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Saturday, March 29, 2014

Cycling the Pacific Coast

As reported by Bikeportland.org there are fix it stations, bike racks, covered shelters, and food storage now going into the hiker/biker sites in Oregon State Parks. Reading this article brought back so many wonderful memories of when we cycled down the west coast.

One of the best things about cycling the coast is meeting up with all the other cyclists at the hiker/biker sites each evening. While it's almost impossible to get a drive-up camp site in the state parks for everyone else from Spring to Fall, they never turn anyone away who comes in on foot or bike. Often we had access to the best sites along a lake or the ocean, and all they charge is $5 per night. The west coast is very cyclist friendly, particularly Oregon. We loved the communal atmosphere where everyone would sit around the fire each night, in the hiker-biker sites, discussing where they'd been and what their next plans were.

We met a German guy who had gone out of his way to get up the Dempster Highway so he could start his trip from the most northern point. He planned to cycle all the way to the most southern point of South America. He didn't have any idea how long it would take him. He had all the time in the world.

A young kid we met, from Montreal, had made his away across Canada, before heading down the coast. Quite happy to get off his bike and hitch a ride with people he met at gas stations along the way, to him it was about the experience, not the means of getting there. He told us the campground we met him at was the first place he'd actually paid to stay. The $5 per night that was a deal to us was a decadence to him. He'd spent it because it had been a while since he'd really been able to talk to anyone and he was getting lonely. His camping setup was our first introduction to a camp hammock tent. It was easy to setup, comfy, and waterproof and worked especially well for camping in areas where he wasn't supposed to be.

We met college students on their summer break, and retirees on their life break, a newlywed couple on a unique honeymoon, and an environmentalist moving to a communal organic farm. There was this homeless man who had recently been kicked off a friend's couch, given $20 and a girl's bike with no gears. Cycling past him, as he pushed the little bike up the hills, he'd then go flying past us on the down hills. Turns out, it wasn't just gears he was missing, but brakes. For someone with limited cash, he sure made bad choices. At the grocery store where we met up with him again, he spent over $5 on a ready made sandwich, when he could have bought bread, meat, and cheese that would have lasted him much longer. Then he tore out all the vegetables in it and threw them away. He told me he was planning to spend the rest of his cash to try and get on a bus to California. He knew he didn't have enough money to get there, but he was hoping they wouldn't kick him off.

Surprisingly, for two people who pride themselves on being introverted, we found the best parts of this mode of travel was how it meshed all the hours alone with just our own thoughts and meeting all sorts of new people along the way. It became quite normal to have other cyclists pull up alongside us at some point in the day and travel with us for a while, striking up conversations as we all moved along. Our size and ease of mobility meant it was so easy to stop along the way, to chat to people, to head into a fair, even to take part in a church fish fry. If we'd been in a vehicle, we'd have missed all this.

The biggest downside to cycling the coastal road is having to share the road with impatient drivers, especially the logging trucks and huge RVs. There isn't always a lot of room on the side of the road and it can be terrifying to look back over your shoulder and see a huge monster bearing down on you. It definitely gives us an appreciation for all the cyclists we travel past in our RV.

There's a book that everyone cycling the west coast purchases. It's the bible of the west coast long distance cyclist, called Bicycling The Pacific Coast We found when we stayed at the campgrounds on the itinerary in the book we'd meet lots of people in the evenings, but when we went off course, we'd often have the sites all to ourselves.

Friday, March 28, 2014

RVillage.com - Great for RVers, tough on the OCD



I have a somewhat obsessive personality and I'm a life-long gamer who loves a challenge.

On the first day at RVillage.com, I noticed that I needed friends in order to see anything on the Home page, so I decided to start friending some people. At first I was taking my time, reading profiles, and then adding people, but soon my obsessive compunction kicked in and I had to speed things up. Like a game, I saw a challenge and set out to conquer and complete it.

At that point, there were only a little over 100 people listed, so it wasn't an insurmountable task, but by the time I got to the end of the list, it had already grown dramatically in size. There was a voice in my head telling me to keep going, to friend those other people too, but I resisted, and quite maturely told that voice, it could wait for the next day. I mean, how many more was the site going to get in a day? 100 more? I just proved I could handle that, right?

I spent some time joining, reading, and posting to new groups and their accompanying forums. I found myself in the bloggers group, where I posted a link to my blog and started adding everybody else's blogs to my Feedly list. That day, there wasn't much to respond to yet so I posted a few messages myself and then moved onto the next group that caught my eye. At first, I was being selective, seeking out the groups that most appealed to me, but once again, my need to do it all clicked in, and I found myself subscribing to everything that held even the least bit of appeal for me. Eventually though, I had to leave and make myself go do some work.

The next few days were super busy work days and I couldn't spend much time on the site. I noticed though that I was getting responses to the forums emailed to me. That made it so handy to collect all the links to everybody's blogs, and then that took on a life of it's own. I felt this nagging in the back of my head telling me I'd never keep up with reading all these blogs, but there was this other voice telling me if I didn't get them all, I'd probably miss out on the best ones.

The next visit I had some time to look around, there were already like a thousand or something people on the site and I felt a big wave of oh-no-this-just-got-waaaaaaay-tougher! I mean, even if I could find the time to friend so many people, there'd be no way to keep up with all the comments, and blogs and forum posts, right?

So now, a couple of weeks later, it's up to 3,678 people, and you know, I just have to come to the realization that I probably won't win this one. I haven't been able to push myself to go on a mad adding push again. There's just been no time. I have a ton of work to do, and we're leaving town in the RV in a couple of days.

I tell myself: Tracey, pace yourself, post some messages, friend people you enjoy talking to in the forums, give up the game. Some games need to be lost, some quests need to change, you can't always do it all. I'm probably not going to get to know every single person on this site, or read every RV blog and forum post. Just like I have to realize I'm probably not going to see every single town, city and attraction in the world. But damn it, I like to try. It might just be a little slower than I first thought.

Oh btw, you should really come and try the site out. And if you're already on there, send me a friend request, okay?


Sunday, March 23, 2014

Where I've been ... so far

I still have a long way to go if I'm going to see it all!

Visited 22 Countries (9.77%)


Visited 34 States (68%)


Visited 7 Provinces (53.8%)


I'm not about to start counting the cities and towns!