Preparation


E-mail sent to a distribution of friends, family, and acquaintances:


I’ve been talking about it with great excitement for over two years….and now the event is about to happen……

I’m about to ride in the Iron Butt Rally!

I’m departing for St. Louis on August 14th and will actually begin riding on Monday, August 21st, at 10 a.m. local time CDT. The finish at 10 a.m. on Friday, August 31st. It’s an 11 day vacation for me that I’m eager to go look for America.

Most have heard me talk about it……extensively. For those that that haven’t…the basic idea is it’s a bit like a scavenger hunt and I’ll be competing with about 100 others (see explanation towards end of e-mail).

Most important is that there will be a variety of information resources to keep an eye on what I’m up to.

Please understand I probably won’t be able to return e-mails or cell phone calls during the ride. I’ll be a bit focused on things like routing and riding, but assured I have four simple goals.

Finish!

Finish Safely!

Finish Without Having to Talk To Johnny Law!

….and if I accomplish the first three….

Finish Well!

Enjoy watching the ride!

Matt

—————————————-

Resources to Keep Up with Matt

The Iron Butt Rally Website - http://www.ironbuttrally.com/IBR/2007.cfmThis is the official website and will give a great overview of the event through “daily dispatches” from the official “scribe”. This site is a must read and will truly give you a forest-for-the-trees perspective of the whole event.

My Personal Blog - www.mattwatkins.org/ibr

Hopefully, I’ll be able to have time to do the occasional update and even download a picture or two, but even if I don’t I’ve enabled several friends and family members to post on my behalf. You also will have the ability to post comments if you want. …again…no guarantee I’ll respond, but I’m hoping to have a bit of time each day to check in.

There are also some links to my fellow competitors that may be updating their blogs.

Star-Traxx - www.star-traxx.com

Username: public

Password: public

This is cool technology! I’m planning to partner in the rally with Doug Chapman. He is an IBR veteran, nice guy, have ridden together some before, and has this wonderful piece of technology that actually transmits GPS position periodically and displays it on a map. This means you can tell where we are in North America updated approximately every hour that we’re riding. Combine this with the the “rally packs” they end up publishing online shortly after each checkpoint and you could possibly figure out where we’re headed.

It’s also likely a combined route for this rally will appear. See http://rally.star-traxx.com/ for a list of rallies that will likely have the 2007 Iron Butt with this information “aggregated” together. If so, the bike with 59435220 in the URL will be us.

Friends and Family

Besides these resources I will likely be keeping in contact with Dale “Warchild” Wilson (IBR veteran, IBR technical lead, mentor, and work colleague), and John Rider (work colleague). I’m counting on them to update my blog if I tell them some detail over the phone. My family, Clark Watkins and Kris Watkins, will be driving out for the finish of the event…so will probably be the first to see on the flip side.

Countdown to The Rally Start

http://www.timeanddate.com/counters/customcounter.html?month=8&day=20&year=2007&hour=10&min=0&sec=0&p0=605

Information About the Iron Butt Rally

The Iron Butt Rally Concept - http://www.ironbuttrally.com/IBR/default.cfm

The idea of “Bagging a Bonus” - The basic part of the rally is to ride to assigned checkpoints around North America within specified time windows, but the meat of the rally is visiting places or “bonus” locations to accumulate as many points as possible. But, the rally master gives you a packet of possible “bonii” (plural of bonus) that is like a smorgasbord. In this metaphor it’s impossible to eat everything…..without becoming very, very sick.

The trick is to figure out which combination of dozens of bonii net the largest amount of points within the time window allowed. Typically, one gets this packet at each “leg” of the rally and tries to locate everything on a map and/or laptop computer with a mapping program like Microsoft Streets and Trips. You figure out how much time you have, how much distance you can travel, which bonii you can snag within the time, strategy for that particular leg, etc.

Again, it’s about time and distance management while reacting to the unknowns of weather, traffic, construction, road conditions, and many other variables…..realizing that many of the places I have never, ever been to before. While a good GPS with XM radio might help it’s no wonder that the front-runner in this sport, Jim Owen, is an airline pilot by day.

Miscou Island 17,745 points Available daylight hours

New Brunswick, Canada

Take a picture of the Miscou Island Lighthouse

There are many ways to get to Miscou Island, this is one possible route: starting in Maine, take I-95 north, crossing the border into Canada and continuing on NB-95. Turn right on TC-2 and ride approximately 67 miles. Turn left onto NB-8 and continue for approximately 110 miles to NB-11. Go north toward Caraquet, approximately 59 miles and turn right onto NB-113. Stay on NB-113 all the way to the extreme northeastern point of the island. The lighthouse is at the end of the road.

Key West, Florida 14,001 points Available daylight hours

Take a picture of the Key West lighthouse

Key West is located in extreme southern Florida at the end of US-1. Take US-1 south into the town of Key West. At the US-1/A1A split, bear RIGHT staying on US-1. Continue South on US-1 (which is also known as Truman Ave.) past mile marker 1. Cross the main party/tourist street of Duval Street to the next intersection south which is the intersection of Truman Ave. and Whitehead Street. The lighthouse is approx. 150 feet to the right on Whitehead St. and will be at approximately the 2 o’clock position as you are sitting at the traffic light at Truman and Whitehead. You do NOT have to go on the grounds and pay an entry fee to take a picture of the lighthouse.

Riders to Watch - There are a few folks that are seasoned veterans and definitely worth watching.

Some of my FJR cronies to watch:

  • Tobie and Lisa S. (and possibly Brian R. on a V-strom) - Yakima couple and Nevada boy. This duo occasionally turned trio has been doing very well on the 1 and 5 day rallies the past several seasons. They epitomize the adage that they are more than the sum of their parts. Tobie’s a veteran and Lisa is a rookie like me. Brian started the ‘05, but had an unfortunate encounter with a deer and had to withdraw, but is all healed up with the World’s Most Expensive V-Strom
  • Greg M. - An IBR rookie Greg absolutely knows how to ride long distances for long periods of time and think his way through puzzles. If he can keep his bike upright, the ol’ girl doesn’t spew it’s guts on the road, and not have a helmet fire…he will be a force.

2007 Rules - http://www.ironbuttrally.com/IBR/2007/IBR_07_Rules.doc

You made it this far in the e-mail and still want to know more. Enjoy the Word Document that I have to read and understand. If you understand it all….be sure and explain it to me sometime. ;)

Gratuitous Inspired Song Lyric

Kathy, I said as we boarded a Greyhound in Pittsburgh
Michigan seems like a dream to me now
It took me four days to hitchhike from Saginaw
I’ve gone to look for America

Simon and Garfunkel

I kind of feel a bit bad about last minute maintenance, but getting an appointment for the 52K valve check (at 54K) and replacing a broken gas cap was difficult to wrangle at Desert Valley Powersports in combination with my schedule.

But, I’m at DVP right now typing on a wonderful kiosk they let me use and realizing that I’m leaving for St. Louis in…like….FOUR DAYS!

After the gas cap and valve check (and probably a coin toss whether it will need any adjustment)….the bike is ready to ride in the IBR. I’ve finally gotten my Cobra CB integrated into the system without being annoying, but can’t quite figure out how to use bike power for the CB without muting the GPS. My workaround will be to power the CB with nine D batteries in a pack I’ve built from Rad Shack.

It should last for days…as the internal AA would last about 20 hours and D hold about 9 times as much juice.

I am having trouble getting my cell phone to consistently plug into the system. Sometimes it plugs right in and other times it cogitates and says “Device not recognized” like it doesn’t like the little plug-in. Another nice to have, but I can live without.

Final thing I’m debating is whether to have my buddy Smitty install the cruise control or not. He’s a pro, but usually installs in the battery tray. Since I moved the Starcom there…..I’d have to go external under the side bag like my buddy Skyway did. We’ll see if I can get a bracket built soon enough.

Now, off to read my CB manual and IBR rules a bit more…..while I watch my friend and fellow competitor spin his little beanie off about his bike. ;)

UPDATE: Just checked on bike progress and the valves were in spec…no adjustment necessary.  Gotta love these Yamahas!

T-minus 14 days and counting until I depart for St. Louis and 20 days until the rally starts. I get butterflies thinking about it!

Part of the proof that things are getting interesting is that the official 2007 IBR Rules (Microsoft Word) were released today as the 2007 IBR Website was launched.

Two changes I noted include a specific prohibition on digital cameras (which either was a change or I had misread the rules initially….but is fine since I decided to go with Polaroid after the Utah 1088) and that fuel logs are not quite the “all or none” affair they have been in the past. Fuel logs are worth up to 10,000 points with errors costing portions of that amount including missing or incorrect information at 500 points per error and missing receipts at 1,000 a pop.

This seems a bit kinder and gentler than my experience last year in SPANK, but I’m still going to strive for flawless logs this year. I’m still not quite healed up from the butt-reaming I gave own self at SPANK last year.

I would bet there are other changes, but I haven’t spotted any others on my initial read through.

Steve Chalmers is a Gentleman among Gentleman. Thanks Steve for letting me come to Utah and play!

Matt

THE PROLOGUE - Gotta Respect My Roots!

This is the week of the Utah 1088 where I started this whole competitive rallying business. Nearly three years ago at the urging of my mentor, Warchild, I entered this event and had 9 months to stew, imagine, and get ready for the event in Salt Lake City.

The Rally Master, Steve Chalmers, invites all of us to come down and “play” in Utah each year….and I gotta say after my first rally I was seriously hooked. Perhaps it had something to do with my decent rookie finish or maybe it was that I then spent the season pondering how I could become more efficient and hone a skill set of a sport I seemed to have some talent in.

Me finishing my ride in 2005. Man, aren’t those halogen driving lights quaint?

I might have placed even higher in 2006 had I not had to have a little discussion with a Duchesne police officer and have my all-important sealed envelope torn. As it was that rally marked an important point because in my mind’s eye I conceived and exectuted a plan that was in the top 3 or so.

The whole field was even rewarded with a professional article from Cycle World that did a good job giving a glimpse of why we like to ride 2 wheel bikes for insanely long distances and opressingly hot and cold conditions.

What will Steve in store for us this year?

Well, besides some great BBQ and a chance to meet many of my LD friends…..it will look like 26 hours of Utah fun.

Heading down late Wednesday night and hopefully get some Zzzzs before the BBQ, technical inspection Friday (where I will try very hard to not lose my wallet), a pre-visit to our WFO-6 site at The Marriott in Park City, a good meal Friday evening, and good night’s sleep.

Come Saturday morning at 7 a.m. I’ll either be riding a rock-solidly planned route that even Jim Owen would approve….or be suffering from a helmet fire and aiming my bike in a random direction away from SLC.

TOUGH DAY FOR WARCHILD - June 21, Thursday Evening, 18:00 (times are in Mountain Standard Time unless noted otherwise)
“A Kamikazee jack rabbit decides to charge my bike. I thought it was a dog! It cracked every piece of plastic on the front.”, Warchild relayed to the small crowd as he rolled into Steve Chalmers infamous Thursday night BBQ.

The Blackbird looked maimed and a small puddle of oil was forming under the bike. “Looks my chain oiler went nuts.”

……as if this wasn’t bad enough…then Dale’s world turn to total shit in about 15 minutes.

“Dude…..you have it kinda funky on the centerstand. It’s really hot. You wanna think about reparking that somewhere more level.”, I said.

He then got on and the bike totally went over on it’s side. I watched and stood there in total shock. No decisive save…just me looking like a doof with him trying to lift it back up and another guy helping.

Back upright he then looked at me and grabbed his left bicep, “Something just popped on tore……?!” Looking over his arm you could see a divot where the muscle was supposed to be and he commented how curious it felt.

His BBQ was cut short as a big puddle oil formed under the bike. Not good. Way too much oil for the oiler.

A picture of where the right side of the centerstand punched through the gooey pavement in a hot Utah evening.

Meanwhile, I found a dude with a veritable pharmacy and find a pain pill and muscle relaxer for the boy. We looked it over a bit more at the hotel, but he went to bed and did his impersonation a bowl full of Jello.

He’ll be sore, but a hopefully bit happier in the morning.

I’ve got a burned out tail light and have to take off a bunch of things to fix it, but that will wait until morning also. Time to head to the bar, drink, and tell some tall tales….and then sleep.

Friday, 09:00

I run across Dale having breakfast and he gives me a look and says, “What was that orange pill? It turned me into Rubber Man!”

“Flexeril. It turns you into a pool of melted Jello for about 12 hours. I bet your arm felt better though.”

Get gives me another look.

Off to Wal-Mart he heads for a quart of oil and hopefully things are better, but after returning the seal has popped back out.

Dale has decided to limp back home. Bummer. Bad Kharma.


11:00

I refuse to let it shake me, but I had to tear apart about half of my bike to replace a burned out tail lamp. It makes zero functional difference, but I just don’t want to be drawing unnecessary attention of any of Utah’s law enforcement folks. It was actually kind of fun spreading crap all over the place and a bunch of newbies coming up to me like it’s a huge deal to tear apart an FJR in a parking lot.

I don’t know if I was trying act the part of a “veteran”, it wasn’t a big deal, or I was just putting on a show. I had actually put fresh bulbs in when I repaired my subframe, but one went out anyway.

But, by 11 a.m. it’s frickin’ hot and I’m starting to get woozy. Buttoned the thing back up and jumped in the pool. Life is better now.

13:48

It seems a field caught fire on part of the course we’re supposed to do an odomoter check and it’s taking longer than expected to get it open.

It’s one of those that’s beyond the Rally Master’s control.

……OH…..just changed. ….Steve just came in and altered the course. ….Headed out now!!!!

Once I do my odo check I’m good until the riders meeting at 7 p.m.

19:15

Steve’s hosting our rider’s meeting and his cell phone rings. Steve says, “Yeah…..I’m in the middle of a riders meeting……..well get on over here!” and hangs up.

“Dale is riding back. He fixed his bike.”, Steve says. ……large applause.

Details are sketchy, but he was in Reno and fixed his bike. However, oing the math…he’s gotta ride 6 or 7 hours to get here…which means 2 a.m. or so….so that he can get 3 hours of sleep to then run in a 26 hour rally.

I’m not making any bets against him for sure…..I’m cheering the guy on for digging deep personally and busting his ass to start.

You already won in my book Dale.

A FINE MORNING FULL OF POSSIBILITIES - Saturday, 05:29

Got up 15 minutes ago, got dressed, and working on getting rid of a burger from last night if you know what I mean. ;) Not glamorous, but I am multi-tasking and wouldn’t have blogged otherwise. We have a riders meeting in 30 minutes….and our packets in 1 hour in 15 minutes.

Only thing we know is the first checkpoint is not to long after the start and we gotta go there. I pondered one of the alternate routes pretty seriously as it was a mileage route, but could include points from the main route, but deciding to go with the main route to be sure. It just seemed a little too …..ummmm….too good?

It’s going to be a fun ride!!!!

Matt

(Note: The next 24 hours is written after the fact to report on the adventure. It was not blogged live.)

LEG 1 - Saturday, 07:00

The bulls from Salt Lake City are loose! The 2007 Utah 1088 is underway.

I guessed right that the first checkpoint was going to be Nephi, but was off one hour in that the checkpoint opened at 10 a.m. instead of 9 a.m. I was able to do the slow-ride on my first try and and scooped up 8901 points. I was on the board!

The easy money was on a bonus north to Antelope Island and snap a picture of trailhead. It was worth 9454 points. However, to get there required riding through a local run and parade….that Steve said he knew all about after the fact. Get a few dozen riders having to wait for 7 year olds jogging down the street that are into the rally less than 45 minutes and you’ve got some old fashioned mind screwing going on. Good job Steve!

Once clear of the sea of pedestrians you pay your $4.00 at a booth and then drive a causeway out to Antelope Island. The aroma of the salt flats is utterly disgusting, but a fun view when you get there.

I was about the third one there and this is what became a typical routine. Arrive, dismount, reread bonus for instructions, pull out camera and hat, take picture with a hat in it, write down bonus information details including odometer and time, repack everything, go. When I got good…I could make it a 4 or 5 minute routine.

Upon leaving I came up on a fellow rider that was at the bonus first and appeared to be pulled over by a LEO. Later they’d say they were the “sacrificial lamb” and had their envelope torn that contained their drivers license. 8901 points for the bonus and -24,000 points for a torn envelope. In the hole…ouch!

After Antelope it was a direct route to Nephi with a one minute stopover at one exit to write down a small 102 point bonus. If one becomes a top finisher…these kind of details are important to snag. I arrived at the checkpoint about 5 minutes before it opened and used the time to relieve myself of some all-important extra fluids and recharge my first of many hydration container fill-ups.

Leg 1 Attempted Points

    • Slow-ride: 8901
    • Antelop Island: 9454
    • Identify a Utah Highway: 102
    • Arrive to Checkpoint #1: 1500
    • Envelope: Untorn

LEG 2 - Nephi, UT, Saturday, 10:00

Move Over Jungo Road…..Hello Utah Road 400!

I turned in my Leg 1 packet and memory card to then be handed a packet that would take me for the next 23 hours through the rally. Leg 2 required getting to Checkpoint #2 in Torrey, Utah; Leg 3 required getting to Checkpoint #3 in Roosevelt, Utah (which would become interesting for a variety of reasons later).

The first bonus was to do up to 100 push-ups at 50 points each. Not wanting to scare any of the competitors off and give them a fighting chance of keeping up with me I decided to do 30 of them. ;)

This leg was a variety of possible routes and I did have some trouble determining what the optimal route was, but the calling to Grosvenor Arch at 11,111 points was just too much to pass up. So, I entered the coordinates to the nearest findable location on my GPS of Kodachrome State Park and added on another hour to guestimate time down this mysterious Utah Road 400. After 50 miles of gravel roads at Simpson Springs last year…how hard could it be?

Steve did say, “This is absolutely one of the roughest roads I have ever had the pleasure of riding”, but really….how hard could it be?

On the way I snagged Old Cove Fort for 5912 points at and had to recharge my vest already. I ended up using the second of my hydration containers to dip the vest into. It was in the 90’s and was going to be a scorcher of a day.

As I approached Panguitch (which I’d later figure out I missed a nearby bonus for xxx points) Greg Marbach came up quickly on my 6 o’clock. At that point I had sucked the other container dry and knew a hugely important part to not folding by sundown was to keep hydrated. As I stopped for some Gatorade and more water Greg kept going and I hoped to catch up with him before he finished Grosvenor Arch.

Reading the bonus more thoroughly while cruising through the berg of Tropic Steve did warn us even more stylishly, “IF IT HAS RAINED….OR ABOUT TO RAIN, DO NOT ATTEMPT TO GATHER THE POINTS FOR THIS BONUS AS IT IS AS SLIPPERY AS GREASED OWL SHIT!” Sue he included it in bold and capital letters, but if he can ride it on his Hondapotamus…how hard can it be?

Fuck me……

It was way harder…….

I full expected the washboard factor and figured it was the cost of doing business, but I would have no idea that deep fluffy dry quicksand would make you do a tank slapper in .4 seconds and require putting your feet out like outriggers. I LOOKED FORWARD TO WASHBOARD and hunted out any I could find! Washboard meant traction for the front tire and shock longevity be damned.

I really wish I could have stopped for a picture of how crappy this road was I was, because I was taken back to being 7 years old on my dirt bike and trying deep gravel for the first time. I cried to my Dad then and cried again this time.

The 11 mile out took about 45 minutes to ride…..each way.

On the way out I practiced my Indian tracking skills and saw “Skooter-tracks” and realized we were the first two bikes out here. Not a GS! Not a V-Strom first. Not a Triumph Tiger……but two freakin’ FJR streetbikes are pretending they’re dual-sports! Some local dirtbike riders on KTM’s and 26 inch waists cruised by standing on their pegs and shaking their heads.

Picture from Wikipedia about Road 400, but I gotta say that this picture shows the nice view, but no washboard or sand drifts.

I’d see tracks from an Avon tire and then two or three franticly stabbing boot prints in the dirt where Greg had saved himself from a tank slapper. Then dragging boot prints until he was clear of each sand drift.

When I got to the arch Greg was in full freak-out mode and had said I was just a few minutes behind him…so I guess I found this road from hell easier than him. This picture sums up this bonus and I cannot overstate that it’s directed towards the challenge of the bonus….not the Rally Master….which I give huge props to for finding this to-be-legendary bonus.

And the gravel parking you see in the picture? It’s like a freshly paved I-15 compared to the road I didn’t take a picture of…..trust me.

Riding back on the road I ended seeming to be the stronger rider on this rough stuff and helped Greg find the better of the lines through the muck. Truth is the ride out was a bit easier and quicker. We passed a GS on the way in felt a little less like we were in the Twilight Zone, but then Dick Peek on another FJR…..so back to Freaky Land.

We’d find out later that about a dozen people spilled their bikes on this road including GS and Triumphs, but not one FJR biffed. Jim Owen would even come back with scars on his brand new RT, red dust covered Stich, and biffed three times. However, he road the entire 46 miles of this road by coming up from Page.

Once back out on old-fashioned asphalt Greg led again and he became the dominant rider with me playing catch-up in the straights. I saw the bars flip from 2 to 1 on my main tank and I turned the valve on my auxiliary tank….crossing my fingers. It was freakin’ hot outside and I’m increasingly come to the realization that the FJR tank has a pressure spring on it that’s designed to hold a certain amount of tank pressure before it burps. Even though it’s been a matter of some debate with FJR owners and cells…when I saw the gauge quickly start flashing reserve I new I was blowing precious tank fuel into the aux. tank.

As I rode into Escalante I told Greg I needed to gas up and to continue on without me. With a datapoint in my mind that 101 degrees is too hot for the cell to work I filled up with 6 gallons in the main tank and left the aux. tank alone. Hopefully, I’d be able to use this later this evening when it cooled down.

Devil’s Garden

My gas stop was about 4 minutes and as reread the bonus details it was 12 miles of gravel. After our adventure on Road 400 the thought of 12 more miles of road that Steve dreamed up gives one a bit of pause…however he didn’t put any special warnings on this one so we took our chances…and were rewarded with a relative freeway of gravel.

I even caught up with Skooter the last mile or so….my gravel skills rock!

Picture of a sign and another 7164 points scooped up!

After we got back on the main road and headed east I started to remember my 2005 ride in the dark, but this time it was in the middle of the afternoon and the most breath-taking road I’ve ever been on. I’m talking about Hogsback Road and I’m increasingly convinced that there are few pictures of it on the Internet because everybody who goes there forgets to stop for a photo-op and rides it instead.

One of the few pictures on the Internet I could find….that give a hint of what this thing is like:

The view is so mesmerizing that Greg and I promptly ignored the bonus pack and drove by a bonus we’d realize the next day. An elevation sign that was 9 thousand-something feet. 455 points down the drain. Damn! Small Mistake #1

Rolling into Torrey I pulled the bike into the shade, checked in with staff, pulled out the laptop, bought a Subway sandwich and began plotting my next leg.

Leg 2 Attempted Points

    • Cove Fort: 8901
    • Grosvenor Arch: 9454
    • Devils Garden: 7164
    • Arrive to Checkpoint #2: 2000
    • Envelope Status: Untorn

Leg 2 Missed Points

    • Elevation Sign: 914

LEG 3 - Torrey, UT, Saturday, 17:30

The Wheels Come Off

I can’t exactly pinpoint when things went haywire, but I can say pretty confidently that through the end of Leg 2 I had made fairly decent choices and was probably a Top 10 rider.

That all changed in Leg 3.

As I sat fumbling through my laptop trying to make heads or tails of what seemed like a meager amount of points in the leg Greg left for points unknown although I was guessing he was headed to Vegas and that just didn’t sound good with all the heat. For some reason it sounded like a sucker bonus to me. Big Mistake #2.

There looked to be options to visit Monument Valley and take a picture of it…or possibly Grand Junction, Colorado, but all of them looked like it was difficult to reach and still make it to Checkpoint #3 (Mistake #3) in the early part of the checkpoint to hit some juicy stuff in Leg #4 (Mistake #4).

So, I decided to head to Roosevelt and headed East on US-12 through Capitol Reef. I scooped up two minor ones by counting window panes at the visitor center as 12 + 2 screens (363 points) and logs of the Fruta school as 11 (555 points). Chalmers would later state categorically there were 10…so that may be my Zelenz lighthouse I have to go back to and count again.

By Hanksville (456 points for answering the year the town was established) I was starting to get this sinking feeling about my choice. Two meaty choices of Grand Junction (7999), Arches National Park (8259), Kayenta (7575), and Monument Valley (4444) just didn’t jive with making it to Roosevelt in time….let alone at the beginning of the checkpoint.

I think it was about Sundown near Price that it started to sink in that I really should have blown off Checkpoint #3, but I was now committed. To add insult to injury I misread the packet thinking looking for MP299 was after I changed from US-6/191 to US-191. MP299 would be up by Duschene because the markers started at like 230 on US-191.

I did try and snag an out-of-order bonus of another paltry 666 points by spotting a Port of Entry speed sign, but when I got to Duschene and the last milepost marker said 293….I knew something was wrong. I missed 755 points (Minor Mistake #5).

Rolling into Roosevelt I punched in the address for the Maverick Station I was supposed to find. Didn’t think it would be that hard to find being on the Highway, but as I rolled into where the GPS pointed 951 West Highway 40…..the lights were out. The attendant came out and said a fuse was popped and that there were other motorcyclists down the road at the other Maverick on Highway 40. Strange…..very strange.

I actually had the GPS search for the nearest Maverick and tried going to it…only to find Garmin thinks this guy’s house in a residential neighborhood a mile from highway 40 is a Maverick. No good there either.

So I drive down 40 through the rest of town and find a very nicely lit Maverick that looks very promising….except nobody there either. Time to call Steve. He tells me taciturnly, “Read your packet….it’s all right there.” I do read it back to him and say that the Maverick address I punched in has electrical problems and not where anybody is at (I’d later find that my GPS directed me there, but the address was weirdly wrong). He also said it may be in Vernal, but Vernal is 28 miles away.

I called the Maverick and she said she was in Vernal itself….but the address was Roosevelt? She assured me she was at a Maverick in the city limits of Vernal and there were a bunch of motorcycles outside. I could go on for two more pages about this confusion thing and even add Duschene to the mix, but suffice it to say I rode to Vernal.

Yep, people here! If I’m wrong….I’m wrong with a bunch of other people!

Leg 3 Attempted Points

    • Capitol Reef Visitor Center: 363
    • Fruta School: 555
    • Hanksville: 456
    • Port of Entry: 666
    • Checkpoint #3: 2500
    • Envelope Status: Untorn

Leg 2 Missed Points

    • Road Sign near Price: 753

LEG 4 - Roosevelt, UT Vernal, UT, Saturday, 23:30

Fatalism Fatale

Resigned to my fate (much like I had experienced in Duschene a year ago) I rode the 4th leg like I was still in the thick of things. There was a juicy 6212 point bonus to identify the name of a Vietname Vet in Vernal and I scooped it up buoying my sun-weary spirits.

I rode US-191 up past the flaming gorge yet again the dark, but took solice there was no traffic with the exception of forest rats dithering on the road. I even stopped for a break at Maverick in the city limits of Urie (I didn’t dare ask the attendant if she thought she was actually in Walla Walla or something) and tried to help a wayward returned Missionary and wife looking for a lake somewhere in the Uintas he had last been at 20 some years ago. Apparently, they had been driving Forest Service roads for 8 hours with no luck.

I was personally chuckling as his problems made mine feel very small. I, at least, knew where where I should have gone (Vegas Baby!), where I was going (Fossil Butte Park near Kemmerer Wyoming), and was having an immense amount of fun doing it.

Fossil Butte Park

The road to Kemmerer was devoid of traffic and signs of life…except for a motorcycle with HID lights that was rolling out of the turn-off for Fossil. I think it was a GS and smiled.

Just as I finished snapping this photo another GS rolled up and we talked for a couple of minutes. Then a car came out of nowhere and I could tell as it nosed at us and parked it was a cop. Turns out it was this nice looking 50′ish man that began donning a jacket and flashlight. Not a cop, but he looked like a park ranger that didn’t want to be here.

“What are you doing here?”

Smiling like it’s a normal thing, “Taking a picture of that sign. I’m on a scavenger hunt.”

“At 3 in the morning? Why don’t you do it in the day?”

Knowing this is not going compute at all in his brain I try and turn on the charm and cooperation without giving him the full novel length explanation, “We do these scavenger hunts around the clock.”

“Well, the alarm company called and said the sensors to the building went off. You been up the road trying to get in the building?”

“Nope.”, I said, “Might have been the other motorcycle that left about 15 minutes ago.”….knowing that was only going to make him more confused and distrustful.

“Hmm. Yeah, I’m going to need to see some ID.”, the Ranger I’ve realized has no badge on his jacket says.

“No problem.”, as I reach for my wallet and realize that’s not going to help things as my ID is in an envelope there’s zero chance of him seeing without hauling me away, “…..there’s a problem. I can’t show you my license, but I have this wallet full of credit cards with my name on them and a emergency card I typed up.”

…meanwhile the dude on the GS hadn’t engaged in the conversation at all and hit the starter and sped off. He made the right choice that no good could come from further conversation with this Ranger.

I handed him several of the credit cards as if showing two pieces of plastic without my picture was better than one with a picture and he looked around my bike including a Washington State plate and either decided to believe me or give up trying to make sense of things. I’d like to think it was because I appeared infinitely patient and upbeat during the entire exchange as if I was happy a local could come out and actually see what I was doing near Kemmerer, Wyoming at 3:10 a.m., but it was probably because he was as tired as I was. Regardless, xxxx points snagged and I was headed back towards the barn.

Provo Falls

Now resigned to the fate that although I’d get more points in Leg #4 I also realize that I’m going to have scooped every possible point in this leg and still have over 2 hours to kill at the checkpoint…and not enough time to get back down to some of the bonii from Leg 2 or 3. I figured out what I neeeded to do before next year’s Utah 1088 to quit making the minor mistakes……memorize and internalize the freakin’ highway numbers in Utah and try and get a better sense of how the danged mile markers are organized.

As I cruised down WSH-150 (which I can now confidentally identify as Wyoming State Highway 150) it turned into USH-150 with a slight flourish, jog, and change in road composition (because it was now Utah State Highway 150). As the sky became lighter the aspen groves were quite pretty and I rolled into a parking lot with two outhouses and tons of time to kill with self-portraits and later image brightening on the laptop. XXXX more points scored.

And in a weird twist of fate…..I decided to take an actual picture of the Falls….that weren’t at all required for the bonus, but since I had lots of time I hiked down he 50 yards to the falls. Here’s the raw picture that gives an actual indicator of how dark it still is.

Here’s the picture with the magic of level and other image balance tricks. ….now whether running a digital camera is an advantage over a Polaroid? It certainly helps in publishing a blog, but did it hinder my rally scoring by worrying about composition? It’s a serious question I’m going to have to ask myself before the IBR.

Steve also insisted that all digital photos of bonii included the Utah 1088 hat. It’s not a bonus, but I just couldn’t help taking a picture of this forest rat. She was pre-dead when I got there for anybody wondering. A car hit ass and made her a second hole.

Leg 4 Attempted Points

    • Vernal Vietname Memorial: 363
    • Fossil Butte Park: 9776
    • Provo Falls: 4xxx
    • Peter Hoogeveen Cold Beverage Bonus: 333
    • Envelope Status: Untorn…about to be 12,000

Leg 4 Missed Points

    • Nada!!!!!

FINISH LINE - Salt Lake City, UT, Sunday, 07:15

The Fat Lady Sings

I got back at 7:15 with my frost beverage bonus and was toast on a stick. The ride back from Provo Falls where I didn’t have to engage my brain and simply pilot the motorcycle was a rough ride.

It surprised me how many people were back at 7:00 and weren’t still out bonus hunting. We all hit the wall and just couldn’t ride anymore.

08:30

30 minutes until the finishing line closes.

Marbach is still out as well as Owen.

I had a strong first and second leg, but didn’t make the right choice to skip the third leg and net more points. Realized at about 2 a.m. I think I still did decently….although there are some new hard chargers this year.

Went to one bonus that Greg and I were the first one down a washed out road that Chalmers warned us about. The drift dirt seemed to catch many bikes including Owen three times, but the three FJRs I know about that tried never biffed. The FJR is now officially a Dual Sport! A few pictures later.

No word on Warchild…he didn’t make the start. Hope he’s OK…headed back down to the finishing line to see how things are going….then sleep.

08:45

Greg rolled in. He made Vegas and skipped a checkpoint…which turned out to be right choice. We’ll see at the banquet if he executed well enough for a high finish. Everybody has agreed the 100+ heat yesterday toasted a lot of people. We all hit the wall a lot earlier than we expected and hoped. Even well hydrated with 2 gallons of water consumed and 2 gallons used by my vest wasn’t enough to not get zapped.

11:40

Just got a 2 hour nap and I’m much better. I’m using pronouns a little more accurately and completely now.

I’m sure housekeeping is going to want the room to clean soon, so I’ll move everything down to the bike for an afternoon departure after the banquet.

13:00

The banquet went well and Steve announced the Top 10, there were a lot of hands from folks that dropped their bikes, and most of them were on the road to Grovenor Arch. None of the three or so FJR riders raised their hands! Nor was anybody hurt.

The Top 10 point getters staggered me in the amount of points they got. Scott Schmidt ended up winning the event and #2 was his riding companion, Danny LaDue, who only came in second because he did 8 less push-ups than Scott. “I’m going to do push-ups every day between now and the next Utah 1088!”, he announced.

Clearly blowing off the 3rd checkpoint and using the time to scoop up bonuses that appeared in other legs was the way to go. I didn’t get it until I was most of the way to check point #3. Oh well, I got 23rd place, had a helluva time, and learned a bunch. Next year I totally am going to commit Utah road numbers to memory. I still had trouble locating bonus locations for the big picture.

My buddy Greg Marbach did well and cracked the Top 10. He placed 6th, but lamented riding past a few bonii that he wasn’t paying attention to. Vegas and blowing off Checkpoint #3 ended up being a good choice for a high place finish. My best leg was with him in that we rode that gnarly rode to the arches, and had a riot of a ride up Highway 12 from Escalante to Torrey on Hogsback Road in the late afternoon and perfect weather.

Summary of Finishers and Summary of Mileage

The banquet is summed by this picture. 104 degrees and I found a new use for my Skyway Hydration System. One beer after riding 1150+ miles was required to have a good time and a second just made me feel like a cheap date. ;)

OTHER RIDE REPORTS

Danny LaDue placed 2nd

Fear and Loathing in Utah by Reno John placed 28th

ONGOING EPILOGUE

Monday, 12:06 PST

Back home and got a bunch of sleep. I was so toast you could have put a fork in me and got juice to pour out!

From 104 degrees of sun beating down on me in SLC, through a pressure front to 80 degree niceness of Boise, through another front at LaGrande that was 37 degrees and rainy through the mountains….that’s a temperature change of nearly 70 degrees in about 9 hours.

Greg rode back with me and we got back about 2 a.m. He’s having his bike looked at possible ticker fix after 100,000+ miles. ;)

I feel much better and going back to add pictures to various posts. Do yourself a favor and go back to see them all.

I’m sure Chalmers will put out the full finish order in due time.

Tuesday, 16:30 PST

Warchild got back from the doctor and the prognosis for his torn bicep and riding season may be worse than expected.

It also turns out that the oil leak was because of an excess amount of crankcase pressure because of some arcane Blackbird valve issues. Once he resolved that, the bike ran fine. However, losing his wallet in Reno was the final kharmic blow and he packed up for home.

TechWest is an event where FJR motorcycle owners get together and invade our friend Dan Denchell’s Desert Valley Powersports and get seriously geeky about the FJR. We spend the day in the shop having technical sessions including Racetech Fork Upgrades, throttle body synchs, etc.

To up the ante I hosted a BBQ the Friday before and had a record 5 FJRs, an hold Honda, and a gas-tanker BlackBird in my garage. The Jetta got to park outside.

And I also seemed to be taking in strays off the street. (Note salt encrusted rim of drink in the lower right….. Margaritas went down quite smoothly….1 shot tequila, 1/2 shot orange liquer, 1 teaspoon Prickly Pear Syrup, 1/2 lime, 1 oz Margarita mix) I should note that the one being squeezed brought me the nicest of gifts……a custom machined cruise control mount…..BIG THANKS Ian!

The party livened up and I got a shot of a portion of the small fleet of bikes just before dark.

We also got a chance to compare HID lights….

Left is my motorcycle that has 6000K low beam HIDs and Hella FF200 HID High Beams in the 4300K range.

Middle is Skooter’s bike with 4300K low beam HIDs and Phillips “PHIDs”.

Right is Skyway’s Sylvania Silver Stars upgraded halogen low-beam bulbs. His Solteks are purposely off…….

……because with the Solteks on….his lights just destroy the competition.

Meanwhile, nature threw it’s own HID light show and my neighbor, William S., shot some photos.

Come Saturday I did snap a few photos….but ended up spending a lot of time preparing for clinics myself. Dale kicks off the morning festivities.

Taking a grinder to your beloved forks is always a tense moment. No tension in Warchild’s face.

A good view of our host Dan Denchell….and a great TL125 I’d love to have myself in the background…..and even some “tech” stuff going on in the middle!

Skooter demonstrating his Wal-Mart Sticky String Special ™ method of tire repair.

Not pretty, but he swears by them….after trimming off what looks like an alien hawked a green loogy.

General consensus from the 3 LD riders using 3 different methods…or at least how I remember it was:

I’ll still use the use the Progressive Suspension product as my primary for symetrical holes.  The plugs are designed to be an interference fit that “pops” into the whole.  The narrow neck part of the plug is wrapped in a special ring of tacky rubber that increases the stick when the vulcanizing process happens.

Sticky string looks to be a great back-up or if the hole is irregular and/or large.  With lots of material and lots of glue causing a chemical reaction there seems to be a good bond.  I carry it as a backup and it’s dirt cheap at Wal-Mart.

The Mushroom Plugger seems elegant, but relies exclusively on air pressure and physics to hold the plug in place.  There’s no chemical change to make the thing stick.   It just seems the PS option does this plus incorporates chemical reaction in the rubber.

Sunday morning was time to see off Skoot and Skyway off to the great wet Highway 395 in front of them. I went back home and went to bed to recover.

Some other photos including more detailed shots of the actual TechWest: Lisa and Mr. Lisa Steven’s Photos

See Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3 for background.

It turns out riding a motorcycle to all 39 counties in Washington State and take a picture of their courthouse……in less than 2 days was a bit optimistic. 52 hours is far more reasonable, you get far better pictures, and a perspective of Washington that I doubt anybody else has ever seen.

I also got this idea from a friend that this ride might make a good coffee table book. Here’s a short version to see if you think it’s worthy.

Enjoy.

Matt


The Route Map


Friday, May 5, 4:42 a.m. - Chehalis, Lewis CountyDragging myself out of bed at 4 a.m. I found I had only gotten about 3 hours of sleep and was in for a very long day. The Motel 6 was cheap at $39 including tax…..but the two skimpy pillows made me think they got them surplus from the airline industry. Riding 7 miles down the rainy road to my first county of 39 I felt butterflies in my stomach for a ride that I’d planned for over 6 months.Chehalis holds special meaning for me because it was my Great Grandfather, Theodore Hoss, that was a County Commissioner here nearly a century ago. He was an involved community member in nearby Centralia, was on City Council, and even ran for State and Federal Office. Also according to family legend involved in the Centralia Massacre as a Wobblie sympathizer.My first night shot of a building I’m sure he was heavily involved in construction photographed well with a 5 second exposure and my new Gorillapod. However, I made my first serious faux pas of the ride by losing my plug-in for my electric vest. It wouldn’t be until several hours later that I’d discover it was missing and I’d be in store for a chilly ride.


Friday, 9:30 a.m. - Anacortes Ferry TerminalBy this point I realized my schedule was too ambitious and where I had planned to get to the ferry a half hour before departure….I found myself driving up as they were boading and was the last one on. Doh!


Friday, 10:55 a.m. - Friday Harbor, Island CountyThis cute little courthouse was Spartan, but serves as county seat for the San Juan islands. Simple, no fuss, elegant. I had figured out the ferry schedule and had just enough time to snap the picture and turn around as they were reboarding the ferry. Once again I was the last one on and foreshadowed a long ride the next two days.

Addendum:  A few days after I initially posted this report and shared it with family, friends, and fellow LD riders I received an e-mail from Bob Higdon.  He’s the spiritual advisor and scribe emeritus of the Iron Butt Association and has been engaged in a ride to visit ALL of the counties of the entire United States. In excess of 3000 it makes my weekend blitzkrieg a small affair…however he still read through it with enjoyment.

However, in an e-mail he diplomatically suggested I had taken a picture of the wrong building in Friday Harbor.  Panicked I studied the picture evidence of his ride and concluded that we had taken our pictures at different angles and he had gotten principally the new wing with the original part of the courthouse to his right.  I had gotten principally the old part with a bit of the new visible on my right and behind.  We were both right.

Photo: Bob Higdon


Friday, 2:34 p.m. - Port Townsend, Jefferson CountyStunning.

Simply stunning.

The Jefferson County Courthouse is like visiting a castle. Port Townsend is probably the most grand courthouse of all in Washington and it’s residents should be proud of the landmark on top of the hill.It was one of my favorite courthouses and by this time I got a sense of the general architectural style of county building construction in Washington during the early 1900’s it was equally obvious that each county would choose some different feature or style to make their building distinctive.


Friday, 7:12 p.m. - Montesano, Grays Harbor County
This courthouse’s colors grabbed my attention. If this marine county had an official color…it would whatever shade of gray they’ve made this building. It just looks right.


Friday, 8:30 p.m. - South Bend, Pacific County
South Bend was a bit of a watershed moment on this ride. I was looking forward to what friends and family had reported as a stunning sight…only to find that it was in the middle of renovation. C’est la vie.Still stunning though and a testament that these old buildings need a lot of TLC and voters to approve their renovations. This is also one of my Top 5 and I’m going to have to return after they finish.


Friday, 11:24 p.m. - Vancouver, Clark County
When I rolled up to the courthouse I was clearly expecting something different. Classic architecture Vancouver is not, but I have I have to say that Vancouver earns a spot in my top 5 as well. The lighted key that’s a pinkish hue rotated through a spectrum of colors every few seconds and actually very subtle.By this point I knew I was so far behind my schedule that I spent extra time setting up shots.For you photographers out there….Olympus E-500 dSLR, 14mm, F/5, +1.3 stops, 5 seconds, ISO-100, no flash.I ended up calling it a night in Goldendale and got a well-deserved 8 hours of sleep with no less than 6 decent pillows.


Saturday, 2:45 p.m. - near Quincy
The only bikes that I rode with the whole trip were a sportbike and several cruisers between Ephrata and Wenatchee. They were a bit squidly for my tastes so I ended up making some room between me and them. Still a fun picture to snap under you arm while riding.


Saturday, May 6, 4:16 p.m. - Waterville, Douglas County
If this town hadn’t been a county seat…I really don’t think there would have been a town. At the same time I thought this courthouse was extremely cute and oasis-like in the scrubby portion of Eastern Washington. The hearty pine on one side with a flowering tree in the foreground and warming sunshine of dryland wheat fields reminded me I was back home on the dry side of the state.


Saturday, 7:00 p.m. - near WaucondaAs the shadows lengthened in the evening I found myself heading for the mountains and very poor counties in the Central and Northeastern part of the state. This area just seemed like 50 years behind in time. Rustic and harsh while simplistically beautiful.


Saturday, 7:23 p.m. - Republic, Ferry County
While the courthouse was unremarkable it was the first time a local took any interest in my ride. The cat, who I named George to compliment my tour around Washington, was so bored in this town that I’m firmly convinced his, “Meow!” was feline-speak for “Take me away out of this sandbox of a town!”


Friday, 8:12 p.m. - Sherman Pass (5575 feet, and below freezing)
The ride had turned into a love-hate relationship at this point. The prospect of riding through the night without electric clothing was countered by moments of sheer beauty. I still had 600 miles to go and was facing a choice of whether to ride through the night or find another motel.Surely, it would get warmer as I got back toward Spokane.


Saturday, 9:02 p.m. - Colville, Stevens
Finally time for a posed portrait. 8 second exposure to draw out the details of the building plus a flash to balance me out. …..one of the tricks I learned on this ride!


Sunday, 2:00 a.m. - Ritzville, Adams County
After snapping the photo of Adams County I made a beeline for the Shell Station on I-90…that I prayed it would be open.It was and took a half hour for my frozen toes to regain their feeling. Downing a hot chocolate in the fluorescent glow of a mini-mart this was the roughest part of the ride. I was cursing this near-freezing temperature that shouldn’t be in the month of May and knew my bed was only 70 miles away.Inspiration struck after I decided to gut it out and perhaps the best inspired decision I made the whole ride was to use my glove liners as makeshift socks.It’s the small things in life that get you through adversity.


Sunday, 4:10 a.m. - Spiral Highway, overlooking Clarkston & Lewiston
My choice to ride the night paid off as I got to Lewiston. I was cold yes, but my toes weren’t yet frozen. The sky beamed brightly with the near-full Moon and Venus while the deep blue glow of the impending sunrise gathered momentum in the East.Running through the barren and lightless Palouse from Colfax I popped over a rise to this stunning view of Clarkston/Lewiston.The crisp morning air signaled that I was on the downhill slide of my ride. It was now only a 200 mile Sunday morning ride to a warm bed at home.


Sunday, 6:03 a.m. - Dayton, Columbia County
Sunrise in Dayton couldn’t have come earlier. As the sun climbed over the surrounding rolling hills I fell in love with this Courthouse and knew feeling was going to return to my extremities. Also, in my Top 5 the Columbia County Courthouse (for beauty….not function Mr. P) must have been restored recently and photographed well from all angles.


Sunday, 8:17 a.m. - Pasco, Franklin County
Also in my Top 5 is my very own courthouse. It was freshly restored in 2005 after our community wrestled with a bond measure to pay for it, but I think it was very much every penny of it! And the copper dome and gold eagle are unique touches I don’t remember seeing at any other of the previous 37 courthouses.This picture was not taken on this ride, but it was one of the very first took with my new camera in 2006 and part of the genesis of this ride.


Sunday, 9:01 a.m. - Prosser, Benton County
The hardest thing to do in the world is to ride nearly 1700 miles….and then consciously decide to ride past the exit to your home and squeeze in 30 more miles. I get to Prosser enough that I could have easily taken a photograph some other day and pass it off as part of this ride….but I would have known.This picture of a courthouse is actually a bit of a contradiction for a county that has moved much of its operations to Kennewick as an “annex”. The result is that Prosser and this courthouse feel much more rural than belies this increasingly metropolitan county.


Epilogue
52 hours and 19 minutes after I had started in a drizzly Chehalis morning I had successfully ridden to EVERY SINGLE county seat in Washington State and snapped a picture.One more thing on my life list crossed off.The question remains: Would a full length and researched write-up be worthy of publishing an honest-to-goodness coffee table book of this adventure? I’ve given some samples of some of the highlights. Would a book sell at a Barnes and Noble or Amazon and would it be something schools would want to put into their libraries for students?Would you buy one for $29.95 or whatever the prevailing rate is for coffee table books?The full story hangs in the balance with reader feedback.

UPDATE: Doug e-mailed Thursday at Noon and won’t be able to make it. Although he figured out a lighting electrical short…he won’t be able to be fixed in time. The ride is solo now….which means I’m a bit more inclined to worry about getting better photos.

Part 1 and Part 2.

It’s the day of decision, the bike is ready, Doug is scrambling to have his bike back together without popping headlight fuses, I have witnesses lined up, and the weather forecast calls for 30% chance of a soggy commute over to Chehalis and Friday a.m. but improving all weekend.

The ride is a GO!

I have many things to do tonight to get ready, but I’ll be riding over tomorrow after work to the Chehalis area.

I’ve had particular fun and concern with the ferry leg to Friday Harbor. It’s been very helpful to watch the Anacortes Ferry Cam each morning from 9:00 a.m. to it’s scheduled departure of 9:35. Washington ferries have unique motorcycle staging and loading procedures at each terminal and I want to make sure we don’t risk missing this critical ferry time because we couldn’t get to the ticket gate. Mid-week doesn’t seem to be much of a problem this time of year.
Although I’m planning a minute-by-minute schedule for the ride….it’s nice to know if one has any wiggle room in case of traffic in the Seattle area. Missing the 9:35 a.m. ferry would be disastrous to the ride with a 5 hour wait until the next ferry.

It’s also going to be tricky trying to satisfy Saddle Sore 2000 requirements while also zig-zagging around the county seats. To prove to the IBA we’re not cutting corners it means getting about 20 receipts….with at least a dozen of those extras we wouldn’t normally get just to prove we didn’t cut any corners. I think getting the SS2000 is going to be difficult and won’t hurt myself or anybody else trying to do it, but will probably have a better sense somewhere about Vancouver whether it’s going to be possible or not. If need be I’ll resort to just the county seat ride and use as much time as needed.
This is actually 3 rides in one we’re attempting and I’m sure has never been tried. 39 county seats, 1 state capitol, all within the state (no cuts down I-84 in Oregon or into Idaho at Lewistn….no matter how much Streets and Trips wants me to), and an additional 300 miles at the end to get to 2K in 48 hours.

We’ll know Sunday morning for sure whether we did it….

Cross your fingers for us and watch for us Friday around 9:30 in the top picture in the lower right near the closest 3 orange cones!

This is Part 3 in a three part story:  Part 1 or Part 2 of this drama.

The final installment is that I had my subframe repaired and it didn’t even cost $6,000,000. It cost 80 bucks via welder Greg Brott of Kennewick and is signicantly improved!

Greg basically added a 1/4 plate on the back, cut some windows out to make sure the wires from the tail lights wouldn’t rub against the metal as well as gusseting it.


A back view shows the plate and at the bottom there are additional “tabs” that roll over and span a 1/4″ gap that also adds more structural integrity.

Greg said, “I had to weld it three times. Each time I’d heat it up……the metal impurities would sweat out of it. The cast piece is not the best metal.”

So, perhaps in hindsight I could have Yamaha give me a new subframe, but I wouldn’t be assured it wouldn’t be another subframe from the same production run. For $80 this was the best option for my piece of mind.

Next issues was the way I had my plate mounted. In the past I removed the rear rack, tied an aluminum plate straight to 3 points on subframe, and called it good. This time I took a longer, closer look at the existing rack and since it’s tied into 5 different points I decided Yamaha engineers had already done a good bit of the design for me and attach my plate to the rack. It’s not much to look at and has seen some hard life with bungees on my previous rear storage bag….so I drilled some holes in the beefy plastic.

Then I redrilled some holes in the alumnium plate after moving the affair as far forward as I could and still have the Pelican not interfere with the auxilliary fuel tank. It’s about an inch farther forward than it was before…and a tiny bit crooked. Fasteners at bottom are the pigtail for a CB anteannae I’m adding in a near-term project.

Most of my effort was driving around my hometown trying to find some very specific fasteners. 6mm x 50mm, stainless steel, recessed head screws are hard to find! While I was there I found some nylon washers that should help putting the metal through the plastic of the rack.


Mounted all up the bike is taking on it’s heavy-weight rally shape for the 2007 season. The case will hold my camera, a set of maps, laptop, various cables, and extra storage for my GPS when not mounted on the bike. I also got a padlock and cable to secure my helmet.

This is Part 2 in a three part story:  Part 1 or Part 3 of this drama.

Following up on Hecho en Pasco and talking with a TIG welding expert on the huge amount of electromagnetic interference generated while welding I became convinced it was a more prudent choice to remove the subframe before welding. This was new ground for me on the bike and there wasn’t the handy-dandy write-up like so many other parts on FJRTech.com. In fact, I’ll probably submit this for inclusion.

I guestimated it to take 3 or 4 hours and would require removing the airbox, ABS unit, and who knows what. In hindsight it probably took 2 hours of work including the photo documentation. Hopefully reassembly will go more quickly.

Remove seats, sidebags, and rear rack.


Remove front plastic including black pieces under tank and side gray panels.

Remove rear plastic (two bolts and six plastic screwserts underneath). Picture shows plastic slid backwards about 4 inches.


A view of the cracked subframe and the single 6mm hex bolt that holds on the tail light assembly. It’s a 5mm hex. Undo the plug, two zip ties holding the wiring harness, and snake the connector from the left side of the frame.

Taillights removed. Notice rubber grommets left and right. This is where the pins from the tail light assembly sit. Also viewable is the electrical connector to the cluster on the left side. Also, my first view of the crack from the back side.

Now the serious work starts. Unscrewing and unbolting bolts I’ve never done before. What I wondered is how much of the parts inside the subframe would have to be removed? Did the airbox have to be removed, the ABS unit, the tool tray, the computer, the seat release cable, etc.?

In hindsight I would have done things roughly in this order:

Remove the rear tank bracket from the frame. 4 bolts into the frame. I don’t believe you need to disconnect the two over the air box. The tank doesn’t move a significant amount with these bolts removed.

Remove the two 6mm hex on each side holding the exhaust bracket to the subframe. In my case I have a Wilbers preload adjuster in between. I just let it hang.

I removed the tool tray with two bolts into the subframe and then three Phillips screws that attach the tray to airbox. I think you need to remove the tool tray and attached computer because you’ll not want to leave it attached to the subframe for welding. Also I removed the two nuts holding on the seat lock bracket in the left of the screen.

Picture of the removed tool tray and computer showing the three screws holding it to the airbox.

The underside of the wheel well plastic (the large chunk of plastic that runs from above the rear tire to points inside the guts of the bike) is held on by 2 bolts in the rear and 4 to 6 screwserts on the bottom tube of the subframe.

Also held on by screwserts is the outer cover of the airbox. It might be possible to leave it on and remove just some of the screserts, but I removed it entirely.


I also removed the crosspiece that houses the shock absorber hardness settings. Again, I have a Wilbers so I don’t have the adjuster, but suffice will need to unbolt the bracket. It’s held on by 4 hex heads….3 mm I think. If you have ABS…it’s worthy to note that the ABS unit is attached to this bracket.

Final piece to remove is the rear brake fluid reservoir. It’s held in with a single Phillips screw and then let it hang freely by the ABS unit.

You’re now read to actually remove the subframe. It’s only held on by six fasteners. Two 8mm hex heads (one on each side) with a nut on the backside as I show here with an allen wrench and end wrench. I don’t believe these were loctited:


And the four 6mm hex heads (two each side) on the upper part of the subframe near the tank. They were Loctited with green and came loose with a loud “Pop” and flex of the allen wrench. These willl be critical to retorque when reassembling.

At this point the subframe should be free and will probably pull itself away from the bike a bit. Try moving it backwards a few inches and see if you’ve missed anything. Again, I believe you shouldn’t have to remove the airbox (except for maybe the cover), you shouldn’t have to remove the ABS unit. I purposely left on the reinforced plastic for the sidebags. Nothing electronic in there to worry about frying with TIG welding.

Here’s a funny sight. Rear subframe dettached and hugger plastic resting on the tire.

An angle of the subframe free of the bike. The blue wire is a special ground I run for my aux. fuel cell.

A close-up of one of the cracks.

And a shot of the subframe I’m taking to the welder. I put back on the taillights so they’d know about critical tolerances when they repair and strenghten the frame.

Finally a couple bonus shots of things one doesn’t usually see because this area of the bike isn’t torn apart often.

Shot of seat release cable:

ABS unit and free-hanging rear brake reservoir. In need of some wipe-down before reassembly.

The wiring harness for the computer….after I had wiped some of the greasy crud off of it. Still needs more wiping.

Ever wonder the handhold is like? It’s an add-on piece of reinforced plastic….the kind they make Rollerblades out of. It has a distinctive almost metallic “tink…tink….tink” sound when you tap it. Solid stuff. Same material for the bag slots just viewable on the right edge.

Next installment…..Fijo en Kennewick: The $6,000,000 Subframe

I don’t wear an Aerostich….the gold standard for LD riders. I’ve thought about ponying up the $700+ bucks for a Roadcrafter “Stich”, but what started out as a budget-minded mish-mash of previously owned snowmobile gear for rain protection and desert-required Joe Rocket mesh gear has turned into what I think is a superior choice for LD riding.

Just before my latest love tryst with motorcycling I snowmobiled a fair amount and was spoiled by the incredible design of Klim Aggresive Sledwar. Snowmobiling in Northern Idaho’s Priest Lake is as extreme as it gets where avalanche beacons, a sturdy jacket, and packed lunch are gear derigeur. Klim is actually cliche wear by locals because of it’s solid reputation for design, durability, and value.

I’ve had a wet crotch many, many times over my years sledding, but none of them were while wearing a set of Klim bibs. Besides the name “Klim” being cool…..one you go Klim…..you won’t go back.

However, riding a 2 wheeled touring rocket in the relative dryness and heat of the Columbia Basin Summer I quickly learned that a mesh jacket and cooling vest are also required gear for that season.So the dilmena……or maybe a lesson I’m figuring out.
When you start riding wider chunks of North America what do you do when broiling by day through the August afternoon sun of Phoenix at 110 degrees, then ride onto a 10,000 foot Utah mountain pass at o’dark thirty where you gotta watch out for frost patches on the road, and then descend into the high plains of Colorado to a wall of swirling horizontal rain at sunrise?

A Stich will work certainly…….but I gotta think during that first Phoenix leg you’re doing an uncanny impersonation of a baked potato wrapped in tin foil. …..and I bet your crotch is wet too…..yuck!
I experienced just that scenario while riding the 5 day SPANK rally in August 2005. I rode the whole day with mesh on recharging my Sahara Vest (which helps reduce dehydration as well) at every gas stop in and around Phoenix. As I rolled into Joshua Tree, CA at the evening’s checkpoint I was certainly warm, but I was surprised how much better I appeared to feel than my Stich encased brethren.

In fact, I ended up being the only person that rode the night straight through.  As the evening temperature dropped I took off the cooling vest and put on my Klim jacket, opened the huge undearm vents in the warm but coolin gevening, and found myself zipping them up as I began dodging frost patches around Flagstaff. After midnight I turned up my electric Widders and soaked in the fact that the temperature had swung 120 degrees in less than 12 hours of riding.
After that night I learned that I was capable of riding some serious extremes of temperature with this choice of gear….while being able to pack it all on my bike for many days at a time.

Range of temperatures I’ve ridden with this gear.  120 miles at 11 degrees, 500 miles at 100+ degrees.
Base Layer:

  • REI bicycle shorts. No lines equals no Monkey Butt and I wear these 24×7 riding LD. I even wear them to the shower and wash them down (there’s a detail you wish you never read)
  • REI Midweight MTS Long-Sleeve T-Neck. Technically long underwear I find the MTS material wicks moisture away well whether it’s hot or cold.

Armor and Warm Weather Layer:

Outer/Rain/Cold Layer:

Very Cold Layer:

Super-Duper Cold Layer:

  • Old Navy fleece top and bottoms. (doubles as pajama party wear in case a bonus calls for visiting the Playboy Mansion)

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