Blog editor takes Monday - Wednesday for a motorcycle run with his Doctor son into Oregon's Rogue River Valley.

I will post early Monday morning,  Pacific Time;  during the evening/early morning hours on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Lead bike, mine, at 14,170
on Mt Evans in Colo. 
We are looking at 370 miles on Day #1, spending the night in Lakehead,  just north of Lake Shasta in Northern California.

Day #2: we will leave early morning,  headed north to mile marker #86,  in Oregon, and eat breakfast at Heaven on Earth.  It is a well known restaurant famous for its cinnamon rolls  . . . .  but good food,  as well.  We will drive back south to Medford and east to Klamath Falls via Sky Lakes Wilderness Area and the Rogue River National Forest..

Colorado from 14,170 ft.
(Summer of 2013) 
Day #3 will be south through the Klamath National Forest and into Weed, California.

After Day #1,  nothing is written in stone,  as far as our schedule is concerned,  as well as breakfast at Heaven on Earth (Dary #2 AM).   Lots of pictures and a lot of riding time in some of the most beautiful country in the States.
Note:  Click to enlarge pictures.  

6 comments:

  1. too bad you'll be confined to the pavement

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Not really. "Confinement" is a state of mind, dude. When on the road, I feel just the opposite.

      Delete
  2. Good news - Republican chances of winning a majority have dropped from 64 percent when the FiveThirtyEight model launched two weeks ago to 53 percent Tuesday.

    Which way is the GOP going?

    down
    down
    down

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nothing matters but what happens on election day. This I know: conservatives and the GOP are in much better shape today, than we were back in 2010, and we won that election cycle in a landslide.

      Delete
  3. Motorcycles come in different brands and types. Different brands of motorcycles such as Yamaha, Kawasaki, or Suzuki, all have different designs and provide different features.

    ReplyDelete
  4. This is so obvious that it hardly bears the mention. What was your point?

    ReplyDelete