Wed 21 Jan 2009

Click for the full gallery of photos
Well, I’m here. Ushuaia. The dot on the map I’ve been zig-zaging towards for the last five months, and oddly, its a bit anticlimactic.
After the struggles and hardships navigating the mountains of Peru with Shannon, to arrive in Cuzco felt like reaching a summit. That first night I walked through the Plaza de Armas grinning like an idiot and marveling at the lights and sophistication. I smoked a cuban cigar on the cold balcony of Norton Rats Tavern and sipped a taste of home, burbon. Life was sweet. To get there Shannon and I had spent more than a week riding unmarked dirt roads with conditions so bad we often averaged 15 miles an hour. Totaly spent at the end of the day, we would reach some unknown town needing to find shelter and food. I loved it and hated it and I would run the full gamut of emotions in a day.
On these dirt tracks that pass for highways, not three hours outside of Cuzco, I had problems with my clutch and had to open the engine to fix it, spending two and half hours of precious daylight, causing us to arrive in Abancay, the next town of consequence, just before dark. We decided to spend the night there and “summit” Cuzco the next morning. Leaving Abancay in a light rain Shannon was hit by a taxi and he didn’t pass go, collect his $200 or make the summit. Instead he went to Lima and got some screws and a plate in his femur. That ride we did together was a highlight not despite its diffaculty, but because it was so hard, and when it was over I felt like I had done something – and Shannon was robbed of that feeling of completion.
It was the same riding the Altiplano in Boliva with Mike, Simon, Didi and Martina. I had reservations about crossing this remote desert with just the three of us, and out of nowhere, Didi and Martina Materialize. Almost immediately we became a little family, and together we complected a five day ride through sand and wind and nothingness – and it nearly broke me. When we pulled into San Pedro de Atacama tired and dirty, I felt like I had really done something, like I had had pushed my limits past boundaries I didn’t know existed – and it felt good.
I expected the same type of challenges from the infamous Ruta 40, a dirt track that runs the length of Argentina near the border with Chile and the route we chose to take to Ushuaia. Its known for being a hard ride with blasting side winds. When we rode it there wasn’t much wind and I’m sure that made a big difference, because we all found it not much more difficult than a gravel road, often averaging 50 or 60 miles an hour. The route runs past Mt. Fitzroy, El Calafate, and with a short detour, Torres Del Paine, the Yellowstone Park of South America. It was a great ride, but it didn’t kick my but the way I like to have it kicked.
That’s not to say Ruta 40 is a ride through the park. About 10 km outside of a small town called Tres Lagos, I was riding in front and as I crested a hill I saw a bike on the stand, sideways across the road, and an ambulance parked to the side. I pulled in with my engine off and asked the rider if he was OK. He gave me a broken look and waved his hand in a “so-so” motion. He walked around and swung his arm in a gesture that said “look at this mess”. When he settled down and started talking he kept asking the same questions over and over the way a person in shock does: “am I in Argentina? Got a cigarette mate? I’ll have to make a naked bike.”
Leo was riding north alone and he didn’t remember what happened, but the most obvious thing is that with his bald front tire he lost control in the gravel and fell. Who knows how long he was there before someone passed and contacted an ambulance – which didn’t do much good. Once we got there, the ambulance said there wasn’t anything they could do and that there was tow truck on the way. The ambulance driver said we should wait for the truck. And they left. With the help of the tow truck driver we got Leo and his bike to El Calafate where there is a hospital and where once he was feeling better he could get his bike sorted out. So even without wind Ruta 40 can bite you if lower your guard.
In Tores De Paine I wanted to spend more time than did Simon and Mike, so we split up, planning to meet back up in Ushuaia. I arrived in Tierra Del Fuego solo via the ferry from Punta Arenas and got my taste of gravel and wind – and that made it interesting. But it only lasted for about 100 km. The last 200 km to Ushuaia was a beautiful ride through forested mountains on smooth pavement. I pulled into town easy as pulling into any American city – and the streets were lined with gore-tex clad adventurers enjoying high end restaurants while they waited on their cruise ships to Anartica. It was no Cuzco or San Pedro. I had in mind a scene like the one in The Mission where Robert Dinero is climbing the waterfall dragging all his armor behind, not pulling into the parking lot at the mall. We did a lot, but arriving in Ushuaia isn’t a summit. Its more of a U-turn.
January 21st, 2009 at 8:43 pm
Congrats Dan!!!!! It has been a hell of a trip. Do you think it will take as long coming back?
January 21st, 2009 at 8:43 pm
BTW , its brad
January 22nd, 2009 at 12:25 am
Congratulations, Dan!!! Glad you finally made it. John has quite a folder full of your blog & pictures and he shows it to all who will listen & look. We’re very proud to have been a part of your trip, dear, and may you have a good trip back. We’ve all learned so much along with your expertise with writing and descriptions have been wonderful. May God bless you, dear, in all that you do from now on. You must be so proud of your accomplishment. Just wish Shannon could have finished with you. Good luck. Hope to see you in the future.
Nancy and the Pleasant Acres gang
January 22nd, 2009 at 9:33 am
Congratulations a thousand times over, brother. It seems weird to say it, because we take no credit, but we are overwhelmingly proud of you for having the stones to recognize that you needed to do this, *and then to do it*.
It’s interesting to me how this ends up like the rest of life – the peaks and valleys aren’t where we expect them to be. Sometimes crossing the threshold feels remarkably ordinary – all of the work and adventure done, actually touching that spot on the map seems an academic exercise. I think the REAL import of that moment might emerge in memory, even if it’s not profound at the time.
January 22nd, 2009 at 12:41 pm
!!!!!Dan!!!! No words to describe my level of saying congratulations.
January 22nd, 2009 at 2:33 pm
Wow, Dan! Congratulations. Safe travels back. I’ll keep checking for more road stories & photos. ~ Peace ~ Jeff Tallman