Motorcycle Tour of Northern California &
Southwestern Oregon

  11 days, 10 nights, 2095 miles, September 2019

We kept having to delay our annual two-week motorcycle trip this year (2019) because of Stefan's job. We did take a long weekend earlier this year to tour Fort Rock & Deschutes National Forest by motorcycle, but work kept interfering with our main annual trip. Stefan was back from a work trip to Japan for just two days before we took off on this trip, to Northern California and Southwestern Oregon - and our trip was almost delayed because I finally got a job offer, and they really wanted me to start immediately. But our luck held out and off we went.

Our goal for this trip was to ride roads and visit sites we hadn't before - so, no Lassen National Park nor Lava Beds National Monument this trip, as we had done both already, in 2012. Northern California is just a day's drive away from where we live and there's so much of it we haven't seen. And everyone raves wanting to ride the Oregon Coast - we've been unimpressed on coast rides north of Tillamook (lots of traffic, lots of traffic lights, not that many views of the ocean and very limited access to park and visit the beach), so we have wondered if the Southern Oregon coast would be different.

So, you can skip the narrative and go view our photos on Stefan's site (coyotetrips), most of which have extensive descriptions other travelers should find helpful - and I hope all viewers will find amusing. And here is our route.

Or, you can read my list of highlights and low lights below. Sorry, no real storytelling narrative this time - I'm too busy with my new job and I'm wondering if anyone is reading anyway... other than Carol and Rita... Hi, Carol and Rita!

A reminder: I am all about Stravaig, pronounced straw vague, an Irish and Scottish word meaning to wander about aimlessly. One goes stravaiging about the roads. Stravaig is probably from an even older and obsolete word extravage, meaning to digress or ramble. I am all about stravaig, both on my motorcycle and in conversations and in writing travelogues - even just the highlights:

tent siteLook at this photo to the left. It's a photo that represents a perfect camp site to me, the perfect escape: remote, tree-covered, our tent up and air mattresses blown up and sleeping bags unfolded and everything ready for whenever we are ready for bed, our motorcycle boots outside the entrance because we're wearing our Tevas, and a fire in that gorgeous, glorious vintage cast iron camp stove. No other campers visible because the campsites are spaced so well. It's quiet except for the sound of the rushing rivers nearby. None of the few campers around are playing a radio or talking loudly.

This photo, for me, represents comfort, charm, romance, nature, relaxation and contentment - the kind I seem to be able to find only when camping. It is, in a word, my happy place. I want to frame it and put it over my desk and stare at it and not get any work done.

The only thing missing from this photo is us, sitting or standing somewhere and being happy, and, of course, Lucinda the dog. When we win the lottery, we will hire someone to drive with her to our campsite, set all this up for us, and then go camp somewhere else after we get there and join Lucinda. 

By the way, that tent is a three-person tent from Aldi and it is the greatest tent in the history of humanity.

You can view our photos on Stefan's site (coyotetrips), most of which have extensive descriptions other travelers should find helpful - and I hope all viewers will find amusing.

Also see:
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________

If you have read this blawg, PLEASE let me know.
Comments are welcomed, and motivate me to keep writing --
without comments, I start to think I'm talking to cyberair.


about me | contact me | support this web site