And so it ends

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

The final ride of the Northern Tier is a 33-mile trot from Snohomish, in through the north end of the city. We wake up at the Snohomish Youth Soccer Fields, tear down our tents one last time, zip up our kits, and get ready for the day of days. Our celebrations are uniquely calculated: the cyclists ride rogether down a puzzle of paths to Gas Works Park, which is where we first see the city skyline.

Gas Works Park

Gas Works Park

By the time the riders hit Gas Works, they’ve ridden 4,291 of the 4,295 miles on the Northern Tier. You don’t have to think about navigating the final four miles because the penultimate task for the route leaders is to rendezvous with the team at Gas Works and (literally) lead everyone to Peddler Brewery to present a donation to the Swedish MS Center, quaff beer, and embrace Don, Cassie, family members, alumni, and everyone else who made it out to Seattle.

Being someone for whom a celebration is for is a delight, but helping set the stage is a different kind of thrill. Riding out to Gas Works with Lucas and Joe and waiting for the team was unlike anything I’d ever felt before. We had a gaggle of 31 riders coming down the way, counting for us to take them to one of the most magical afternoons of their lives. We waited, knowing the champage was on ice, the hotel rooms booked, and the Pacific waiting.

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More evidence of tall-person discrimination: forever relegated to only being a head in the background of group pictures.

The mighty Pacific!

We did it! Again!

After the revelry, we lead the team one last time to Myrtle Edwards Park, where our front wheels touch the Pacific. And just like that, the crescendo hits and it is over. It takes 69 days to cycle from Bar Harbor to Seattle, and it takes a few minutes for it to end. When everyone steps over the logs and onto the beachy rocks, they’re Bike the US for MS alumni, and everything present-participle about the trip ceases. And I think the abruptness of the end makes the connection to your teammates, trysts, memories that much more enduring. You never feel like you’re done being a part of the team. I waded in the ocean, knowing I was in a moment I’d surely romanticize and remember both immediately, and years after.

Seattle has only ever seen me in hysteric joy. I had resigned myself to having to wait another two months until Drew’s done riding the Great Divide before seeing him, but he surprised us in Seattle! He’s probably currently gliding south through Alberta (and if you’re reading this, Drew, I expect an equal amount of reciprocated postcards from the Divide). Colin, who is the Brand Historian for Eddie Bauer, took the time to show Joe and I around the company headquarters in Bellevue on our day off in Seattle. We ogled the office and talked about what it’s like being a creative type at a major outdoor retailer, and I left the office hopeful to some day have an interview there. The Pacific Coast team is made up of mostly Northern Tier 2014 alum, and seeing my Route Leaders was a joy. I spent a good bit of the summer explaining to the cyclists that I was merely trying to emulate the bang-up job my Route Leaders did, and seeing Ryan, Duncan, Kevin, Rob, Larry, and Kenny in Seattle was the greatest reunion since when Ford Prefect and Arthur Dent found each other in So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish. I feel like I’m dropping the ball by being home and not riding down the Pacific Coast with them.

Oh, yeah. Home! I am home. Though “home” may be a bit generous because I have no permanent address, no employer, and no sense of where my life is going. And these are issues which may not be soon fixed because my top priority is seeing all the people I love in this city, not, you know, molding my future.

In 2013, I lived with Drew around the corner from Pete, and I’d regularly cycle right past the Bike the US for MS vans in his driveway on the way to class. That was when Drew and I started fancifully talking about what it’d be like to someday ride across the country, but the commitment cutoff was pretty early on. We just let “someday” do the heavy lifting in those conversations. Fast-forward two years, and I’ve just caught a flight home from Seattle, and he’s cycling his way down to Mexico. We, and all of the Bike the US for MS alumni, are lucky.

When you cycle your way into a place, you have more time to see its personality, its quirks, all the weird little details which make it what it is. Now when I think of all the places I’d like to go, I think “Yeah, but can I ride my bike there?” Cheers to Bike the US for MS for showing me the world.

Cheers to the 2015 Northern Team. You made it, and I love all of you. I’ll be hard pressed to find a group of people as fun as you lot. Cheers to Lucas, Joe, Emily, and Ayhson. We may have lost more than a little of our sanity, but we made it, and I’d hug each of you every day if I had the means to. Cheers to my 2014 Route Leaders. I didn’t know what I was doing this summer, but the only reason I managed to get to Seattle was because of the example ya’ll set for me. Cheers to Don and Cassie. It’s one thing to follow your dream to the other coast, but to enable people to chase down their dreams is truly something else. And cheers to you! Thank you for taking the time to scroll down this far. Thank you for donating, for the kind words of support along the way, and allowing me to share the trip with you. It has been an absolute joy.

An immolation in Idaho: Mike goes to the E.R.

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

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I stumbled out of the van and into the hospital. The receptionist was an elderly woman, and I tried to sound as collected as I could when I maladroitly approached the window and said, “I…can’t stop vomiting.”

I suppose it all started on our last day in Montana, when Ayhson found himself sick and sad on the side of the road adjacent Lake Koocanusa. He thought he drank some spoiled milk, and after taking him to the hospital, he was diagnosed with Gastritis. But somewhere lurking in his insides was a nasty viral infection which would soon have it’s way with nine of the 35 of us.

Lake Koocanusa

Lake Koocanusa

Long story short, the stomach bug made haste. One day, I rode 100 miles into Idaho and felt fantastic. The next, I was peeled over in the gym we were staying at, having to count down from three just to summon the strength to stand up. The infirmed were flanked on either side of me, most of whom showed signs of improvement throughout the day. But the evening rolled around and I still felt like a shell of myself (“Mike, you are actually green” – real quote from a cyclist), so to the emergency room I went! They dumped two liters of IV fluid into me and sent me on my way.

There are still pangs of the bug floating around the group, but we haven’t had to take anyone back to the hospital so I’m counting it as a win. Montana, a proper albatross, was sure to send us out of the state with something dreary to deal with.

Tall trees in Newport, WA.

Tall trees in Newport, WA.

I’m writing this from the public library in Tonasket, Washington, which is famous for being the hometown to actor/comedian/musician Jack Black. Tonasket also has a grand café called Shannon’s and a taco truck. Oh, and it’s like 100 degrees here! Which to most is hellish, but to me it’s home. And speaking of home, I am scheduled to be there in a week! It really felt real when I called my sister and said, “Let’s get dinner next week” and it wasn’t a joke. I’m very much looking forward to the opulences of the real world, but there are a few mountains to climb before I can get there!

Mending my relationship with Montana

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

When you sign up to cycle across the country, you resign yourself to a good bit of suffering, and I knew going in that ~600 of the ~850 miles we ride through Montana are abject agony. And this prior knowledge didn’t really prove to be worth anything. The five of us Route Leaders groan on our van-driving days, but through Montana, I actually relished my rest days a bit. The 107-mile-death-ride from Glendive to Wolf Point is a day which builds character and undoubtedly makes you stronger, but riding that day once is enough for this lifetime. People rolled into rest stops cursing like sailors, and I empathized because one year prior, I, too, was airing my greivances. But it’s over! We have made it to the mountains, and we have earned it. It’s been 15 days since our last rest day, and it was desperately needed.

Very typcial scenery in central Montana.

Very typical scenery in central Montana.

Turns out there are bodies of water in North Dakota, you just gotta look for em!

Turns out there are bodies of water in North Dakota, you just gotta look for em!

Last year I made no bones about how I felt about Montana. Even when we got to the good part, it kicked me in the teeth. But my Glacier experience was infinitely better this time around. Alex has a buddy from college works at a lodge in Glacier for the summer, and he gave us a personal tour of the north end of the park called Many Glacier. We don’t ride through Many, and we were really lucky to get to see it.

The Many Glacier Hotel, which is a little too The Shining-esque for my comfort. FUN FACT: the opening scene to The Shining was shot in Glacier!

The Many Glacier Hotel, which is a little too The Shining-esque for my comfort. Which is doubly creepy because the opening scene to The Shining was shot in Glacier.

Glacier reminds you that you are constantly at nature's mercy, and that it is all so, so much bigger than you.

Glacier reminds you that you are constantly at nature’s mercy, and that it is all so, so much bigger than you.

I’d put Going-To-The-Sun Road against any other scenic road around the globe, and it was an absolute joy to go over again. The first sight of Glacier is hypnotically gorgeous, and so are all the rest. Unless you live in like, Calgary, or something, Glacier National Park isn’t on the way to anywhere. You’ll only end up there if you deliberately go, especially if you’re from the East Coast. The last of the glaciers in the park are projected to be completely melted by 2030, which (breaking news here) will have major global implications. Someday I’ll be able to say I saw the glaciers before they were gone.

“Smile if you just climbed a mountain on your bike!”

To get a feel for just how big it all is, look to the cars in the left third.

To get a feel for just how big it all is, look to the cars in the left third.

A day after we left Glacier, it literally went ablaze. I promise we had NOTHING to do with this. I think. Well, I’m mostly sure. Anway, we’re all sitting on our bums in Whitefish today, an eclectic little town tucked away in the mountains. We celebrated Phrom, or Fake-Prom, a Bike the US for MS tradition. Basically the goal is to look as awful as possible and gad about town, and we did a pretty good job at it.

We are the worst thing that can happen to a small town.

After From 2015, we may not be allowed back in Whitefish.

City Beach on Whitefish Lake

City Beach on Whitefish Lake

When you’re in a different town each and every night, your memory regresses to that of a goldfish. We’re short-sighted, and concerned only about what the next mile will be like. I don’t need to explain how this can be detrimental, but it allows the salient parts of the trip to really glow. Glacier National Park shines brighter than all the anguish of eastern Montana, and now we’re just happy to play in the Pacific Northwest. It is jarring to think in two weeks from the moment I’m writing this, I’ll be sitting in the Seattle airport. Which is convenient, because I’m certainly not ready for this summer to end.

Au revoir, Midwest

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

I beg your forgiveness for the drought here.

Last year I said cycling across the country was summer camp for adults. And if being a cyclist is being a camper, being a Route Leader is like being a counselor. Except instead of caring for a bunch of adolescent twerps, I’m responsible for a crew ranging in age from 19 to 66. In Bar Harbor, I, like an idiot, was certain I’d know how to handle the day-to-day challenges, thinking “Hey, these people can practically lead themselves! Whenever someone approaches our group and asks, “Who’s in charge here?” I always laugh under my breath as I raise my hand. There is always, always a fire to put out. Or at least a fire to throw water on haplessly and hope it doesn’t spread. Our propensity to fall off our bikes and get dinged up is outright impressive. Hell, even the van and trailer have gotten flat tires. There is no job description for a Route Leader, and it’s because I’ve found myself doing everything from folding everyone’s laundry, to pumping up a van tire with a bike pump, to battling parking officials, to trying to cook breakfast for 35 rapacious cyclists.

It took me a few weeks to accept this summer isn’t about recreating the unbelievable time I had a year ago, but instead about helping these hooligans have the same experience I did. Every other day I get to drive the van and hang out at rest stops, but it feels like the days I’m on the bike are my true days off. When I’m riding my bike, no one’s asking me if there will be showers available tonight, or if there’s anywhere that has WiFi. I really ought to call up my route leaders from last year and apologize, because I’m now realizing I was a proper pain in the arse last summer.

I am so lucky to call them my coworkers.

I am so lucky to call them my coworkers.

ANYWAYS. I will now attempt to dig up the memories since your last visit here.

PENNSYLVANIA: We were here for about five total hours. I’ll omit it.

OHIO: Somehow, there were no headwinds in Ohio. Ohio is flat as it is expansive, and everyone skated right on through with no complaints, which is remarkable. Hopefully this means Montana may show us mercy in a few weeks. I turned 24 in Ohio, and everyone made me drink too many Smirnoff Ices, which came as a surprise to no one but a hilarious joke to all (except me). Cleveland was rad, and we made a donation to the Mellen M.S. Center!

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I cannot believe they let ME be the one who wrote the giant check.

Oh yeah, in Bowling Green we got to ride mopeds! Matt and Michelle Stimmell put up the Northern Tier each year in Bowling Green, and it turns out when Matt’s not being a baker and all-around awesome guy, he’s a moped enthusiast. Which meant we all got to go bananas on the country roads.

INDIANA: I don’t remember much about Indiana, because it was practically underwater when we went through.

Somewhere under there is the road we were supposed to take.

Somewhere under there is the road we were supposed to take.

Tremendous storms hit Indiana as we rolled through, and we had to re-route virtually every mile to make it through.

ILLINOIS: Illinois was where we finally caught some breaks regarding the weather. The rain held, the roads drained, and we had a number of generous hosts cook for us.

IOWA: Not only is Iowa the home of Field of Dreams, Adam Devine, and caucuses, but it’s also a stunningly beautiful state. I also got to play with this puppy.

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WISCONSIN: See; Pennsylvania.

MINNESOTA: My admiration for Minnesota is well-documented. The MS Achievement Center in Minneapolis was a smorgasbord of emotions, and a great reminder why we’re doing the ride. If you care to read my post from a year ago, I got to see John again! He’s still playing music when he’s not battling MS and Parkinson’s. Tears rolled and we got to present a donation of $25,000! It will enable even more MS patients in the Twin Cities to visit the Achievement Center. I could gush for another 600 words about how delightful Minneapolis is. On our second day off there, I got on my bike and wandered aimlessly around town, going wherever the trails and bike lanes took me. I had totally forgotten what it’s like to ride a bike for fun. I didn’t worry about my pace, how many miles I had left, or if I had sufficient calories in me. I haven’t been anywhere quite like Minneapolis, and I really hope to return there someday soon. Preferably by plane, not bike.

Celebrating the Fourth on one of Minnesota's bike paths!

Celebrating the Fourth on one of Minnesota’s bike paths!

A beautifully lit bridge in MInneapolis.

A beautifully lit bridge in Minneapolis.

In Minnesota, we finally got to see Don and Cassie again! We Route Leaders need Don and Cassie the way Calvin needs Hobbes, and up til Minneapolis, we had only ever called them, offering problems we didn’t know how to fix (In New Hampshire I had called Cassie, a complete wreck and just had her tell me it was going to be okay. She obliged, and everything did turn out okay). But in the Twin Cities we paraded around town, got drinks, completed service projects, and just got to enjoy their company. Meeting Don Fraser and Cassie Wertz was one of the best things to ever happen to me, and I’m not embellishing that.

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Ayhson, Joe, myself, Cassie & Don at orientaiton in Bar Harbor.

Now, our directions are considerably easier: go left. Only Montana, Idaho, and Washington await. I need to make more time to post here, as writing this has been therapeutic. Now, I have to go. The Dairy Queen isn’t going to eat itself…

Just what I needed.

Bike the US for MS 2014-16
Watching the sun set over Lake Ontario

Watching the sun set over Lake Ontario

Part of the joy in bicycle touring is the complete disconnect from reality. The world’s events and personal worries go by the wayside when you’re a lunatic on a bike for 6+ hours every day. We’re most concerned about how and where we can get our hands on a decent cup of coffee at sunrise. Disregarding “the real world” and it’s problems is just a byproduct. If it can’t be delivered to me in the form of a podcast, chances are it’s not at the forefront of my mind.

I left Richmond with a handful of worries, most regarding my future, my career, personal relationships — you know, trivial stuff. Last year, I was gliding through Glacier when I got some truly dreadful news. Today, the pendulum swung back and I got some fantastic news: my dad is officially cancer-free!

His diagnosis came around the holidays, and we knew from the get-go that it wasn’t overly aggressive, though that didn’t keep me from stressing out. I had to wake up each day, and think to myself, “My dad has cancer.” My dad, the man who I’ve idolized and thought invincible for years, would have to go to battle. I think I can speak on both my and my sister’s behalf when I say I’m lucky to call Babs and Ricky Platania Mom and Dad.

I wasn’t so lucky in that I didn’t inherit my dad’s poise and level-headedness. It seemed like he embraced the challenge, and even the day after returning from surgery, I never heard him complain (if it were me, I’d air my grievances for years). He was stoic through the entire process, and I think that counts for something. My mother, the same woman who tells me to be careful everytime I hang up the phone with her, was as steady as ever. It felt almost like they said, “Okay, we’ll deal with all the tough parts. Mike will do well to take care of the panicking, so there’s no need to do that.” I’m so proud of you, Dad, and I couldn’t be happier for you.

A typical rest day in Osceola, NY

A typical rest stop in Osceola, NY

I’m writing this from a hostel in Buffalo, having just shoveled a mountain of food into my face. And, in the morning I get to wake up, and no matter which direction I walk, I’ll hit a Tim Horton’s in a block. Say what you want about Buffalo, but these people know how to eat proper.

In two days I’ll be 24, and I’ll celebrate it by riding 95 miles across three states. I’m ready to embrace the Midwest and it’s humid headwinds with open arms. Years of Virginia humidity have prepared me for this. Besides, everyone’s been a little too familiar with their rainjackets in the Northeast. I’m ready to harvest some absurd tanlines again.

Today, reality popped it’s head back into my life and gave me a little boost. Douglas Adams said, “There is an art, or rather, a knack to flying. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss. Clearly, it is this second part, the missing, which presents difficulites.” As a son, a route leader, a person, I’m trying to learn how to throw myself at the ground and trust my abilities to miss.

And away we go!

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

It’s been two weeks of learning and homecomings. We, and by we I mean myself and the other route leaders, spent a week in Blacksburg before shipping up to Maine, and it didn’t take too long to remember why I love Tech as much as I do. Few things warm the cockles of my heart like spring days in Blacksburg.

18 hours of driving, countless cyclist pick-ups along the way, and a handful of car problems later, we made it to Maine! And while Maine itself was delightful, New Hampshire rejected us like a body does a bad organ.

Turns out Bar Harbor is sunny sometimes!

Turns out Bar Harbor is sunny sometimes!

 

The ceremonious tire-dip in the Atlantic.

The ceremonious tire-dip in the Atlantic.

New Hampshire greeted us with steady rain, temperatures hovering above 40 degrees, and elevation changes variable enough to throw off anyone’s equilibrium. The usually beautiful White Mountain National Forest chewed us up and spat us out, and we were all elated to cruise into Vermont, home to Thetford, Middlebury, and considerably better weather.

Somewhere behind the sideways rain and fog is a stunningly beautiful view. Instead we got borderline hypothermic conditions.

Somewhere behind the sideways rain and fog is a stunningly beautiful view. Instead we got borderline hypothermic conditions.

What can I say of Thetford that hasn’t already been said of a fleece blanket? It’s cozy, familiar from first sight, and always there when you need it most. The entire community of less than 3,000 came together to get us showered, laundered, and fed. Each year Bike the US for MS gives out an award for outstanding hospitality, and this year was high time for Meg and the entire Thetford community to be honored.

Meg accepting the award. She has MS herself and still goes all out to take care of us each year. She's an inspiration!

Meg accepting the award. She has MS herself and still goes all out to take care of us each year. She’s an inspiration!

Middlebury was the site of the entire team’s first day off, and some Bike the US for MS alum drove up from NYC to hang out! For being as small as it is, Middlebury has a lot of character, and everyone certainly needed some vegetation time after the battering we took in the days leading up.

So New England is on the books, and I’m writing this from one of my favorite weird towns in New York, Old Forge. Being a Route Leader is as rewarding as it is stressful, but I think I’m finally starting to get the hang of it. I miss riding each and every day, but the abundance of rest days now is pretty nice (especially when in New Hampshire).

A van on a boat next to some bikes ferrying over to New York

A van on a boat next to some bikes ferrying over to New York

But I must make haste now, because if I don’t 26 cyclists are going to get lost looking for camp, and I know a little too well what that’s like.

We go again.

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

Hey, you made it back! It’s been quiet around here lately. Almost a little too quiet. So quiet in fact, I decided to grab my life like a snow globe and give it a few enthusiastic shakings. Then I figured I’d crack it open and dump out the insides just for good measure.

Ever since returning from Seattle I’ve wanted to leave Richmond, and I’m now realizing I can’t give an adequate answer why. The magnetism of everywhere else outweighs what’s keeping me in town, and I know that’s hardly a fair reason to uproot one’s life, but I want to find the mysterium tremendum et fascinans. And earlier in the spring, it felt like I was about to finally receive my ticket out of town! In the form of a job offer! A Staff Writer position at a weekly paper! Oh, my hopes were so decidedly up after months of mentally and physically exhausting interviews and applications. All I had to do was wait for the offer to arrive. I stared at my email inbox for the better part of three weeks, waiting for the verdict (Which, by the way, is a terrible way to spend three weeks).

But everything changed on Sunday, April 19th.

3:58 PM: I’m vegetating in bed reading The Hunger Games like the 16-year-old girl I am. My phone buzzes four times quickly and my screen lights up with a text from Joe.

“Answer your phone in a few minutes”

Before I even have a chance to think about what he means, it buzzes again.

“It’s really important”

Joe and I don’t often keep a straight face for more than a few fractions of a moment, much less talk about anything anyone would consider “really important.” So I shrug it off and save my nerves.

4:03 PM: Cassie’s name pops up on my phone, and I pick up, figuring this is what Joe was referring to. She tells me one of the Route Leaders for the Northern Tier had something come up, and wasn’t going to be able to ride this summer. I’m no detective, but I’m starting to figure out what might be coming. She was asking me to fill the vacant Route Leader position.

Now, you might be thinking, “But Mike, what about the aforementioned Staff Writer position?” Glad to see you’re taking notes. There will be a test later. I explained my candidacy for the position to Cassie, and said I couldn’t sign up to be a Route Leader without knowing whether I’d get the job. I was so invested that I couldn’t just punt it away. To my graces, she waited on shopping the Route Leader vacancy to others for a few days, but she couldn’t wait forever.

A few days go by and I still don’t hear about the job, and my descent into madness hits a full nosedive. I catastrophize everything in my head, and the thought that a reality might exist in which I get neither position was insufferable. I had two chances to get out, and losing both would crush me.

But my phone did finally go off, almost four days later to the minute from when Cassie initially called me. My future waited on the other line, and I picked up feeling how I imagine criminals feel when the judge returns from their chambers, sentencing in hand.

I was politely told that, while I was a finalist, the position had been offered to someone else, and I was encouraged to apply for future openings. I was also told they’d be framing me for arson, stealing my car, and launching the rest of my possessions into the sun. Just kidding. Well, only about the last part. Ipso facto, I didn’t get the job, and I learned what it’s like to feel bitter and elated at the same time.

I’ve become no stranger to rejection through my job hunt, but you can only throw a piece of spaghetti against the wall to see if it sticks so many times before throwing it back in the pot and letting it cook. Mark my words, many an editor will rue the day they turned down Mike Platania!

So I hung up and immediately called Cassie and was like, “Hey, so I didn’t get the job, which is a bummer. Whine-whine-whine. Pout-pout-pout.”

And she was like, “Nonsense, poopypants! So you wanna route lead the Northern Tier?”

And I was like, “Mahalo to that, let’s do this thing.”

And she was like, “Clear your calendar and come to Blacksburg in a few weeks to get ready!”

So that’s about it. It’s time for Northern Tier 2: Electric Boogaloo, my way of letting my metaphorical spaghetti self cook a bit longer. If you’re feeling a bit charitable, here’s my official page. I’ll be posting here with the same unreliable regularity I did last summer, and I do hope you’ll follow along. I promise I’ll try to not complain about Montana so much (but don’t hold your breath).

My adoration for Bike the US for MS and the Northern Tier is endless, as it is documented in the archives of this website. There are so many places I can’t wait to return to, so many people I can’t wait to meet, and so many miles I can’t wait to ride. It’s been a good while (about a year if we’re being precise) since I’ve had something of this magnitude to look forward to, and I’m over the bloody moon. Whenever Don, Cassie, and the entire Bike the US for MS family ask you to do something, just say “Yes.”

The catch is, this time I’m supposed to know I’m doing. Which might be an issue, because I don’t think I’ve ever known what I’m doing. It won’t be long before I’ll be back at the Atlantic saying so long, and thanks for all the fish before taking off for Seattle once again.

Champagne & salt water

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

It was a moment I had been waiting for since the day I applied to ride. I had the same feeling for months that eight year olds have starting December 26th — patiently waiting, yet still doing all the was required to get there. We made it to Seattle!

I kicked off my shoes at the shore and ran into the Pacific for the first time in my life. We popped champagne, and whether it was from the ocean or our tears, salt water was flowing. Just before reaching the water, we had one last check donation to make to the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. Peddler Brewing, a bike-themed brewery native to Seattle, hosted us all for a great time.

 

Once the champagne bottles were empty, we moved to a five-star hotel we had NO business staying in. Kenny actually called the concierge and their conversation went something like this:

“I’m not a fancy man, and I don’t stay in many hotels. If I wear the robe in the closet, will I be charged?” – Kenny

“…,”- concierge.

“Alright great!” – Kenny

It still hasn’t hit me. Swimming in the ocean never felt so good!

There really wasn’t a true crescendo to finish the trip. The night before in Snohomish, we all started celebrating and reminiscing prematurely, and that itself felt like the end. There were so many high points to end the trip, it’s hard to keep count, much less emotionally process them all on the fly. It was hard to hold onto the unfiltered happiness of finishing, as our team was dispersing just as quickly as we came together in Bar Harbor. I’ll miss everyone, and hope to see ya’ll on the road again someday!

We were welcomed into town by Peddler Brewery, a bike-themed spot in the heart of town!

The scene we were welcomed to at Peddler

Bike the US for MS’s founder, Don, getting iced and taking it like a champ! He’s the one who makes the magic happen and started this all.

The first time we knew we had made it!

The first time we knew we had made it!

Amidst one of the final climbs through the North Cascades

Amidst one of the final climbs through the North Cascades

One of the final, restless nights we spent together playing cards, goofing around and dreaming of Seattle

One of the final, restless nights we spent together playing cards, goofing around and dreaming of Seattle

The world famous Pike Place Market. We went back the next morning and it was as hectic as advertised

The world famous Pike Place Market. We went back the next morning and it was as hectic as advertised

The Seattle coastline

Found a sleeping giant at CenturyLink Field

The calm (about a month) before the storm

This summer was like summer camp for adults. It was a 10-week long cardio session under the guise of sightseeing. It was the most unforgettable pilgrimage of my life. I saw parts of the country I didn’t knew existed, and did things I never thought I could. I got comfortable being uncomfortable, and now that I’m a few days removed from riding, I actually miss being on the saddle a bit.

A road trip back spanning Portland, Yellowstone National Park, Denver, Chattanooga and Knoxville in a few short days has me absolutely winded right now. While I miss my personal car, I can’t say I missed sitting in a back seat for hours. I’m writing this from the house I once lived in at Tech, and it’s incredibly bittersweet to be back in Blacksburg. For the last four years at this time, I was getting psyched about being in Lane, starting classes and seeing friends. Now only a fraction of my closest Hokies are still around, and above everything, it’s weird knowing I won’t be here in the fall.

I’m back in reality and my time being funemployed is underway! Life’s a lot simpler when all you have to worry about is pedaling 70 miles instead of finding a career. I’m admittedly perturbed at the idea of having no idea where I’ll be in five years, or five months, or even five weeks. But after this trip, I’m much less intimidated at the idea of being somewhere

Before I conclude the documentation of this journey, I owe many people thanks. To my teammates and route leaders, thank you for making this trip the greatest, silliest trip of my life. To my donors, thank you for helping change the lives of those with MS and supporting the cause! To my friends and family, thank you for the never-ending supply of love and support. To Don, Cassie, and the rest of the Bike the US for MS team, thank you for making this all possible and letting me represent your organization. Becoming a BTUS4MS alum is one of my proudest feats and it was an honor to wear the jersey! And lastly to my readers, thanks for following along and interacting! It’s been a joy write and post all of this, and I’m glad you enjoyed it!

 

 

 

 

Scorching in Washington

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

Washington has treated us well so far. We’ve had pretty good rides, and at night we’ve been playing plenty of cards while prematurely reminiscing about the Northeast and New England areas.

Every day since Idaho has been over 100 degrees, but the heat hasn’t really bothered me much. The heat and I have a mutually assured destruction agreement in that, while it can wear me down, it motivates me to ride harder and revel in being drenched in sweat. All those years of skateboarding, running and playing soccer in the Virginia humidity are finally paying off.

Paddle-boarding back in Sandpoint!

Paddle-boarding back in Sandpoint!

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I’ve camped along worse places

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A vibrant red grated bridge along an otherwise generic slate of Washington. This, much like giant Red Wing boot, was mildly interesting

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Can you tell I haven’t taken many interesting pictures since Sandpoint?

Soon we’ll be heading through a part of the state which was recently devastated by the “worst forest fires in state history” as one local put it. There were even doubts we’d be able to make it through due to road closings.

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All of the Northeast’s state signs. Only absent are Maine and Wisconsin, but they were rainy and rude to us. Also missing is Canada, but does it really count?

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The straight shot across the west represented here. The next and last sign I’ll be snapping a shot of is Seattle’s city limits!

 

But holy mackerel are we close! I’ve clocked over 4,000 miles on my bike, and we only have four real riding days before our 30 mile trot into Seattle. Loup Loup Pass and Washington Pass and their 7,500 cumulative feet of height stand in the way, but after that it’ll be all downhill into Seattle! Wish us luck!

 

 

 

The beginning of the end

Bike the US for MS 2014-16

Sayonara, Montana! We’re now in our 14th state, Idaho, and it’s endearing, mostly because it’s not Montana. Maybe I’m being a little melodramatic about Montana, but after being put through the gauntlet for two weeks, it’s refreshing to be not only out of the Big Sky country, but also in the Pacific timezone!

Today’s our final rest day in Sandpoint, Idaho. It’s like the west coast version of Lake Gaston. It’s touristy, yet quiet and cultured, and a fine place to do roost. The Sandpoint West Athletic Club is putting us up, and holy mackerel is this place something else. We have full access to a weight room, steam room, sauna, hot tub and more! We’re all thrilled to not have a Pigpen-like cloud of stench and dust around us.

Bright and sunny skies in Sandpoint!

Bright and sunny skies in Sandpoint!

Coastline of City Beach, where I spent most of the day hanging out

Coastline of City Beach, where I spent most of the day hanging out

Common area of the Athletic Center

Common area of the Athletic Center

Racquetball court turned bike garage

Racquetball court turned bike garage

Bruce getting some sun

Drew found a hole-in-the-wall type Thai restaurant which wears its visibility issues on its sleeve. Dynamite food though!

Drew found a hole-in-the-wall type Thai restaurant which wears its visibility issues on its sleeve. Dynamite food though!

But we’re officially in the countdown! Only nine days ’til Seattle! Sweet Maria, where has the time gone. I’m admittedly homesick, and I think it’s because the feeling of hanging in Richmond is so imminent. To those back on the east coast, I can’t wait to see you!

In terms of day-to-day, mile-by-mile living, I reckon it’s changed a little. Once upon a time I was on the caboose squad, but I’ve worked my way up the line and I’m now typically one of the first in. Riding with Caroline (our resident German doctor who wins downhill races in her spare time), Jen (another Virginian who’s cooler than I will ever be, of JenRidesTheUS), and Eric (whose accounts of the trip are always hilariously blunt and available at here) is standard protocol. I’m of the belief it’s more energy-efficient to ride fast and finish early as opposed to exert less energy and be on the saddle all day. Each day I aim to have at least a few hours to relax at camp. Everyone’s cognitive abilities have been at least a little compromised. We must be a server’s worst nightmare, as we storm into cafés hardly piecing together complete sentences, requesting separate checks and guzzling all of their coffee. But what’s necessary is necessary.

Real life is beckoning, and I can count the amount of days left on two hands. It definitely feels like we’re in the home stretch, and I’m ready to give the trip a proper sendoff!