Thursday, April 8, 2010

Day#2 (4.1.10)



I slept great last night. I set up camp in an abandoned lot in the middle of a grouping of farm fields. It had a couple of buildings that were partially destroyed, what looked like to be the doing of a vicious storm some time ago. There was also a completely stripped car and old truck rusted to a color that just radiated in the morning sun. I plotted my tent behind one of the collapsed structures where I couldn’t be easily seen from the adjacent roadway. For my first night stealth camping, I was very happy with the experience.


I quickly stowed away my tent and other belongings back to their rightful place on the bike and left around eight. When I set out I realized I was low on water and I should refill my three water bottles as soon as possible. About a half hour into riding I went through the small town of Stryker where I was unable to find a drinking fountain. Fifteen minutes later after I had left the area, I realized that I could have just gone to a public restroom and used the sink, but I decided I had already travelled too far and that another source would turn up soon.


When I stopped to take one of my routine breaks, a man approached me from his driveway. He asked me where I was going and I told him about my trip. After a minute of chatting, the man introduced himself as Steve and did the most remarkable thing I’ve witnessed thus far. He handed me a bottle of water. I didn’t say I was low on water, but perhaps he knew. It was the most random piece of generosity I’ve been given in a long time.

Late that morning I stopped at a local park and caught up on some computer work. Of course as soon as I opened my laptop, the grounds crew showed up and started mowing so I got out of there pretty quickly.

Then the unbelievable happened. At around noon, I was just a couple miles outside the next town when I felt this intense vibration coming up through my feet. Before I knew what happened, my pedals froze up and I had to pull over. My first instinct was to look back at the rear cog set. To explain in simple terms what happened, the gear set broke off the axle. I attempted for the next hour trying to fix the problem. I was able to make a temporary repair that I would hope get me to the nearest bike shop 30 miles away, but the makeshift fix gave way not a mile ahead.

In what seemed like the middle of nowhere, I had few options. My first time bicycle touring, I faced what is the most dreaded problem of any cyclist. In the six months I took preparing for this trip, through all the effort of finding a bicycle, getting it tuned up, ordering the accessories and supplies I needed…going through every possible scenario in my head, not once did this come up. In fact, during all my research I never read anybody suffering this particular kind of breakdown. Not one. I had prepared for everything else: flat tires, broken spokes, warped rims, loose brakes, sticky shifting, broken chain…but the gear mechanism failing? I’ve never heard of that.

Well either way, I have to take my bike into a bike shop first thing tomorrow morning and see what the problem is. I promise that as soon as everything is fixed, I’ll be back on the road and writing interesting content before you know it.

Day#1 (3.31.10)

My first day on the road was nothing to complain about. I left home at 9:00 a.m. and arrived in the city around 12:30 after 30 miles of biking. At one point before I left, I thought I should be afraid of traveling alone for the next six months. This is the first time I will be away from my close family like my parents and siblings for more than a couple weeks.

A lot of people close to me thought I was giving up the friendships I had formed, as well as any hope of forming future, stable ones. But over the years, I’ve come to realize that I’ve never held any long-term relationships. Though I’ve had a lot of the same people circulating in my list of acquaintances, the importance of each individual has varied on a nearly year-to-year basis. I think the reason behind this pattern is due to the fact that I bore easily. I’m in no way commenting on the personalities of those close to me, but once I know a person well my interest drops off.

I hope that by completing my travels in a more bare and simple manner that I will be able to connect with people on a more intimate level. I aspire for those friendships that last a lifetime after only knowing the person for a couple of days. I want to cut through all the superficial garbage that people go through when trying to form a relationship.

Tonight will be my first time camping on what probably is someone else’s property. I plan on leaving the dense, crowded area for the farmed suburbs where I may ask a home owner if I could set up my tent on their lawn for the night. I’m close to exhaustion, but the day ends in high spirits. I’ve got almost a full week of sunny days ahead and a lot more pedaling to knock out.