In which there is an itinerary of the cross-state ride venture

Yesterday, I made a beautiful itinerary document to send to my mom and dad.
Then, I realized that my mom's computer won't read the formatting of it.
Sigh.


I (mostly) love technology.  

Windows was made for short-attention spans like mine, and connectivity not only makes my job as a librarian easier, it allows me to give my library patrons really good information even when I'm working at a teeny library that doesn't have room for a ton of reference books.  

I love the ability to answer my own questions in the middle of conversations, even if it does lead to jokes about me being unable to talk unless I have my information source (i.e. my phone) fired up.  This became really apparent on a recent drive to Seattle:  I accidentally left my phone behind, and so I couldn't consult library databases, Google, or even Facebook.  Egad.

And yet, in a little more than a month, Fiddle and I will head out to an adventure that will take us away from our usual connectivity:  the Cross-State Ride is a journey through territory that will have few, if any, cell phone bars.  

I can hardly wait!

The website for the event is a patchwork of old tech stitched to newer tech, edited by people who put things together as time allows.  I wanted a sleeker itinerary, so I made one.  I want my mom and dad to be able to access it, so I'm posting it here.

My goal is to post updates from the trail, but I make no promises. When you see the itinerary, you might see why:  most of the "towns" we will travel through are tiny, and are unlikely to have wi-fi I can tap from my camp.

But hey, you never know.  That's one of the joys of this kind of adventure: to go and find out!

Cross-State Ride Itinerary

May 16: meetup in Easton.  Camp meeting @ 5pm

May 17: Easton to South Cle Elum, 11 miles.  Bridges, gravel footing, train tracks nearby.

May 18: South Cle Elum to Thorp, 18 miles.  2 tunnels, gravel footing.  Bring a headlamp for the tunnels.

May 19: Thorpe to Ellensburg Fairground, 11 miles.  Parade through town with police escort! 

May 20:  Ellensburg to I-90 Trailhead, 11 miles.  Farmland, sage, gravel footing through town in Kittitas.

May 21:  I-90 Trailhead to Vantage/Wanapum Dam, 23 miles.  Sagebrush, gravel/sand footing.  We will pass through the military training grounds. Water on trail, bring a bucket.  Fiddle and I traveled this section of trail in 2015, as part of the Milwaukee Rail Trail Ride.

May 22: Vantage/Wanapum Dam to Smyrna/Warden, 13 miles.  Portage across the river, then ride.  Follows Crab Creek, Wetlands, farms.  Lots of bugs, bring bug dope! 

May 23:  Warden (rest day).  In town: showers (at the fire station), post office, restaurants, landramat, grocery, hardware store.  In Othello: feed stores, shopping.

May 24: Warden to Lind, 20 miles.  Irrigated farmland, open range, sandy trail, some gates.  Water at lunch stop, bring a bucket. 

May 25:  Lind to Ralston/Marengo, 16 miles.  Farmland, open range.  Sand/rock footing, 3 gates.

May 26:  Ralston/Marengo to Revere, 17.5 miles.  Scablands.  Watch for snakes!

May 27:  Revere (rest day).  Grocery store, restaurants. Fuel available in Ritzville.

May 28: Revere to Ewan, 13 miles.   Farmland, high trestle, high rock formations, waterfall.  Sand/gravel footing. 

May 29:  Ewan to Malden, 23 miles.    Pine trees, old homesteads, vistas.  Gravel/sand footing.  Go around the grain elevator.

May 30:  Malden (rest day).  Water available in town behind tire store.  Laundry. Groceries, fuel, restaurant, post office, drug store and a golf course available in St. John. 

May 31:  Malden to Rosalia, 10 miles.  Woodlands, canyon, trestle. 

June 1:  Rosalia to Tekoa, 23 miles.  Wheat fields and trestles.  Sandy track with a swampy area near Tekoa.  Optional parade in Rosalia on Saturday morning.

June 2:  Tekoa to Idaho border, 6 miles.  Farm land, pine forests.  Gravel roads and dirt trail. 

June 3 (afternoon):  Pack up and go home!






Comments

  1. This sounds like such a neat trip! I hope you have a great time!

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  2. I was with you until I got to Ritzville. Never heard of the rest!

    I'm sitting in a hotel right now watching television. We don't have television reception at home so it's a treat for me. It's an American-made documentary about aliens. They just said, "Aliens don't look like us, they don't talk like us, and they have different sex organs. But we could be their descendants." TV is so cool.

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  3. Unless I missed this info -- where are you staying each night? Is your horse trailer going from place to place? To me, arranging overnight accommodations (and figuring out how to bring food for the horse) would be the worst part of planning a trip unless you have a trailer to go to.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. KT, they leapfrog their rigs and gear each morning to the next campsite, then are bused back to their waiting steeds.

      Delete
  4. I want to do this with you one day.

    ReplyDelete

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