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Monday 9 September 2013

September 8-9th down the home stretch

We took our time getting up and about Sept. 8th because the first thing Gayle had to do was get her hair done at noon. While she was at the stylists I worked on the " Blog" and planned our travel route for the next several days. Researching the weather prognosis for the week had me thinking that we should just leave and ride home directly without fulfilling my desire of riding through the Eastern Townships of Quebec.
                          Hi lites once again:)

Once I picked Gayle up in Kanata we rode via March Road to Almonte to visit with Sue and Mike  prior to going out to supper at the Riverside in that great little town. We played catchup on the summer as we hadn't seen them for several months. So good to see the advances made on their condos and that life is good for them. Some visits are just too short.
                                                Sue Evans and Michael Dunn

We returned to our motel after dark for the first time on our journey. Autumn is just around the corner!

We left  the nation's capital during morning rush hour but did OK getting through traffic and street construction to Gatineau and off towards Montreal. Traffic was grid locked heading towards Ottawa but very light heading our way east. I had decided to stay north of Montreal and stayed on highway 40 all the way to Quebec City. We crossed the Pierre Laporte Bridge for the first time ever and boy was it windy! Shades of riding on the Prairies! We rode to Rivière du Loup before calling it quits for the day. Highway 20  on the south side of the St. Lawrence river was definitely blustery and busier traffic wise than what we found on the north side highway 40 earlier in the day. You just knew that the weather was changing with wind like that!

Up early for our last ride of the journey. Continental breakfast load the bike and ride. Took the opportunity to stop once we were inside NB. No room on the highway to park and get a photo with the Welcome to New Brunswick sign. But we did pull into the airport and took these shots to answer Mike Dunn's question from the other night, "Is the Lancaster still there?"




Light Tuesday traffic allowed me to set the bike on "cruise" for most of the TC run and we pulled into our yard by 1pm Atlantic Time. Happy to have stayed ahead of the changing weather (rain) and to be home after 81 days on the road!

                                         You can't see the smile,but it's there.

                          Now......what's next?

Thanks for following us on our first major bike journey. It was good to have you along.




Wednesday 4 September 2013

September 2-7th (boy time flies when you are having fun)

Can you tell that we were not the only ones that wanted to get out of the rain.?  All these bikes were at our motel for the night.


         


              

Our plan for today Aug.2,2013 was to ride to Sudbury, but include a side trip up hwy.# 69 to Elliot Lake to visit an old friend from our days  in the Peace River. The weather was definitely more agreeable to bike travel and the road was clean of animals and had a light flow of traffic. It was good to have a face to face (first time in 28 years) with Dorothy Daly who was our Anglican priest at St. Peters Anglican\United Church while we lived in Hudson's Hope, BC.
                
                   Gayle and Rev. Dorothy Daly at home in Elliot Lake

We did a quick ride about town and Gayle found a bike that she thought would  fit her solo riding.

                           A Chinese manufactured electric unit parked at Tim's

Nature call at Tim's then back onto hwy.# 17 to Sudbury and holed up there over night. It feels great not to ride in the rain even though it has turned cooler. Supper at Kelsey's restaurant to warm us up before some shut eye.

The next day's ride down to Elora was windy while on highway 69\400 with a definite increase in traffic. The scenery was more to our liking with rolling farmland, as we left the main drag for the more rural secondary highways of 9, 3, 18.

Found my cousin Sharon's place with no problem (on board GPS) and called her at work after 4pm to announce our arrival in town. Ian, Sharon's husband was still at work for awhile longer,so we snacked and wined until his introduction to both Gayle and I. We had never met Ian who is now 72 and has been married to Sharon since forever. Hard to imagine!

We went out to The Cellar for a wonderful supper and more conversation, after a quick tour of their lovely town. There are so many great looking little towns in this area of Ontario. It would be hard to choose one if we ever considered moving to "Upper Canada." One thing about living in a small town.....you certainly get to know most everyone over the years.

    The Girls [Cousin Sharon (Day) Rice and Gayle.]

    Ian and Sharon Rice. We finally got to meet him!

These people should both be retired but had to be up and about in the morning so we tried not to keep them up too late when we returned home. We were up in time to say goodbye to Ian while Sharon put together a fantastic breakfast before excusing herself and leaving for work before we mounted up for the day.

Off to the most southerly point in mainland Canada today Aug. 4th. Why that is Point Pelee National Park of course. "It forms the southernmost point in mainland Canada (its latitudinal position is the same as the northernmost counties of California) and is part of a bird and butterfly migration corridor over Lake Erie via Point Pelee and the Lake Erie islands. Over 360 bird species have been recorded in the park. The peak time for bird migration is spring, especially May, when tired migrants make first landfall after their journey north across the lake. Bird species include Cooper's Hawk, Painted Bunting, and Yellow Choochity Warbler. Many birdwatchers from North America and abroad visit the park in spring, often staying in the nearby town of Leamington. One attraction, apart from the sheer numbers and variety of bird passing through on migration, is the opportunity to see more northerly breeding species such as Blackpoll Warbler before they move on." (I threw that in here for my friend Jim St.Laurent in Calgary) :)

Rode the bike into the area as far as the park officials would allow me and checked out the visitors centre before mounting up for the ride to London.


We were not aware of the beaches of the park being "nude" but we did see another bird species returning to his SUV while leaving this view point. Rather old and wrinkled with a lack of plumage!
That's Lake Erie out there and very windy on this day.

The next day was set aside for a 20,000km warranty maintenance visit to Wolf BMW.
Ian and Christine Mc Queen run a great shop here in London

I met a customer of theirs who came in to book a rear tire replacement. Blair and I talked about bikes, travelling in Canada and most interestingly renting a BMW in New Zealand and group touring two up with his wife last winter. He was entertaining and engaging for almost an hour. Great fun.

Sticking with our plan (someone's plan) of checking out quilt shops took us next to The Hobby Horse Quilt Shoppe just north of Georgetown. Gayle got to spend time with Gail Spence and staff while I was able to talk farming with Gail's husband Al. Great visit on a bright sunny day. Wonderful location!
Just the lower building was the shop thank goodness or we might have had to stay longer:)
                                   BEFORE
                                                     
                                  DURING            
                                                                                                         
                  AFTER (notice the smile)
                 Oh yes, there was a cat to be seen on the farm Angela and Jessica

Because we were so close, we just had to check out where Nicholas used to work before moving to Vermont. As luck would have it we caught Dino Deligiannis, the President in his office and he went to tell Dan Goodwin (from Fredericton) that we were outside in the parking lot. Another employee, Rob Wardlaw took the opportunity to come out to meet us as well as check out the bike.
                              Good sports from Intlvac. Dino, Dan and Rob

To finish the day's ride to Peterborough I planned a route to circumvent the Friday afternoon traffic around greater Toronto. I now know that there is probably no such route and like I'm finding in much of Ontario the highway signage giving you a heads up before the road changes actually are upon you, is TERRIBLE at best. Many small towns will post a street name and not tell you that is is also a certain highway # you have been navigating on, for over an hour. It is almost as if they want you to get "lost" in their town and have to stay awhile! I didn't get too lost at any time but probably took longer than necessary to arrive at the motel. :)

August 7th saw us waiting till mid-morning for the rain to let off a little. We then followed highway 7 from Peterborough to Carleton Place under heavy overcast skies and no predicted rain, then north to Mississippi Mills (Almonte) on highway #29 to Quilting Quarters. (Not another bike shop!)

                      Do I see more smiles?

Saturday 31 August 2013

Let's catch up Aug. 27- Sept. 1, 2013

The next day was another hot one as we took hwy.#5 to Canora where we ran into a detour which took us all the way to the Yellowhead (16) at Yorkton on hwy. #9. Straight east on hwy. #52 which turned onto Manitoba hwy.#5. Temperature climbed through the afternoon and a water break took us into a wheat field to check on the crop.
   Gayle was saying that it is not as tall as in the old days.

Finished the ride of the day by checking into Dauphin MB. While Gayle had a nap I went for a swim to assist in cooling off before pizza for a late supper.

The next morning Wednesday Aug. 28th it was heavy fog for over a hour as we headed towards Lake Manitoba. I missed a hwy.#68 sign and stayed south on hwy.#5 and ended up in Neepawa at the junction of hwy.#16 (Yellowhead) Hey, I didn't want to be here. What to do what to do? Well we retraced 90km to Ste. Lac du Rose and hwy.#68 and drove to the Narrows at Lake Manitoba before we pulled off to have a "top bag" lunch at a lakeside park.
                 The Narrows at Lake Manitoba (marina) in front of the bridge

                                      Must get this gear off "it's HOT"

                Packed up again and ready to ride all the way to Selkirk, MB

We went for a walk before supper then I went out to wash the bike. ( hard to imagine to bug cover some days) It can make looking through the windshield a challenge.

The next morning before a light breakfast I took a 5km plus run before mounting up for the day. Not a big deal, but now I can say I have had a run in all of the provinces in Canada. We ran into road construction on hwy.# 44 near Whitemouth and chatted with a really friendly young first nations guy who told us that he had just started on the job the day before. He had come over from Brandon because "no one like the long hours" standing out in the heat! Gayle took the opportunity to get ready for the rain, and good job she did because it began before we connected with the TransCanada by West Hawk Lake and rained heavy at times. 

I could see a bike rolling towards us at this point and it followed us right into Tim's on the west side of Kenora. It turns out that this Winnipeg couple were riding a white Victory tourer and had just begun a 6 day vacation that morning. They told us that their daughter had just moved to St. Stephen, NB. When I asked why, they answered "her husband took her" :) They chatted with us while we had something warm to drink then were on their way. We changed our travel plans from the road to Thunder Bay via Dryden because of the weather radar shot they shared off their iPad and it rained at sometimes HEAVY  on the run back down hwy.# 71 to Fort Francis. (we had done this ride on the way west, if you recall) We saw the Victory riders several times on this run as they stopped more than we did and their initial plan was to only make it to Fort Francis for the night anyway. By the time we rode out of the rain, just 50 or 60km west of town Gayle was pretty wet and ready to call it a day. We checked into the Super 8 again and began drying out before enjoying a before supper nap. We noticed that the Victory was parked beside our bike and had an opportunity to speak with them again in the morning as we all readied to ride to Thunder Bay.

Rain and the threat of more later in the day had us holed up in Thunder Bay hoping beyond reality that the  storm would blow itself out! Heavy overcast resulted in more rain after we were settled in. Many parents dropping their children off for the school year at Confederation College and Lakehead University it would seem, as the place was full. 

August 31 and the weather was a factor once again. We took the opportunity to pull off east of town for a quick visit to the Terry Fox Monument.

                    Canadian flag stuck to the flag pole even in the breeze.

We haven't seen much game from the saddle lately, but today was our lucky day. Somewhere around White River a young gangly moose came out of the ditch from the left and walked to the right side of the highway and stopped to face us as I geared down. I reved the engine and he turned and pranced away from us staying on the centre line for quite some time. (no other traffic either way) Then he decided to return to the bush on the left side of the highway. Sometime later a bobcat came out of the woods\ditch on the left and took its time walking across the highway in front of us. It does my heart good to see wildlife in good shape.

Rain at times heavy and a low ceiling because of fog in the hills north of Lake Superior had us return to the Mystic Motel just east of Wawa for the night. (we had stayed here also on our way west) We had a DVD night while the rains turned into a full blown thunder storm by morning. 

We were awake ready to go to Elliot Lake, but let our departure time pass while sitting on the bed whose headboard was up against the outside wall. You know it is not a good sign when you can "feel" the bed shake with every thunder clap! I went to the office to return the movies and had the chance to talk to an older rider like myself from Richmond, BC who was packing up a new Yamaha Super Tenerré. He was riding out on 101 with plans to make it to Timmins, although his ultimate destination was to ride the Trans Labrador Highway and return as far as Kitchener, ON. He said he had no desire to ride the prairies, so would ship his bike home from there, sometime in October. He agreed with me that pavement is taking over and wanted to get the Trans Lab off his list before it too is all black. We wished each other well and Gayle and I mounted up to ride much of the way down 17 to Sault St. Marie in the thunder, lightening and oh did I mention that it was still raining! Boy.....do I know how to show a girl a good time on her 44th wedding anniversary. Hey, she was hardly wet when she said enough for the day! :) Good job most motels have air\heating units that allow us to dry things easier on these wet travel days.

Few pictures again, this time due to inclement weather. I will try to be a braver chronicler in the future.

Thursday 29 August 2013

Trouble on the Prairies........Monday August 26th

After leaving Bob we turned north on hwy.# 2 to again pick up hwy.#5. We then ran into major seal coating operations between Peterson and Carmel which slowed down forward motion in a big way. Dustiest riding to date. As we finally arrived in Humboldt, I followed the GPS instruction to by pass on a gravel road. 

It led us out of town and was about 5 km long heading south then east. As I pulled up onto the pavement I felt the bike wiggle a little and immediately looked at the digital display. It confirmed we had 0 psi pressure in the rear tire! When I pulled over the gravel shoulder made it impossible to put down the bike side stand. So Gayle got off to try and help but to no avail, we were unable to move the bike in the soft gravel and I could not get off without putting the bike over!

No problem, we are not far from town and someone will stop to assist us, we'll wait? Well it seems that all the friendly people of Saskatchewan (near Humboldt that day) had forgotten that you should stop to check on someone stranded on the side of the road! We lost count of how many drove by without so much as slowing down!

Gayle finally decided to get passing traffic's attention by waving and after many tries, Charlene in her black VW turned around and came back to see what was up. She agreed to get a tow truck to come and pick us up when she got into town. I thought Kal Tire would be the best shot, so off she went. 

Some time later she came back "to keep us company" until the pick up arrived. She told us that Kal Tire suggested Discovery Ford would be better equipped to pick us up as they had a Powersport Bike and Marine service. So we waited, did I say waited? I am sitting on the bike all this time (the better part of a hour) and when Andrew a service tech. showed up he had a closed in bike trailer in tow! Good job Charlene had hung around, because it took all four of us to get the bike up the trailer ramp (remember the rear flat tire).

Off to town we went to off-load the bike in the Discovery Motorsports service bay. Now what are the chances of them having a rear tire to fit a BMW K1600 GTL? I talked with James and Andrew and James thought they might be able to find one if they checked in Saskatoon. So I suggested I could call Gayle's bother Bob and see if he could help out. Wouldn't you know it no Rogers phone coverage. So I went back inside to find someone and Stan told me the guys had gone to lunch!

I asked to use the parts department phone and connected with Bob, now back in Saskatoon. He made some inquiries and called me back saying " Harley to the rescue". Just what every BMW rider wants the hear on a hot prairie afternoon! He found a Michelin 73W Pilot 190\55ZR17 at Proline Motorsports and Marine (the last of 20 they had purchased earlier at a good price) and sold it to Bob for $141.70 taxes in. So then Bob asks Lynn whether she would like a two hour round trip to Humbolt (I neglected to mention when I called him earlier, the seal coating that was going on that day on hwy.#5) Lucky for us they agreed to deliver the tire and we waited again!

In this period of time, we took the tire off the the rim and found a 3\4 inch cut in the centre of the tread, but not a rock which I suspected of being the flat causing culprit! Actually we found nothing in the tire or inside once it was off the rim!

I looked at every marine motor, boat, motorcycle, quad, and chain saw they had in stock more than once as the afternoon wore on! Sure was counting on Bob to show up before closing! When they did pull in I had the tire in Andrew's hands and we had the tire on the rim in a jiffy. But he could not speed balance it for me. Darn. Then he thought "they have a five hole machine over at the Ford  garage, I'll be right back." He was impressed with the other garage's balancing machine and that the BMW wheel fit on it perfectly. When he returned we looked up the torque specs on Google and we're finally done. I loaded up the saddle bags and gear while Gayle and Lynn went next door to the Canalta Motel to secure us room for the night. Bob stayed with me until the ladies returned to pick him up. 

When I went in to pay up I got a major surprise. I owed them $140.95!! I had made arrangements earlier to have CAA pay Discovery Ford for the bike pickup just outside town south on hwy.#20. Ernie filled out the paper work and had us sign the CAA claim. That was $80. Now the people were friendly enough, but I was not happy about the financing on the whole transaction. Bob did more on the day and onIy took the price of the tire and supper as payment for his full afternoon helping us out.

The last goodbye after supper was really a BIG thank you to both Bob and Lynn. Family going above and beyond the call to help us out on our journey!

Where are the pictures you might ask? My mind was elsewhere after the flat happened. I have only one on the afternoon and it is of the guys at Discovery Motorsports. My apologies to Gayle, Charlene, Lynn and Bob.
                            James, Andrew, Stan and Jeremy busy on the phone.

Time for some shuteye it's 12:30am!! Keep the rubber side down and the shiny side up!

Tuesday 27 August 2013

Saskatoon

It seems like Saskatoon has become our home away from home on this trip. We spent 5 days here this   time. Quite a layover to wait out some hot weather that has set in this past week. We have found that riding in the heat is the hardest travelling that we have done in the last 10 weeks. 

It certainly didn't hurt to have such great family that encouraged us to stay each day that we lingered. Gayle's brother Bob and his wife Lynn not only fed us and entertained us but we got to spend more time with our niece Jennifer and her husband Jay and their daughter Olivia.

We did a variety of activities while here: brunch, lunch, supper seldom breakfast because we seldom got up early enough to consider the first meal of the day a "Breakfast"
                                      Mia the laundry helper (in the hamper)

            Olivia Bridges watching her DVD player

  Jay and Olivia on the beach to see Bob and I off. She would not wave goodbye until after we left.

   Bob on the North Saskatchewan River, leaving The Berry Barn launch, in his home built kit kayak.

    Lunch on the sandy shore of the river. The red kayak is the one I borrowed from Lynn.

Lynn did this a lot, while we waited for the delicious results.

                           Heat and sunshine makes for a sleepy cat, right Mia?

                              Reading to Papa

                Playing at home with Gayle
Entertaining Papa letting Glass "stones" slide into Tupperware container.

                       Jay, Jennifer, Lynn and Bob relaxing in the Bridges backyard
Live music at one of the largest car Show and Shines in western Canada, in downtown Saskatoon.





  It was said that 900 cars, trucks and some motorcycles were at this show covering 10 city blocks.

I was lucky to touch bases with my cousin Ann Louise and her husband Doug Peters at this event. I can see why they choose not to miss this time in their downtown. Doug has rebuilt some cars in his day and  is really knowledgeable on this topic. Wish I would have had more time with them. Will have to make it next time. :)

                               Does this lifeguard look ready to dive in?

       This one is rather relaxed, wouldn't you say?
While Olivia was in the pool, Mom was busy painting pieces for her (Olivia's) kitchen under construction in Papa's garage.
                     Last story time with Olivia
               A Harley rider led us away from Saskatoon on hwy.# 5 as far as hwy.# 2
 We thought that this was our last goodbye to Bob on this day! It was good to ride together.