Superzoom
New Member
I'm not sure which idea sprouted first: run the Vancouver Marathon with my sister, go to a film festival in Seattle, visit my cousin in Danville, CA, or ride the Pacific Coast Highway. I guess it doesn't matter, but this past April, I thought it might be a fun idea to hop on the Yamaha and ride out to the left coast for some neat adventures.
And if you're thinking, "April sure is early for motorcycling," well then you just might be on to something. And if you're thinking, "That's a lot of stuff to carry on a motorcycle," well then you're right!
It all fits!
The plan is to cut straight across the northern U.S. states all the way to the Pacific, then up into B.C. from Washington State. I've always been a bit wary of riding across the U.S. Something to do with an irrational fear of guys with shotguns in pick-up trucks. But I've already cross Canada twice by motorcycle. Time for a new route.
This is the Ontario/Michican border in Sarnia. I survive a few hours of pretty serious rain along the 401 and 402.
It's dark as all get-out when I arrive at the Big Bear Lodge in Alpena, Michigan. This is a shot taken the next morning. Cute little motel with a giant stuffed bear in the lobby.
Dinner is a cup of steaming ramen, with water boiled with this tiny little stove.
The next morning I am greeted by a completely dead battery in the motorbike. Last night I had done too much idling while trying to find the motel in the darkness, and the electric vest I had been wearing drained the battery dead.
Luckily the nice motel owner gave me a boost.
Goodbye Room 28 of the Big Bear!
The next morning I am treated to the unwelcome sight of ice on Lake Huron.
I freeze my way over the impressive and beautiful Mackinaw Bridge, which takes me into northern Michigan.
A stop for greasy chicken and to plan my stop for the evening. The original plan had been to ride west on U.S. Route 2, which runs all the way to the west coast through the northern states. But the cold is getting to me, so I decide to try cutting south to find some warmer temperatures.
I bump into this fellow from London, Ontario, who also happens to be riding to Vancouver via Route 2! We don't end up riding together, as we seem to be on different schedules.
I get to ride a little bit of Route 2, and it really seems like a lovely highway.
Another long, cold day.
I end up at this hotel in Wisconsin. Not bad.
Not bad at all. This turns out to be one of the better hotels I get to stay at. I use booking.com to find all my accommodations, and always just choose the cheapest!
And if you're thinking, "April sure is early for motorcycling," well then you just might be on to something. And if you're thinking, "That's a lot of stuff to carry on a motorcycle," well then you're right!

It all fits!

The plan is to cut straight across the northern U.S. states all the way to the Pacific, then up into B.C. from Washington State. I've always been a bit wary of riding across the U.S. Something to do with an irrational fear of guys with shotguns in pick-up trucks. But I've already cross Canada twice by motorcycle. Time for a new route.
This is the Ontario/Michican border in Sarnia. I survive a few hours of pretty serious rain along the 401 and 402.

It's dark as all get-out when I arrive at the Big Bear Lodge in Alpena, Michigan. This is a shot taken the next morning. Cute little motel with a giant stuffed bear in the lobby.

Dinner is a cup of steaming ramen, with water boiled with this tiny little stove.

The next morning I am greeted by a completely dead battery in the motorbike. Last night I had done too much idling while trying to find the motel in the darkness, and the electric vest I had been wearing drained the battery dead.
Luckily the nice motel owner gave me a boost.

Goodbye Room 28 of the Big Bear!

The next morning I am treated to the unwelcome sight of ice on Lake Huron.

I freeze my way over the impressive and beautiful Mackinaw Bridge, which takes me into northern Michigan.

A stop for greasy chicken and to plan my stop for the evening. The original plan had been to ride west on U.S. Route 2, which runs all the way to the west coast through the northern states. But the cold is getting to me, so I decide to try cutting south to find some warmer temperatures.

I bump into this fellow from London, Ontario, who also happens to be riding to Vancouver via Route 2! We don't end up riding together, as we seem to be on different schedules.

I get to ride a little bit of Route 2, and it really seems like a lovely highway.

Another long, cold day.

I end up at this hotel in Wisconsin. Not bad.

Not bad at all. This turns out to be one of the better hotels I get to stay at. I use booking.com to find all my accommodations, and always just choose the cheapest!
