I’d stopped for gas and as this
couple drove by in their car the guy leaned out the window and said, “Have an
extra special good day.” How nice. And I did.
It was great riding. T-shirt,
vest, no helmet until California.
The California border has an
inspection station. I pulled up and
stopped. The guy wanted me to pull up a
bit further. He asked if I’d like some cool
air? Sure. There was a big fan there and he turned it
on. Wow.
It felt good. And then I was on
my way again.
Barstow is our usual meeting
place, a Rodeaway Inn where they remember us and treat us very nicely. Stef arrived about 4 p.m. I arrived about 5:30 or so. It was good to meet up again and be doing a
motorcycle road trip.
The next day, Monday, May 15, we
decided to head to Lee Vining, California.
There is a lake there with some cool things and we figured we’d maybe
spend a day or two. That wasn’t to
happen although we sure didn’t know it at the time.
We rode merrily on our way,
stopping to take a photo here and there.
One of the places we stopped was Pearsonville, California, the Hub Cap
Capital of the World. We found a few
things of interest. One was the Uniroyal
Gal, who is also listed in Roadside America.
She’s a giant woman made of fiberglass with a blond flip hairdo. What we didn’t know
until later when we looked her up was that there’s a flower-adorned grave
behind her next to a playground, of the Muffler Queen’s husband, whoever that
is.
The Uniroyal Gal, known locally as the Hubcap Lady, after a former resident, Lucy Pearson, who was rumored to have a hubcap collection in excess of 80,000. |
We even found a load of garlic buds. We could smell them before we got to them and knew what they were. |
We could see snow-capped mountains around us when we stopped for gas. It was beautiful. |
It just kept coming down,
sometimes at a near whiteout … I couldn’t see and my windshield was
covered. I kept swiping at it with my
glove. I was cold, and apprehensive as I
didn’t know how long this would go on or if it would be worse than what it
already was. Plus, I wasn’t dressed for
this kind of weather. I had planned on it
being nice and warm. I had put on more clothes at one of our stops, but they weren't enough. Something white
blew by me. It turned out to be a sheet
of ice sliding off the fairing. We got through it and I was grateful that it
hadn’t turned from Deadman to Deadwoman Pass.
By the time we stopped to take photos, this was all that was left. The snow had slid down the windshield, and what had been on the fairing was mostly gone, too. |
There was still a bit around the headlight. Ugh!!! |
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