Wednesday, May 2, 2012

White Pines

Tuesday 5/1 Day 11
Today started off with me in the dumps. This is he story of me not staying in the present. I looked up the weather and saw that it was suppose to rain for the next five days up here with possible snow. When I saw this I was in a mood of me not wanting to move on but to stay in doors. It's weird because if I was to experience the rain or the snow in he moment I would end up working with it. In this example I was going off a prediction and making conclusions before they even happened. It turned out that it didn't rain today, it was a great ride in the clouds in the mid 50s. My point is I got worked up for nothing. Finding that balance between working with the future and just focusing the moment is key, because if I don't I spend to much time focusing on things that haven't happened and miss out on what is happening.
Harvard, ID
Anyways I rode north through the last of the wheat fields, I hope. I stopped at a little coffee shop where I read an article a out this lady climbing all the 8000 meter peaks without supplemental oxygen. Now I know what my mom is thinking right now, and no mom I won't do them all in a year I will take a couple of years to do them all, there are eight or so. Just kidding, k2 is ridiculous over a forth the people that start off to summit end up dead on the mountain. Oh well, interesting article. As I left town a guy wished me luck on my trip, gave me a smile. Three miles later I went into Idaho. I think 70% of cars are trucks here. There are no shoulders on the back roads here but for the most part people are friendly. And for entertainment a few Idahoans have chosen one of there favorite games to play, opening the door of the car as you pass a biker a scream at them. I have yet to figure out the main rules of the game or how they keep score but I will keep you posted since I'm guessing it will happen again. The final stretch of my day was on a deserted road, the white pine high way. I stopped for lunch in the city Harvard where it seemed to be a ghost town. It was here on the way out of town I had my first scare of dogs. 3 big Rottweilers came running at me going insane!!! Thankfully there was a fence so they didn't get me but I think I pooped my pants or left a skid mark when I saw them coming. Everywhere I go I ask bikers about their strategies with dogs so when the time comes I think I will be prepared.
My protectors for then night
 As I approached the national park the land scape turned into foothills with trees on them, more specifically pines. I had about a 1200 foot climb where I finished the day at the top of the pass. I camped out On some cross country skiing trails. It was here where I had my second dog scare. Three came running at me from the trees the first two were friendly and the third was growling. I screamed at him and he ran away. Could not believe that worked. But the other two stayed with me the rest of the night they looked like dogs I have seen in my life so I named them accordingly One was Louise and the other was Simon. They were so funny and expected me to walk around with them. I later found out that these dogs follow cross country skiers regularly After a bit of reading I hit the hay. Oh stuffed my sleeping bag tonight it will probably be in the thirties and it already snowed on me up here haha.

2 comments:

  1. Don't bother looking up the weather, as there isn't any point to getting all worked up about something that you can't do anything about. I never did unless I thought that conditions might become dangerous, ie t-storms or snow.
    Yelling REALLY loud works well for dogs, as does spraying them w/a water bottle. I once had some come after me from a driveway up ahead so I got aggro and started yelling and basically charged at them. They ran straight back down the driveway w/tails between their legs. Fun times.
    Keep living the dream (and telling the rest of us about it)!

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  2. Riding tandem with a teacher as stoker is a great way to keep dogs away. That "Teacher Voice" is really scary.

    About those "moments": Zen masters never tell you how to achieve enlightenment, nor what "enlightenment" is. At most, a Zen Master would just tell you to keep doing what you're doing and the enlightenment will come.

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