The Long Way Home

Mom's flowers
Thanks to Mom, Dad, and my sister for making this trip possible.
The
mission was to visit my Mom and Dad in
Much
discussion had occurred among some IBR vets recently that since everything else
pales in consideration to the IBR, many vets after riding the rally, do not put
in long days routinely unless on a specific mission or riding another
rally. Such was my case and I debated this
subject after my last rally in 2004. My longest day ride since then had been
500 miles in Oct 2005. But being a crazy, LDRider (Long Distance Rider), we
consider ourselves almost invincible (we are not) and always able to ride 1000
miles in day in great style (we can not).
With these
two falsehoods firmly implanted in my brain, I planned a Friday
departure of 3:00am from
Well,
that was the plan... most of it was executed, some portions in better style...
Some
long time friends (Mike and Karen) visited us Thursday night before I left as
they were on their way on a move cross country with the AF. I doubt I gave
them my full attention as I was doing final prep on the bike and getting in the
"go mode". Sorry! Everything was set and the Goldwing (GW)
was poised in the garage ready to go. Hit the sack at about 10:45pm and of
course, tossed and turned until I got up at 2:00am - probably slept 30 minutes.
Loaded final items on the bike and pushed away from the house at about 3:00am.
Headed out Hwy 24 to

Not sure why I stopped in Limon for 5 mins, but I did...
Never really felt fresh on the departure and after about two hours of riding I stopped for gas across the KS border and then headed down I-70 into the still dark KS morning. After about 30 minutes, I pulled off an exit ramp somewhere in the middle of nowhere, crossed the ranch road, and then pulled off on the side shoulder on the off ramp. I “think” I was stopping to get an energy bar from my trunk.
I
recall deploying the side stand, testing it for a lean angle, dismounting,
getting the bar from the trunk and taking a few bites. As I carefully
closed the trunk and started to walk up the left side of the bike, I sensed
it was falling to the right...and it did...over on its crash bars. I can only
surmise the right angle of the shoulder by a few degrees made the center of
gravity tenuous, and the slight force of closing the trunk put a little spring
into the side stand and it rebounded past the center of no return.
Did
I mention that as I watched my bike slowly beach itself like a whale that my
helmet went tumbling down the 40 foot embankment like Jack and Jill?
Well
it did...
....what
a fine start I have gotten to this ride...less than 120 miles into the
ride, I am on a deserted interstate on ramp, bike on it's side, and
helmet rolling through Kansas wheat fields... I felt like I was in a bad
dream...
... Realizing
it was not a dream, I immediately went around to the right side of the bike
and tried to lift it upright...the whale did not budge...not one inch.
I
scampered down the slope, found my helmet and inspected it for damage; none
noted...it has been a soft grassy roll.
Climbing
back up to the bike, I assessed what options I had. Call a trucker on
the CB to stop and assist? ...take a picture of the whale? ...take a deep breath and try
to lift the bike correctly?
While
the correct choice would have been to take a picture of this comical situation,
instead I opted to lift the whale in the correct fashion. I again moved to the
right side of the bike, backed into the bike slowly while holding the
handlebar and seat support and slowly the whale fought gravity to upright
itself, coming to rest on the side stand ever so gently without toppling over to
the left.
Inspecting
for damage, I again found none as the crash bars are designed so well on this
Honda product. OK, time to ride rather than taking part in this Three
Stooges episode. I quickly looked around to see if anyone saw me act this
episode out and stowed all my items and zoomed down that on ramp into the pre
dawn Kansas
darkness.
Perhaps
this little episode should have been a clue to me. Perhaps I should
not have written about it! J In retrospect, I knew I was not
having a good day. I could not shake the drowsiness or feeling of being
tired while heading east into
Just into

Tough
mean dude that Chopsaw is...
After
about 30 minutes of socializing and fresh cold water, I suited back up to
continue the ride. Rich described me later in an email as "tired, but
focused".
It does not take 58 miles to decide, keep riding! The choice is obvious!
It
stayed light for the longest time with an awesome sunset which I kept
looking over my shoulder at until it dissolved to dusk and darkness.
Arriving
in

Mom and Dad
The
thermometer was rising on Sunday about 1pm when I departed, with me planning on
riding west until I got tired to minimize the mileage on Monday, July 3rd.
I got through Indianapolis as the F1 race was finishing and many corvettes,
porsches and sports cars in general zoomed by me heading west on I-70 after a
hot day of spectating.
Into
IL was a breeze and I felt strong, even with the heat...the bike was performing
magnificently. Soon,
There was a sun there...
I
called Debbie at about his point to have her look up in the Garmin Street Pilot
manual if I could reset my GPS as the screen had gone black. She suggested
the screen brightness and although I had considered that I forgot what button
you had to push so she told me and it worked! That was a BIG help as that
GPS is the single most important add on accessory I have on my bike!
Thanks again Debbie!
Back
on the short stretch of
Life is good when you can munch on a personal pan pizza, a moon pie, and slurp a coke while watching the weather channel in a room at the Salina Inn at midnight...ah vacation!
Salina
Inn
The
next morning I was on the road by 7:00am and home by 12:00 noon with no drama or
even interesting scenery or encounters. Let’s just say if I go east again
soon, it will be on a two lane road. Pulled in after 2300 miles into my
garage and within 45 minutes the biggest rainstorm came through
and the rain comes
down on the 3rd and 4th of July!

GPS:
missed about 100 miles when I goofed in MO...
Epilogue:
The
bike performed as advertised. Although Chop (Rich) joked with fellow DoD
players he is still cleaning up the oil from my bike, it is just that, a
JOKE. :-) The bike never skipped a beat
except when it was laying on its side (I should have got a picture) and that was
my fault! Total riding time over 4 days was approx 34+ hours for
about 2300
miles. Average moving speed was 68.7 mph.
Epilogue:
[n] a short passage added at the end of a literary work; "the epilogue told
what eventually happened to the main characters"
After I got back I contemplated long distance riding once again. Frankly, the great day I had on Sunday made the bad day on Friday nothing but a distant memory. I had a decision staring at me squarely... it was an entry draw into the 2007 IBR. Did I really want to do it again? I had debated this very thought many times, and when I had received my entry into the 2007 IBR I had that sudden rush of excitement all over again.
Only
close friends and my family knew I had been drawn so I discussed the issue
with Harry and Tom (while he was traveling through AK and
Factors included time,commitment,and risks...
In
the end, there is still point A to point B riding left in my life, as well
as competitive endurance riding. In additional to rallies, the 49/10
(49 states, including Alaska in ten days) with Harry in the next 24 months
and/or a four corners tour (Southern CA, Key West, Maine, and Northern
Washington State – no time limit) seems like the right things to do. I will also throw in some pleasure touring, maybe add a FJR1300 to the
stable at a later date or give into pressure from Tom and add a dual sport bike.
J
Additionally,
I
want to go on day trips to the mountains with Debbie on the bike!
When
I started this weekend trip on that Friday I sure did not think it would lead to
this decision, sure to be criticized by some, but I at peace with it. I look
forward to riding around the
Copyright © 2006 Robert Broeking. All rights reserved.
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