Blog

  • Day 5-no movement.

    Washed my socks and pants.
    Last night we left most of our kit in the garage downstairs. It’s the same garage that the ants use.
    So, I’ve boil washed everything to kill the little bastids. I discovered this after doing the to camera piece.

    So, nothing doing distance wise. Tom has his new tyres and is arranging for the petrol cap to be shipped on. I’ve been doing communications bits and bobs and charging batteries…and killing ants.

    You do know, don’t you, that you can help support the charities I’m riding for, simply by buying books, that you were going to be buying anyway, from www.threecupsoftea.com ?
    It’s an online bookstore that offers discount prices on books (like amazon) and each time you buy, some of that money goes to the charities, so that’s a book, a discount, smug satisfaction at helping overcome ignorance (your’s from reading the book and the kid’s from the schools that will be built and the teachers that will be provided, or the additional cultural programmes that can be run) all for money you were going to spend anyway…what a fab bargain that is!
    www.threecupsoftea.com…take a look, then buy a book.

  • Thought for the day

    I’ve decided that there’s a big difference between a direction and a destination.

    If you are heading in the right direction, then you are making progress, whatever happens. If you set a destination and don’t make it, you have failed.

    It’s a mindset.

    Anyway, I know some of you folks are thinking, this is all well and good, but how about some gratuitous tarmac shots, with sexy curves…

    What you don’t see is the drop on the right. Birds nest on the cliff face and are safe, that’s how sheer and steep it is.

  • Day 4

    The highlight was breakfast with Randy. He was riding the first GS800 I’ve seen moving. He paid for breakfast too, so a thoroughly nice bloke. It sort of went down hill after that. 101 and freeways until I caught Tom in Malibu. we went to Santa Monica Pier for lunch. Piers always seem so jaded and in need of some tlc, this one was no exception. 

    After lunch, over to Hollywood, where we rode around Beverly Hills and then rode straight back onto the highway. We should have stopped our relentless quest for distance in exchange for a few moments of quality, tea on the grass in front of the Hollywood sign or something. Instead we opted to sit in a traffic jam than ran on for hours, all the way to San Diego. So I’m afraid that once again, no tea making chances.

     

    Things will need to change.

  • Day 3 San Francisco

    Hit the Pacific Coast road today. The 1 and 101. Have some road footage, but no tea drinking footage, as at 4pm I was on a freeway and had been and still were to be for a few hours, just coming out of San Francisco.

    Tom and I had split up early in the day, as I wanted to stop and take pictures and Tom was on distance to cover mode. 

    I didn’t catch up with him all day and when I stopped in Paso Rubles, he was 45 minutes down the road.

     

    Still it enabled me to run around the motel room stark naked!

  • Day two

    Far better than day one. Mt Shasta looming large from the living room window. A ggod nights sleep and then some spectacular riding on Cecilville Rd Route 3 across towards the coast. The roads went from sweeping low country to tight blind switchbacks on single track with sheer drops and no barriers.

     

    The needles I had must have worked better than I expected, because I didn’t get off and walk.

    Mid day we were in Orleans, with a good little hardware store and a cafe where the waitress should find another job…is there a job where insolence is required!

    Later in the day, the Avenue of Giants, somewhere I’d passed by but not through before. Very impressive.

     

    Took tea at 4pm (little unusual- watch the vid), then ended the night in Ukiah. A long day, with challenges I’ve faced up to (vertigo) and overcome…primarily because there wasn’t an option to not go on.

  • Turn Left for S.America.

    6am the garage doors rise to reveal a still unwelcoming darkness.

    6.01am I’ve lost Tom.

     As I pull out of the garage, he’s nowhere in sight. Not even a red glimmer from distant tail lights. God this guy rides quickly. So in hot pursuit I race down to the first set of traffic lights. There’s only clear road ahead, no Tom.

    The GPS lets me know a call is coming in, but as I’ve not switched on the headset, my shouts of “Tom, Tom, is that you?”, only resound within the confines of my helmet.

     

    This is not a good start.

    I park up and ring.

     

    Tom turned right from our house, rather than left and so, he looped himself round a few roads, to end up back where we’d started.

    Once that was sorted out we started the journey again. This is the fourth departure. The official departure from the Tea Festival. The unofficial departure from the Tea Festival, to which we’d returned so that additional footage could be shot and now, two departures from home.

    The day which had started inauspiciously, deteriorated further, when the oh too short respite from rain ended and the Gods deluged my gusset area with wetness in abundance. This would be 6:30 ish. It stopped raining at 9am and restarted at 9:16, to last for long enough to become uncomfortable. Tom however was tootling along happily in front, seemingly oblivious. His 650 single was a constant audio accompaniment, so much so I often dropped back, just to clear the air.

     

    Oregon offered better climatic conditions, although due to our clever planning, we did manage to avoid every point of interest which this State had to offer, by sticking to the I5 all the way.

    We stopped for fuel, we stopped for water, we saw a gas station and a Walgreens. We did have a late lunch in a small town just off the I5, where I tried to convince the staff that if they licked a baby, the flavour would be uncannily similar to Spam…it is, try it yourselves.

    California bought warmth and Mt Shasta, as spectacular as I remembered it from my Death Valley trip. Fresh snow had fallen on the summit and the low sun caught it with an irridescence and pink hue, like frosting on a bun.

     

    Trudy and Chet were our couch surfing hosts. Me in the main house, Tom in  a rather spledid Yert in the garden, underneath the imposing Mt Shasta.

     

    Splendid people. Opening their home to two smelly bike riders that they’d never met before.

    Chet will have to add a comment about where we ate, but suffice to say, the “probably the best burger” I had, could well live up to its nomenclature.

     

    Tomorrow the ocean.

  • It’s not all me me me!

    Meet Tom.

    He’s riding with me, for as long as he can stand my company. So, I’m posting these picture on his behalf now, just in case we don’t make it through the first day as riding buddies.

    Ladies and Gentlemen…Tom’s picture:

  • And they’re off!

    The Three Teas Tour officially started at the conclusion of the first annual Northwest Tea Festival this afternoon.

    Steve explains the Three Teas philosophy
    Steve explains the Three Teas philosophy

    After speaking with visitors throughout the weekend the time finally came for Steve and Tom to mount up and begin the long trek South.

    Final checks, where's the keys!
    Final checks, where's the keys!

    Stay tuned for updates from the road as the journey unfolds.