Sunday, March 28, 2010

First Trip



68 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66


Trip to Academy




The first trip getting ready for my trip down 66 would be to Academy Sports and Outdoors. So, off we go 50 miles to the nearest Academy. The family didn't mind because we like to go on road trips.




Especially when Acapulco's Mexican Restaurant. is involved.




I have been looking online for all my supplies. I think it is very convenient to shop online, but I wanted to hold the products in my hand. I wanted to look, feel, touch, weigh. I don't think that online shopping can compare.

Some things that I looked at and tested.

Sleeping Pads:

I tested sleeping pads. I knelt down on them, tested the weight, aired some up. I think that any one of them will work fine. All of them roll up small. I did like the accordion style better. Any backpacker pads were fine.

Tents

I looked at tents. I tested the weight of all the tents. It boils down to one simple solution. Unless you want to sleep in a glorified sleeping bag, the weight was still too heavy. So, my Wal Mart tent will be just as good as the other ones.

Sleeping Bags

I checked out the sleeping bags and found that the back packing tents didn't pack away any smaller than the ones I already have.

Stoves

I FOUND ONE AND BOUGHT IT! I was looking at all the multi fuel stoves and seen some backpacker stoves and was amazed by how expensive they were. One I picked up and it was very light, but cost over 100 dollars. I could almost buy a kitchen stove for that. I found this Esbit Pocket Stove. I bought it and brought it home. It boiled a pint of water in less than 8 minutes and still had half of the fuel left. The odor was very very little. The fuel burned clean. The good news is that it is cheap and very very light! I am going with this little baby!


Food

There was plenty of choices of freeze dried food, if I wanted to bring some.



Note


The reason I am concerned with all of this stuff is because there may be times on this trip that will require me to stealth camp. Most cyclists do this when they cant stay in a hotel. One day I will have to blog about it. Hotels do get expensive. Personally I would prefer to stay in a hotel but if there is a safe place to stealth, I don't think I would mind. When I get into Oklahoma, the towns get closer together. I may be able to send a lot of this stuff home. But, if I do stay in a tent, I want my coffee and a hot dinner or breakfast.




See you on the Road!!

Friday, March 26, 2010

Decisions, Decisions



70 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66




Decisions, Decisions

There is an awful lot of planing that goes into a multi day tour. Fortunately there have been many many people who have gone before me. They love to post about their adventures. I suppose that is why I am blogging my adventures too. I don't think anyone cares what I do and where I go, but it is fun to share with anyone that will read.

I haven't written in a few days because I have been sick and haven't done a great deal of planning. I have been planning on getting back to work rather than a long bike ride. I think this week, I would have been anywhere else than on a bike. Boredom does kick in, however. When I get bored, I get to thinking about my trip.

I sent my race bike into the shop to get it repaired from my recent "bike wreck". I was happy to get it back. I haven't rode her yet, but I intend to do so on Sunday, if I feel up to it. When I got it back I saw that there was no place for the panniers to fit. I posted on the Bike Journal forum www.bikejournal.com if anyone knew how to attach panniers onto a Specialized Allez Elite. I got several posts back. One post was to call this guy who owns a shop in Colorado. I did. He liked to talk a lot and had some great techniques that I already knew about how to climb up a mountain pass. In a nutshell, he said my bike was a race bike and was not meant to put panniers on it. I was disappointed, because I really wanted to take my nice bike on the trip. I like the way it rides and think that it is very comfortable. He suggested use a trailer which would OK except all my equipment cant go on just the trailer. Also, it is better quality so if it broke down, I could get it repaired with not too much trouble. Scratch that!!




This gives me two choices. One, use my old bike I bought from Walmart, which has served me well. Denali's are well worth their money. OUTSTANDING BIKE! But if it did break down, I don't know how easily it could be repaired. Two, buy a touring bike. Which would be great except that it would use up all my savings to buy the bike and leave nothing for equipment and for the ACTUAL tour! Maybe if I can find a cheaper used one for 300 or less.

So I am at odds again. At odds with the most basic thing for a bike trip. Which bike to bring?


I also have been thinking about what I need to buy for this trip.

Multi-Fuel™ Stove
Model No. 550B725
$89 bucks

3 man back packer's tent
Hooligan® 3 - 8’ x 7’ Tent
Model No. 2000001590Cayman ™ X 40 Rectangular
Model No. 8492-420
sleeping pad











Decisions, Decisions.

See you on the Road!!!

Monday, March 22, 2010

Not much today



74 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66

I havent really thought too much today about the trip except the simple fact that I need to buy more stuff. Lighter tent, lighter roll mat, and lighter sleeping bag.

I had a busy day today, so not much to post.

See you on the road!!

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Camping and Biking in the Palo Duro



75 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66




Camping in the Palo Duro Canyon



The family and I decided to spend our spring break at the Palo Duro Canyon near Amarillo. It has been some time sense we have been camping so it was definately an adventure. We brought along my daughters friend so we had to buy some new stuff.

I hoped to learn a lot from this camping trip. I took mental notes all weekend as to what I needed to bring on my bike trip. What I needed, and what I didn't.

The first thing I wanted to know was which tent should I use. I had our big tent (8 person), a four person, and a 2 person junior tent. The weather was extreme so this was a great test. The weather started warm with a cool night. We forgot some comforters and had to use a borrowed sleeping bag. The next night was snowing blizzard with sub zero temps.

Our big tent, the one me and my wife stayed in, did extremely well holding up to the wind and the snow. Because there was a mesh top and a rainfly, everytime the wind blew, the snow blew in under the tarp. The bottom stayed very dry. I cant use this tent on my trip. It is too big and heavy.

The four person tent that the girls stayed in did very well until the snow came. The snow blew under the rain fly and the snow soaked in through the sides. But the dome style was very good for moving around and getting dressed. I dont know how well it would do in the rain. I will have to test it out with the hose. This tent was a lot lighter than the big on, but it was still pretty heavy.

The two person tent was just plain too small and didnt stay dry at all. I cant see putting gear and myself in there. My son barely had enough room to sleep.

Mattress
We got the Coleman air matresses. These things roll up small, but they are pretty heavy. But I thought they were very comfy. I dont know how long it would take to blow it up by hand, but I am sure it would take a while. I think that these things wont work for my trip because it was too heavy and impractical. I will have to try out a foam pad.

Sleeping bag.
I used a 45 degree sleeping bag. It worked well in the cold and it was nice to unzip and was cool to the touch. Comfy. I think this will work.

Stove.

I used the stove my father gave me to cook. It worked great if you can get the match to light in the wind. I think with a good wind break, it would work great. The downfall is that it is bulky and heavy. The good thing is that it works great on a very small amount of fuel.

Food.

I cooked water and it worked well for my coffee. It think with a small pot, I could boil enough water to make breakfast and coffee. The freeze dried food was good tasting, but didnt fully cook in the cold tempts.


The weather was pretty brutal, but we did fine. I have never camped in the snow before. We were cold, but we definately tested our gear to the limits. High winds, rain, snow, you name it we had it.


See you on the road!!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Tents



80 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66


Tents:

We borrowed a tent today for our camping trip this spring break in the Palo Duro Canyon. It is a two person tent. The size said 5ft by 6ft. I got in the tent and there is NOO way that the tent was 6 feet. I am 5'8" and I had to lay diagonal to fit. Now, I am worried about which tent to bring with me on my trip. I like how small and light the tent is. I need to find something that will fit me and my gear inside. If I bring my expensive bike, I will need a four person tent. Those are heavy, but would work well. If I bring my cheap bike, I can leave the bike outside and bring my panniers inside. All this doesn't matter much when I sleep in a hotel.

I have to spend a few nights in the field and I want to make sure everything will work.

After this weekend, I will know which one I will need. We will have a two person tent, a four person tent and a 8 person tent. I think I will figure it out after that.

See you on the road!!

Monday, March 15, 2010

Route 66 Through Texas


81 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66





Today, I plotted my route through Texas on my Garmin Map. I have decided to start my trip in Amarillo instead of Dimmitt. I want to do this because it takes a day off my trip and I get to see more of Route 66. It will take me two days to get out of Texas.



"The sun is riz, the sun is set, and here we is, in Texas yet."








I will follow a well researched route and try to follow the precise route through the panhandle. I am even going to follow the famous "Jericho Gap".


History of the Jericho Gap.

Jericho Gap Journal

© Delbert Trew

This piece by Delbert Trew describes the infamous Jericho Gap in the Texas panhandle.
Introduction

The High Plains of the Texas Panhandle were formed by deposits of silt washed down by floods from the slopes of the Rocky Mountains. The eastern Panhandle is split by a cap-rock-escarpment dividing the High Plains from the lower Rolling Plains. All waterways in the plains area flow to the east as a general rule.

Topographical maps reveal a narrow winding ridge starting at Jericho and reaching more than sixty miles east to near Erick, Oklahoma. Called Old Trails Ridge by early settlers, this time-worn path has served mankind for hundreds of years. The westernmost portion of the ridge contains the Jericho/McLean segment of today's Route 66/I-40 corridor.

Earliest civilizations were Paleo Indians living in rock pueblos and establishing the Alibates Flint Quarries along the Canadian River some sixty miles north. Later, Apache, Comanche and Kiowa tribes roamed the entire area until 1875 when the U.S. Army placed them on reservations.

The Indians had used Old Trails Ridge annually to travel from winter camps along the creek bottoms of Oklahoma to the High Plains to hunt buffalo. The U.S. Army expeditions used the ridge to pursue the Indians during the Red River Wars. The U.S. Mail Service used portions of the ridge as mail routes between Clarendon, Eldridge, Fort Elliott, Tascosa and Dodge City, Kansas.

Suppressing the Indian tribes opened the area for white settlement from 1876 to 1895 with both free-graze ranchers and farmers arriving each year. In addition, the ridge became the route of homesteaders heading for the newly-opened public lands of New Mexico. Both wagon trains and trail herd drivers used the ridge to reach traditional trails going north and south.

From 1880 to 1900, a mail-coach-way-station drew scattered settlement around close and became known as the Jericho Community taking the name from the Bible. The Rock Island Railroad surveyed, purchased right-of-way and laid track in 1901 and 1902 with the first scheduled train running on July 6, 1902. A side track, depot and cattle loading facilities drew the community to its site and a Jericho Post Office was established.

As local commerce grew, both county and state established “dragged” dirt roads connecting Groom, Jericho, Rockledge, Alanreed and McLean with the road configuration following the railroad right-of-way closely. The railroad and the dirt roads followed the gentle elevations of Old Trails Ridge eliminating costly fills, culverts and bridges.

Early settlers remember the roads crossed the tracks several times and numerous barbed wire gates had to be opened and closed for passage. When rains fell, the rich black soil became “black gumbo“ rendering the roads almost impassable. This “gap” of bad road, in between sections of improved roads east and west, was christened “Jericho Gap” eventually becoming famous in Route 66 History. This journal recalls some of the legend and lore of the Gap.

During the 1890s, tidbits of “before-Jericho-Gap” history recall travelers riding the U.S. Mail coach, arriving at their destinations muddy and frozen or hot and dusty as the season allowed. The two-day trip from Clarendon to Fort Elliott often meant sleeping on the hard ground or sitting upright in the coach seat all night.

In 1884, a U.S. Army water-hauling-detail lost a soldier while hauling water from Spring Tank (Alanreed), when his mount bucked the man off and dragged him to death before the others could catch the horse. The man was buried in the wagon tracks to hide the grave from Indians and the site is lost to history.

In the 1890s, the community of Jericho suffered several deaths to Malaria. The malady was traced to the town's water supply in a nearby canyon. All joined together to remodel and improve the springs to eliminate stagnant water.

In about 1935, Johnny Hermesmeyer a life-long resident of the Jericho community, recalls as a young boy of leading the team of horses that pulled the body of an obese dead woman strapped to a barn door, up the narrow stairway of a dugout so she could be buried. The dugout was located only yards from Jericho Gap.
Before Jericho Gap: 1902–1926
abandoned farmstead
Old farmstead at Jericho
photo © D. Knowles

During this period, wagons evolved into automobiles, wagoneers into motorists and both the State of Texas and the U.S. Government became involved in improving roads. Efforts by the Good Roads Movement and the National Old Trails Movement brought on the Federal Aid Road Act forcing each state to organize a state highway department. Texas formed its department in 1917. By 1921, Congress decreed quotas of good road mileage in each state with interstate design in mind in order to receive federal funds. Local road improvements increased drastically at this time when the burden of cost to local counties was transferred to State and Federal agencies.

Improvements to the Jericho/McLean segment of road were few before 1927 and consisted mostly of local teams of horses pulling county-owned graders, with work provided by “statute labor” where everyone living along the road or close by was expected to help maintain this community-owned road. Photos in the McLean/Alanreed Area Museum show crews of men working on a road site near Alanreed.

Early settlers in Groom recall loading up their cars with pretty girls, driving to Alanreed or McLean to buy watermelons in season. The twenty-five mile trip required most of the day, driving slow, crossing and re-crossing the tracks and opening wire gates every mile or so. On the return trip, they stopped at today's Trew Ranch near a large wild plum thicket to eat watermelon and allow all to go to the bathroom in the thicket.

In about 1907, a local rancher and a real estate agent from Amarillo met at Rockledge to discuss a dispute over a sales commission. The dispute escalated into an argument resulting in both being shot to death in a shoot-out. The nearby railroad section crew witnessed the murders then loaded the bodies onto an empty boxcar of a passing freight train for off-loading at the depot in Alanreed.
1926 to 1933

America's first trans-continental highway was born on November 11, 1926. Starting on the shores of the Great Lakes in Chicago and ending at the beaches of the Pacific Ocean at Santa Monica, congress visualized a paved road the entire distance for the new automobile owners of America. Of the original 2500 miles of new highway, only 800 were improved at the start. In the early 1930s, the four western states had only 64.1 miles of paved roads. The Crash of 1929, the following Great Depression and the disastrous Dust Bowl slowed road improvements and it was 1938 before the last miles were paved.

The legend and lore of Jericho Gap was written during the period of 1927 to 1933. Only with help from the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), and the Works Progress Administration (WPA), did improvements to the “Gap” occur. However, before and during the improvements to Route 66 which was removed some distance to the north, history was written as the travelers experienced more than their share of crude, road-travel experiences along the mileage of old Jericho Gap.

The new-age automobiles could move on the open highway but were helpless in the gooey, gummy mud of Jericho Gap. Tires spun, mud balled up under the fenders and if your car fell into the deep ruts, you were there until someone pulled you out. Mud tires or chains helped but were not infallible. A tow-chain and shovel helped but once stuck, only a team of horses or a tractor could extract your car from the gumbo. Lord help anyone who was in a hurry along Jericho Gap.

One unproven but likely story accused local farmers living along Jericho Gap of hauling water at night to fill the ruts of the Gap providing more income from stranded travelers the next day. Of interest was the fact that nearly every farmer along the route owned a water tank on wheels!

A young boy named Rush Turner lived east of Alanreed along the “Gap” and found a Greyhound Bus stuck in a ditch near his home. He “fetched” his pa and his team of mules to pull the bus back onto the road. He was promised one dollar for his work and five dollars for his pa's team but had to ride the bus to Alanreed to get the money. It was his first ride on “rubber tires,” plus he had to walk home, but considered it to be his greatest adventure to date.

In April of 1928, the Great Footrace Across America, also known as the Bunion Derby, traveled the full length of Jericho Gap just after an April snow storm. One runner fell injured and had to drop out of the race. All the cars, busses and trucks in the race entourage were stranded in the mud of the Gap for hours while the runners raced on to Alanreed and McLean. Jericho Gap had no mercy on the rich and famous as well as the poor and impatient who tried to pass through its portals.
1933 to 1952

The Jericho Gap/McLean segment of Route 66 stayed in a continual flux of change from 1927 to 1952. The Triple A Guidebook in 1931 shows 194.7 miles of Texas Route 66; later resources show only 184 miles and today's mileage has shrunk to 178 miles.

The original configuration has continually been re-routed, up-graded and altered. In addition road bases, road widths and surfacing, driving rules, laws and driving habits have changed. Increasing traffic numbers, faster speeds and more trucks demanded straightening out curves, cutting down hills, filling in valleys and by-passing areas of slower driving.

Road construction and highway construction equipment improved. The discovery and use of “birds-eye caliche” for a road base under final surfacing was a blessing along Jericho Gap. Nature provided many such deposits from Jericho to McLean. The old pits are still in sight for travelers to see today.

Finally, a new route was chosen from Groom to McLean staying north of the railroad tracks thus eliminating the mud of Jericho Gap, the railroad crossings and by-passing many curves and sharp corners along the old route. Relegating the gumbo mud to the past was welcome news to travelers. Sadly, these inconveniences which made the Gap famous were replaced by a new factor.

The speed and impatience of modern motorists began causing wrecks in unprecedented numbers. Local citizens, observing these occurrences daily, coined the nickname “blood alley” for the new configuration. Eventually, new hospitals were built at Groom and McLean verifying the new dangers. A new era had been introduced to Route 66 travelers.

Almost overnight automobiles traveled at sixty miles per hour instead of thirty. Lightweight trucks grew into heavily-loaded semi-trailers, hard to turn or stop and even harder to pass on the highway. All vehicles seemed larger and wider, especially when being met or passed on the outdated narrow pavement.

Compounding the problem, better sections of road existed to the east and west with long straight stretches of highway to enjoy. When travelers reached the hills and curves of the Jericho/McLean segment their impatience turned to frustration with some causing horrible wrecks and devastation. It became a sad chapter in Route 66 history.

The blood-alley-chapter in Texas Route 66 history is still being argued today as to whether it was a human disaster or a bonanza for entrepreneurs along the route. A boom in traveler's services occurred during this time with motels, cafes, service stations and garages being built. Also, ambulance services, wrecker/tow concerns and additional law officers were added and the new hospitals paid for. Sadly, highway improvements did not keep up with increased traffic. Death, injury and loss of property continued to rise until the early 1950s when the dual lanes were built.

“One day we were going to Groom for tractor parts and came upon a head-on wreck at the Lake McClellan road. A driver suffered a heart attack and pulled into an oncoming vehicle. Three were dead and we pulled a live woman with her throat cut from the burning crash. We placed her into a passing empty hearse and he rushed her to the Groom hospital where she survived. You never knew what to expect.”

“A ranch cowboy and I were riding in the pastures and heard a crash up on the highway. We ran our horses to the site, tied them to the fence and helped pull the truck driver and one live passenger from a car. The truck was loaded with Post Magazines for the southwest part of the United States. The load burned for days and no one in the southwest received their magazines that week.”

“Once my brother and I were hauling a heavy load of livestock feed near Alanreed and were traveling through a road construction area. A speeding car passed us, skidded on the loose gravel, hit a sign post and ejected a woman from the rear seat into the path of our truck. I braked sharply, veered into a deep ditch nearly turning the truck over in the process. After stopping, we ran back to attend the woman. We encountered a very mad person, with shorts and panties pulled down revealing badly skinned buttocks and upper legs. We stood with the woman's husband and took a cussing that would have made a hardened sailor blush.”
1952 to 1975

The “blood alley” chapter of the Jericho Gap/McLean segment came to an end in the early 1950s when dual, parallel highways were built. It was believed at the time, the wide thoroughfares, one-way designations and wide median would eliminate wrecks and crashes.

This was not the case. Head-ons and multiple crashes were replaced by single rollovers caused by higher speeds and driver exhaustion. The tremendous increase in traffic numbers also increased the numbers of strange and weird travelers. Route 66 has always seemed to have more than its share of such characters.

The late Emmet Allen, a Texas Route 66 Hall of Fame inductee, once had a customer come into his Alanreed garage. The man had generator problems and was a “spy” who was being watched by the CIA. After much whispering and sneaking around, Emmet wised up and told the man he wasn't cleared for working on spys' cars. He jumped the car battery and sent the man on his way.

Emmet also once made extensive repairs to an elderly couple's car and suspicioned he might not get his money when finished. The old couple slept in the car and ate crackers and cheese for two days and nights. When time came to settle up for the bill, Emmet had to sort through $6,000 in cash in the man's wallet to get his pay.

Shortly after the dual lanes of Route 66 were completed, a drunk woman entered the east bound lane going the wrong way in heavy fog. She eluded the Highway Patrol, Sheriff's Deputies, barely missed a bunch of oncoming cars and pulled into the Alanreed Coffee Shop parking lot. The scanners were going crazy trying to get this woman off the highway. Emmet was drinking coffee when an alert cashier saw the woman pull in. She told Emmet to go get the woman's car keys before she killed someone in the fog. When Emmet approached the car and reached through the window to snatch the keys, the woman bit him. He got the keys but had to go to the doctor's office for stitches and a tetanus shot. He received unmerciful teasing about catching “mad-woman's-disease.”

“We had a truck driver in our coffee shop one morning that had hit a huge black Angus bull standing on the highway just before daylight. The man's eyes were big as saucers, his hands still shook and he had to go to the bathroom every few minutes. He had topped the hill about half asleep and running hard when he saw the bull at the last moment. He thought it was a black elephant and vowed to never drive at night again.”
1975 to Modern
Modern rest area
Modern rest area near Jericho Gap
photo © D. Knowles

The modern-day configuration of the Jericho/McLean segment of Route 66/I-40 is complete with dual concrete highways, overpasses, controlled access, wide medians, service roads and by-passed towns. It offers the best money can buy for the time-conscious, modern-day traveler. Yet, the strange happenings, weird travelers, vehicle accidents and crime continue to occur.

The old Jericho Gap, most stretches of old Route 66 and the Mother Road structures of the past now require maps and special guides to locate. Only trash heaps and crumbling foundations mark many of the famous businesses of the past. A few of the best sites have been restored, thanks to the Route 66 Associations and The Texas Department of Transportation. New Safety Rest Stops provide the latest in tourist facilities and several new tourist attractions have been added.

The most significant effort to date is the collection and gathering of Old Route 66 information, photos and stories. These will always be here for the future historians of the Route.

“Among the many modern-day adventures of the Jericho/McLean segment, we were asked to help film a scene for a documentary about the Bunion Derby taking place in 1928. Although it was a hot July day, temperature above 100 degrees, we helped spread white laundry soap on a section of Jericho Gap roadway, spray white foam and paint on roadside grass and weeds, then operate commercial-grade fire extinguishers blowing white powder into the wind simulating a Texas April snow storm in 1928. When a young Andy Paine look-a-like jogged past into the blowing snow the effect was so real on the monitor I couldn't believe my eyes.”

At mile 131, alongside today's I-40, old Route 66 is the south service road lying beside the abandoned Rock Island Railroad right-of-way. Both skirt a large playa lake located on the Trew Ranch. There are two huge holes in the bottom of the lake with life-long ties to the history of the past and the future of the area. Thousands of yards of black gumbo dirt, like that along Jericho Gap, was removed from the holes and used to plate the medians of I-40 from Jericho to Alanreed so that grass would grow and hold the soil. Today, that same gumbo soil is being used to line and seal the land-fills of McLean and is destined to line the new waste water lakes to be built just south of town.

No longer would the old timers from Groom have to stop at the wild plum thickets to use the bathroom. New multi-million dollar rest rooms now provide relief, overnight parking, picnic facilities and beautiful glimpses of Texas. Ironically, one of those rest stops now sits astraddle a section of famous old Jericho Gap.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Route 66 Tidbits


82 Days
Until Departure

Bike Ride from Amarillo to the Mississippi River along Route 66




I find route 66 very interesting. Some of the things I hope to see on my trip to the Mississippi River I have included in this blog.

Get Your Kicks (On Route 66)

Well if you ever plan to motor west
Just take my way that's the highway that's the best
Get your kicks on Route 66
Well it winds from Chicago to L.A.
More than 2000 miles all the way
Get your kicks on Route 66

Well, goes from St. Louie Joplin Missouri
Oklahoma city looks oh so pretty
You'll see Amarillo and Gallup, New Mexico
Flagstaff, Arizona don't forget Winona
Kingman, Barstow, San Bernardino

Would you get hip to this kindly tip
And go take that California trip
Get your kicks on Route 66

- Bobby Troupe, copyright 1946, Londontown Music

Interesting facts

The founder of McLean, Tx (Alfred Rowe), A rancher from England, went home to England for a visit and never came back because he was on the Titanic.

The numerical designation 66 was official assigned to the Chicago-to-Los Angeles route in the summer of 1926.

Route 66 starts in Chicago, Illinois and ends in Santa Monica, California.

The Corvette has become a Route 66 icon.

91% of the original Route 66 is still in use in Texas.


On the corner of Route 66 and First Street in Tucumcari, New Mexico is a Texaco Station that is the only service station to have operated continuously through the Route 66 era to the present.

Kansas has the shortest section of the Mother Road with only 13 miles. However, three historic Route 66 towns are located on this short segment including Baxter Springs, Galena and Riverton.

As a publicity stunt in 1928, promoters of Route 66 held a coast to coast foot race that included all 2448 miles of the Mother Road and then some. The race kept right on going far beyond Chicago all the way to New York City.

In 1984 Route 66 was officially decommissioned as a federal highway. However, daily use of the road had been gradually replaced in earlier years by the Interstates. The road was decommissioned due to public demand for better transportation as the old road deteriorated after World War II.

Route 66 is also know as "Mother Road", "The Main Street of America" and "The Will Rogers Highway".

85% of the road is still drivable.



During all of its life, Route 66 continued to evolve, leaving many abandoned stretches of concrete, still waiting to be found by the more adventurous traveler.

Cyrus Stevens Avery from Tulsa, Oklahoma can be called the father of Route 66. Mr. Avery lived in Tulsa. Conveniently, the new highway ran right past his own filling station and restaurant.





Elvis Presley used to like staying at the Best Western Trade Winds Motel in Clinton, Oklahoma.



Lou Mitchell’s CafĂ© has been providing breakfast for those beginning the long journey on Route 66 since the beginning. Opened in 1923 at 565 W. Jackson, breakfast is still served all day at Lou Mitchell’s in Chicago.


Most of the road was replaced by five interstate highways, including I-55, I-44, I-40, I-15 and I-10, but still a surprisingly high amount of old road is waiting to be found by the more adventurous traveler.

When is a corn dog not a corn dog? When you're at the Cozy Dog Drive along Route 66 in Springfield, Illinois. This first fast food of the road was introduced by Ed Waldmire at the 1946 Illinois State Fair. In 1950, he opened the Cozy Dog Drive Inn. This Mother Road icon still stands today at 2935 So. Sixth Street in Springfield, Illinois, but when go try their "Cozy Dog," don't call it a corn dog, or you might be met with little more than a steely eyed stare.

You cannot count on the road to be marked with road signs. Though some states and organizations have posted signs, these often disappear with souvenir hunters. Others are simply never posted.

Driving the route from west to east is historically wrong, and a lot harder, as all available documentation goes the "right” way.

John Steinbeck in his novel, Grapes of Wrath, published in 1939, was the first to refer to Route 66 as "Mother Road.”




Old Route 66 originally began in Chicago at Michigan Avenue and Jackson Boulevard. After the 1933 World’s Fair, the terminus of the road was moved to Lake Shore Drive at the entrance to Grant Park.

Route 66 TV ShowGeorge Maharis and Martin Milner were the stars of the CBS television series Route 66 which debuted on October 7, 1960. In the show, the stars drove brand new baby-blue Corvettes, though the audience wouldn’t know that because the show was in black and white. The show continued for 116 episodes, finally ending on March 13, 1964. Ironically, the show was filmed on locations all around the USA, but rarely near the real Route 66.

Cyrus Avery, the father of Route 66, was the first to refer to Route 66 as "The Main Street of America” in 1927.

The last original Route 66 road sign was taken down in Chicago on January 17, 1977.



SEE YA ON THE ROAD!!

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Does it really matter?

STOVES. DOES IT REALLY MATTER?




I was looking at a packing list for my bike trip along Route 66 from Amarillo to St. Louis and came to one of the most important items on the list: The Camp Stove. On the Texas Panhandle and Oklahoma portions of route 66, places to stop for food are few and far between. If I want to eat a hot meal, I will have to make it myself. Also, I am coffee person. So, in the morning, I do like a nice cup of Joe.


Does it matter?


Apparently so. I have researched stoves now for about a week. I have viewed home made ones, cheap propane ones, and expensive multi fueled stoves. I didn't really care what I used, just as long as I had something to heat stuff up. I don't want something very heavy, obviously. I don't want something that takes up all my pannier space. And, I don't want something that will spill all over the place.

Which stove will I use?

Here are my Choices:

Home Made Soda Can Stove


I found a great web sight about stoves and this guy made a homemade one.

http://bicycletouringpro.com/blog/a-camp-stove-comparison/

I followed the directions and built one myself. It WORKED. It wasn't fast but I am sure with some tweaked measurements, it will work the way it is supposed to. I like this stove because it uses alcohol fuel which burns clean and is easy to transport without spilling. For me, this will be perfect. I still haven't brought a pot of water to boiling yet, but I still haven't tried too hard.



Propane Stoves






I think Propane stoves would work well, except that they bulky and heavy.


They do heat very quickly. A liter of water will boil in 4 minutes and each canister burns for 14 hours on low. This would be great because I could buy two bottles for my whole trip and it wont spill.

I think if it were not so bulky, this would be perfect.






Duel Fuel Stoves




This stove is great because it is small, light and can use multiple fuel sources. This one will burn alcohol, kerosene, Coleman Fuel and Gasoline. YES Gasoline. The reason I like this stove is because I can get Gas anywhere. I think that would be great because if I run out of Coleman fuel, unless there is a Walmart around, I would be out of luck. With this stove, I can go up to a gas station and get my 12 cents worth of gas. Imagine that one! The reason I don't like this stove because if the stove tips, or spills, my panniers will now and forever smell like gasoline right along with everything else. NOT GOOD when I am on the road. I also worry about the fuel smell while cooking too. I don't want my rigatoni smelling like Chevron a Toni.





In summery, I have not found the perfect stove yet. I don't think cost is a consideration, but ironically the stove I like the best doesn't cost a thing.



See you on the road!!

Friday, March 12, 2010

Not just a back road

Route 66 is not just a back road.



To many, Route 66 brings back fond memories of family vacations and long awaited road trips. This route made it possible for average people to see the rest of the country. To others, it was a way to make a living. Many town's survival depended on this route. Many road side attractions were designed to distract motorists to stop and spend money. A lot of these historic icons are still visible on The Mother Road.
x











I think riding this route on a bike will let me get a close up look at an Icon of America.



The basic map









The bug ranch in Conway, Tx.


This is a knock off of Stan Marsh's Cadillac Ranch. This attempt is to get motorists to stop for gas.


Leaning Water Tower
Another interesting thing to attract motorists in the town of Groom, Tx



Most of the road side attractions are now closed due to Interstate 40. Towns were bypassed and and dreams were shattered. Their ghosts remain to remind us of days long past. Weather beaten, tattered, and torn, but still standing; giving testimony of the American Dream.








Ghost Town (border of Texas)
"First Hotel, Last Hotel"










I want to see all the sights along Route 66 at a bicycle pace.




Some say, "Why?"

I am asked why I like to ride long distances on a bike. I suppose most of the population ride bikes around town and do not go very far. It takes a lot of effort to ride a long distance.


To me, riding my bike is an adventure. I used to take my boat out a lot until I moved to the panhandle. Here there aren't too many lakes to explore. One of my favorite pass times when I lived in Waco was taking the boat my father gave me up the Brazos River. I found it relaxing to explore new bends in the river. I would want to see how far up river I could go. Usually after a good rain, the river would be up and I could go just a little further. I would seen a new Cliff, or sand bar.

To me, riding my bike is the same thing. I know when most people get home from work, the last thing they want to do is get on a bike to ride 50 miles or so. But to me, it is a vacation. Mental demands made on me all day simply vanish when I am in the saddle; much the same as it was when I was on the boat.

At the end of the school year, when all the kids are thinking about their long lazy days of playing video games and sleeping in, I am thinking about the road. Just like the kids, summer is MY time and I do not intend to spend it lying around the house all day.


When I am stressed and I am having a bad day or week, I dream about the road. You see, there are endless possibilities, endless locations, endless miles. All you got to do is just go!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Bike Ride to the Mississippi River


I am planning on riding from my house to the Mississippi River along Route 66. I have often dreamed of seeing the Mother Road by bike ever since I rode to Vega, Tx. Because of some changes in plans, I have decided to go East and not West. My son graduates from high school and his grandparents cant come to Texas, so we are going up to Indiana. This sort of ruined some Colorado plans I had. Sheila, my wife suggested that I ride to Indiana and she will catch up to me. She suggested that I could take Route 66 as far as I could go. I thought, "what a great idea". It was also great because she was ok with the whole idea of me touring. I plan on heading out right after my son and his friend comes back from their state solo contest. Seth, my son, plays French Horn. His friend plays Trumpet. And I am their band director. The estimated departure date is June 4th. I plan on riding for about 18 days. I should make the Mississippi River by June 22. I have already bought my Panniers and have researched a packing list. As the departure date draws nearer, I will have more definite plans. I hope you enjoy my blog and keep coming back to follow me as I journey East. I will post every now and then until departure date. I hope you enjoy!