We mounted up at 9:00AM which gave me the time I needed to write the blog, process my pics and get a rough route lined up. I decided to take I-90 about 30 miles to Hwy 2 just west of Spokane. On Hwy 2 we had to endure miles of stagnant traffic due to a highway line painting crew at work, but we finally arrived in Reardan, WA and turned to the north on Hwy 231 looking for the roads that Butler Maps recommended. In a short time we entered the Spokane Indian Reservation and the terrain became much hillier than the rolling hills of the wheat ranches we'd left behind.
At Little Falls Rd, we turned west, crossing the Spokane River, which is a major tributary of the Columbia River. Both of us remarked at what fine condition the highways were in and at how unpopulated the area was.
There was very limited traffic and the weather was absolutely perfect...blue skies, no wind, mid 50's temps and no humidity. Navigating was a little challenging but even on the "rez" the roads were well marked and between my Butler maps and our GPS's we missed very few turns.
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| Confluence of Spokane and Columbia Rivers |
When we ran into Hwy 25, which tracks the Columbia River for miles, we turned south, crossing the Spokane River and then tracking it as it finally dumped its huge contents into the already massive Columbia River. At the confluence we passed by Fort Spokane, established in 1880 and closed in 1898, then serving as an Indian boarding school and a tuberculosis treatment center.
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| Fort Spokane |
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| KC damn near stuck in a Central Washington wheat field |
At Creston, WA we stopped into a wonderful restaurant called the Corner Cafe. Mind you, Crestin is a wide spot in the road...
with nothing but a gas station and a bunch of grain elevators, so finding a great spot to eat was a shocker. KC said it was his best meal of the trip. He may be exaggerating a tad, but it really was very good.
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| Starter home in Crestin |
In Waterville, an appropriate name for a town built near a river I suppose, we turned south on Badger Mountain Rd. and were treated to more intensely beautiful scenery. The golden wheat stubble against the now emerging Cascade Mountains to our west and a blue sky mixed with puffy white clouds was jaw dropping.
The grand finale of our route positioned us on a hillside several thousand feet above the Wenatchee valley and the Columbia River. The view was breathtaking and KC and I stopped at a pullout and gawked.
Day Two is in the books and it was a good one.
Nighty night.

















3 comments:
I guess now's a good time to express my gratitude for Bob's VERY thorough planning of the route for this trip. You all know him as somewhat anal in such things......well pretty much ALL things. I can only imagine the hours he's spent pouring over his Butler motorcycle maps. After the meticulous routing was done, he then looked for a Hampton Inn for each of our overnight stops, failing that, he picked the second best hotel available. And yes, after that he made room reservations for us both. All this was done literally months in advance. To this Type A, spontaneous, come what may redneck, this is just beyond my comprehension. But, I'm damn glad he did it, 'cause I sleep like a baby knowing that Bob's got it covered.
FELIX AND OSCAR...
Bob.... I share your planning gene.... explain to KC how I map out a 30 day bicycle trip ---- routes, lodging, restaurants and even where to do laundry...... Well done sir.
Thanks for blogging - another passion we share.
Yall ride safe
MM
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