Today was the half way point in terms of days on the road at
a total of 32 out of the scheduled 64 day tour, and we reached the half way
point in terms of mileage as well. At
2.1 miles east of Miller we crossed the 2150 mile mark reaching half of the
scheduled 4300 miles. At the half way
point there was a large chalk sign placed on the road which everyone signed in
chalk as we passed. In a way it is hard
to believe that we are already half way across and yet it seems like it has
taken forever to get here. The amount of grinding and labour is unbelievable. Well the second half is easier. At least I
hope so.
In an effort to be more effective with my time I have
decided not to be caught up in the first to load luggage game and have started
setting my alarm 20 minutes later. This
allows me to load luggage at 6:20 and still have 10 minutes before
breakfast. I don’t see the point in
loading luggage at 6:00 am and then sitting waiting for breakfast at 6:30. As I generally tent at the far end of the
campground I am not too bothered by the hustling about.
I rolled out of Miller and was down the road quickly so as
to get my name on the chalk half way point and get a photo and be out of there
before the masses arrived. It worked and
I got my photo and was down the road.
There wasn’t a whole lot to see as we a traveling through
the huge American bread basket. The main
sights are fields of soya beans, corn and wheat as far as you can see. In the little towns and I mean little of
population a few hundred there are huge metal silos which dwarf the semi-trucks
which are feeding the silos.
The few photo op’s included this huge metal horse some
ingenious soul has created out of railway tie plates, an arrow which missed the
target, and how can I forget the world’s largest pheasant. The Pheasant being the mascot of the town of
Huron (pop 12,592).
Huron was the largest town we saw today by at least an order
of magnitude and in a lot of cases two orders of magnitude. It was where we had picnic. Picnic was in the city park which is located
on a local lake and it was very pretty and tranquil.
The ride down to picnic was very nice as the wind was only
in the 3-5 mph range and the temperatures started in the high 60’s and by time
I go to picnic at 10:30 it was 80 F.
Even though the we were headed straight east on highway 14 and the wind
was directly out of the east it didn’t seem to be too much of a factor.
After lunch there was 33 miles directly east. However by now it is getting hot and the wind
is picking up every minute. The road
shoulder has also turned to gravel and the road is a concrete road with a 2
foot should which has rumble strips so we are out in traffic. The white concrete might be cooler than the
black asphalt but the sun bounces right off it and into your face. There are a billion huge semis hauling the
grain, soya beans and corn to the silos and they are paid the load so they all
have their feet glued to the floor. To
say it was more than a little scary would not be an exaggeration.
At the seventy mile mark my bike odometer seemed to go on
the fritz. I must have looked at it a
million times and it never seemed to change.
The magic 77.8 mile mark, camp, and the DQ took forever to come up. The large DQ ice cream cone was great.
Terry hot biker
Congratulations on passing the half-way mark!!
ReplyDeleteThe day to day scenery doesn't change much across the great prairies; cropland and silos for days on end.
I am enjoying reliving our 2014 coast-to-coast. Thanks for the blog and keep up the good work.
Canada Ken C.
Congratulations on finishing the first half...it’s all downhill from here, right? Enjoy the ride!
ReplyDeleteYou're the man Terry. Congrats on reaching the half way point, hopefully the second half treats you well.
ReplyDeleteWay to go making it half way across the USA. I trust the second half will be down hill and down wind. This has been quite the ordeal, but you conquered it and got yourself in great shape. Congrats๐ ๐ ๐ด๐ฝ♀️
ReplyDeleteBTW, how has the running training going for your next marathon?๐
Congratulations on reaching the halfway mark. Man that's a lot of miles. Mind boggling actually.
ReplyDeleteHalfway there, wind at your back and all down hill from here on out! Some tough days but I never doubted you get there.
ReplyDelete