Wednesday, December 12, 2012

I'm Home

I just wanted to give everyone who checks on here a quick update. I'm sorry I haven't posted anything in a while. I came home November 29th, after a little over 7 weeks of riding. I made it to Gainesville, Fl, after riding about 1000 miles from my parent's house in Fayetteville, NC. I met so many wonderful people that I still have to tell you about! I will eventually get the rest of my adventures up here.

My future is still a big question mark. I did come home much earlier than I expected to, but it was a decision I made, and not due to any sort of emergency or anything.

But yes, I just wanted to say thank you to everyone I met along the way who has been keeping up with me on here, and let you all know that I am safe.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Day 25: Nov 3, Springfield to Savannah

I woke up on time, but dawdled longer than I had originally intended. I felt kind of weird just leaving without saying bye, but eventually I realized that a thank-you note would just have to do. I was excited to be following an official signed bike route for the first time since North Carolina.

I had to stop soon after I started in the next town I got to, as the bottom cog on the tensioner was stealing an estimated 20% of my energy now. I cleaned the whole chain and each of the two cogs and re-lubed everything really well. I've been having to leave the screw in the center of the cog a little bit loose so that it would even rotate, something that made me uncomfortable from the very beginning. It should be able to move freely even with the screw tightened all the way. Getting my bike to a real shop that actually could help me in Savannah was becoming a major priority.

I was looking at the green dotted line on the map on my phone (which pretty well follows the cue sheets for the east coast greenway) and comparing it to the marked bike routes on the road, when I got the bright idea that I knew a better way and struck off on my own. An hour later, I realized that I was slightly confused, as the road I was on was taking me steadily away from the road I wanted. I sighed to myself for being the hardheaded know-it-all that I am as I turned to go the 6 miles extra I now needed to go to get back on track, not to mention the extra distance I had traveled on the road I had just come from. I passed by a high school that was doing some kind of homecoming parade practice or something, and couldn't help but smile and bounce a little to the music of the marching band as I went by.

I got some Subway when I finally got back on track, which was one of the landmarks I had been looking for anyway. I was extremely pleased that the traffic was all together tolerating me quite well, even on the road where I didn't "belong." There was a huge stretch with wide 5-10 foot shoulders, sometimes even protected with a row of rumble strips.

All good things must come to an end, I've decided, especially when it comes to good places to ride. Eventually the shoulder went away completely and the traffic increased as well. It was a major commercial area nearing an interchange for a major highway, and although people were being decently nice, the shear volume and speed of the cars was stressing me out. I had been calling and texting my cousin off and on all morning so we could keep tabs on where we were in our journeys. I had expected him to be coming down I-95, so I started to think that as long as I get as close to I-95 as I can by the time he gets arrives, he could just come to pick me up and we could go from there. Little did I know that his GPS decided to route him around through the way I had considered coming the day before. (He told me it was strangely not busy, by the way...) He ended up driving all over the city due to a bit of miscommunication and confusion about just where I was. Eventually I decided to just sit and wait at a library I found in Pooler, which is just on the other side of I-95 from Savannah.

Soon after we found each other there was the comical and highly technical business of getting my bike into his car. When he told me he had a hatchback, I immediately thought of my station wagon back home. It never crossed my mind that my bike wouldn't fit, mainly because it not fitting wasn't really an option. Well, he showed up in probably the smallest hatchback ever. I took one look and decided it wasn't going to happen. Nope. I started thinking about how I was going to ask the fire department across the street to watch my bike for a day or two for me. Dave was still a bit optimistic, though, so I went ahead and took off all my bags and my front tire, and let him go ahead and try to stuff it in and see for himself. The back seats went down. My front seat went all the way up, as well as tilted forward to a very uncomfortable angle. He also gave up several inches of his own leg room in the name of victory. I also told myself to stop whining about bending the fenders funny or any of the other more sensitive things because it needed to be taken in to be looked at anyway. I'm sure that probably helped. The back hatch door wouldn't close all the way, and if it wasn't for the little stylish inward curves in the doors where my back tire ended up resting, it wouldn't have worked, but it was in! It was a feat of tetris contortion mastery and a testament to the mindset of, "oh, it will happen," that we both seem to have with certain things. Unfortunately no pictures were taken of the poor thing in the back of this tiny little car.

We got in with plans to go into downtown Savannah and ditch the car somewhere and have a look around. We went to a little bar/restaurant with a crazy bike/trolley/carriage/bar in the front! I had seen them before on the internet, but never in person. As I had been to Subway not long before, I just got some desert, while Dave proceeded to devour some real food and some beer. He really likes his beer. This is important to know. He vowed to return to get the banana egg roll before leaving the next day.

We started meandering our way toward the river, and stopped into a Scottish pub to try out some of their drafts. I left my wallet in the car, however, and couldn't get anything as I actually got carded, which didn't happen even once in SC. I almost forgot about having to prove your age to get a drink in most normal establishments. I know I'm old enough to buy some booze. The bartender informed me that I should seriously consider going back and getting my ID if I wanted to drink that night. I'm not much of a drinker, so not drinking didn't bother me nearly as much as having her look at me as if I was some kind of underage hooligan trying to be sneaky. I must be the worst sneaky underage hooligan ever, because I would have at least presented a fake ID and not no ID if that was the case.

This is also when we found out that the Rock 'n' Roll Marathon was going on in Savannah this weekend, which helped to explain why the parking lot was nearly completely full at the restaurant from earlier, and why there seemed to be just so many people everywhere. We eventually continued to mosey our way down to the river walk, and I continued to ask Dave at nearly every pub or bar I saw if he wanted to get something from this place or that place. On the river, I kept my eye out for a carved candle shop that used to be a sort of tradition for me to go to whenever I was down here. I loved watching them being made, and looking at all of the pretty designs. At one point I wanted to become an apprentice there and learn how to make them myself. After walking all the way from end to end, and still no candle shop, I went into the last little store to ask about it. Apparently, they had been out of business for 10 years or so! Shows how long it's been since I've been down this way. It hasn't really been that long since I was considering SCAD for a college, was it?

We had been putting off finding a hotel for the night, and here I'm sure that Dave and my stories will differ significantly. I was beginning to drag from being in bed by 10 most nights, and I still hadn't had a shower. I also needed to do laundry. Neither of us wanted to pay more than necessary, but because of the Marathon, about half of the hotels didn't even have any rooms left! After driving around for well over an hour, both calling and walking in to ask about the price and amenities, I stopped caring where we stayed, as all of the hotels started getting jumbled up in my head and seemed about the same anyway. I kept worrying about the circulation in my legs as my toes kept getting tingly and numb, probably from the way I was all bunched up in my seat due to my bike being all bunched up in the back. "The thrill of the hunt" kept Dave going long after I was done, and we finally settled in to somewhere that seemed to fit the bill, although there wasn't a laundry room.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Day 24: Nov. 2, Ridgeland SC to Springfield GA

I got going relatively early that morning, as the family I was staying with had to attend a funeral. It was still pretty chilly outside, and I was dropped back off at the gas station where I had been picked up at the evening before. I headed back to the Blue Heron Learning Center, because I really did want to look through it. They had a decently informative collection, especially on the poisonous snakes of the region, and I went ahead and took my time and read everything.

I still didn't know which way I wanted to go into Georgia. My cousin was coming down to Savannah for the weekend to visit with me, so I needed to be there. The pros of taking the "shortcut" were that I would get there a day early and be able to have a look around ahead of time and get settled in and not have to stress out about getting there the day of. The cons were that it was off the bike route and the traffic looked quite heavy when I had scouted it out ahead of time on satellite view. The pros of taking the long way around were that it should be on less traveled and therefore hopefully more pleasant back roads and on an established bike route giving me some semblance of hope that people might have seen someone like me coming through before, while the cons were that it was going to be a full day out of the way and I might be setting myself up to be too stressed out about getting to Savannah in time to still be able to have a decent visit with my cousin.

I went back and forth a good dozen times, each time I was 100% sure that that was what I had decided and that's what I was going to do, and I would mount my bike and I just couldn't do that first push on the pedals to get going. A call to my mom was in order, I just needed to talk it out. A little while later I was heading down highway 17 on my way to Savannah.

It didn't take long for me to realize that I had been spoiled with an usually low amount of traffic the last 2 days due to Halloween; on the way to Yemassee everyone was out with their kids trick-or-treating or partying, and yesterday everyone was at home nursing a hangover or sick from too much candy. Today, everything was back to business as usual. This alone might not have been enough to bother me, but the local bike rider who had given me route advice had failed to mention that when they resurfaced the road they added some deep rumble strips which took up what little shoulder there was. Being stuck between a few semis whom I couldn't trust to give me enough room and a row of death traps was just too much for me. I made it about 2 miles before I pulled off onto a dusty dirt road and called my mom again in desperation. We were both looking up alternate routes and throwing out ideas. I wasn't even willing to ride the 2 miles back into Ridgeland.

Mr. Sheffield, the guy I met the day before, had offered to drive me to Savannah if I wanted a ride, and I considered calling him and making good on his offer. I wondered how long the funeral and any related activities would take, and I thought a lot about how they had already done way more for me than I could have asked for. My mom was reading me street names for an alternate route that she found for me, but one of the roads didn't appear to go all the way through according to my GPS. I also would need to brave another mile or two of the trucks and rumble strips to get to the turn I would need to take. The stress response was impossible to ignore: look at 17 and feel like crying with an angry determination. Look down the dirt road and feel freedom. Three trucks had come down that dirt road while I hemmed and hawed, so I was sure it went all the way through and wasn't gated up at some point. It would pop me out right on the bike route without much trouble, or I could just take a joy ride and loop back around to town, giving me some time to decompress and giving the funeral time to finish up. Any way I looked at it, it boiled down to "what are my priorities now and for this trip?" I had battled my way though South Carolina because there was no other way. But here I was: finally handed a real choice in the matter. I thanked my mom again for her assistance and crossed over the railroad tracks and rode on into the woods, with a big smile on my face and peace in my heart. I don't regret for a moment trying to go down 17, because now I can't say I didn't try it out, and it also, again, helped me bring back into focus that I'm supposed to be having fun out here. It's about the journey, not the destination. 

The quiet, empty road in the woods was just what I needed. I soon forgot about looping back to Ridgeland and just rode. Before I knew it, I was back on track to go the way I had originally intended. I passed by a reserve where gopher tortoises were present, and I was tempted to go ahead and spend the rest of the day in search of one. The fact that a little hut with a log book for deer hunters' comings and goings and kills only served to encourage me to set up camp (somewhere near the entrance where I couldn't be seen from the road but would be immediately visible by anyone in a truck as soon as they passed over the little hill), as the last entry was from two days ago, and it didn't seem like anyone would care if I spent the night in the woods there anyway. But the sun was starting to get lower in the sky and I knew I needed to move on.

There was soon only one last bridge in front of me before I crossed the boarder. It was steep and narrow with the split shoulder/sidewalk design that made both too small to use alone. On the other side, the first thing I saw was the welcoming sign of the Georgia bike route #95 that went all the way to Florida. Marked bike route signage! I was so relieved and happy. I had some sort of visible proof that I had a right to be there. "Share the Road" signs! Special "Watch for Bikes on Bridge" signs! But it was what I noticed after riding only about a mile or two into Georgia itself that had me literally dancing and singing merrily as I rode (attracting a little too much attention from the dogs in people's yards as I passed): not only were the lanes wide and there were shoulders present and the quality of the roads improved so much that I suddenly gained a solid 3-4 mph, but I was actually being treated with some common courtesy again! People actually slowed down and waited if another car was coming, even though I had been shell shocked by SC so badly that I had limited myself to the shoulder and they could have easily passed me inside their own lane if they wanted to. No, they moved all the way into the other lane and passed properly regardless. I could tell that they knew I belonged in the lane and not in the shoulder, and that I was confusing them pretty badly as to why I was insisting on staying in my little 2 foot section on the side. I thought about coming out to claim my rightful place and ride like I should and was expected to here where I was respected as a legitimate road user, but decided I needed a little more time with myself first.

The sun was setting faster and faster, but I was getting closer and closer to Springfield, where I had decided to stop for the day. My mom was not answering her phone at all and my battery was about to die. The charging cable had decided to be incredibly touchy when I tried to plug it into my rechargeable battery charger with the USB port that I had been using as a last resort. The internet wasn't really working for me either, and after riding up and down the main stretch and not seeing a single hotel, I started to get worried. I thought about the big Catholic Church I passed on my way into town and how it was probably locked so I would be sleeping outside in the back. I thought about the local government building I passed that was a bit closer with all the cop cars in the parking lot. I thought about whether or not I would be willing to ask to spend the night in a jail cell and what spending a night in a jail cell would be like. What a story that would make!

I passed by a church with the lights on and a few cars in the parking lot. I really had to use the bathroom as well, so I decided to go in and ask around to see what I could find out. The ladies were having a scrapbooking party and making Christmas cards. They welcomed me in and let me use the bathroom and computer. The nearest hotel was in Rincon, another 10-12 miles away depending on which way I went. I had already done over 38 miles that day, which is a decently long day for me, so the thought of doing another 10 in the dark was a little daunting. I went ahead and mentally prepared myself to do it anyway, if it needed to happen. Eventually I asked the ladies if they would mind just locking me in one of the rooms in the church, and they told me to wait while they called the preacher. Lucky for me, there was a family life center just across the street, and I was going to be allowed to stay in it for the night. It even had showers!

I went ahead and got myself all cleaned up, by which time I was starving. I was informed of a restaurant on the next road over that had some of the best fried chicken around, and I went ahead on over and ordered a plate. Everything was made to order, and I was told to come back in about 20 minutes as it had to cook. The ladies working the kitchen were so sweet and there were several other families waiting patiently for their own orders in the dining room decorated with old classic records of famous musicians.

I enjoyed the company of the ladies for a little while longer before deciding to go to bed. I would need to get an early start in order to be in Savannah around 1:00 to meet David. I settled myself down on one of the couches and passed out.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Day 23: November 1, Yemassee to Ridgeland

I again took advantage of the late check out time in hopes that it would warm up a little before I had to head off. This hotel had some fancy raisin-cinnamon bagels and individual packets of cream cheese, which was so good I went back for a second one.

Today I was going to be riding on genuine frontage roads right next to I-95 on my way to Ridgeland. I hoped they were actually passable and paved, as I wouldn't have the option on hopping on I-95 if I got stuck. I shouldn't have worried, though. I had the roads almost entirely to myself, and although I originally thought that the super straight road right next to the highway would be too loud and boring, I couldn't stop smiling at the cars as they couldn't get me. I couldn't help feeling like I was mocking them with my presence and how I was definitely having more fun than they were today! How my priorities have changed. It's safe to say that my standards of what makes a good day's ride have dropped to just above not dying here in SC. The only really enjoyable places to ride are the places you have to yourself. Plain and simple.

Ridgeland was supposed to be close to a 20 mile ride according to my GPS, so I was surprised when I got there in only 12. From the way I got into town, it appeared that this place was halfway on its' way to becoming a real ghost town, almost exactly like the kind you can find in the prairies out west. I got such a bad vibe about the place that I almost didn't even take the time to find the library for a little break. I was glad I did, however, as the garden walls offered some sense of safety that was otherwise lacking. I wasn't entirely sure if I wanted to keep going or not. If I did, I would need to go over 30 more miles to cross the Georgia boarder and get to the next town, as it was still just a little bit nippy for camping. I did a quick search and found that there were a few hotels here, and the Blue Heron Nature Center with a nature trail not too far away!

I headed to the center only to find that it was closed. It had closed an hour prior, even though it was only 2 pm. I wandered around the short loop next to the road and stopped to watch a couple of guys mowing down all the ferns and small trees and other vegetation on a huge industrial riding mower. There were several signs instructing smokers not to light up under orders of the fire marshal, as well as an info board explaining how fire is an important part of the ecosystem here. Fire is good because it keeps the leaf litter and hardwoods under control, yet there is so much leaf litter on the forest floor because of lack of burning that the fire marshal has banned smoking in the area, and they are mowing down everything that a good burning would take care of. I asked about it and they told me that they were clearing out the area to put up Christmas lights...

I moved on to look at more of the ironic info boards on the semi-nature trail going around the artificially mini-golf-blue water of the man made lake with the fountain in the middle next to the handful of hotels and restaurants. I tried to let it be relaxing. I really did. There were lots of places to sit and enjoy the water. There were lots of turtles in the lake, and also an alligator. The alligator didn't look right, though. It was sitting too high in the water, showing almost it's entire body. A floating gator would only have its head and maybe a row of the tips of its back ridges showing. I suppose it might have been laying on a tree branch or pipe, but I couldn't see anything like that. I was so very, very tempted to throw a rock at it to see if it was real, which is not like me.

I went back to the museum, which had a very nice wrap-around porch with benches in the front. I was just about to have a snack and think about my next course of action, when a couple of guys, who had come to look at an old dug out Indian canoe that had been found in the swamp nearby, came around the corner. They were also a bit disappointed about the hours, and struck up a conversation with me about my trip, as they had noticed my loaded bike near the parking lot. They were Mormons and had done a bit of missionary work by bike way back in the day. After I told them that I had been having a rough time with the traffic the last few days, we joked a bit about swerving to look drunk to get people to give us more room. I was invited back to their office up the road to work on the computer for a little while, if I wanted, and since I didn't really have anything better to do, and still hadn't decided what my plans were, I followed them up.

I got a very warm welcome at the gas station where the office was, with a bottle of cold water and fresh-baked cookies, and soon it seemed that everyone knew about my trip. A fellow biker came in to ask about my planned route, and I told him that I was actually kind of torn because the bike route took me around the long way, but when I had looked for a shorter route into Savannah, I was discouraged by the volume of traffic on the roads that the satellite images had picked up. He seemed shocked that I was planning to go a full day out of my way (also that I only did 30 miles a day), and encouraged me to go ahead and take the shortcut, as he's gone through there several times.

It didn't take long for the awesome guy I met at the Nature Center and his wife to invite me back to their place for the night. I was more than welcome to ride if I wanted, but they had a truck as well if I wanted to load it up instead. I didn't want to admit it, as it had been such a short day's ride, but I was glad for the offer. My legs were very sore after the last few days, and I had been treating a rash that had developed in an unfortunate place between my cheeks, probably due to friction and me being too lazy to change into my proper riding clothes since my bum had toughened up enough to not be too easily bothered by chaffing from my khaki's and cotton underwear.

We stopped at the grocery store on the way home, and he drove me around to look at his son's house and a few other places in town so he could tell me a little bit of history of the area and his family. The closer we got to the house, the more I realized that I had happened upon someone who was very well-to-do. After I stepped into the house itself and had a little look around and heard a few more stories, I realized this couple will likely never want for anything money can buy. As I'm still struggling with just how much to say about some of the people I meet, I think I will leave this particular topic at that.

Their three young grandchildren were spending the night as well, and it was quite a change of pace, as it's been quite a while since I've babysat for a few little balls of energy. First thing on my list was a shower, as usual, and after that it was breakfast for dinner, with oatmeal, bacon, eggs, pancakes, and chocolate milk. After dinner, the kids played around a bit, and I got to visit with the grown ups. Eventually, the kids went for a bath and I snuck back upstairs for a long hot bath myself. I found some Bengay in my bags that I had forgotten I had packed, which turned out to be a bad idea, as it burned badly on my wind-chapped hands and made my thighs feel cold, taking away the good done from the hot bath in my opinion. It was nice to have such a generous, down-to-earth family take me in for the night (it got down well into the 30's that night) and feed me, and just give me some company, which I do miss sometimes.

Friday, November 9, 2012

Day 22: October 31, Walterboro to Yemassee

It was cold again this morning, and after the last two days I was in no hurry to get back on the road. I took full advantage of the 11 am check out time, before heading back to the park I had found the evening before. I explored it for a few hours, as there were quite a lot of trails, and I even found a thick Tarzan type vine hanging down right over the boardwalk. I couldn't resist swinging from it a few times. The park was pretty long, and I was able to actually use it as a shortcut into downtown, helping me avoid the road with people speeding along off of I-95. I found the library and worked on my blog for a bit, before finally deciding I needed to get going if I was ever going to get to the next stop before dark, as it was already pushing 4 pm. I had decided to stay in yet another hotel that night since it was going to be cold again, and so getting in close to sunset wasn't as much of a concern as if I was planning on camping.

I had a few choices as far as how to get to Yemassee. I could take the secondary highway 17 (which is actually a different highway from the one I had been on for the last week or so that goes right along the coast) which paralleled I-95 and hope it wasn't busy because it was so close to a major interstate (but the way to it was back up that same ugly hill I had to ride over last night), or I could go back the way I came (highway 64) and get back on the bike route that way, or I could take a middle road, highway 303, which would also take me to the bike route. I chose 303, and the first few miles out of town were kind of nice, until I got passed by a certain jackass in a semi truck. I can't tell you how many times I've seen impatient and rude people coming from behind me absolutely refuse to so much as ease off the gas for a few seconds to let an oncoming car to pass before passing me themselves. Sometimes I swear they even adjust their speed to ensure that all three of us will be next to each other at the same point in time. It's incredibly reckless and unnecessary, and often the oncoming car gets pushed off the road to avoid a collision, with tires hitting dirt more times than I can count. Or, if the oncoming car refuses to move just as much as the passing car refuses to slow down, they come within inches of missing each other, and I have witnessed this also more times than I can count. It pisses me off because by insisting on passing me at that very instant, right then and there, they not only put me at risk, but they are also putting the people in the oncoming car at risk as well. It's not like I've asked them to come to a full stop. I'm still moving too. Seriously, what is the emergency? You are late for work? You are going to the store? You just want to get home and plop your butt on the couch and watch some TV? Is it worth it? Would it be worth it to have an accident or kill someone because you couldn't spare a few seconds and slow down just a few mph?

Yes, I've had more close calls now than I can count, but to have a big semi do it when another semi is the oncoming car, and the lanes are barely wide enough to have their trailers be inside the lines in the first place, just left me speechless. The truck in the other lane almost lost control and went in the ditch when his tires hit dirt, and I also went off the road and into the ditch when I saw that we all had missed each other with less than a foot between all of us. Neither truck stopped. The truck that passed me didn't even slow down. He didn't care at all about me or his fellow trucker, and it was that which blew me away most of all. I'm used to people not caring about my well being on the road. I'm sure they think I've somehow asked for it and deserve it by being there in the first place. I stood there in the grass for several minutes. I was done. I had had it with with these utterly rude, inconsiderate, downright dangerous drivers on these too-narrow, poor quality roads.

After I while, I got back on my bike and kept going. There really wasn't much else to do. I was extra glad when I came upon a newly paved winding residential road that I had scoped out ahead of time as a possible "longcut" to get off the highway for a few miles. It was a super pleasant ride, and I took it very slowly, enjoying the empty street that I had all to myself for as long as possible. I passed by one huge rural mansion after the other, some still being built. They had fancy brick and ironwork gates guarding the entrances to their driveways, and for the first time in a long time I started singing about how this was how bike touring *should* be. I was a bit apprehensive as I approached the end of the road. How was this next road going to be? The quality went down measurably, but it was mostly empty and the scenery was fantastic, and absolutely best of all, nearly everyone that I passed waved and smiled at me! It was such a huge 180 degree change from the behavior of only an hour before. I was again apprehensive as the end of this road drew near, and I would need to get back onto highway 17 paralleling I-95. How would that road be?

The first thing I noticed was the fact that the lanes were a good 2 feet wider, even if there was no shoulder. The rolling hills looked daunting, but it was mostly a trick of the eye since the road was so straight. They were very very gradual, and I had very little problem working my way over them, although the fact that I was actually losing speed on the downhills if I stopped pedaling was most puzzling and obnoxious. I stopped at a little shop for a drink and snack, and smiled and waved at the group of old guys that were sitting around on the side chatting and maybe playing cards. They did not smile back but stared me down like I had absolutely lost my mind. I ignored it and went in anyway. The cashier was nice enough. I went back out and overheard an escalating conversation between a guy in a car and a guy bent over his window about "Where's my money." Hmm... I pretended not to notice them at all and slowly moved my bike to the other side of the building where the group of old guys was. I again smiled and they continued to stare. One walked past me giving me a wide berth, and looked scared when I smiled at him and said "Hi." He was obviously still dealing with a bad case of PTSD left over from Vietnam, probably. I decided it was time for me to move on, even though I had only had a sip of my drink and hadn't even opened my snack.

The next several miles were hardly memorable, just more hills up and down on the very straight highway, until I got to Yemassee. The hotel I was staying at was actually a bit past the town itself in a cluster of gas stations, restaurants, and hotels right off the interstate. The sun was starting to set, but I actually enjoyed the ride through the nearly empty road through the swamp and forest. I did pass by a red truck that was parked in front of a gated road, a tree stand in the back. Hunters. I really should probably get something orange to wear when I'm in the woods at some point...

Again I felt apprehensive about getting on the next road to the hotel, as it was an exit road and potentially busy and full of speeding rushed people. It turned out to be almost pleasant, as people actually moved over into the free lane when they saw me, for the most part, to pass even though there was a shoulder that I was hiding in. The front desk lady at the hotel was just as nice as could be, which is why I didn't say anything at all when she made the comment "I'm one of those impatient ones, don't be mad," when I commented about how people are so impatient as to be dangerous on some of these roads. I couldn't say anything, because if I said anything at all, then it was all going to come out. I had a lot built up from the whole of South Carolina, and this poor woman was not going to know what had hit her. I did give her my site information, so maybe she will be reading this now and can understand why, yes, I am mad, and I feel like I have full right to be.

Dinner at Denny's was awesome! I stuffed myself with pretty much 2 dinners, and the waitress seemed a little concerned. The room I ended up in didn't seem to be used all that often, as the room I was supposed to be in had some issues with the card reader and I couldn't open the door, despite getting a new key about 3 times. When I pulled back the covers to get in bed, the biggest wolf spider I had ever seen in my life came strolling out onto my night stand. We are talking huge. Massive. It was easily 3 inches across, and not at all spindly or all legs. It was a beefy sucker. I was desperately trying to find a nearby shoe without scaring it away as it strolled along the nightstand next to the phone. If I tried to hit it now, I'll miss and then what? I tried to wait patiently for it to come out to a better spot, but it had paused. It knew. As soon as I could tell it was about to make a break for it I swung, and missed. It scurried behind the headboard of the second bed. I could see it on the wall, just waiting for me to forget about it and go to sleep. I might have done it too if I didn't know that they can bite and that they hurt when they do. I wished I hadn't used up the last of my potent permethrin spray a few days prior, but it couldn't be helped now. I got out my little spray bottle of DEET bug spray and squirted it behind the head board. It fell to the floor and I started looking around the edges for it to come running out so I could smash it. After a while I gave up and hoped I had knocked it out at least, and pulled out all of my treated clothing and surrounded the bed with them to create a sort of perimeter, which I'm sure was more for my piece of mind than anything.

As tired as I was not 5 minutes ago, now I was wide awake with a decent amount of adrenaline flowing through me. I laid down and tried to read for a while, and just as I was about to turn out the light, the gigantic beast wobbled his way drunkenly out from under the other bed and tried to make a break for mine. I squashed him with my shoe and after checking that there were no more hiding behind my headboard, I went to bed. He was probably as big as he was because he had eaten all the others, I thought.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Day 21: October 30, The Woods to Walterboro

I woke up at 4, probably due to a combination of not being tired anymore due to my early bedtime, and being too cold. I was tempted to go ahead and get an early start on the day to get some major miles under my belt before most normal people even woke up. After climbing out of my tangle of sleeping bag and hammock and hammock sock, and the fleece pillowcase I've taken to sticking my feet in on the colder nights, and everything else just to tinkle and freezing my ass off in the process, I decided to just spend a few hours relaxing all wrapped up like a cozy caterpillar. My sleeping bag wasn't cozy enough, however, and after a few minutes of debating, for the first time so far I had to break out one of my hand warmers. I put it on my neck, right over the big artery that goes up either side, and I felt tons better in about 30 seconds. I drifted in and out of sleep for several hours, waking up at 5 to the sound of a massive semi truck rush hour, then at regular intervals for trains. I was suddenly glad I hadn't continued on, as I had originally intended to sleep much closer to the tracks. It was so cold out, and the thought of riding on the highway was becoming so stressful as I listened to the traffic levels increase, that I played with the idea of just hanging out here all day. After all, no one was going to find me. Around 7:30, I heard a quick series of about a dozen shots, and decided it was time to go ahead and get moving.

My phone had turned itself off at some point in the night, and it wouldn't turn back on. As I had plugged it in to my other backup battery charger (I dropped my really awesome one and broke it...), I didn't think it could have been due to the battery dying. I imagined having rolled over on it in my sleep and crushing it in a bad way, as the screen had already been broken some week or two before in the Subway on my way to Myrtle Beach. Part of me wondered if/hoped that it was just too cold out for it work properly. Either way, I thought about what losing my phone would mean to the long term success of my trip...

It was easy getting to the other side of the frontage road this time, and I was pleased to find it was paved as well and had some nice scenery. There was a short unpaved section, but it barely dampened my spirits. I was in a rather good mood, despite the weather (which did look surprisingly like snow). I took my sweet time enjoying the ride, until I got to the last third of the frontage road, which was gated off with an angry looking no trespassing sign with a line on it about illegal hunting. I couldn't even slip around, and apparently there were cameras watching me anyway. Damn poachers, ruining it for everyone. This is where the green dotted line on my map tells me to go, dang it! I looked longingly at the muddy dug-in tire tracks on the other side of the gate. I didn't really want to ride on that, but I would have gladly done it. I had a little pout and hissy fit about not wanted to ride on the highway, before turning back to the last cross-road. I was looking desperately for another way to get closer to the bridge without going back on 17, and decided to take my chances with some roads on the other side that would really add some miles, but I didn't really care much about that any more. I went up the empty, but nicely paved road, peeking down all of the gated off dirt roads. I had a sinking feeling that the road I wanted to take that I was seeing on my GPS was dirt as well, and the chances of it going all the way through anyway was slim. I turned around, defeated.

On my way back to the highway, mad at myself for wasting so much time and energy messing around when there was no other way, with stiff cold fingers and a red runny nose, and the cloudy dreary sky, an old man passed me and stopped, waiting patiently for me to get to him. I wasn't expecting him to proceed to tell me that I can't do what I'm doing because I'm a solo woman on a bike. I held my tongue, despite my current mental state, and reminded myself that I HAD come this far already and if I don't make, it it's because South Carolina will have killed me first.

Back on the evil highway 17, I fought for every 100 yards of gain through brutal 20+ mph headwinds and rude traffic. The next 7 miles or so took me about 2 hours. I wanted desperately to call my brother and tell him I was done, and that I would wait here patiently on the side of the road for him to come get me, even if it took him till midnight to get there. However, my phone was dead, and so there wasn't much choice other than to keep on going, if only to get to a phone where I could call my mom and let her know the situation.

Eventually I crossed the bridge into Jacksonboro, passed by an abandoned looking hotel, and found a nature trail off of the side of the road on the right, where I went ahead and took a nice break and walked around for a little while. I debated setting up camp in there, although there were a bunch of spy style tree cams everywhere. Who are these people? A little farther up the road was the gas station with Church's Chicken in it: the place I had been looking forward to getting to since I left Charleston. Luckily, it was still in business, and I abandoned my bike outside to seek refuge indoors for a while. After a bathroom break, I ordered a sandwich and claimed a booth right next to a wall outlet. I held my breath as I plugged my phone in, and I felt a glimmer of hope as a blinking red light appeared in the corner. I ended up spending the next several hours there, charging my phone and reading The Hobbit, calling my mom once in a while in vain. I had told her the day before that I intended to get to Yemassee (Yeh-meh-see; I've been corrected too many times...) today, and I needed to find out if she had booked a hotel for me or not, because it was still over 30 miles away, and that just wasn't going to happen. Not today. Giving up on my mom, I called my brother and dad as well. They didn't know and couldn't get up with her either. I feel like this always happens. As soon as I really need momma, she goes missing...

Around 2, I decided I couldn't wait around any longer. I headed back to the motel just to make sure it really wasn't open. It wasn't. My mom finally called me back, and we decided I should head for Walterboro, as I really needed a decent place to stay tonight and it was closer than Yemassee at 15 miles away, even if it was taking me a little bit in the wrong direction.

The ride started to look up a little as the sun came out, even if the high for that day never broke a nippy 55.
I was still facing a bad headwind, but now I had a shoulder about a foot and a half wide to try to hide in. There were historical markers every so often, and I stopped at a few of them to snap a quick picture and get a quick break. It was never more than a sign telling some history or a headstone of some dead soldier. After I passed the road I would normally have turned on to stay on the bike route to Yemassee, the shoulder went away, and I begged out loud for it to come back.

"I like you, shoulder; I appreciate you, shoulder; don't leave me, shoulder. PLEEEEAAASE???? Why???"

Alas, it did not, and after the school buses let out, traffic started getting really busy and rude, and the twists in the road didn't help at all. I'm just waiting for the day when I "cause" a head-on collision because of someone else's impatience...

The hotel my mom found for me was on the far side of town, right next to I-95. It was going to be busy and unpleasant, I already knew. As the outer roads nearing the town were in a spiderweb pattern, I was able to find an alternate road in through some slightly depressed looking neighborhoods. There were several kids being driven around on a 4-wheeler, having a grand old time, and they all waved and shouted at me. I got a little nervous when the road turned to dirt near the end, but it went all the way through. I passed through some more sketchy looking parts of town where I got a lot of gawkers. I didn't mind: if people are so confused by me that they slow down to stare, that's absolutely fine with me. I made sure to smile at everyone. Eventually I found the road I wanted, but the big hill I wound up staring at was daunting. I pulled into another park (I do love how many parks I stumble on), and ate a snack and watched the traffic. The sun was starting to set (it would figure that it was right in front of the direction I needed to go, getting in people's eyes), the road curved to the right, it was rush hour, and I was tired.

Eventually I scraped up some more resolve and at the next break of cars started up the hill again. I pulled into the very next place, the parking lot of an apartment complex, with still about a third of the hill left to go. There were about a dozen elementary school aged kids playing in front of one building, and 6-8 high school aged boys chatting quietly in front of another. Everyone stopped for a moment to look at me, and I got a bad vibe from the high school bunch. I smiled a quick "Hi, I'm just gunna sit here for a minute" smile, and turned my bike around to face the road and pulled out some gadgets to look busy, glancing at the sun and the traffic and the sign of the apartments I had turned in to (which happened to be in the direction of the boys, who had decided to ignore me for the most part, only giving me a curious glance once in a while). I did call my mom to buy some time, and almost as soon as I hung up with her, a fire rescue truck pulled in and asked me if I was OK.

"Yep! I'm just waiting for a break in traffic before I keep working my way up this hill."

"Alright, well I'm going to wait for you to get that break in traffic, because this is a bad spot for you to be in."

I waited for a second for him to move, as he was now blocking my view of the road with his big truck.

"I totally agree with you. This is a big hill and the sun is right at that time when it gets in everyone's eyes, and the road curves too, and it's rush hour. This is a very bad spot for me to be in."

He looked nervously around. I still wait for him to move, as not only am I now blocked from seeing the road, he has pulled his truck in next to me in such a way as to block me from view of everyone in the parking lot, while also effectively trapping me where I was, as the front of the truck was too close to the curb behind me to allow me to back up. Finally he hints at giving me a ride, and, defeated, I tell him to pull in then and point out that he has blocked me from moving. He calls for a different fire rescue truck to come get me, and hands out a dozen plastic fire hats to the elementary school kids as I took my bags off my bike to make it easier to load. He was still looking extra nervous, and was trying his hardest to block the kids from me with himself, going so far as to reach out and stop curious hands from trying to touch my tires or my handlebars, which I really thought was odd. These kids were about 5-8 years old and super excited about getting a free hat, and my loaded bike was something they had never seen before. I couldn't help thinking that this was another person with an unjustified level of fear of certain people even if the situation doesn't call for it. Now the boys, I also got a bad vibe from, but I felt like we had made a sort of quiet agreement when we looked at each other. I wasn't interested in them and they weren't interested in me. They stayed where they were, and I stayed where I was.

The fire rescue guy waited there with me until the other truck got there, who asked me what was wrong with my bike. "Nothing's wrong with my bike. I had just stopped for a little break from going up this hill, and I guess this guy just wasn't comfortable with my choice of spots so he called you to give me a ride." I could tell he wasn't really listening, he too was uncomfortable with this place. He was doing the calculated, calm, no sudden movements, don't-look-at-anyone thing that I do sometimes as he loaded up my stuff. I get it, this is a bad spot. But seriously, there are a dozen kids playing blissfully outside, me and the guys had already made a quiet agreement to not bother each other, and that was all. I didn't say anything, though, as I was happy to be getting a free ride the last few miles to my hotel after such a crappy day.

As I got dropped off, guy #2 asked me again what was wrong with my bike. "Nothing." I could tell he wasn't listening. That wasn't the right answer. After I got all settled in, I walked next door to the Shoney's and got myself a big fat burger. It was really cold again that night, and I was happy to be in a nice room, which I had cranked the heat up to full blast in.

Day 20: October 29, Leaving Charelston

I had to leave relatively early, as Andy and Sue had an appointment they had to go to. Saying our goodbyes was sad, as I'm finding is usually the case with the nice people who take me in as their own for a few days. I was rather cold out as I headed to a bike shop to get the bottom cog on my tensioner checked out, as it had been driving me nuts. I was pretty sure it was just because I had inadvertently cleaned out all the thick greasy lube when I was trying to get out the sand that had made it's way into the bearings, making the most obnoxious squeaking noise. The bike shop wasn't very helpful. It was the same one that had flat out ignored my existence when I had rolled in a few days ago looking for a chat. The guy put it up on the work stand and took a look at it, and poked and prodded it in an obligatory fashion before telling me that the part was bad and it needed to be replaced, but because it was a specialty part I would need to order it. I also had him look at the shifter cable, as I had discovered it was hanging on by only a thread at a scary 90 degree angle when I went to make a simple adjustment, because attempting to shift had started making my bike act funny. I had simply shoved it all back in and hoped for the best, but it made me nervous.

I headed on, and stopped at a gas station to use the bathroom and get some hot chocolate. Really, I was looking for some refuge from the cold and wind, and was a bit disappointed that there was no where to sit. The bike trail that would lead me out of town was nearby, but crossing the street was kind of scary, and I wondered why there was no crosswalk connecting the two sides of the trail. I was glad that there was a bike trail at all, although the very poor condition of the pavement made me snort at the picture of the racer type images on the sign. Some parts made me wish it wasn't paved at all, as it was so bad. I later got my wish when the trail turned to single and double track. I didn't mind too much as it was a very peaceful ride, if very slow, as I picked my way through the jaggedy gravel paved dirt. I got to a freshly graveled (read: loose gravel) causeway, and the wind sweeping sideways over it was so strong that I ended up getting off and walking for a few miles, as I was afraid it was going to push me onto the sloping side where the gravel would finish the job, sliding me right into the water, bike and all. But it was still a beautiful ride, and I stopped to look at all the water birds and a pair of curiously large whirlpools that had formed on one side.

Eventually, I had to get back on the road. I stopped at Bojangles to double check my route and watch the traffic for a while. I was excited to be taking mostly frontage roads from here on out, as they should be pretty much empty. Unfortunately, there were a few long stretches of unavoidable nasty highway that still needed to be dealt with, mainly due to the fact that there are only so many bridges. I had originally planned to stop at the Caw Caw Interpretive Center for a break, but they were closed. The leaving-side gate was open, however, and I did sneak just inside the fence to sit and grieve for my situation for a few minutes before sucking it up and moving on.

Finally, I got to another frontage road. It was so peaceful in comparison to the highway, and I took my time riding down it, enjoying the smell of jasmine and honeysuckle. One of the few good things about South Carolina roads are the fragrant flowers you chance upon sometimes. Unfortunately, the frontage road turned to sand about halfway through, and I took a few minutes debating whether or not I really wanted to go that way. I remembered the last time I got stuck on a sand road and the barrage of mosquitoes I had endured, even though the cold and wind were keeping them at bay today. It was a very hard decision. Eventually, I decided to head back to the highway. I was surprised and pleased to see another set of tracks in the sand just like mine! Another bike tourer had been this way within the last day, pushing his bike in the sand as well, and really working at it too, judging by the way his toes had dug in. I couldn't help but wonder which way he was going, and exactly how long ago he had come through, and if I might catch up with him at some point down the road.

After only a few minutes on the highway, I turned back off onto the very next street, deciding that I would take my chances with the sand. I was rewarded with the pleasant surprise that the road had turned back into pavement! This was short lived, however, as it turned back into sand at the next street coming off it. I decided to just push through it. This road, in all, was one of the least busy roads I had been on. In the hour or so I had been riding it, I was passed by maybe 3 cars, including one cop. I found a lonely, grassy, gated road in a stretch that had wild forest on both sides for quite a ways. I stopped to investigate a little, but decided it was still a bit early to be thinking about stopping, and I was hoping to get in about 10 more miles today.

I got up to the highway, intending to only ride it for about 100 yards before turning left, as the road I was on continued on the other side there. I thought about how it was probably unpaved as well. The traffic was so bad I couldn't even find a place to cut in, much less hope to cross, so I turned back around and went back to the unused road I found. There were no "No Trespassing" signs, no houses, no anything except for the gate, so I went ahead and slipped past it. The grass had been low before, but it quickly grew up to a height of well past my knees, and up to my hips in some places, with delicate mosses also interspersed. No one had driven through here in a long time. I parked my bike behind a particularly tall clump of vegetation, just in case a random car decided to pass by, and started investigating the woods to one side. It didn't take long to decide that this was where I was going to spend the night.

I took the bags off my bike and carried them over the little hill walling in the lost road, before rolling my bike over as well and parking it in the little ditch on the other side. It was so peaceful. For the first time wild camping, I was so sure I wasn't going to be found that I felt comfortable enough to strip down and have a proper wash. I decided not to cook, however, as there was too much leaf litter around, and I didn't want to leave any evidence of my having been there. I then surprised myself with how tired I was when I went to bed around 7:30, just as the sun was setting.