Official IBA witness Joe Denton takes care of the
paperwork.
Mike thinks about the remaining 1300 miles.
Steve Viertell greets the dawn somewhere in
Nevada.
Tunnels in eastern Nevada
"Are you guys ready, yet?"
Steve Long watches as Chico learns to steer by
rudder.
Throwing down some energy bars and fruit in
Utah.
Wolfie ponders the Casper, Wyoming, newspaper
stand at the halfway point.
Mike finishes his salt flat action in one
piece.
Here's Chad wishing for a warm bed. We
all were at this point.
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The Four Amigos, from L to R - Steve Viertell,
Mike Wolf, Chad Olson, and Steve Long.
Chad races towards Utah in the early morning
hours.
Steve Long poses in the meager daylight.
Inside the tunnel - don't forget
to honk, Steve!
Chad and Chico get saddled up after the Elko
gas stop.
Our first view of the distant salt flats.
To eat or not to eat? Not at that hole in
the wall.
Chad watches Wolfie go crazy. Kids, this
is your brain on Vivarin. Any questions?
Steve Long catches a beautiful sunset in
Nevada.
We redefined the term 'tired'.
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On
Saturday October 6th, 2001, at 2:00am, four of Northern California’s
finest Concours Owners Group members, well four of us anyway, assembled in
Roseville, CA. We were going
to Salt Lake City and we were going for gold. OK, we were actually going through
Salt Lake City to Lyman, Wyoming, to visit the Gas-N-Go truck stop in
pursuit of the Bun Burner Gold.
The
team included Steve Viertell from Chico, Mike Wolf, COG Insurance
Communications Officer, from Folsom, Steve Long, COG AAD – NE California,
from Sacramento, and myself, Chad Olson, COG AAD – NW California, from Bay
Point. The two Steves
and I were on Kawasaki Concours and Mike was mounted on a Ducati ST2.
After official IBA witness Joe Denton signed
our paperwork, we obtained our starting gas receipts at 2:18 am. The
plan was to leave Roseville and go east on I-80 for about 200 miles, gas
up, eat some nutrition bars and repeat about three more times until we got
to Lyman, Wyoming. At that
point, we would turn around and then see the scenery from the other
side. If we were lucky, our
plan would work out and there would be gas stations about 200-210 miles
apart – the effective cruising range of the ST2. At 5.5 gallons, the Ducati finds
itself two gallons short of the longer legged Concours, so Mike’s
machinery was the determining factor in when we needed to stop for
petrol. Well, not
entirely. Steve Long’s
bladder routinely required purging at 200 miles, as well.
The day’s route took us up over the Sierras
to Reno. We would see two stops in Nevada, Lovelock and Elko, one
stop in Utah, in Tooele, and the midpoint stop at Lyman Wyoming. The temperature was around 50
degrees when we started but dropped into the mid 30’s on the way up the
Sierras and through the night into Nevada.
When the sun decided to finally grace us
with its presence we noticed some dark clouds off in the distance barely
hovering off the ground.
Streaming down from those ominous looking clouds were very chilly
looking trails of moisture.
We all saw them but no one said a word except for Chico Steve
Viertell. Did I mention his
other nickname is the Snowman?
Before our last Iron Butt ride in November, 2001, Chico filled us
in on his frigid history.
Apparently, his first Saddle Sore 1000 (SS1000) was met with a lot
of snow and cold temperatures.
Sure enough, the November SS1000, his presence assured us of a
significant amount of snow over Tahachape Pass on the return leg of the
trip. Well, Steve did not let
us down this trip either. At
dawn, we briefly encountered a snow shower that spattered a few flakes of
snow on our windshields once again.
Thankfully, the Snowman’s work was done. The temperature soon improved into
the upper sixties with partly cloudy skies for the remainder of the
daylight hours. It was
perfect riding weather.
The second gas stop in Nevada brought some
unwelcome news. After Mike
fueled the bike, he checked the oil sight glass and didn't see much
oil. The motorcycle was
already on the center stand, so he knew there was a problem. Sure enough, there were a couple
drops of oil on the ground underneath the engine. Crap. This was not good. Mike went inside the adjacent
store and purchased a quart of 20w50. After putting in maybe a 1/4 of
the bottle into the crank case, a closer look revealed the source of the
leak: head gaskets. Unfortunately, this was Mike’s
fault as he did some piston work last April. We all hoped that the gaskets
would mostly hold for the rest of the trip. As expected, Mike was not a happy
camper. He finds oil leaks to
be extremely annoying.
Pushing the bikes towards the next gas stop
in Tooele, UT, Steve Long had to switch over to reserve. Unfortunately, his Connie didn’t
like the change and began to sputter and cough. The FRS radio came to life and he
gave the bad news. We all
expected him to tell us everything was OK, but Steve finally keyed up and
said, “She’s dead, I’m pulling over.
Shit.” Mike pulled
over with Steve and Chico and I went on ahead. The plan was to hook up at the
next gas station. Steve tried
a couple of times to get the bike started, but to no avail. He declared that he was going off
to urinate and Mike was left to stare at the troublesome motorcycle. After a few seconds of listening
to the sound of fluid hitting hard-packed salt, Mike decided to fire up
the beast. Choke on, no
throttle, jab the start button.
Vrrrroooom! She
breathed to life. Hearing the
motor chugging happily, Steve stumbled up the hill and gave Mike a mighty
slap on the back, nearly dislodging his eyeballs from their respective
sockets. Yep, Steve was
pleased.
After separating from Mike and Steve, a rare
and unexpected event occurred.
Chico and I were cruising along about 80-85 mph in a 75 mph zone
and we came upon some slow moving traffic. I noticed a motor home in the left
lane followed by a car. In
the right lane I spotted the source of the slow traffic, a Highway patrol
car crawling along at 62 miles an hour. “Uh, oh, I think were busted,” I
thought to myself. We slowed
down and became part of the motorcade. After a short time, the motor home
passed the patrol car and got in the right lane. The next car in line did not speed
up, though. It just kept
plodding along at 62 mph just behind the highway patrol vehicle. We were apparently observing a
classic case of “Blue Light Fever”.
This went on for what seemed like an eternity considering the
speeds we had previously been traveling at. Finally, the patrol car slowed
down some more, turned on the yellow flashing lights and we dropped back a
little more. We had no idea
what in the heck this guy was up to.
Suddenly, he zipped over behind the moron going 62 mph in the left
lane, turned on his lights, and pulled over the poor, frightened
driver. There is justice in
this world after all.
After hooking back up with Mike and Steve
Long at the next gas stop, our trek through Salt Lake City was
uneventful. Traffic was light
and the only road construction was to the on and off ramps in preparation
for the upcoming Olympics. On
the east side of the city the traffic crawled up the grade through
sweepers to the ski resort area.
Everything fell into place through some magical alignment of the
planets, because the cars were perfectly placed like flags on a giant
slalom. Rest assured, they
were dispatched in short order.
The last hundred miles of Interstate 80 into
Lyman was an unremarkable stretch of interstate. Apparently built for speed, this
section of our trip would test the limits of Mike’s speedometer. Let’s just say that the max speed
on his GPS was way above the posted limit of 75 mph. By time we reached our turning
point at the Gas-N-Go truck stop we were 1-1/2 hours ahead of the pace to
complete the ride in 24 hours.
We had planned on grabbing some lunch at the stop but it wasn’t
much more than a shack with some gas pumps. There was a large building with
the word “CAFÉ” blasted across it, but we weren’t too confident about the
potential for good food.
After refueling and choking down some more nutrition bars we turned
tail and headed our trusty steeds back towards the west.
The back side of Salt Lake City brought some
interesting observations about Utah motorcyclists. There is no helmet law requiring a
helmet there, but by the number of helmet-less riders were saw, you’d have
thought that there was an anti-helmet law. In the presence of a freedom of
choice, we all would have expected more than a few motorcyclists to choose
to protect their noggins.
That is apparently not the case in Utah. Not only do helmets provide crash
protection, but they also provide insect protection. Mike was thoroughly grossed out by
the thought of all the dead bugs on his face shield being on his teeth and
face in the absence of his full face helmet. Blech.
Since we already knew where our gas stops
were located, we decided that in order to maximize our chances for success
we would stop for gas at the same places during the return trip. We were making such good time, so
at out next stop in Tooele, we felt we could afford to splurge and grab a
meal. We experienced the
finest dining that Travelcenters of America had to offer - Taco Bell. We all recited our new motto: “Get the runs at the border.”
We left Tooele and headed towards the Nevada
border. While crossing the
salt flats for the second time that day we pondered what the hooligans
were thinking that left the tire tracks in the salt. Little did we know that moments
later we would find out. The
Sirens of the Salt Flats were calling to Mike. He suddenly declared over the FRS
radio, “I’m one of those guys that hates to say ‘what if’. I’m gonna do it.” I couldn’t believe what I just
heard. Somehow the sirens
convinced Mike that his Ducati ST2 would be a good dual sport and he heads
off the road and across the salt flats. Mike and his Ducati came through
unscathed, however, we now know what we knew all along – he needs
therapy.
After Mike’s distraction in the salt, we
continued our journey into the setting sun. The Nevada border quickly came and
went as nightfall settled in.
At our last stop in Lovelock, NV, the gas station attendant
recognized us from the morning before and asked if we were doing some kind
of test on the highway. I
guess she was right. We were
testing our will, endurance, and sanity. Then, it hit us. Lovelock would probably be our
last stop before we swiped our credit cards for our final gas receipts in
Folsom. We were on the home
stretch. It was a good thing,
too, ‘cause we were whipped.
The ragged group set off towards Reno. All of us were suffering from some
sort of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome.
Our wrists were killing us.
Those of us with aftermarket seats had the advantage of comfortable
butts. Steve Long
was suffering through the ride with his stock seat. Ouch. We hit the lights of Reno and we
were all like thirsty horses sniffing water. We were almost home! First, we had to deal with the
late night alcohol-hazed traffic of downtown Reno and then the
construction on I-80 down the hill towards the Sacramento area. The traffic turned out to be a
snap, but the construction was another story.
As soon as we passed the last Casino, the
roadwork began. It was night,
the road was pitted, rough, uneven, and the lanes were narrow and often
lined by unforgiving concrete barriers. Left, right, left, right. Normally, this would have been
fun. After 1400 miles of
nearly non-stop riding, though, this road was downright intimidating. The FRS was constantly
in use as we helped each other down the hill. The miles counted down to Auburn,
and yet as we got closer, each mile seemed longer and longer.
We finally arrived in Auburn, exited I-80 at
Highway 49, and headed towards Folsom on Folsom-Auburn Rd. We needed twisties like we needed
another 500 miles, and yet that is what we got. The road winds between Folsom and
Auburn and we might have been better served if we had simply avoided
it. The GPS at this point,
was over 1500 miles, so all anyone wanted to do was head towards
Folsom. The road finally spit
us out of the curves at Douglass and we continued our southerly
route. The FRS was active and
everyone was awake as we anticipated our finish. We passed Folsom Dam Rd, and Mike
let everyone know that we were almost there. Just as we rolled into the parking
lot of the Union 76, the GPS read 1510 miles. Close, but plenty of miles. We were done.
Well, not quite done. We needed to get our Police
witness to finish the Iron Butt Association requirements. The group saddled up and Mike led
us across the bridge and the two miles to the police station. Wow, what an ordeal it was to
simply dismount the bike. We
were sore. Mike walked up the
steps to the station and picked up the phone. He called Friday morning and set
the stage for us to have an officer witness our return. Unfortunately, the message didn’t
get passed and he had to explain our situation about four times. Apparently, she was too busy or
she didn’t care about four motorcyclists at 1:30 in the morning. Finally, she understood what we
need and agreed to send an officer.
“You’ll have to wait a while,” she said to Mike. “All my officers are busy. In fact, it’ll be a LONG
while.” Mike gave us the bad
news and we spied the Circle K up the street. The IBA says in the guidelines
that three regular citizen witnesses will work in the event that a police
officer, fireman, or authorized IBA witness cannot be found. Well, it was worth a shot.
As
luck would have it, there were three people in the Circle K. Two obviously intoxicated young
ladies buying beer and trying to make it back to their bar’s last call,
and the store clerk.
Amazingly, they all agreed to witness our return and signed our
paperwork. After many thanks
and slurred goodbyes, we saddled back up and headed to Mike’s house. We rolled the bikes into his
garage and invaded the house.
Four beers were held high and we all toasted our successful, safe
return. Steve Long stretched
out on the floor, turned on the TV, and promptly began to snore. The remaining three of us looked
at Steve, then looked at each other.
Grins began to appear on our faces and we finished our
well-deserved beers. I looked
at Wolfie and asked, “Wanna ride some more?”
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