Tuesday, July 20, 2010

DAYS 31, 32, AND 33

DAY 31

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Spirit Lake (St. Michael’s) to Carrington, ND

50 miles

Spirit Lake is the Casino/Resort where we stayed last night in St. Michael’s, ND. And Spirit Lake is also another name for Devil’s Lake. It’s one of the only non-man-made lakes we’ve seen, and since it has no source or run-off, it’s supposedly a salt lake. All we noticed was the yellowish-green, almost iridescent color of algae around the shore. The hotel was nice, and there was also an adjoining deluxe RV campground, with permanent cement pads for the RV’s and green lawns and landscaping. Another world.

The highlight of the day, for me, was biking through Sheyenne (yes, with an S), a small town with one grain elevator on the right side of the road. I noticed a small sign in front of it with an arrow pointing left. When I looked left, all I saw was a Taxidermy Shop.


But I’m always up for a morning coffee, so I got off the bike, and looked in the window of the entrance. A sign said, “Internet Café.” Well, this made me curious, so I proceeded inside with Laura. We found ourselves in a newly pine-paneled coffee shop in the front, and in the back, ropes leading us on a path through a taxidermist’s delight: specimens of elk, moose, black bear, deer, a grizzly bear, and God knows what else, all perched in naturalized habitats. When you got over the fact that it was all a little weird, you couldn’t help but laugh.





Further discussion with three nice women working there revealed the story of the place: the town had lost its school, but didn’t want to lose the whole town. People there decided to re-purpose the school into a not-for-profit hunting and fishing lodge. They wrote a grant proposal, and got a grant to pay for a new roof for the school. in order to raise more funds for the lodge development ,about twenty women now staff this café on a volunteer basis, calling themselves the Sisterhood of the Traveling Crockpots,. Sure enough, while we were there, one of the “sisters” showed up bearing a crockpot for today’s lunch. I have no idea how North Dakota’s health laws work. But I digress. They serve about 70 lunches a day, usually only open between 11 am and 1 pm. We arrived before then, and had delicious rhubarb cake with pink coconut frosting and a cup of coffee, all for $1. We told them they needed to charge real prices if they hoped to get this thing off the ground.

But the best part was the T-shirt we bought for $10 apiece, with the name of the place: the Wild Things Taxidermy and Spicy Road Kill Café. We each gave them a $20 and told them to keep the change. When we asked to use the restroom, they directed us to the back, through doors that opened into (cringe) the taxidermy lab on the left and restrooms on the right. The guy was working on a deer. I think this might very well be the oddest bit of Americana we’ve encountered, but the women were so proud of their venture, and clearly got a kick out of visitors’ reactions, that you couldn’t help but share in their enthusiasm.

DAY 32

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Carrington to Mayville, ND

91.8 miles, of which I biked 49

It seemed like a good idea at the time. The Carrington Inn and Suites served homemade donuts as the main part of their motel breakfast. Of course, Linda had the usual oatmeal and eggs at the trailer to be sure we had enough protein for energy to bike. But really… homemade donuts?? We just don’t get these every day. So that’s what I had for breakfast. I should also add that I had only slept for 5 hours the night before. Put together, that’s a bad formula for enough energy to bike 92 miles in a day. In biker parlance, I “bonked.” I just had no energy at all, and my legs felt like dead weight. In addition, there were a lot of trucks on the road that day, and the back third of us all felt a bit skittish. So, five of us called it a day at mile 49 when the van came by and loaded our bikes on top.

Meanwhile, it was an odd day for a couple of others, too. Jane took this picture of Ellen, seen here, ducking. Double-click on it to see it in better detail. File it under: One Damn Thing After Another.


Ellen saw the crop dusting plane, thought it was just buzzing the group of bikers to say hello, so she stopped to take an overhead picture of it. Suddenly, she realized that it was actually landing on the road behind her!! Its wingspan was wider than the road itself. It’s definitely time to go home.

Mayville is the home of Mayville State University, which might look more like a community college around home, and much of it was under construction or renovation, with lots of wire fencing, so I couldn’t use the library there. I had gone to the town library and asked where the newspapers were. It was a sweet old library with library smells and old oak woodwork. But the librarian replied, “We don’t have any. You’ll have to go to the college.” Whoever heard of a library with no newspapers? So Mayville proved to be a newspaper-unfriendly town.

DAY 33

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Mayville to Fargo, ND!!!

59.8 miles

Well, it rained some and we had a headwind against us all day. Most of the day I biked with Sue, and as we got into the Fargo area, the corn and wheat and soybean fields gave way to roads leading to North Dakota State University, the airport and downtown. We kept looking for a Fargo sign to hoist our bikes in a grand finale, but there wasn’t any! The closest we came was this one for a photo opp:



Not satisfied, we asked a guy at an adjacent gas station, “Aren’t there any Welcome to Fargo signs around here?” He thought a minute and said we might try biking over the Red River into Minnesota, and then come back over the bridge again. He thought there was probably a green Fargo sign there. You’ll have to see the next blog entry to find out whether we satisfied this goal. (There will be two more entries: one of pictures of the trip, and one describing some of the riders I’ve enjoyed for the past five weeks).

We found the bike shop to leave our bikes for shipping. Felt funny to walk away without them. In the parking lot there was this bike, evidently on a very long journey, with even its orange safety flags faded in color.



Later as we sat in a downtown restaurant window, we saw the bike back on the road, along with another equally loaded down tandem. It turned out to be a family of five, doing a self-supported trip! The three kids appeared to range from about age 7 to 12. Wow, and we thought we had accomplished something big!

In the evening, we had a final banquet at the Radisson, which was in Fargo’s downtown. Fargo was surprisingly bustling and even a bit urban. The banquet was fun, and we toasted the guides and the sag drivers, and though we didn’t talk a lot about Barbara, we agreed that she was there, too.

1 comment:

Anne B. said...

Congratulations on finishing your amazing journey, Lynn! What a huge accomplishment and celebration of your youthfulness! It was great fun to travel across the country through your eyes this summer. Thanks for sharing your incredible experience.