| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526 | <p>The first half of this day had easily the worst conditions of the trip. Having left beautifulCorvallis, there was a lengthy stretch through the Willamette Valley before I would come to another town withany services. And there was a gnarly headwind, making things tough.</p><p>The thing about headwinds is that they sap your energy, both physical and mental. And there is no rewardfor the difficulty. At least when struggling to go uphill, there might be a nice view and breezy downhilldescent. With a headwind, there's no reward for the suffering. You just get to work extra hard to go extraslow.</p><p>So if that wasn't enough, my allergies kicked in with full force and no warning. Suddenly I'm pushing againstthis headwind and</p><blockquote>My eyes were so dry and also shedding endless tears. My nose was unbearably stuffed and alsorunning. And of course I didn't have kleenex or anything, so I had to <b>[redacted due to graphic andunpleasant description]</b>.</blockquote><p>I would have died for some antihistamines. My nose has never been so raw and sore. But the next pharmacywasn't going to be for another 20 miles--20 miles of futile pedaling against stiff and unrelenting winds.I stopped at several houses (really more like farm houses out here) asking for something ... anything! but noluck.</p><p>The worst part was the sneezing fits. I was sneezing uncontrollably over and over and overwhile trying to ride a bicycle. I would sneeze, the bike would swerve and just as I'd correct course, anothersneeze was throwing me askew again. This was one of a handful of situations that I'd like to be able to watchon a video. It was so silly! Panting and mouth breathing through the Oregon countryside, sneezing so hard Ialmost fell off my bike!</p><p>But it did nothing to diminish my spirits. I did eventually find a pharmacy, stumbling in looking like I'vegot the consumption. From my journal:</p><blockquote>Looking back, it wasn't <u>that</u> bad. That's been a pattern. I'll be miserable and suffering,	but in hindsight, the experience mellows out.</blockquote>
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