“I’m on a roll; it’s time to go solo.” - Vanilla Ice
Riding down 85S I pass my friends the metalsaurs at Gila Bend and wave as they stand there with corroded looks upon their toothy, rusted half-grins. The desert is empty except for a few randomly scattered cars and the road heading south is mine for the taking. Thanks to Grandparental advice, the next stop of the ride will be Kartchner Caverns State Park to take a tour of a living cave. Near Benson, AZ, the snaking route takes me through the Arizona desert, which is absolutely freezing and transforms my hands into mangled, immovable claws that form a death grip on the handlebars.
The Tohono O’Odham Nation Reservation spans the distance between Three Points and Amado and the grin that was just so pervasive takes a grimacing downturn when I notice that the only thing more prevalent than the saguaros, broken bottles and exploded truck tires on the sides of the roads are the shrines to fallen loved ones. This holds as a universal truth for the entire desert and many of the shrines erected are monumental, beautiful and beg to be photographed. Superstition is interwoven throughout this trip in many forms, including: guardians, routines and gut checks. The thought of capturing some bad juju and carrying it with me is one that will not be left to chance. No pictures.
Arivaca Road laces itself through the bottom of the desert mountain basket and looking forward, appears to dissolve into the desert in a ripple. Over the hill and round the bend pops up Amado, AZ, housing the Outlaw BBQ and the Longhorn Grill. One reads of biker, the other has a twenty foot high longhorn skull with horns, boasting an entrance through the nasal cavity.
Gas tank and stomach full, I-19 opens up to the right, showing that the Mexican border is not far away. A quick south on I-19 and north on 82 puts Nogales at the crotch of the cartographic V. An easy navigation on the map, the trip proves troublesome when poorly marked roads and my internal deficiencies in direction combine forces to thwart expedience. Tales of murder, kidnappings, drug cartels and other American misfortunes flood my head as sweat starts to roll down my brow and the GPS crawls obstinately into action. Sitting in a broke-down gas station lot while waiting for the phone GPS to start up and load my current location cause the first real thoughts of potential jeopardy to my personal safety as two guys pull up in a dented, rusted and limping pick-up from the Nixon era. They stop and squint to eye me and my bike. Two thoughts simultaneously race: they are admiring the bike or they are about to abduct me, sell the bike and throw me into the underground sex trade. Oh boy. Time to leave. Go with my gut. Just because you’re paranoid…
The GPS eventually points the direction to HWY 82,with ass-saving accuracy and once again the Harley Davidson Muscle is eating up desert highway like Kobayashi eats up hot dogs. The day is starting to expire and Kartchner Caverns State Park offers a very welcome crash pad, after a quick set up of the tent. But…not tonight, no soup for me. A victim of circumstance, late arrival, no reservation and my own “fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants” attitude, the campground is full and there are no sites available. Instead, I set my sights on nearby Benson with hopes of a hotel. The cross-roads town delivers the sanctuary of yet another glowing blue light representing my road home, the Motel 6. The 11 hour ride has produced as much exhaustion as it has mileage and my creative juices are as dry as the sandy lands of which I’m beginning to become accustomed to. No writing tonight, 9.30 equals bedtime and the bed catches me as I collapse into a slumber that will last until 8.30 the next morning.
Following a breakdown of the big book of cave rules, the tour group enters through a series of airlocks and a mist de-linter (to prevent lint droppings), designed to preserve the cave’s integrity and seal in the balmy 80 degree air that will soon leave me saturated and wondering if the smell is coming from my days on the road or the cave itself.
My nose wrinkles while trying to gauge the temperature outside of my goose feathered haven and my ears listen to the first sounds of daybreak and the rustling RV-ers. The tent unzips, revealing a half-moon doorway and I’m blinded by eyefuls of white, snowcapped mountains now surrounding the park. Seriously? Really? Enough already. This is the desert and I’m on vacation-ish. Time to check weatherbug. All rain and no sun make Dan a something something… The coin is flipped a few times, but ultimately the decision to stay an additional night is easily made due to the impending rain, the lack of desire to pack up wet gear and my resolve to have at least one nice night in a campground. Bring it nature. Expectations of a very long day and tent fever set in as I hunker down to spend the day reading, writing and literally chillin’ out in the tent. Finding it suits me, the day is spent inside the thin skin that separates wet from dry and coming out is not an option. It’s necessary to go to the station to pay for the extra evening as a guest of Kartchner Caverns state park, and the rangers are unusually glad to see me. This is not a treatment that I am used to, but apparently they weren’t sure if I was actually still alive inside my tent and I had been the topic of some discussion. That crazy biker with Wisconsin plates. I wonder who had the over…
A momentary break in the weather offers a bit of reprieve and an opportunity to spread my increasingly contortionistic wings, which turns me into the direction of my neighbors from Colorado. A little, old, seemingly harmless couple offer friendly salutations then spews poisonous froth that is steeped deeply in pro-American ideals and their blatant racism is like a blind-side round-house to the jaw. My Jedi mind tricks to politely steer the conversation into alleys of travel and landscape, rather than that of politics and economy are easily thwarted by these Siths in Yoda’s clothing. Old and tiny, yet strong and powerful, their resolve is undeniable and I am easily defeated. Mrs. Evil-Yoda’s socially degrading, dehumanizing and morally reprehensible tirade eventually peters out and she invites me to a nice dinner. I choose ramen, my tolerance and my dignity.
Tomorrow, I will take that tolerance, dignity, open mindedness, and human decency, load it onto my bike, and make tracks for New Mexico. Rising slowly, I meticulously pack the bike and efficiency in this area still hasn’t seemed to find its way into this part of the program. Surrounded by snowy mountains and opaque breath, I wait until just before 10am to head out, with aspirations of warmer weather as I travel further south and east.
My path today takes me on a nostalgic pass through Bisbee, where the need to stop and look at some familiar establishments and the Lavender Pit Mine forces me off the bike and onto past thoughts of unfortunate circumstances.
Lunch is ok.
New Mexico… look out.
"The bike may break me. The road may take me. I'll forever be alive knowing that I followed the road paved by my heart."
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