in North Dakota.  There were many old trestle bridges but the rail line here is weed covered and ostensibly abandoned.

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Our first glimpse of the Badlands

Biking either downhill, level or slightly uphill we made very good time and were congratulating ourselves at our projected early arrival in Glendive. That was the time when Maja found she had a leak in her rear tire. There was no shoulder to retreat to so we moved as far off the road as we could and replaced the tire. That process involves unloading the bike, taking off the rear wheel, removing the old tire, finding the cause of the leak (in this case two small staple size pieces of metal probably from one of the many shattered truck retreads along side the road), installing a new tube then replacing everything.  The repair was a success and we cruised (or limped) into Glendive.

Tomorrow we head into North Dakota and we are allowed to ride on Interstate 94 since the smaller parallel roads are, for the most, dirt except for stretches of Old Highway 10.

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The view of my “office”

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And the road ahead. The divots next to the white line are the ubiquitous rumble strips that will definitely jar some fillings loose if you wander onto them. Our path is the shoulder between the rumble strip and the grass – for the most part. 

Day 23 – Wolf Point to Circle

52 miles. Another “heroic” struggle against the wind.

We had a great plan today, to make 102 miles from Wolf Point to Glendive, putting us on the threshold of stepping into North Dakota. As is said, “no battle plan survives contact with the enemy.” Today the wind was our enemy so our plan flew by the wayside after 6 hours or so of hard pedaling, we even had to pedal going downhill! We sought refuge in the little agricultural town of Circle where anti-meth posters compete with new John Deere tractors for attention on Main Street.

There is only one motel in town, the other two are boarded up, so our choice was limited. But run down as it is, the motel gets us out of the wind and even has wi-fi.

Our trek today took us south east away from the Hi Line and the BNSF railroad. We crossed the Missouri River and then the fun began. The road crosses a series of ridges that separate the Missouri drainage and the Yellowstone River so we were constantly up but very little down thus far.  The up hills lead to plateaus and then more up hills all to the background of the wind buffeting us and whistling in our ears. On coming trucks provide a passing air dam that at times can bring a cyclist almost to a halt. Trucks passing on our side give one a shocking push but then the draft can push the bicycle away or even suck the bike into the whirlwind behind the truck. So the ride was stressful!

The landscape we are riding through is of vast fields of sweet smelling clover and wheat all bright green. That hue against the cloudless blue of the Big Sky reminds me of the Tellytubby set!

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Tellytubbies?

The wind direction is predicted to shift to be from the north tomorrow so we’ll have a little advantage since we will be heading east toward Glendive.

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Shiny new grain storage and a tiny little church.

 

Day 22 – Glasgow to Wolf Point

48 miles -flat windless miles.

After a very pleasant stay with Mary and John and he dropping us off in Glasgow we continued our trek to the east.  Today was sunny, the road mostly flat and (hallelujah!) there was no wind. For the most part the shoulder was ample so we were able to make good time all the way to Wolf Point (4 hours, average speed 12 miles per hour).

Not much to report about the day other than there was little to report on. The landscape is much the same right to left, front to back – big fields of hay, alfalfa, clover, etc. And, of course, there’s the omnipresent BNSF railroad.  As a source of entertainment, Maja has taken to counting the cars on passing trains.  The longest so far has been 137.  Since we crossed the Divide, we have been riding steadily due east and downhill toward the Missouri River but here at Wolf Point we will turn southeast. We will cross some hills tomorrow then meet up with the Yellowstone River and, on Saturday, will leave Montana and cruise into North Dakota.

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Seemingly endless sea of green.

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A shiny grain elevator next to the BNSF tracks. These monuments appear almost like cathedrals in the distance and usually signal the location of the next town

Day 21 – Malta to Glasgow

72 miles. Oh Aeolus, what did we do to make you angry?

As wonderful as Sunday’s ride was (104 miles with a substantial tail wind), today’s was  conversely  horrible – a constant hard wind directly in our faces the entire day! We wanted to get to Glasgow, in reality there were not any midway stops available – no hotels, B and Bs, Warm Showers, campgrounds – so we were committed. We sort of took turns with one riding ahead and the other tucked into that person’s wind shadow – drafting. Sort of, I say, since Maja did most of the leading. I took two turns but even out front, Maja is a faster cyclist so I did little to speed up the trip other than give her a few minutes breather. Drafting is efficient only if the behind person can get perilously close to the one in front with his front tire nearly touching the other’s rear tire. The system does work but the cost is 100% concentration which precludes looking around at the sights!

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Almost looks like a painting we have of hayfields in France. Because of the wind we took quite a few breaks today.

We slogged on, mile after mile and reached the town of Hinsdale. Kelsey and Craig (he was last night’s host) recommended a bakery in Hinsdale that is known for its sweets and ice cream. Once we reached the town (we still had about 30 miles to go and no let up in the wind) we stopped at a quickie mart just to get some A/C, water, eat our sandwiches and get our heads out of the wind.  There we learned that because of a family emergency, the much touted bakery was closed! Of course, we said.

At that point, my eternally positive outlook on life had definitely turned to the dark side. Averaging only 7 miles an hour into that wind meant we still had 4+ hours of hard work to go. But, as is said, there’s nothing to it but to do it so off we rode. Honestly, if some Good Samaritan with a pick up had offered us a lift from there to Glasgow I would have jumped at the opportunity.

So … 4+ hours later, fighting the wind and the swirling gusts from passing trucks, we “rolled into ‘Glasgow’ feeling about half past dead” (apologies to Robbie Robertson). We had originally been in contact with a Warm Showers host who offered her living room floor but as we stopped at the edge of town to call her, Maja noticed that she had a message from Mary and John (highly recommended by Kelsey the night before) and they had a bed for us.  They breed Angus cattle and live about 6 miles outside of town on a sometimes rutted dirt road (not good for our already drained biking legs) but Mary offered to come into town and pick us up in her truck (fantastic!) and … wait for it … would fix us dinner and send us off with breakfast the next morning.  All we had to do was meet her at the local Albertson’s. Wow!  The skies were looking pretty bad so we retreated into the store for shelter, water and a few bananas.

After a bit, a woman came up behind me and without any introduction asked, “What kind of beer do you like?” Well, she had me at “beer!” It was Mary who had observed that we tired looking people in biking jersies must be her guests. Gratefully, we helped her shop a bit then loaded everything into the back of her pick up and away we went!

The storm passed us by and shortly we pulled up to their house. Mary and John had spent a hard day on the final leg of the artificial insemination process for their cows so we were, all four, a bit worse for wear. Showers, beer, snacks and good conversation helped Maja and me get back to being a little more human and Mary’s cooking did the rest.  John educated us in the process of breeding their cattle and the arcane metrics involved with picking the right bull’s genetics – a preferable low birth weight of the calves coupled with fast growth later, etc. We had a very pleasant dinner and stayed around the table swapping stories and getting to know each other.

In the morning, true to her word, Mary fixed pancakes and sausages and John drove us and our bikes back into town where we reluctantly said goodbye and got on our way.

We are newcomers to the Warm Showers movement and have not hosted yet. We plan to offer our house when we return to Paradise Valley and are learning from some very kind and generous people how to do it right!

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This rock was in a roadside shelter outside of Malta. Legend has it that the Native Americans thought it looked like a sleeping buffalo. It was moved into Malta for a while then relocated to near its original location where many people give offerings to it for good luck etc. Back in the 1800s, the tribes thought that making offerings to the sleeping buffalo would bring the buffalo back to Montana (hunted into extinction) where they  had provided food, hides, and bones for tools for the tribes.

Day 20 – Havre to Malta

92.8 miles. The day got harder as the wind turned against us.

I’m writing this on June 22 as we sit in our hotel in Wolf Point. Our previous days’ riding were long and hard and we were too tired to add to the blog. We left Havre still buoyed by our wind aided ride the day before. We had contacted our Warm Showers host in Malta and told him we would be to town early in the afternoon. Oops!  The fickle wind turned and we had a small head wind for a while that grew stronger as the day grew longer and our energies grew weaker.

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We stop at almost every historical marker. They usually give an unvarnished view of how the US treated Native Peoples.  This one describes the final defeat of Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce.

The towns along Route 2 (called the “Hi Line”) were built originally by the railroad companies to serve the grain producers. According to legend, the railroad magnate(s) spun a globe and wherever their finger landed became the name of the next town – Harlem, Glasgow, Nashua, Malta, etc. At one point we were low on water but there was a town just ahead and we knew from other bloggers that there was a bar/cafe there where we could fill up. Surprise!  The bar was boarded up!

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Lunch table provided by the shuttered cafe

We had lunch at one of their outside tables and moved on down the road to the next town of Dodson where there should have been a convenience store. That too was closed and may have opened in two hours or so! There was a three man crew digging a huge trench next door with a back hoe and they gladly pulled two bottles of water out of their ice chest for us. They told us that under a nearby house the town’s water main  was broken and that house was basically a swamp. They were searching for the main so they could cap it off but could not find it. This region of Montana is covered with about two feet of topsoil and below that is sand so once the crew hit sand (the foreman called it “quicksand”) the trench collapsed. Frustrated, they were calling it a day and offered us more ice cold water!

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You’ll have to look closely to read the lettering on the grain elevator. It says “Howdy Pardner. Welcome to friendly Chinook.” The reality is that Chinook almost doesn’t exist anymore.

Our maps indicated an alternate route on a few BIA roads that got us off busy and narrow shouldered Rte. 2.  It added a mile or two but the road was completely empty. It ran more or less parallel to the sinuously flowing Milk River (eons ago the Missouri River followed this course but it was diverted by a huge ice dam to its present course. The Milk eventually took over the old Missouri channel and many centuries later Lewis and Clark named the Milk for its color.

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The road outside of Malta. Note the narrow shoulder as well as the marker on the other side of the road with 7 crosses.

Finally after all the struggles with wind and lack of water we made it to Malta. We had agreed with our host, Craig, that we would supply the chicken for dinner and he would do the veggies so we stopped at the town Alberstson’s and then made it to Craig’s house.  He graduated from Nebraska a few years ago and had just moved to Malta within the last few months to work for the Bureau of Land Management. He welcomed us in and we sat and talked about Montana, biking and Warm Showers. He started the BBQ and his friend Kelsey joined us for dinner – she supplied a bottle of currant and honey wine from Canada. Craig also provided a delicious taco dip, eggplant and asparagus.

Over dinner, Kelsey asked where we were headed to next and said she knew a couple in Glasgow that did Warm Showers hosting and what great people they were.  We had contacted them but thought they (John and Mary) were unavailable. (More on this story in tomorrow’s blog).

We also heard from Craig and Kelsey that the storm we had avoided by sleeping in a motel in Shelby on Saturday had blown over a standing train in Malta.  We had seen the crushed cars being transported on truck beds on our ride.  Our warm weather hosts in Glasgow (details to follow in upcoming post) showed us the impact of the hail on their alfalfa.  We were lucky we were inside that night rather than in a tent.

Finally settling to bed – we were to sleep in Craig’s spare bedroom on the floor on our camping pads.  Maja discovered that she had apparently left her pad somewhere between Glacier and Malta! Craig, being the super nice person he is, offered her his pad not only for the night but to take with us to be mailed back to him once Maja got a new one.  She got on the phone to REI and they are shipping a new pad to our hosts in Bismark, ND!

Thanks to Fred Prozillo for recommending Gorilla Tape for our tool kit, the tape is holding my pannier together until we pick up the new one at General Delivery in Dickinson, ND.  Thanks also to Jean and Barry Bingham for their gift of miscellaneous items for out trip – some of the twist ties are employed to insure my pannier stays on the bike  and the anti saddle sore cream has been a life saver!

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The weather is warming so Maja dons her sun sleeves.