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Sixty days on the road.

Friday, March 31, 2017

Recycling

I will not seek any great groaning glaciers on this trip, or climb pink granite peaks, or camp along an Ozark  Highlands trail, or sleep on deep snow hoping to scale Mt. Shasta.  No, I’ll head east on a bicycle, hoping to cross the desert before it gets too hot, and  meet Illinois after all the icicles have fallen from eves. 




After biking across America, from Virginia to Los Angeles in 2007, then halfway across Canada in 2009, then across the USA again on a southern route in 2013 and 2014, I feel ready to start again.  Call it “Recycling,” if you wish, but I'm excited.












I remember Jackrabbit Trading Post,
Route 66, Joseph City, AZ


Route 66, the “Mother Road” in John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath, brought Dust Bowl refugees to California in the thirties.  And again in WWII they came for jobs in our war plants, where my Aunt Vera died.  And this war baby remembers riding in a ’49 Plymouth past Jack Rabbit Trading Post.    







This is not a logical trip, for  bicycling close to cars is never sensible.  They are always dangerous.  But I’ve gained confidence over many rides, and feel ready to do it again for a sentimental journey.  That third grade attitude still prevails over reason.  



I remember gas stations like this,
 and they say a few of them still exist


I will ride alone and unsupported, and some say, with courage.  But they are wrong; it’s shear necessity—a need to do something adventurous.  











I chose Route 66 for its history, its culture, and because the train ride home from Chicago sounds pleasant.  I’ll visit campsites of those dust-bowl pioneers and the motor courts of post-war migrants to California in the fifties, and places where I, as a child, went on summer vacations.  






So, with nostalgia, anticipation, and a sense of danger, I will set off on April 5 from Pasadena, arriving in Chicago about June 15.  Please join me in some way, commenting here on the blog or by email.  I welcome your thoughts and poems.  But, of course, you can ask to be removed from this list, if it’s all too much.





“You may be saying ‘She wanders the world in full circles and comes back two months later’
I always eat with strangers
The hours pass and time turns to wood.
There is a hero inside you, bigger than you are.  
      Jackie Chou—from her chapbook of March, 2017

17 comments:

  1. As I nurse my overacting wisdom in my tooth I look forward to your adventure that will consume more than a set of tires. Don't forget the pump!

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    1. My wisdom is under reacting, giving way to a bit of foolishness, Alex. but I haven't forgot the pump. Thanks for joining me here another time.

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  2. I've got my pink helmet on and I'm ready to roll. 🌸x

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    1. Excellent, Lois. We’ll strum chords together, or tie them to tent stakes.

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  3. pin your 'extra' bike to your lapel,
    just in case you need a backup

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    1. Ok Junnie, or maybe I'll keep it in its little pink case so both bikes don't break.

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  4. Hello dear Sharon, you haven't left yet, though we said goodbye a couple of hours ago --see you June 15 or after! We were happy for our cheerful time together listening to the fine words of Luis Rodriguez and Lois' sensitive questions on KPFK. And so I had to finally begin following your blog as I always do, and love your prelude. I do love your destination, Chicago is family to us and dear friends are there too, and next to where we are here, a city full of heart, culture and intelligence.. I think you will find it so, though it is such a small part really of your trip! More time to explore Chicago I think, would be a good addition. (as if you need an addition!)

    I love how you quoted Jackie's words as part of your introduction, and I can feel why. Her solo explorations in many ways so in tune with yours, with thoughtful individuality, as an outsider, though with warmth, sincerity and capacity for love. Thank you for using her words, it brought me back to her little book and her fine, poems with the outstanding lines you mention. I found all of them by looking again, just now, closely at her poems, scattered here and there in four or five of them!

    begin again
    on a different trail
    the same gold rush
    come back with your pearls
    of wisdom


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    1. Great to have you along again, Kathabela, on another “gold rush” Love your poem.

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  5. Don't take any wooden nickels. L C

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  6. But I want wooden nickels, L C, whoever you are.

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  7. You didn't mention Madrid, just outside of Barstow. I thought it was on your path, but perhaps just a little beaten off. Here is a little tale from there:

    http://jolteon13.blogspot.com/2015/01/madrid.html

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    1. I can’t find Madrid on google maps, and no Audi a5 either. It’s a good poem though, and sad. “two-fourteen” is good too.

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    2. and everyone says you have no taste...

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