Run to Bisbee

With the move, and work I haven’t been able to hit up some of the places I wanted to ride.   I’ve been needing an overnight trip somewhere to just explore, do whatever I want and enjoy the road and whatever that brings.

It’s fun to ride with friends, but sometimes I just want to get out on my own and not have to listen to someone bitch about where we’re going, or not waking up on time because they need their beauty sleep or whatever.    Riding by yourself you can do whatever YOU want to do.    If I want to wake up at 3 AM and ride to Texas because I have some crazy idea I can find a BBQ Place I’ve always wanted to try, or sleep in and come home I can.  I can push myself to make miles or ride slow and check out every little small town along the way.   It’s all about the exploration and enjoying  the moment.

At work I have to follow someone elses plans and bust ass to make sure they’re being implemented.   On the road, its Fuck all.   I’ll do what I want to do, and its a nice change up.   It’s fuel for the fire, and it’ll last for a long time.

That is exactly what I love about riding.

I left Saturday morning about 9.   The air was a bit cool and the riding was perfect T-shirt weather.   Perks of living in Arizona in march.   There was a renaissance festival 30 miles outside of town that backed up traffic for 15 miles and I tried to avoid it by taking side roads and getting breakfast, but it was clear I wasn’t going to be able to.   Just bite the bullet and get through it.    Once I got past it the road opened up and it was clear it was going to be a pretty damn good day.

Trying to find a side road, getting the hell out of dodge.

Just past the town of Superior there’s an old tunnel from the 50’s you go through that winds up the canyon.    I’ve noticed the old road that wound below it, and spotted the older tunnel on a past trip this way.   Curiosity killed this cat.    I’m a sucker for an old bypassed road.

 

Old 1920’s to 1950’s section of US60, winding around the terrain.

 

The Claypool Tunnel

I had a minute so I filmed it.   If you’re ever over this way, its a neat old section of road.

Claypool Tunnel, back in the day

 

It was starting to get hot, so I headed east on the 60 again toward Globe.   It’s a great stretch of road to ride.

Made me giggle.  Welcome to Miami Arizona.

I think the thing I love most about Arizona is the Sonoran Desert.   It covers about a third of Arizona but its the most unique desert in the southwest IMO.   Basically, if you see a Saguaro Cactus, you’re in the Sonoran Desert.   It’s beautiful terrain, and makes for a great ride.    I was heading east, and the desert starts looking more and more like New Mexico, which is sorta ass.    Maybe I don’t know as much about New Mexico as I think I should, but its the neighboring state and I’m sure I’ll have time to hit those roads once I get sick of riding AZ.

US 191, East of Fort Grant

I wound south down through the Apache Indian reservation and westward into Benson.  I crashed for the night at the KOA.    The place was empty for tent sites, which sort of surprised me since this is the time of year to camp.   I gotta think no one camps in Southern Arizona in July.   Maybe no one just wants to go to Benson, who knows.     The old Korean Lady owner was a sweetheart and gave me an upgraded spot with power so I could charge up my phone.    I called Missus Zip and hit the sack.

Ya gotta love a good  road morning…
Arizona Moon, before sunrise.

Woke up early and enjoyed the morning.    There’s something about waking up in a new place.    After a day of riding your senses come back in tune:  you hear the birds, the wind, hell… everything else.    I fucking love road mornings.    I loaded up the bike and headed down the trail toward Tombstone.

Tombstone Arizona

I’ve been to Tombstone before.   There’s a lot I want to see here, but I’d like to get my family down here if I can talk them into it and experience some things with them.   I had breakfast and headed toward Bisbee, which my brother Skeezix has talked about for a few years.

Riding into Bisbee, I was sorta blown away.    I’m not sure I’ve ever seen another town like it before.    It’s like a combination of Park City, and Caliente Nevada:   A re-purposed old town nestled in the middle of a canyon, with a lot of hipsters and mining history.    I rode through it, put my gopro on the windshield of my bike and figured I’d show you how cool the main street of Bisbee is.   Turns out, Harley-Davidsons shake a lot so even at 20 MPH my goPro footage was like watching the Blair Witch Project.   I won’t subject you to it 🙂

I went to take a tour of the Queen Mine, but the next tour was an hour away and like Tombstone, I figured we’d plan a family trip and come down here again.

I pointed the bike toward Sierra Vista and then toward home.   Great ride, and I got to see a lot of the different terrain that Arizona has to offer.

Turns out, Life is pretty goddamn good.  The nice thing about scouting the perimeter you always come back with more questions than answers.    I think I need to spend an entire day or two in Tucson, there’s a lot of things I want to see there.

Great ride, one for the books.

 

 

 

2 Days, 500 Miles, 1 State.

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2 more days

It’s 85 degrees out there, and in 2 days I *finally* get to have a couple days to just find whatever road I want and go see a thing.   I’m fucking pumped.   I can hardly keep a thought in my head.    It’s why I moved to Arizona.    There’s been a loose plan:  Scout the southern part of the state before spring, the northern part in the summer, and whatever else in the fall.

Pack a tent and sleep where I will.   Pick a spot on the map and ride toward it, and just. enjoy. the. ride.   Twist a throttle and turn up the music.   Find something along the way and explore it…  The rest I’ll just figure out.   God, I can’t fucking wait.

I’m figuring toward Bisbee and Tombstone.

 

2 more days Read More »

Tomorrow, we ride

Nothing big or Major, just more scouting the perimeter.    The last couple of weeks we’ve been seeing what’s around us and taking some day road trips, and tomorrow we’ll do it on the bike again.

Phoenix is the 6th biggest city in the US.   I’m always interested in what makes something tick, and in this case I’m curious about what makes a landlocked area out in the middle of bum fuck egypt has so many people living here.    The missus and I are going up to see Theodore Roosevelt dam, built over 100 years ago and is a large reason so many people live in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona.

I’m a geek, and I dig that shit.

Tomorrow, we ride.

Tomorrow, we ride Read More »