KOWAFREEKIN’BUNGA BUFFALO BOB, WE’RE IN WYOMING!

GREETINGS FROM WYOMING!

Leaving Paonia, Colorado, yesterday, was sweet sorrow, as I loved the village, it’s  microclimate, and friendly folks.  There’s a plan lurking in the back of my brain to return, and  stay a month.

The delightful B&B, (Fresh & Wyld), is a 1908 farm house, owned by Dava Parr, a well known  chef and self-confessed  escapee from the grind of Aspen.  A more pleasant person you couldn’t  meet.

 The road out of Paonia, headed north bound toward Wyoming is Route 133…a motorcyclists  dream  of a zillion sweeping turns, sharp corners, and occasional straight-aways that tempt a  twist of  the throttle.  Roads like this, though thrilling, are quite tiring and demanding of one’s  strict  attention. But once out of the greener pastures and curving roads of northern Colorado,  around  the town of Craig on route 13, the land turned uninteresting and stayed that way to the  Wyoming  boarder and beyond.  For the remainder of the ride to Rawlins, Wyoming, I asked  myself,  frequently, “Why do people live here”? The answer, of course, is mining and cattle.

 What does one think about during miles upon miles of  open land with  nobody in sight?  How about this…Is it OK to wear underwear two days in  a row so long as you do number two, then shower, before putting them  back  on?  I’ve decide that’s it’s OK. You know, deep stuff like that.  And, it  also  crosses my mind that some  people I know are worthy of love…and  that  many aspects of my life are blessed, and that others need to be  changed.

 Immediately after entering Wyoming, I went through a town that modern times has totally  forgotten, it’s called Baggs.  There was mild confusion about the direction of the road so I  stopped to ask directions from a local who had just climbed out of his truck.  It was so  completely covered with mud that the brand was not discernable.  This guy had on tan bib  overalls over a T-shirt with loads of hair climbing up from his chest to an unshaved neck and  then on to a full beard, topped off with a toothy smile, albeit one that seemed to be missing a  few ivories.  I stuck out my hand and said, “You’re the first person I’ve spoken to in Wyoming”!  He laughed and extended his in return. It crossed my mind that not only were we meeting each other, we were meeting each other’s wives.  With clarified directions in hand I roared off to Rawlins, arriving a few hours later just in time to beat the evening rain.

 On the way to Rawlins I crossed the Continental Dived on three occasions…with no change in  political views.

Rawlins was a good place to sleep and nothing more. Hence, no photos.


 This morning I left Rawlins around 08:00 and headed northwest to  Dubois.    The initial look of the land had me thinking I’d landed on the  moon.  Long  periods of time elapsed where I saw not a single living thing  save some  sorry ass looking grazing land.  The sense of being alone in the  midst of a  great expanse of nothing is profound, and one becomes quite  aware that to  have a problem, of any kind, in an environment like this,  means real trouble.

 After what seemed to be endless miles of nothing the land began to change around the very  attractive town of Lender, Wyoming.  The land took on a more pastoral look; it was also the  entrance to the Wind  River Indian Reservation.

 This statue of the Great Shoshone  Chief Washakie, stands in front of  a Shoshone Indian center on the  reservation. He was a man who  finally saw that peace and  only  peace would end his tribe’s  slaughter by invading whites.  He  lived  to the age of 102.

 A big sky western look with snow capped mountains in the  distance gave me plenty of  WOW’s, and OMFG’s, in  response to the waves of this incredible scenery.  The  profound  beauty of this country, seen in real time also made  me think about how so  many  Americans take this nation for  granted.  A great ride  today, one that had me  singling  America The Beautiful over the sound of Harvey’s 96 cubic inch, made in  America, 75  mile per hour rumble.

 Dubois, is cute as hell, and a place to spend more time…perhaps another trip to this western of  all western states.

 The western evening sky winds down a wonderful day in this beautifully unpolished state.    The state motto of Wyoming…Forever West. Long may it be so!

Harvey, this morning in Rawlings, WY.  Fueled, packed, and ready to go!

Tomorrow morning…The Grand Tetons, and Yellowstone!

XO

Middie

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