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Sunday, June 20
Waldport,
OR to Crater Lake National Park
/
272 miles (Scott & Trev)
Sunset
State Beach, CA to Crater Lake / 522 miles (Paul, Jeff, Eric &
Joe)
Trev and Scott break camp and find breakfast at the Galley Ho Restaurant
somewhere on the Oregon coast. The waitresses are wearing t-shirts with "I love the HO!" on them.
Nice touch. Food was good, too.
We do some more coast
cruising down to Coos Bay and then head inland through
the Coast Range for some nice two lane riding on Highway 42. It's
pretty peaceful out here. We even pass through a town named Remote.
Once we reach I-5 at Roseburg, we pick up Highway 138, a.k.a. the
Rogue
Umpqua Scenic Byway. 19 miles east of Roseburg, the highway hugs
the Umpqua River on its way up into the Cascade Mountains. We now start gaining
elevation with lots of twists and turns. As we
approach the Continental Divide, we emerge from the forested hills and
valleys onto a flat, treeless, expansive plain with mountain peaks
sticking up out of it. From what we've heard, the only thing that
causes flat terrain high up in a mountain range is lava. Looks like
we are now in the Crater Lake neighborhood.
We gas up in Diamond
Lake, just north of Crater Lake, and continue south on Highway 138.
Trev gets a chance to test the durability of one of his hard luggage
bags as it detaches at speed and cartwheels across the dusty plain.
Thankfully, the sucker doesn't open up and discharge his undies all
over the road.
We
roll into Crater Lake and secure two campsites just as the rest of the ODMC
contingent comes motoring in. The snow hasn't completely melted
off yet so
we setup our tents between big slabs of snow and pools of standing water.
Tiny
mosquitoes are hatching like crazy and they enjoy sucking on Pork
Chop's shaved melon. Benadryl is applied to ease his itching.
Meanwhile, a good dinner is had at the lodge on the shore of Crater
Lake.
It gets pretty chilly this high up in the mountains after sundown, down in the thirties, and some of us buy
"CL" knit
caps at the camp store. With caps on, beers in hand, bundled up in
whatever clothing we have, huddling closer and closer around the
fire, we look more like ice fisherman than motorcyclists.
The
cigars are broken out. Eric and Scott puff on tasty imports while
Pablo sticks with America's number one cigar, the
Swisher Sweets wood tip, two hole.
The brews range from Bud Light to
Fish Tale
Organic Amber Ale to Obsidian Stout. Mighty fine!
Click here for Day Three: The
Redwoods
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