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About that little trip…

Alrighty. I said I’d give the details about the trip this weekend, so here goes nothing. This is long. Really long.

Ever since I got laid off, I’ve been figuring that I might as well make the most of some of the free time that’s been handed to me. There are great roads up in the NC mountains (and elsewhere around the Appalachians and Smokies) and there are some decent campgrounds that don’t cost much. I did a bit of searching online and some planning but never quite got around to getting out there until Dave told me that he decided to take a quick weekend trip up around the Cumberland Gap this weekend and would I like to come along. So we packed up and headed out early on Saturday morning.

We followed 485 and then 85 south until we got to Gastonia, NC and then we picked up 321 headed north. We went through Blowing Rock and Boone and crossed into TN while we followed some nice, twisty roads through parts of the Smokies. Around Bristol, TN (there’s also a Bristol, VA which ought to give you an idea of how closely we followed the state lines) we pretty much adjusted the route to travel due west on Route 58 across the south-western edge of VA until we got to the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park at almost the exact spot where VA, KY and TN meet.

We set up the tents, relaxed and cleaned up, and started to think about dinner. The closest town was Middlesborough, KY so that’s where we headed. And here’s where the, um, “exciting” part started.

If you saw the pictures (just take a look over on the right side bar for the latest Flickr photos), you might have noticed one of the shots of the campsite with my bike pointing toward my tent. There was almost no room to the right to make a proper u-turn so that meant starting up the bike to inch it forward and then pull it back a bit and repeat the whole process in an interminable multi-point turn until I got it pointed in the right direction. Normally, this isn’t a big deal. We do it all the time when we park head-first into parking spaces and such. But this time it was a little tougher than normal. That should’ve been my first clue.

Finally, after getting turned around, we took off toward the main park entrance and turned right onto the main road. Pulling out onto the highway, I felt the rear wheel get loose like I’d slipped on a patch of gravel or something. I caught it, straightened up, and keep moving but the whole rear end didn’t feel right and the steering was off. It wasn’t until I got to the restaurant some 10 minutes away that it became clear what it was: a flat tire.

Now, I don’t know how many of you out there have had to change a tire on your car along the side of the road. It isn’t any fun at all. It’s dirty, sweaty work. But a motorcycle is a different animal entirely. To change the tire, especially the rear tire, you need something to stand the bike perfectly upright, remove several bolts, disconnect the rear brake hanger and caliper, remove the muffler hanger and muffler (which also unhinges the rear shock), remove the drive chain, and lift the bike at least about 6 – 8 inches off the ground to give yourself enough clearance to get the wheel out. And all of that before you can actually start the process of removing the tire and tube, patching it, putting it back on and repeating the whole mechanical mess until it’s back together. This is a 2 hour job, at least, in a properly equipped shop with a hydraulic lift and a complete set of tools. I had a change of underwear, my iPhone, a camera, and several packs of cigarettes. Not ideal. Except for the cigarettes. They came in handy.

By now, it was around 5:45 in the evening. Thinking through the problem with empty stomachs and slightly tired from riding about 375 miles, we tried to call around to see if there were any MC shops that might still be open (a long shot) and there weren’t. And no MC shops open on Sundays. I tried AAA which was a great option if I had an extra day and another mode of transportation since the best they can promise is to take your ride somewhere to have it fixed.

There was a Wal-Mart across the street so while I talked to AAA on the phone, Dave rode over and picked up a Slime emergency flat repair kit. Now, Slime normally works great on tubeless tires. Cars and many bikes have tubeless tires. I have tubulars. See the problem? But what the hell. We didn’t have any other choice so we put in about half of the bottle, filled the tire up with air, and I rode around the parking lot for a few minutes to give the Slime a chance to fill in whatever puncture inside the tube needed to be fill in. Then we went in to eat.

After about an hour, back in the parking lot, it looked like the Slime did the trick. The tire was holding up so off we went to pick up a 6-pack of O’Douls (had to go into TN for this as Middlesborough, KY is a dry town. Which makes absolutely no sense when it comes to non-alcoholic beer) then back to the campground in VA. Are you keeping up?

The Cumberland Gap park ranger service sponsors weekend events at the campground and this weekend, there happened to be a band. As if our trip wasn’t already getting to be somewhat bizarre enough, the band turned out to be this really strange group of 5 women who played what can only be described as feminist, activist, bluegrass music. And I am not making that up. They were rather good, though. So it was nice to have some entertainment. We chatted til it got dark and hit the sack around 10:30 or so. The plan was to get up early and get on the road again by around 6:30 or 7 to beat the heat and give us enough time to maybe make it down to the Tail of the Dragon which is highway 129 that runs for about 11 miles between TN and NC. We went sort of south-west for 30 miles or so, then pulled off to the side of the road to do a quick tire check.

It was flat again. Middleborough was a really small town. But compared to where we were now, it looked like Manhatten. I know that 30 miles doesn’t seem like a long way, but trust me when I say that we were in the middle of nowhere. What happened to the Slime that was working so well the night before, you might ask? Maybe the road friction heated it up enough. Maybe it never really held against the inside wall of the slick inner tube. What ever the reason, it had been slowly pushed out through the tiny hole in the tire and was now coating the entire inside of my frame and fender. Green Slime on hot pipes equals a scorched, smelly mess.

Now what?!? It’s Sunday morning. We’re outside of a town we came to find out later was called Bean Station, TN. (Go ahead. Look for it. I dare you. You won’t find it because its too frickin’ small!) The only option was to hope to find a friendly house nearby, beg to allow us to leave the bike there, ride tandem to the next closest town and then call Kim to come and get me while Dave travels home on his own. The next closest big city is Knoxville, TN which is easily 4 hours from Charlotte by car. I didn’t like this idea. But what else could we do? We had no tools to change a tire so we had no choice. We filled up the tire and quick as I could, I got on and started up the road rehearsing my plea: “Excuse me sir and/or ma’am. I have a motorcycle with a flat tire. Could I trouble you to keep it and all of my stuff for me until I can get it picked up by whatever repair shop is around this godforsaken, middle-of-nowhere place? I’d be very appreciative.”

Not 2 minutes later, I saw a hand-painted sign for an auto repair place and I pulled in figuring, if I have to leave my bike somewhere, I’d at least want to leave it where it might be looked after by an actual mechanic. I pulled up to this pathetic cinder block building with, I shit you not, a telephone number spray painted on the side, parked my bike and grabbed my phone.

You might be thinking that the worst of the troubles were over at this point. You’d be wrong.

I called the spray painted number and a woman picks up. After partially explaining my situation she says, “You’re gonna be wantin’ my husband.” “Yes, ma’am,” I said. So he gets on and after hearing my story, says something like “I don’t work on no motorcycles.” I said, “Yes, that’s really OK. No problem. All I want is someplace safe to leave it. OK?”

Before he can really answer, I glanced at my bike. Maybe I was starting to feel some separation anxiety. Maybe my sub-conscious was trying to tell me something. Whatever it was, I looked over and in the span of a few seconds I thought about the following 2 things:

  1. I seem to have parked on a slope that leans just slightly away from the kickstand
  2. The tire is now flat enough that it won’t support the weight of the bike like its supposed to

And before I could blink, the bike went over on its side. Yup. If you’re keeping score, it’s now bike, 2 – BJ, 0.

There wasn’t much to do but laugh at this point. That and picking up all 500lbs of my bike. But while we’re picking up the bike, a young guy comes walking out of a nearby mobile home asking us what the trouble is. Turns out, he’s the son of the guy I just talked to on the phone. And he works at this garage. And he says he’d be happy to open the garage to help us fix the tire. Really. He actually said all of this. Although his accent was bad and I only caught every other word. This was an auto repair shop so they didn’t have much of the equipment that would’ve made the process easier, but we improvised and we managed. 3 hours later, the tube was patched and the tire was back on the bike. When we asked how much we owed the guy he said, and once again, I am not making this up, $40. $40! We gave him $60, thanked him profusely and motored on.

We still would have had some time to make it to the Tail of the Dragon if it wasn’t for the fact that Dave got us lost both getting into and getting out of Knoxville. We burned over 1½ hours  just trying to figure out which way to go and then burned another hour in bumper to bumper traffic trying to get through the Gatlinburg/Pigeon Forge area. By now, the temperature was nearing 96° and it was already after 1:30 in the afternoon and I had told Kim we’d be back sometime around 3pm. Once again, we’re about 4 hours by car from Charlotte. You do the math. The only thing to do was fight our way up to I-40 and follow it through TN, into NC where we’d pick up I-26 back toward Charlotte. The rest of the trip passed by uneventfully and we got back to Charlotte, sore and dirty, by about 6:30. After around 650 miles, a flat tire, a veritable comedy of errors, and the friendliest most helpful red-neck auto mechanic I’ve ever met I came to the end to my first trip on the motorcycle.

You might wonder if this has soured me on long motorcycle trips. Nope. I’d do it all again (minus the flat tire, of course) this weekend if I could.

Taking a little trip

mc-tripThis weekend, Dave and I took a short trip up to Cumberland Gap National Historical Park on the motorcycles. We camped out in the Park’s campground and generally rode around that area where Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia meet. The trip was fun all in all. But there were some moments that were a little more…interesting, I’ll call them, then I would have liked. I’ll write more about that in the next post once I figure out how to make it sound as funny as it probably must’ve been to anyone other than me at the time. Until then, enjoy the picture and click to get to more pics on my Flickr page.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-06-28

  • RT @Twitter_Tips: No more unsafe links!! Twitter link protection now available: http://ow.ly/fI21 —Please Retweet: http://bit.ly/FHK3v #
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  • I don't remember often complaining about what my mom cooked when I was a kid. But I'm feeling that way now about my own cooking. Ironic, no? #
  • Michael Jackson in hospital in cardiac arrest? Still waiting on AP or someone to pick it up for more info. #
  • Don't agree with Bob Boilen – http://bit.ly/178FUy – I loved Sky Blue Sky. But so far, I'm enjoying the songwriting on #wilcothealbum more #
  • Suddenly hearing Michael Jackson has died! Is this possibly true? #
  • I was pretty excited about #Smoltz's start last night. Boy, did he ever get the tar beat out of him. Guess he's still rusty. #
  • A spider just ran across my desk and between the leather insert and wood frame. Not cool, spider. Not cool. #
  • David Bianculli just reminded me of one of my fav MJ songs…Dirty Diana – http://bit.ly/7fHbz #

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Desperately seeking topics

I hit a big brick wall with topics for the blog. Maybe its the heat.

There isn’t anything worthwhile to talk about cause most everything that’s in the news is already over-played. Except for this little item that I hope doesn’t get drowned out by the rest of the salacious and celebrity news.  In a 8-1 ruling yesterday, the Supreme Court decided that the strip search of the young girl suspected of having 2 advils on her person was unconstitutional. It’s a sort of complicated ruling that casts no actual blame on the motives of the school officials. The justices wrote that they believed the officials were trying to protect the students of the school. From what, I’m not entirely sure but I’m glad to hear that the court ruled in favor of the young girl albeit in a sort of non-precedent setting way. I understand the difficult nature of protecting students in an era of cell-phones, texting, 24-hr. news,  and an explosion of prescription drugs for just about everything one can think of. But I firmly believe that 13-year old kids, no matter how much they posture and preen, are still just 13-year old kids. And I don’t think they should be subjected to humiliation under any circumstances.

On a side note, there are several articles about the ruling (this one on the NYTimes site is the one that I read this morning) but the article and the ruling sent me to the Supreme Court official site so I could read the full opinion. Go there – http://www.supremecourtus.gov/ – and tell me if you’re as shocked as I was at how crappy the site is. It took forever to load and looks like it was designed by somebody who’s never designed a powerpoint presentation before, let alone a website!  I mean, seriously.  Come on! You’re the SCOTUS.  You ought to have at least a slightly better looking website. At the very least, get a better graphic of the official seal on there. Take a tip from the Obama administration’s web gurus and get yourself some graphic designers while you’re at it.

N.C. unemployment rises to 11.1%

N.C. unemployment rises to 11.1% – Charlotte Business Journal: .

Make that plus 1…me.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-06-21

  • Just like last time, I'm getting the Unknown Error -4 when I try to connect to the iTunes store after the upgrade. ARRRGGHH! #
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This will make you cry

A sad story, for certain. But a little bit heartwarming as well.

Pixar grants girl’s dying wish to see ‘Up’

Here come the crazies

I’m so over sensationalism in the news that even though there’s been plenty to talk about, I haven’t had the inclination to post lately. I didn’t want/have/need anything to add to the noise. But yesterday I heard something that just plain pisses me off.

So by now, you’ve probably heard about the flap over Letterman’s joke about the Palin daughter and A-Rod. It got to the point where Dave graciously apologized on air to the Palin family even though the joke really wasn’t that bad and even though he really didn’t have to. But those who are fans of David Letterman know that whether you care for or don’t care for his brand of humor, the one thing you can count on is that he is as authentic and down-to-earth person as there is. I love his humor. But that’s me. And it may not be for you. No biggie. There’s plenty of other late nite talk for you to tune into if you prefer. And I don’t really give a rat’s ass over how you think he’s caustic, cynical, rude, mean, whatever. That’s where some of this frustration comes from for me. I don’t go around haranguing people for not watching David Letterman so I don’t really care to listen to you waste your breath trying to explain why he’s not your cup of tea. I’m not trying to be mean. Really, I’m not. But just SHUT UP ALREADY!

Anyway, Sarah “I can see Russia” Palin gets all high and mighty about a joke, Letterman apologizes and you’d think that’d be the end of it, right? Wrong. Get a load of this article from the Huffington Post. What can only be described as some die-hard crazies from the Palin “base” are suddenly calling Letterman’s son a bastard, his wife a slut, and calling for Letterman’s ouster. Notice what’s absent from the article? Any outrage from Ms. Palin herself. Typical neo-con crazy behavior.

Among the many things that bother me about this are the following 2 points:

1. If you (and by “you” I mean any radical, crazy, neo-conservative, ditto-head) are so egregiously  wronged by these episodes, why do we never hear from you when one of your own makes a comment like, oh, I don’t know, an escaped gorilla being related to Michelle Obama? Yeah, that’s sarcasm. Recognize it? It’s also rhetorical so I’m going to go ahead and answer for you…it’s because you’re CRAZY.

2. If Sarah “drill, baby, drill” Palin considers this a good strategy for establishing her bona fides ahead of the 2012 election, she’s even dumber than I thought. If you want the public at large to take you seriously, you need to treat your political reputation as something a little more important than a front page article in Us Weekly (right next to the articles about whether Jon or Kate cheated and with whom and when.) Fighting with David Letterman doesn’t make you look like a savvy politician or a “family values” advocate. It makes you look like a petulant child.

This one incident in particular was just the straw that broke the camel’s back for me. After the killing of Dr. Tiller and the attack on the Holocaust Museum in DC and the shocking dust-up at Fox News over one of their anchors actually saying something that came close to really fair and actually balanced about hate groups being associated with the right-wing of the Republican party, I thought we had reached a point where maybe, just maybe, even some of the most delusional wingers might take a step back and consider that there’s more middle ground here than they had originally imagined there to be. But no. Stupid just breeds more stupid.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-06-14

  • @stewartcink For want of a comma, for the briefest moment, I thought you were looking for a date. :) in reply to stewartcink #
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  • Snow Leopard for #$29? But not until Sept.?? #
  • AT&T NOT supporting tethering??? Boy, that makes me really mad and ready to go back to Verizon if its true #
  • June 17 #
  • Am I the only one having crash issues with Safari 4? It seems to hang on some flash content but not all. #
  • Did I miss this? Since when did PJ O’Rourke become a talking head on CNN? #
  • first there were staycations, now we’re talking about microcations. How ’bout if I just go out to my neighbor’s backyard and pitch a tent. #

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Good news/bad news

apple-logo1Yesterday was the WWDC (World-wide Developers Conference) keynote speech and, as expected, Apple announced a whole bunch of updates to both software and hardware. In the good news category, the entire Macbook line got updates and price cuts at the same time. Best of all, the new lithium polymer batteries promise up to 7 hours of power on a single charge.

If I can pat myself on the back a bit, some 14 months ago or so someone asked me what advances would convince me to shell out money for new hardware. And I said that I thought we’ve reached a point where most laptops had plateaued in terms of what they offer the consumer. Apart from faster processors, room for up to 8GB of RAM or SSD hard drives, the laptop you have today (unless its more than a couple of years old) is probably as good as it gets right now. But I did say that I might be tempted to buy new, even if I didn’t really need to, if someone would finally address the one problem that plagues laptop users: battery life. If someone could produce a laptop that gives up to a full work day’s worth of battery life, then that would be an extremely compelling reason to upgrade. Laptops are nearly as powerful (and in some cases, even more powerful) than most desktops. And sales figures for laptops indicate that a significant number consumers are opting for laptops to replace their aging desktops. Plus, you get the benefit of taking it with you when you need to. But laptop batteries have the frustrating habit of dying after a few hours of use. If you aren’t near an outlet or if you forgot to bring your power cord, you’re pretty much shit-out-of-luck.

So, back to Apple…the new Macbook Pro line has better battery life, claims to be the greenest on the market, and the old 13″ Macbook is now considered part of the Pro line. And when most PC manufacturers can be trusted to jack prices when they add new features to their hardware, Apple is cutting their prices, in some cases as much $300.00. Good for you, Apple!

Adding to the good news, OSX is getting a major update from Leopard to Snow Leopard. And it’s due out sometime in September. And its only going to cost $29 for the upgrade! That’s virtually unheard of. I mean, it’s not a complete OS overhaul like Tiger –> Leopard was, but still, if you read over the list of planned improvements, you can see that it’s as close to a major upgrade as possible.

Of course, there’s the new iPhone 3GS to talk about. And with it, iPhone OS 3.0 is going to be released a couple of days in advance. Starting with the new OS, there’s almost too many improvements to list but my favorites are landscape keyboard, copy/paste, and MMS messaging. There were a couple of very cool surprises, too. You’ll now be able to buy and rent movies from the iTunes Store directly from the phone. And they added a “Find my iPhone” feature that has some cool tie-ins to MobileMe. Long story sort, if you lose your iPhone, you can log into MobileMe and send a message to the phone asking for it to be returned. You can also send a command to make the phone beep loudly (even if you turned the sound off!) until someone locates it. And if everything else fails, you can remotely wipe the data completely off of the phone through MobileMe. All of these features are free to existing iPhone owners. The new iPhone hardware gets a camera upgrade along with video and, according to the keynote, most processes are up to twice as fast on the new phone vs. the old one.

Remember how I said there was bad news? Well, if you think back to when the original iPhone came out, there was that little uproar over the price drop that made Apple issue a “mea culpa” to the tune of $100 to every early adopter. Then, when the 3G came out, they actually allowed previous iPhone owners to purchase the new one at the subsidized price even though they were still in the middle of a 2-year contract. Well…not this time. Even though the new 3GS is only $199 for the 16 GB model, existing owners won’t get the subsidized pricing. If any existing owners want to upgrade, they’ll have to pay full price. At least for now. Maybe AT&T and Apple will cave on that decision. Another really nice feature that was announced that comes with some very bad news is internet tethering. Basically that means that you can use the phone as a modem. Which is awesome. Except that AT&T isn’t supporting it yet. You should have heard the groan from the audience when that was mentioned. Seriously AT&T, what’s your major malfunction here? Are you begging your customers to dump you? You won’t have the iPhone exclusivity forever, you know.

Overall, the complete list of updates and improvements overshadows some of the bad news. But I’m curious to hear what some of the tech world thinks about those frustrating bad news items. My guess is that most of the blame is going to be laid at the feet of AT&T. That’s who I’m blaming.



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