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DAY 10
Here Comes The Sun

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ROUTE: Garberville to Ft Bragg CA DISTANCE: 68 Miles WINDS:  Light
WEATHER: Cool, mid 50s at start, Sunny TERRAIN:  Mountainous until coast then rolling...two good climbs with two great descents TOTAL CLIMBING: 5127 Feet

DAILY REPORT: 

I know, I know...I just keep harping on how great the scenery is...but it's true!!!  Our forecast this morning was for cool temperatures and after yesterday's afternoon temperature, it was hard to imagine high 40s at our start.  But it turned out beautiful...not as cool as predicted and the skies were sunny...maybe we can shake this fog pattern.  As soon as we pulled out of the motel we began our climbing.  But first, a nice descent along a river on a county road before getting to the highway.  It's common around here for roads to be closed from time to time and this one had been in that state recently.  They had just repaired some of the roadbed that was affected by a slide but they hadn't put a hard surface to it yet...and may not from the way it looks.  It wasn't bad and only about a quarter mile of gravel road before we got back on pavement.  On the highway, there was another place as seems to be the norm around here that had just been repaired.  As we were climbing along the ridgeline it wasn't hard to understand why they have so many slides in these parts.  The road is just cut out of the mountain and it seems there's nothing to hold it up.  If the ground gets saturated, it's going to slide down the hill.  Aside from that, being on that road above the river was a sight to behold.

We had several 1 mile ascents before the first SAG and we again were in and out of giant Redwood forests, through a couple tourist traps (Confusion Hill and Legend of Bigfoot), and along a river...where was the coast?  We were a bit more inland for the first 50 miles but that would change at the second SAG where we were right on the coastline.

When we left the first SAG, we started up the famous Leggett Hill...a 4 mile, switchback climb that definitely woke everyone up.  But every effort has it rewards.  Cresting the top led us to a marvelous 9 mile descent with plenty of switchbacks to make it interesting.  I've ridden this section every year until today and I've always been in a good zone in the climb and elated with the technical descent.  It's exhilarating to feel the tires grip the road in a 45 degree bank zooming around a hairpin turn...one with the bike.  After bottoming out, we started another major climb of about 3 miles that was a little steeper than Leggett, but again the rewarding downhill was well worth the effort.  Plus, when we neared the bottom, we popped out along the coast again with breathtaking scenes of the surf below.  There were several places along the side of the road where there was nothing between the vehicles and the steep drop off to the ocean below.

We thought it couldn't get any better as Barb had set the SAG along the ocean.  And we got a good lesson in coastal weather...it's hard to believe the temperature differential over the last two days.  We started out cold and foggy yesterday morning and went inland to 93 degrees.  This morning it was clear and sunny when we left and was getting to be the perfect temperature to ride when we went over Leggett...then back to the overcast coast where the temperature was about 10-15 degrees cooler than the sunny side of the mountain.  The good news was we picked up a slight tailwind for the last miles and the scenery was beautiful in spite of no sun again.  When we left for the last 20 or so miles to Ft Bragg, we rode along a high ridge overlooking the ocean.  Again, we had to make several stops just to take it all in.  The only thing bad about the scenery was we never saw any wheat again today. 

One interesting stop many made today was at a small grocery after the second SAG.  There wasn't much on the road today in the line of food, so several stopped at the grocery-deli for a bite in the early afternoon.  The lady working there would never win a Miss Congeniality award but she was a hoot.  Marc ordered a cup of soup and said it wasn't the best soup he'd ever eaten, but the lady told him it was "great soup."  Marc said he was so intimidated that he was afraid to say anything...about the soup or otherwise.  When Paul filled out his order form, she informed him in no polite manner that he had the wrong bread.  He changed the bread.  She looked it over and said, "I'll now accept your application."  Paul commented that he'd never "applied" for a sandwich.

Another successful day...everyone in safely.  At rap we talked about tomorrow's challenges.  It promises to be another good climbing day...what's new.  We're also expecting to see some more awesome scenery and we'll cross our half way mileage point at one point during the day.  I'll get to ride tomorrow...it will be the first time I've ridden on this day so I'm looking forward to seeing something new from the bike.  We'll go through tall trees, start getting into wine country, and I think we'll see the ocean a time or two along the way...makes for another great day of riding...see you then.

 

HEARD DURING THE DAY:

"Those curves on the descent are called 'spit curves.'"
"Why's that?"
"When you are at the top, you spit.  When you go around the corner on the descent, it hits you on the top of the head."

"I can't blow snot rockets so I have to stop to blow my nose."
"It just takes practice...just let me pass by first."

"We're not from around here."
"I'm painfully aware of that fact."   Store clerk response.

"I need a girls bike...I can hardly reach my leg over the top tube any more."

"I need some illegal drugs."

"Mike, I hear you are a great mechanic...can you fix my legs?"

"Our motto is:  We don't try harder."  

OH DOPEY ME:

Last night, Paul announced he'd put his yellow vest and arm warmers in the clothing bin and by the end of the day, they were missing.  Sometimes people pick up the wrong stuff so we weren't too concerned...we figured they'd show up sooner or later.  Well, no one fessed up to the egregious error.  This morning at breakfast, Marc discovered Paul's belongings tangled with his own jacket that he'd also put in the clothes bin the day before.  Apologetically, Marc promptly returned the missing garments...only when Paul finally noticed, they weren't his...they were Marc's.  Now it appeared Marc had committed a double whammy, but I'm thinking it wasn't a mistake at all, it was a clever cover move.  By giving his own jacket to Paul, Marc had now leveled the field...now Paul had something of Marc's.  Now it's, I wouldn't have taken your stuff in the first place if you hadn't taken mine...I'm keeping your jacket and warmers until you return my jacket.  Paul...why would you do such a thing?  Pretty slick of Marc if you ask me.

SCENES OF THE DAY

Paul and Bill are always looking for ways to create good will.

"But officer, we didn't see the speed limit sign!"  Team Flamingo was barely successful in escaping a local speed trap.  I'm not sure they would have avoided a fine had the cop not been such a dummy.

Tom was beside himself when he found his birth year ring so close to the center of the tree. 

Everyone was looking for the back of this sign on Legget Hill.

SAG guard

Nice to see the coastline today.

Somehow this just doesn't seem to be a "Team Flamingo" type move...mantis perhaps?  Actually, I think he was just trying to avoid stepping in sea gull poop on the sea wall.

Let's see...did Mike say to use three times the recommended serving to go three times as fast, or did he say I'd probably go three times more?

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