Eastern Oregon






So these are the towns I need to write about...but I only got to tonight's really. If I'm feeling ambitious maybe ill write later, but enjoy anyway ha.
Unity
John Day
Dayville and my 21st!
I slept up in the sanctuary and they didn't find me to wake me up right before breakfast which was nice. When I woke up, the first thing I told Aileen was how mature I felt now that I was 21 years old. It was a really short day on the bike, which I rode how they had decorated it, although it got really hot and stayed unbearably so inside at the host. in town, I exercized my newfound rights, by the river and it was a lot of fun.
I slept in the kitchen which was cooler and so got a refreshingly good nights sleep.
Fossil
One sentence: beautiful desert valley, huge awesome melting climb, music at dinner, and sleeping in a real bed!
Maupin
Today we started out a tad later, waking at 6 and I won the rock paper scissors face-off to drive to the church. It was only like 5 blocks, but still the first time behind a wheel in two months. Really wasn't that exciting though. The best part was that when we turned on Tim's radio we got to jam to "Dancing Queen" for that minute and a half! Breakfast was pancakes and scrambled eggs, everything I could ask for.
Leaving town we hit the first climb within a mile, and although I was already with the lead group, I felt great and took off. Flying up the hill, I was adapting "I'll Fly Away" in my head to I'll Climb Away and my legs didn't tire all the way up. At one point it switched back to where I could see people below me and I shouted to them haha. At the top was one of the ladies I had talked to the night before who did international relief work and had Kristen and Alyson for the night, taking pictures. I stopped and chatted with her for awhile more, and waited for the others. They got there and then down the hill we went together, and it was a sweet dowhill. By the bottom it was just Will G and I, before long though we were going up again. The second climb seemed to last forever, and after awhile Tio got a flat. I waited with him, and took the tiny villanous sharp rock out of his tire. Mark passed us outta nowhere, then Joe and Aileen and then Noah and Emily waited with us.
After he got it changed we all took off and I started cruisin, then it was just Noah and I. It felt good flying up again, I could feel the first climb though. Eventually we passed Joe and Aileen back, but knew Mark was long gone. After what seemed to be like 12 miles of climbing, we reached a summit and stopped to stretch and wait for ppl. When Aileen pulled up, she looked to horizon and out of the desert we could see giant Mt Hood rising above. It was awesome and I don't know how we didn't notice. The mountain appeared so huge and was all snow covered, out of the desert that as other caught up and we pointed, Tio most memorably just screamed "Good lord!!" haha.
Another sweet descent took us into the tiny town of Antelope and to lunch, where we had brown bag lunches complete with cold cuts from our hosts in Fossil! I took off with Mark and Dave, and right out of lunch, up we went. It ended up being just Mark and I, and at mile 40 we made the turn onto the Bake Oven. From here, we could clearly see three giant white mountains...and couldn't tell which was Hood. The Bake Oven was hot but downhill and tolerable. We had heard of a massive climb at the end of the day, but as we grew closer the only mountain was that giant one, presumably Hood, and were going downhill still. We approached the Descheutes River and its massive gorge, and before long took an incredible descent down to the river level and to Maupin. The town was on the other side of the bridge and up the other side of the gorge a little, which I guess was the climb there but it was nothing, lame. When we hit the steep descent, the hot air hit us literally like an open oven in the face. It was suuper hot in town, and we debated ice cream but went to the host first. Good thing we did, cuz they had root beer floats ready!! And tons of other snacks and goodies, and ac...heaven. Dave was right behind us and before too long others started rollin in.
Tonight I then got to hammock, read, talk to Lauren, sort my bin for the final time and now blog wirelessly from the hammocl before bed! I don't feel much like doing the other posts on this little thumb keyboard right now tho haha, its finally cooled off and I'm gonna catch some shut eye before our big day tomorrow over the mtn and into Gresham (portland)!
Thorns?
Ontario, OREGON
Sixty-two miles after a rest day is nothing for us now, and so today was definitely an easier day. My legs were sore, but after stretching at mile 15 I was all good. A lot of farms on the way here, including the Idaho University's experimental ones which seemed...interesting. We all waited for everyone at the state line, and with the two people we had met who were biking across the country for fun who were really cool, to take a state line picture with everyone in our last state!
Leaving the sign looked like a trainwreck though. I forget again what they're called, but these little thorns gave just about everyone on the trip flat tires. Mark, earlier, and flats in both tires at the same time! Somehow I managed to luck out, I think the record was Emma with three flats. And then in town at McDonald's, Kristens tire did the weirdest thing ever, it got like pimples haha hard to explain but really crazy. She managed to ride it to the host somehow before it got flat in the parking lot though.
Dinner tonight was spaghetti and salad, which was good and since then I've had time to talk to Lauren for a long time for the second night in a row which has been really nice. Also got to take out and fix Raleigh's fork, read some of a book, and now blog! Although I've only got three hours to sleep...but I'm sure there will be more time to sleep when I'm not biking across the country.
84 miles tomorrow to Unity, thanks for reading!
A tough, needed rest day
Day Off
Needless to say, many of us also spent the day off coping with this loss as well. I enjoyed the sleeping in, and spent most of the morning doing things on the computer and planning the end of the trip with Mom. After that I walked around town for awhile, got a milkshake, and then came back to make dinner for the fourth night in a row on dinner crew. Heather shared her recipe for her award-winning grilled cheese, which won the Tilamook grilled cheese competition her first year in it. They were the best grilled cheese I've ever had, I think most of the group shared that sentiment.





