Thursday 26 August 2010

I Feel Like I am Being Watched....

For about 18 months, I used to work in Moscow for the Russian Government. I flew there on a Monday and came back on a Friday, every other week. I was working on the Governments preparations for the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi 2014.

While I was there, every now and again, I felt I was being watched and my phone was almost certainly being bugged. But you just accept that these things happen there and you just get on with it.

But, I had the feeling a couple of times yesterday that I was being watched again, over here. In the US. I can tell you, it felt very strange.

Yesterday I left Bear Lake in Idaho and immediately crossed the border into Utah, the 22nd state I have been in on this tour....




















When I stopped to take the photo above, I had that feeling I was being watch. I looked around and this is what I saw....




















Someone was watching.

I stopped a little further on and again I had that same feeling. I looked around. I was being watched!....




















I put my fears behind me and rode on.

I hadn’t expected to be riding through a forest in Utah but I found myself in the Cache National Forest. There were rolling hills, good views and at one point, I was 8998 feet above sea level....



















































































There were not many people around. I went passed a few guys working on the utilities alongside the road and even they stopped what they were doing and waved as I rode by. I did see cows and even a horse on the road – clearly folk around here need to take classes in fence maintenance!

I did spot something I have never seen before and to most of my readers this will probably be boring, but I have never before seen electricity pylons where the structures are made of wood....




















I am holed up in Salt Lake City today, while my bike is being serviced. I cannot believe I have ridden 5000 miles since it was last serviced in Chicago!

Wednesday 25 August 2010

Harley Davidsons in Advertising

We recently were called on to supply 1o of our bikes to be part of the production of a television commercial for Hyundai. Utilizing Harley Davidson bikes to compliment a marketing strategy is something that we get called upon to assist with quite often. On this occasion the ad was part of Hyundia's in involvement in the FIFA World Cup. The ad was call Hyundai Booming.

Tuesday 24 August 2010

Did The Egyptians Get Inspiration From The Tetons?

It was cold enough to freeze the nuts off a brass monkey when I left Yellowstone. I togged up in all the warm gear I have and looked like I was ready to rob a bank....


























Soon I crossed the Continental Divide, which for those like me that had never heard of this, it is a hydrological divide that separates the US and Canada into two halves. It essentially runs down the Rockies and rain that falls on the west side of the Continental Divide drains into the Pacific, while rain falling on the east side drains into the Atlantic / Gulf of Mexico. Anyway, it seemed like a good place to take a photo of the Leading Ladies....




















I stopped and took one last look at Yellowstone....




















Then rode a few miles and zap..... there were the Tetons. Right in front of me. These are a most impressive mountain range and this was almost my first view of them....




















The shape of some of the peaks immediately made me think of pyramids.

They are so big, I wanted to find something in the foreground to put the mountains in context. Happily, along came a marina....


















The Leading Ladies soon let me know (with the slightest of subtle hints of course) that they were a little put out that they hadn’t been chosen to be put in the foreground, so I had to put this right.... they were happy then....


















Usually something big and made of steel or concrete gets my attention, as did the Jackson Lake Dam, which I stopped and took some pictures of. Just like a waterfall, there is something mesmerising about water passing through a dam especially if it makes a big whoosh!....


















I arrived in Jackson and decided that I liked it enough to stay there. The motel was basic, but I had had the bedroom over the rather large hot tub and the plant and equipment for this was located right next to my room. I decided at 1130pm it was time they turned the blasted thing off, which to be fair, they did as soon as I asked. I wouldn’t have normally minded the noise so much, but I had decided to get up really early and go back to the Tetons to re-photograph them. The earlier pictures I had taken were a bit milky due to looking into the sun and I thought the early morning sun’s rays coming from the east would look good on the mountain.

So, the alarm went off at 5am. I had seen the weather forecast the evening before and 29F was expected. Jeepers it was cold riding the 26 miles needed to get to Jenny Lake, where I thought a good view could be found. It was dark as I started riding and I passed a few signs warning of the potential for animals in the road. Not this morning, please!

I set up next to the lake edge right next to a sign saying “Bears – special precautions needed”. As I blew into my hands to try to warm them, I wondered how far that blowing noise would travel in the perfect quiet of the landscape at this early hour. Hmmmn. What do they mean by special precautions? The only three I could think that I could do was to use the tripod to fend off a bear, climb a tree, or give it the candy bar I had in my pocket when I found I could no longer climb trees. Over the next 45 minutes or so, as I watched the sun rise and light up the mountains, I kept looking sideways for bears....

Yogi didn’t show up.

I consider myself to be a reasonably accomplished photographer, but that is all. When I looked back on the photos I took this morning I kept wondering what I had to do to become better. I want to be good enough that I am happy with my pictures, but today I wasn’t. Here are just two that I was pleased with out of the many I took....





































Personally I blame the cold. Plus I worried about any potential Yogi’s that might have showed up.

After taking the photos I headed back to the motel in the cold, except it was even colder. I was riding into the wind in this direction. Even with my winter gloves on, it hurt my hands. I was going to take a few more pictures of the mountains from different places, but I didn’t want to because it felt my thumbs were about to fall off. I have lost a few things, especially keys, on this trip and I didn’t want to go back home without my thumbs....

However, I did ride through a town called Moose and thought of my step-daughter, Mishy Moo, who adores anything to do with moose (mooses?). Today she will go by the amended nickname of Mishy Moose! I don’t know why I haven’t thought of that before. Anyway, for her benefit, I took this picture....




















Just outside Jackson is the National Museum of Wildlife Art. It was closed, so I couldn’t go in, but I love the building it is located in. This is a great example of how a building can fit into the environment. I read the design was inspired by a ruined castle in Scotland and I really like the building....




















Jackson is a fun town. It is full of shops that cater for the many visitors that come to the area, but it isn’t at all tacky. Even the t-shirt shops have a good feel to them. Here are a few views of around the town square area....

A stagecoach you can go for a ride in (I resisted)....




















An arch made from Elk antlers....







































The sign for the Million Dollar Cowboy bar. Don’t bother going in as the service is dreadful and the seats (which are saddles) are really uncomfortable....




















Main Street....




















I couldn’t work out what this sign in the back window of a car was trying to tell me. There is no ocean in Wyoming, so I am at a loss to understand how one would surf....




















I have been playing a game with people who look at the pictures on my bike. I tell them that if they can name all 10 of the actresses, then they will win a prize. Normally people get 3 or 4. One guy got 9 and this couple, George and Jeanne from Carmel, came very close. They also got 9 but were stumped when it came to the last picture on the rear fender. They were having to look under my luggage to properly see the picture and they said they knew who the 10th actress was, but just couldn’t remember her name. They gave me their phone number and said to come and see them in Carmel, which I will do if I can. By then, they may remember who the 10th actress is.... they were very nice people....




















How about this for a piece of great work. This is a trailer being pulled by a Honda Gold Wing and the roof opens to allow storage of clothes etc... This is excellent!.....




















As I headed south today, I rode alongside the Snake River, I saw many people white water rafting and I became jealous – it looked like great fun.... click on the first photo and take a closer look....


























































You know the nets you see on steep slopes at the side of the road to try to prevent rocks from falling down. Have you ever wondered how they fix them? Well, here is the answer, by abseiling up and down the slopes....


























I have been in Wyoming for a long while now. Today as I got near to its southern border, the landscape changed to gentle rolling hills.... I have decided I like Wyoming....




















Soon I was to enter yet another state. This time Idaho, the 21st state I have ridden in....




















This is for my brother, Tim..... Geneva has gone a bit downhill since you left there!.....




















I have stopped for the night next to Bear Lake. I rode past this house just before I found a hotel and I will try to go back there tomorrow to just ask one question. Why did they do this?......

Monday 23 August 2010

Magnificent Yellowstone, But Where is Yogi?

This is a long post. Yellowstone deserves that. There are few words, but many pictures. I hope that you enjoy them....

Day 59 saw me leaving Cody in Wyoming without the cowboy boots I was tempted to buy. The trouble with things you buy when you are away from home is they look great there and then, but get them back to your everyday surroundings and that cool purchase doesn’t look so cool anymore. I am glad that I resisted. They were nice though.....

On the west side of Cody on US 14 is the Mountain Trails Galleries. I was struck by the beauty of the sculptures standing outside – the one below was maybe 15 feet high and was of a cowboy lassoing a deer. Wonderful....




















When I was planning my route across the US, I considered the pro’s and con’s of doing it east to west, or west to east. I chose east to west for one very simple reason – I wouldn’t have to ride into the sun in the mornings. Here is an example....

This is Main Street in Cody. Here is looking west (in the direction I was riding)....




















And here is looking east. I am glad I considered this when sitting in my office in the UK....




















As I continued west I came near to the Buffalo Bill Dam. Just before that there was a tunnel – the first I have ridden through since New York (I think)....



















































The dam is on the Shoshone River and when it was built, was the tallest dam in the world. This is above the dam....




















The driftwood behind the dam made for an interesting pattern....




















The dam operated a system that you parked your car / bike away from the dam and then were transferred to the dam itself by a golf buggy. The driver of the one I got in had noticed the licence plate on my bike and commented on the fact that I had “GB” on the back of my bike, meaning Great Britain. It is a requirement in Europe that you display what country your vehicle is from. The drivers name was Nyuki and she told me she was raised in the UK at a place called Canterbury and still had ties to England....


























What was funny was she pointed out her car to me. Note the GB sticker on a US car!....




















A little further on, I saw a couple of things that intrigued me. The first was a motel that was designed in a western cowboy style. It was very simple, effective, stylish and cheap to build. A brilliant use of clever design. I liked it....




















The second structure that caught my interest still confounds me, because I have no idea what it is....


























I had to stop here just to take in the sheer beauty of the landscape at the side of the road....


















This was called Chimney Rock, for obvious reasons....



















The various layers of rock could easily be seen in Chimney Rock....


























Soon I reached Yellowstone. Even though I had never been here before, I sort of knew what to expect, having watched several tv documentaries about the place. The main thing that struck me the most was the size of the place. It is enormous. One thing I hadn’t realised was just how much of Yellowstone had been affected by the recent fires, the most devastating of which was in 1988, which burned for several months. There are a huge amount of dead trees....





































































But, from the ashes mighty oaks do grow. OK, in Yellowstone, not oaks, but fire actually helps regenerate the forest and fire splits open the fir cones which is how the new seeds are released. For every dead tree, I reckon there were 10 new ones growing!

Of course, one of the things I really wanted to see in Yellowstone was buffalo. I discovered later the correct name is Bison and that the commonly used name Buffalo is wrong. It didn’t take long to spot my first Bison....


















I followed these Bison through some trees, trying to get as close as I dare. I heard later that someone was killed getting too close to a Bison just a month ago. Gulp....


















The scenery in Yellowstone is extremely diverse. This was stunning....


















Looking back on it now, something quite startling happened as I rode north up the east side of the park. Along with two other bikers I stopped to let some Bison cross the road....there are bulls, cows and calfs here....


















Then more appeared and prepared to cross the road....


















We soon realised this was a huge herd crossing right in front of us. It was a splendid sight.... note the big bull looking at us....


















The big bull gets most of the way across the road....


















.... and then turns back right in front of us! He seemed a bit upset and was snorting.... he was about 10 feet away from me, when I looked sideways and saw the other two bikers getting off their bikes preparing to retreat.... I kept taking pictures as I wondered what to do....


















I too then retreated. A park ranger in a car came driving up and put his car between the bull and us. He with the aid of his megaphone the three of us to move even further back and get into a car. Any car.... you can see his megaphone and my now abandoned bike in this picture.... please nice bull, please don’t push my bike over....


















Thankfully, he left the Leading Ladies alone. I was about to get into a car when I noticed a big dog on the back seat barking at me. OK, I think I will choose someone else’s car.....soon the ranger suggested(!) it was safe to return to our bikes and carry on. We did this quickly!.

We rode off and stooped up the road in a car park. Here are the two other guys, Carlo on the left, from Omaha Nebraska and Bob, from Kansas City. I think they are smiling from the relief of escaping the angry bull!....


















The three of us rode together for the rest of the day, saw the sights as a group and even shared dinner that evening.

Here are some of the things we saw that afternoon....

Some geysers....


























Some fantastic waterfalls....




















































































The Mammoth Hot Springs, which have built up from minerals in the water over millions of years....




































An odd shaped rock column....



























The next day, I continued to explore the park....

These are Elk by a river....




















Some wonderful colours caused by micro-organisms living in the boiling water coning out from geysers....
































































































And an almost pure white scene....


















In the park, some of the roads are engineering masterpieces. OK, I am an engineer after all....


















This is Sheepeater Cliff....


























One of the marvellous lakes....


















More stunning scenery....


























A deep hot water pool....


























I decided to take rest from riding on day 61 and I went fly-fishing in Yellowstone instead. This was my guide, Rob, patiently tying on another fly....


























And here I am, in the Madison River....




















Day 62 saw me riding south through Yellowstone, mainly through areas where there are a lot of geysers....









































































This is Sapphire Pool. I knew it was very hot, but still I had this crazy notion I wanted to jump in. It just looked so inviting....


















More geysers....



































I then reached the most famous geyser of them all, Old Faithful. The crowds were there in eager anticipation, and like me, camera at the ready....


















Then, right on cue, the geyser began to rumble....


















































So, that was Yellowstone. It lived up to expectations and overall, it was magnificent.

The only trouble was, I didn’t see Yogi ....