Crater Lake To Stanley, Day 4 : Curiosity

I’m biking north on Highway 97, headed out of the Crater Lake region, towards Klamath Marsh. It’s a very long flat highway with a slight downhill grade and a narrow shoulder, fringed with loose red rocks that are hell for bicyclists. If you stray into them for even an instant, your balance disappears and the bike pitches violently. It’s a proper highway too, with scores of fast-moving vehicles. I still get plenty of curious looks and the truckers still wave, but the other drivers don’t anymore. They’re in a crowd now, and country-style greetings are inappropriate.

Far ahead of me, in the heat haze, I can see a narrow shape at the edge of the lane. Too narrow to be a motorcyclist. Could it possibly be another person on a bicycle? Since it will probably be another half an hour before I pass within range, I set my curiosity aside and continue listening to my H.P. Lovecraft radio dramatizations. “Pickman’s Model” is the story, and the actor playing Pickman has the perfect lunatic edge to his laughter.

As the story is drawing to a close (Pickman has just fired his pistol at some unseen ghoul), I finally come within range of the shape. It’s a bicyclist alright. It’s a man, deeply tanned, with a huge exploded beard of gray hair and a battered straw hat. He’s wearing shorts and a T-shirt, and pedaling his bicycle in sandals. He doesn’t have any luggage attached to the bike except for what looks like an old bedroll and a sack, bungee-corded to the rear. He’s going about 3/4 my speed, in slow strokes with the pedals.

I tail him for a while, and when the traffic is clear I slip around him. Some time later I stop by the side of the road to empty my bladder and eat a snack, and he passes me by. I wave, and he holds up a hand. I lounge around at the side of the road for a while, chatting on the phone and woolgathering. How long has that guy been on the road? Where is he going? How does he eat or sleep, with so few supplies?

For all my enjoyment of the open road – especially the long clear stretches when there are no cars for miles and the wildlife has emerged – I can’t see myself becoming the die-hard cyclist represented in that old man. This trip is forcing me to acknowledge that I take too much pleasure in having a home, and in the convenience and human variety of the city, to become the wilderness-trekking hermit I had romantically imagined as a kid. I’m just not interested in making the kind of sacrifices that a true Kerouac-style life “on the road” would require. Perhaps that means I’m no longer a young man. … But that can’t be it… That guy who rode past me was obviously not a young man. I guess it just means I’m a different person? Different than I thought I would be?

I turn off Highway 97 and begin cruising down Silver Lake Road. The traffic thins out to almost nothing, except the occasional RV or big-rig. The drivers all wave as they pass. Up ahead is the Klamath Marsh, but first I ride through some buffalo grazing land. Check out the crude electrified gate:

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(That cloud of dust is actually a whirlwind, not an overclocked buffalo.)

Here’s an interesting effect. The clouds are moving so fast over the plain that in the space of a few seconds, everything around you can pass under a giant shadow, and then out again. Check out these two pictures, taken only a few seconds apart:

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And then the cloud moves just a little more…

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It’s funny… I’ve been away from the open plains and the Alpine valleys and streams for so long that my most recent memories of them are actually the artist’s renderings in whimsical Miyazaki films. To experience them in person again is quite a treat.

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It’s also a source of cognitive dissonance, because even though this terrain feels like a second home to me, a more practical part of my mind is constantly observing how inhospitable it is for humans. Since I have a road, and a bicycle laden with food and water, and a phone and a map, I can enjoy this land purely for the aesthetic appeal — and historically, that level of detachment is normal for my relationship with it. I have always been comfortably equipped with reliable modern tools when I go exploring, and in my heart I probably wouldn’t want it any other way. Slogging through this marsh in animal skins, spending half the day bent over in search of tiny scraps of food, would be a miserable experience. But on the other hand, my relationship with the land would certainly be a lot more … “authentic” … that way.

Funny how civilization can change perspectives. I’m genetically indistinguishable from my recent ancestors, and this land is almost unchanged. But as I travel through it my mind is in a totally different place than people were even a generation ago.

Hell, even half a generation. I have four bars of cell signal right now.

I’ve completed an exhausting ride up Silver Lake Road, and have met up with Highway 31, just on the outskirts of the town of Silver Lake. To my left and right are sections of ranch land, squared off by foothills of scrub and piles of soft desert rock. The landscape appears to have dried out suddenly, after the relatively lush forest I’d been riding through all afternoon.

A couple of times I pass over a creek, and since I’ve run out of water I’m tempted to stop and drink, but I restrain myself. Silver Lake is close at hand. Surely there’s water there.

When I hit the junction of Highway 31 and Silver Creek Road, the town buildings begin. I doubt this town was ever in a state that could be called “thriving”, but it’s abundantly clear that the downturn in the economy has decimated Silver Lake as thoroughly as any medieval plague. Fully half the properties on both sides of the main street have “for sale” signs – sometimes several, from different agents – nailed and posted on them. The gas station is shuttered. The restaurant is dark and unfurnished.

Other signs of decay are move lived-in: On a back-street I see an entire tanker truck, cab and all, splayed against the side of a decrepit repair shop, so thoroughly integrated with the weeds that form the curb of the road that it has the character of a gigantic insect that’s been pressed under a log in the forest. A block away is a fire station, next to a smaller building that must have been an “urgent care” facility and ambulance station at some point, but is now decrepit and empty. A single aluminum crutch has been hurled up onto the shingled roof. Adjacent to this building is a public park that has almost been vandalized out of existence. The grass is only partially green, and only one of the picnic tables is still upright.

On the rough edge of the town I spot a motel, still open for business. A couple of seconds’ examination makes me discard my idea of spending the night here in Silver Lake. The rooms look flimsy, and the gravel patch that serves as a yard and parking lot is host to a handful of very rough-looking gentlemen, sitting on the steps to the rooms or lounging in the open doors of their trucks. Forget about privacy.

Over the course of this trip I will worry many times about thieves. Occasionally I will worry about being robbed at gun or knifepoint. Over time I will learn to appreciate the difference between the honest intimacy of true wilderness towns, and the atmosphere of furtive menace in the industrial centers that are slowly imploding and the tourist-trap cities that are washing sadly away. Crystal Lake is, obviously, imploding. Only the town church and the “Youth Center” are in decent shape. The Youth Center is a gigantic corrugated-steel box – much larger than the church – and it looks more like a prison than a proper YMCA. The outside walls are bone-white and plastered with Christian slogans in yard-high letters, like a disclaimer, or the ingredients list on a huge pack of cigarettes. Like God went walking through the valley and dropped his cigarettes, and the locals tried to build a town around it and failed.

I’ve passed the town of Crystal Lake and am biking over the flatlands next to a huge dry swath of land that would be an actual lake – Crystal Lake – if it were a different time of year. I’ve called ahead to a motel in Christmas Valley and arranged for them to leave a room unlocked, so all I need to do now is keep pedaling until I get there.

On my right is a procession of electric poles, bearing wires suspended on chunks of insulating ceramic. These are old-school power lines, being taxed beyond their intended capacity by a zillion air conditioners, televisions, and water pumps. From the top of every pole I can hear an agitated crackling sound, like sharp rocks being crushed together, mixed with a chaotic buzzing noise. The noise from each pole blends into the next, making a chorus. And since I’m moving at a decent speed, each buzz is given a subtle “doppler effect”, causing the pitch to bend slowly down, level out, and then bend down further. It’s the weirdest sound I’ve heard since … well, since I can remember.

Usually, when I’m pedaling my bike, the wind carries a gentle rushing sound to my ears that covers up quiet noises from the environment, but the noise of the poles is right on top of the wind. If I heard this noise in my own neighborhood of downtown San Jose, I would eventually call the power company and tell them to investigate it. Out here, this is just the way things are, I guess.

I listen to the ominous sound for a couple of miles, wishing that I had a good quality microphone so I could sit down and record an hour of it. Then my ears receive an even stranger sound. I am passing under a chain of gigantic wire towers, running perpendicular to the road, down from the hills to the north and over the mountains to the south. Each is vaguely human in shape, with a triangular head over wide shoulders, and two dangling arms, each holding a set of massive bare cables that arc across the deep blue of the evening sky. They tower over the road and over the line of power poles, their course completely indifferent to either. On top of the irregular buzz of the poles they add their own low, resonant hum, turning the chorus into a symphony.

I grind to a halt and listen to it for a while, transfixed. Then I remember where I am, and my desire to get to the next town and drink water and sleep. I dismount the bike and rewire the dynamo in my front wheel to the headlight, so I can see the road in the near darkness, and pedal onward.

When I reach Christmas Valley I get a strong cell signal, so I enter my day’s route on the iPhone to check my mileage. My GPS died after the first ten hours, and I’d been biking for almost eighteen. 109.5 miles. No wonder I was so tired, hungry, and thirsty.

I reach the motel and drag my bike into the room, and then proceed right to the bathroom and drink four cups full of water, rapid-fire. As I’m setting up for bed, a chorus of bullfrogs kicks in from the dingy pond behind the motel, and a chorus of coyotes picks up from a distant hillside. First time I’ve heard coyotes since going to Pinnacles National Monument, seven months ago.

I collapse onto the bed, and draw my sleeping bag over myself. It’s more convenient than actually getting into the bed. Just before sleep pounces on me, I realize that I am absolutely ravenous with hunger. I’m going to have to find some good protein in Christmas Valley, and lots of it.

Crater Lake To Stanley, Day 4 : Amusement

Today is a long biking day. I pass through valleys and flatlands, up steep hills, across bridges, and over a wide variety of roads. Sometimes the vehicles are rushing by, a few feet away. Sometimes I see them coming from a mile off, and they move into the opposite lane to give me plenty of room. One constant, though, is the enthusiasm of the drivers.

Throughout Oregon, almost every driver that passes me on an uncrowded road has waved at me. Mostly they just raise a hand off the steering wheel in acknowledgement – the truckers like to do that – but other times they wave. I’ve received dozens of “thumbs-up” gestures. One woman in the passenger seat gave me a very enthusiastic double-thumbs-up as I was climbing a hill. A car full of teenagers all made “hang-loose” gestures at me out the windows – a gesture I haven’t seen back in California for ten years or more. A carload of girls went “Whoohoo!” at me.

I receive waves and smiles from construction workers, “Yeaaaah!”s and “Whoooo!”s from cars, and casual nods and under-bar waves and thumbs-ups from motorcyclists. The tough guys on their Harleys seem the most enthusiastic. I think they like to acknowledge a fellow “free spirit”. Or perhaps a fellow badass.

Because badass I am! On this day I will pedal 75 pounds of bicycle and gear over two mountain passes, and countless hills, for one hundred and nine miles. I can’t even capture the whole ride as GPS data because the batteries in the GPS crap out at 10 hours, and I keep riding while it recharges off my battery box.

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Around mile 60, still in the middle of the National Forest, I start to get very very angry at the hills. No one’s around, so I’m free to tell them exactly how I feel.

“&%$#*@ YOU, HILLS! YEAH YOU HEARD ME! YOU SUCK! YOU &%$#*@ING SUCK!”

[ pant pant ]

“I’D &%$#*@ING SPIT ON YOU BUT I’M TOO THIRSTY! WHY DIDN’T YOU SHOW UP ON THE &%$#*@ MAP WHEN I WAS PLANNING THE ROUTE? WHY ARE YOU HERE?”

[ pant pant ]

“I KNOW, IT’S BECAUSE YOU’RE &%$#*@ING ASSHOLES!! HILLS ARE ASSHOLES! YOU ALL JUST CROWDED IN HERE YESTERDAY WHEN I WASN’T LOOKING!! GET OFF MY ROUTE! &%$#*@&% YOU!”

[ pant pant ]

“Oh – maybe that was the last one – let’s see what’s around the corner ANOTHER HILL, %$#*@&%ING SURPRISE, %$#*@&% %$#*-@&% HILL!!!!”

On the gigantic hill leading into Christmas Valley, a large rabbit hops into the road, about 30 yards ahead of me in the fringe of my headlight. Since there’s no one around, I scream, “LOOKOUT, RABBIT! I’M GONNA GETCHA!! O-M-G-LOOKOUT MR. RABBIT!” The rabbit hops about twenty yards further down the road, then stops. I keep screaming “warnings”, and the rabbit keeps hopping forward, for another hundred yards or so. Finally I give up with the warnings, having exhausted my supply of cute nicknames for rabbits (Mr Bun-face, Captain Hoppers, et cetera), and the rabbit hops over the ditch and into the weeds. It must have sensed that the evening’s entertainment was over.

Crater Lake To Stanley, Day 3 : Discomfort

I wake up at 4:00am, and though I’m still feeling a bit fatigued, my brain will not let me sleep any longer. So I shower and get on the road. Too trusting of Google Maps, I take a “short cut” that ends up diverting me down a mile of gravel road, instead of the paved highway I rode on the way in. The sunburn on my hands slowly fades into an unpleasant, mottled tan, still throbbing. My knuckles dry out. They look like chunks of ash from a fire pit.

Crater Lake To Stanley, Day 3 : Curiosity

I’m back at Forth Klamath, in the field behind the organic food store that I’d scouted out days before. The store owners charge five bucks to camp back here, and the sites are in good shape, with clear numbering, flat spaces for tents, and a collection of stout picnic tables on a gentle hill overlooking a pleasant brook that slithers between the farmhouses and fenced fields, joining with smaller streams here and there. I suspect the river itself is being used as a property line.

I’ve set up my tent in a hollow beneath some leaning trees, framed by knee-high grass, and am sequestered inside, napping on my roll-out mattress. It is quiet except for the sounds of the wind. Down here on the ground, the wind is strong enough that I had to stake the tent down, using sticks pressed down into the thick soil. Up in the sky, the wind is gigantic.

For the rest of the afternoon I drift around on the edge of sleep, listening as the wind pounds the clouds across the sky, and churns the grass around in the field, making coils and spiral patterns. Swishhh… Boom, boom. Swishhh… It is a strange feeling, having a body tired from bicycling but a mind fully rested, being dragged down into sleep by fatigue. Even stranger is the knowledge that I have no plans at all, for an indeterminate time; no appointments to keep, errands to run, or household to maintain. Everything I would do is wrapped up in physical possessions that are hundreds of miles away. I’ve had at least one item on my to-do list for so long that to have the list completely blank feels somehow … inhuman.

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I eventually get up and take a few photos of the field, playing with the camera to pass the time, then retreat back inside and listen to an old Terry Practhett novel. The wind hurls a few drops of rain down onto my tent, and continues to tear apart the clouds until night falls, leaving only the gigantic sound.

Boom… Booom… Whusshhhhhhh… Boom…

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Crater Lake To Stanley, Day 3 : Amusement

On my way back towards the Organic Market and Campground in Fort Klamath, I pass through the floor of the valley again, with its huge squares of flat ranch land. This time I zig instead of zagging, so I can see some different stuff along the way. Ahead of me almost half a mile, I see a large truck lumbering down the road.

About a quarter mile distant, the truck stops, and a rancher gets out. He walks across the road and begins to open a gate, except I can see he’s doing it awkwardly because he’s got one hand pressed to his head. He’s talking on a cellphone.

By the time I roll past, he’s got the gate open and has turned around. To my great amusement, I observe that his phone is a second-generation black iPhone, same as mine. I wonder what apps he’s got on it.