Owyhee Oregon 2009

Did you know the Owyhee river and region were named after a couple of Hawaiians?

From wikipedia:

“Owyhee” and “Hawaii” are two different spellings for the same word. When Captain James Cook discovered what he named the Sandwich Islands (known more recently as the Hawaiian Islands) in 1778, he found them inhabited by people called Owyhees. The spelling “Owyhee” is simplified a little from its original form: “Owyhee” is the spelling that British and American traders used during the early nineteenth century in referring to natives of the Sandwich Islands, and a number of Owyhees sailed on to the Columbia, where they joined trapping expeditions or worked at some of the fur trade posts.

Three of the Owyhees joined Donald MacKenzie’s Snake expedition, which went out annually into the Snake country for the North West Company–a Montreal organization of Canadian fur traders. Unluckily, those three Owyhees left the main party during the winter of 1819-20; they set out to explore the then unknown terrain of what since has been called the Owyhee river and mountains, and have not been heard from since. Because of their disappearance, the British fur trappers started to call the region “Owyhee,” and the name stuck.

Just at the time the Owyhees disappeared into the Owyhee country, American missionaries came to the Sandwich Islands and worked out an alphabet for the native language in order to print the Bible and other missionary literature. In the alphabet they adopted, the word “Owyhee” turn out to be “Hawaii.”

Now you know it.  I did not know either… but it was time to explore a new area of the state of Oregon.  My new friends (from last year’s Ochoco Rally) invited me to join them on this other ride.  What a beautiful place.  We camped at the shore of the Owyhee Dam.

We spent some four days there, each day riding to a different location.  View of Homedale, Idaho.

One of the many irrigation systems in the area. Ken was really impressed by the tubes and the canals.

Big sky.

Leslie Gulch

More Leslie Gulch

Helmet parking.

I like this picture.  Friends having a great time.

Taking a break on one of the many rides

More big sky

A view of the Owyhee River

All in all, great times.

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Backyard Rides 2009

Now with two bikes, time to get busy in the practice sessions.  The first 600 miles were all done in controlled situations.  After that I started venturing towards my usual routes in the Coast Range.

This bike is a sweet ride.

It performed exactly as described by all others. Nimble, light, planted and incredibly smooth and vibration free.

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Ochoco Forest, OR 2008

The local BMW motorcycle dealer is one of my usual “hangouts” on Saturday mornings. I go there to drool over the new machines.

But Scott, Madeline and Kendrik, along with their staff at the shop: Lin, Doug, Tom and the rest of the team are also a hub for local riders as they organize social events and rides. It was there that I met several of the people with whom I ride. They organize an annual rally, called the Discovery Rally (or something to that order). In 2oo8 the rally would take place in the Ochoco State Forest, in east Oregon.

There was one slot open and so they invited me to attend this year’s rally. I loaded the bike on the truck and went to the Ochocos.

On one of my Saturday morning hangouts I had met Alain and Rebecca, a very nice couple who happened to be part of the rally.  I did not know many of the people there, so Alain and Rebecca invited me to their fold and introduced me to a nice group of riders. The photo below is courtesy of Alain Despatie.

I rode with them the three days I was there and great a great time not only riding…

but enjoying their company as well.

Great times!

Great riding!

New friends!

Good memories of September 2008

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Backyard Rides 2008

So after a 2007 with no more than a few miles of riding, in 2008 I got back on the settle.

The F650GS Dakar patiently waited for me. I got back into practice mode, riding the bike around my “neighborhood”.

Old Stagecoach Road

Old Stagecoach Rd again.

Along Hwy 36

Off of Nelson Mountain Rd.

It was good to be back on the settle…

..and getting reacquainted once again with riding.

One day, after this ride, I stopped by the BMW dealer and they invited me to join them on their annual Discovery Rally. It was going to take place in the Ochoco National Forest in Eastern Oregon. Check story coming up that next!

Cesar, September 2008.

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I’d rather be sailing? (2007)

Despite such a great and successful back to riding opportunity in 2006, it turns out I did not ride much after the great Steens adventure. For one thing, I had felt a great sense of accomplishment with that ride. It felt as if I were satiated.

Was my dream to get back to riding so short lived? Was it just a fad? Well, at the same time that I realized how great it was to be back to riding, I also realized I still had a long way to go to arrive at a comfort riding zone.  Especially when riding on my own. It is an expensive sport, and I not only needed to buy the appropriate riding equipment, but also be able to find my lost riding mojo.

I remember at one point during this period that Brian McCarthy, someone I knew and perhaps could consider a friend, asked me a, to him, rhetorical question: “don’t you sometimes just want to ride your bike out there, without a destination?” To me it was not a rhetorical question at all.  It was and it is a crucial question that remains unanswered. His untimely passing in the fall of 2010 has brought these thoughts back to the foreground.  Is the act of riding a means for getting out there, to obtain a sense of freedom? An escape machine from the oppressing bureaucratic way in which we live our lives?

Or was it for me to ride in a certain style, with equipment that largely surpasses the minimal requirement for a ride, surrendering to the details of the pleasure of certain mechanical sounds, the acceleration, the performance, and experiencing the sensations of the relationship of the most sophisticated machine with the terrain at speed? Perhaps a combination of both?

Brian attended college during the time Easy Rider was released.  Inspired by the movie and with what it represented, I learned at his service, from his best friend, that while in college Brian attempted to transform a Triumph into a an Easy Rider machine.  I then understood his, to him, rhetorical question. That was something he was seeking, perhaps. Or once sought? And something I’m yet to contemplate as I often find myself too deep into the details of the ride itself. There is always a destination, a route, and a style to be accomplished, or something to be documented.

I appreciate the perspective that Brian had brought to me at that time he asked the question, as my still very new bike was sitting idle in the garage for an almost entire year in 2007.  But I only really understood what his question meant in the fall of 2010, after Brian’s passing. This is something to consider. I’m not there yet. But it triggered me to start this blog, and come up with the name: I’d rather be riding. Even if my reasons for riding may be completely different than what Brian’s reasons for riding were.

Back to 2007, as this question remained answered, or actually unasked in 2007, other forces were distracting me from riding. With my two great friends Sierk and Chris, for example, I purchased a sailing boat (a 1974, 27 feet, Ericsson) and kept it in Portland.

Not necessarily competing priorities, sailing provided a great opportunity to spend quality time with my old friends.

I’m not a sea man by any stretch of someone’s most creative imagination.Although going up the Columbia river…

Brought the peaceful times, something to enjoy sailing.  Going with the wind and coming back on aggressive sailing into the wind was great.

But you know, as great as sailing is, the idea that this boat was confined to the Columbia river was not appealing to me. Sailing easterly up the river for about an hour with the wind, and then enjoying the into the wind ride back west was not enough for me.

My imagination of what sailing was all about was to sail the open seas, face a storm, go the distance. My dream would be to arrive at a port or marina that was different than the one from where I left. I appreciate the friendship, though, and that was the motivation to engage on a couple of hours of sailing in a month for me. But as fast as we ran that old boat at times, it got too old, too soon for me.

And for my friends as well, although for different reasons. For them it was competing priorities as their families were growing (as in having babies). So we started sailing less and less. By 2010 we only set sail a couple of times. Well, they did sail a couple of times.  I did not at all, as by this time I was decided to devote more resources to motorcycles. By the end of 2010 we donated the boat and closed that chapter. And I started this blog.

So long Rosebud.  Yep, that was her name.

No. It was not going to be a “I’d rather be sailing” chapter in my life. But I will reconsider sailing if one day it becomes the idea of going the distance. Adventure sailing! For now, I’m back to motorcycles. The sailing chapter is set on pause mode.

But everything brings some learning into the equation. I realized some parallels between sailing and riding. I like or imagine both the same way: going the distance, having a destination, going through the motions to keep it going smoothly and efficiently, and tallying up the miles. Not something my friends share with me. If I knew how to sail, and if I had the necessary navigational skills, I’d probably set out on a sailing adventure.  For now, motorcycles are a lot easier mode for me to get there. And I can do it on my own, and that on itself adds something more to the ride. And I’ve done my share of solo rides, going places, spending the night or not, but at least arriving at different destinations during the ride.

Meanwhile, I still need to revisit the idea of riding with no destination. I still want to entertain this possibility and see what’s out there, beyond the destination. Easy riding. And riding solo at that.

Thanks for reading.

Cesar

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Steens, OR (& Nevada) 2006

Prior to moving to Oregon, in the fall of 2005, I registered at the ADVRider website (a forum for all matters related to motorcycle adventure riding – http://www.advrider.com).  After lurking on the forum for a while, I started asking questions about possible rides in Oregon.  I had not ridden at all during my entire 18 year tenure in Ohio.  Now, moving towards one of the riding meccas of North America, I was already anticipating purchasing a bike and adventuring out in the desert. One guy responded: David Wachs, of Tumalo, OR. After no more than a couple of email correspondences he invited me to join him and his friends on ride to one of the most spectacular riding locations in the Pacific Northwest:  The Steens Mountains in Southeast Oregon.

I was apprehensive.  After such a long hiatus from riding, I was not sure what it would be like to be back on the settle.  Notwithstanding that these guys with whom I was going to ride were all experienced riders.  And I had just purchased my bike, was just back into riding, not at all confident of what I could deliver.  However, I comforted myself, this was not unlike the situations I put myself when I first started riding.  It is something about who I am, I suppose. Going back into ancient history, to make some sense on this, I had bought an XL250R in 1983 and with basically no experience, with only three months of riding under my belt, I registered for an enduro race in my home town of Porto Alegre, Brazil.  The same fears had dominated my thoughts then. But the result was that I not only finished that rally, but I placed 30 out of the 90 entrants. Considering the top finishers were pros and experts, I did very well.  The red Honda XL250 was my ride those days (Photo from 1984) .

So here I am, same situation, 20 years later. I bought the bike in March, and in June I’m already going for my first full blown adventure. Barely trusting my instincts that everything would go well, I packed the bike. Everything looking as new as I don’t even remember they could once had been after this first real ride. And I never saw these bags this clean again.

I rode to Bend, followed the directions to Dave’s farm in Tumalo, and met with him and his gang in the afternoon, as they completed final preparations on their bikes.

The next morning, as early as last night’s beer allowed, we left towards the Steens. The idea was to reach the Steens in one day. A truck would be taking our gear following a different route.  All we needed to carry with us were the tools and the essentials for a day ride in the desert.

We took the China Hat road going south (and some variations on that theme), stopped by the Green Mountain Lookout Tower.

And from there we fueled in Christmas Valley and went south via the Fandango Road.  Let’s pause this story for a second here, as I need to highlight this moment of the ride: This road, my friends, is the road that got me back into the enduro riding mode.  This photo is historical as it is document the moment I got the riding feel back. Up until now, I confess I was trying to figure out what the heck was I doing. But here, this two-track road, gave me the opportunity to crank a notch up on my riding style, bringing me back the memories of what riding is all about.

It is not only about the views.  It is about the connection of man, machine and the road.  What makes to me riding a motorcycle the pleasurable experience I feel it is. Of course, I did not get back immediately to the riding skills and level I had 20 years earlier.  But this road gave me the perspective of what riding once had been to me, and what it could once again be for me.

When we gathered at the first intersection of this road, I was elated. It still was slow going for me, but I was happy, comfortable, and looking for more.  A new riding chapter had started. We continued on, going in a southeast general direction until we hit Hwy 395. We crossed the highway and continued towards Plush where we fueled.  From there we continued east, entering the immense open spaces surrounding Beatys Butte.

After many miles of awesome two-track roads we eventually entered Funnel Canyon from the South as the shadows were growing longer.

We made it to the shore of the Alvord Lake, on the East side of the Steens with day light to spare.  We had managed about 300 miles with not a single problem except for a slow leaking tire in one of the bikes.

Everything went fine. The bike performed flawlessly.  I performed, well. Better saying, reasonably well, all factors considered.  And most importantly, I never took for granted, during the time of the ride and now that I describe form the distance those memories,  what privilege it represented for me to have had that opportunity. I was getting back to riding in style: riding on one of the most spectacular riding terrains on earth, being led by one of the most renowned and  accomplished riders in Oregon and beyond. Something of which I’ll always be thankful.

We rode in the area for a couple of days.  Soaked in the hot springs a few times. On the third morning we lifted camp and rode towards Nevada via Domingo pass.

We reached Soldier Meadows ranch in the afternoon and settled there for a night.

Our group of riders kept growing along the way.

The next morning we left for Gerlach, NV and got a chance to ride in the famous Blackrock desert.  If you don’t know it as the location for the many land speed record attempts, you probably heard of it because of the annual burning man festival. Whichever is your perspective, it is a beautiful but desolate location.

After one fast run across the flat desert floor we gathered in Gerlach for grub…

…and fuel

I said my goodbyes to everyone.  Mostly everyone was staying for a couple of days of more riding. I had to go back to work. One other rider joined me on the ride back to Bend. I arrived back in Eugene at 10:00pm that evening, 380 miles in one push. The advantage of a BMW: having a long distance cruising comfort.

All things considered, I was impressed with this motorcycle capabilities on off-pavement roads, despite of its heavy weight.  And I was happy I could ride it.

Cesar, June 2006

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Backyard Rides 2006

The backyard rides are the day rides I take in the area close to my house.  Rides where I leave in the morning, never too learly, and come back in the afternoon. They are what I call practice runs.  I test bikes and equipment during these day rides. I also these rides to practice my skills and develop endurance at the beginning of each season.

Eugene is located in a privileged area. You can go anywhere around here. To the beach:

South Jetty, Florence, Oregon

To the Cascades:

To the Oregon Coast Range

All of this with almost no traffic to get there and back.

I bought the BMW F650GS Dakar new in March 2006.  Here it is as it was being taken out of the palette and being prepped for delivery at the BMW shop.

Soon I was riding everywhere in the “backyard”, getting reacquainted with the feeling of riding a motorcycle.  It had been several years since I had ridden my last motorcycle.  Got the gear (suit, helmet, gloves and boots) and went out to discover my area with riders I met at the local BMW dealer.

It was good that I practiced, I had to get ready! I was going to embark on a great adventure in June 2006. I was invited to join a group of experienced rides based in Bend, Oregon, and with them reach the Steens in SouthEast Oregon and the Black Rock desert in Gerlach, Nevada, performing a Giant Loop, returning home via California.

Cesar, March to June 2006

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