| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051 | <p>This was perhaps one of the worst, best and weirdest days of the trip.</p><p>The first half of the day was fine. Was prepared for a long day, ready to get to Astoria. I keptthinking... I just need to get to Astoria. Stopped for lunch in South Bend, right on Willapa Bay, famous fortheir oysters. So I got a fried oyster sandwich--exactly the kind of small town cooking that I was so eager toexperience. An incredible sandwich. I continued. My maps directed me towards a kind of off-road. I wasuncertain, but trusted my directions. I followed the road until I came to a sign: "Paving Ends Ahead". Thesign did not lie. Ahead of me lie a gravel road.</p><p>Being on a road bike, gravel is a surface I would typically wish to avoid. But if this was the fastest wayto Astoria, it seemed the way I should go. My directions said the road name would change in a mile. So Ithought... I can handle a mile of gravel. If it doesn't change, I'll turn back. This "road" was one of themost difficult of the entire journey. Not only was the coarse gravel tough, the incline was perilously steep.It was at times too difficult to bike so I had to get off and push. But I kept going and at some point, I hadgone so far thinking "there can't be too much more of this" that it eventually became clear there was noend in sight. But I had come so far; it would make no sense to go back. So, after 4 miles of treacherousuphill gravel and no people, buildings, or civilization to speak of, I get a flat.</p><p>Exhausted and fed up with these conditions, I take my time to unload my stuff and fix the flat, having asnack and cursing this dumb idea. This road seems to be the middle of nowhere--no cars coming or going anddeep forest on both sides of this gravel path. It was actually rather serene. Until I heard a menacing growlcome from the woods.</p><p>A bear? A mountain lion? Bigfoot? To this day, I do not know if this growl was real or a product of myoveractive imagination. Regardless, I have never reassembled my bike faster than I did in that moment. I wasscared witless. Sweating, nervous, and with a racing heart, I pedaled furiously for another 1/4 mile before mytire was flat again. I was too rattled to take the time to fix it, so I pushed my bike another few milesbefore I reached the end of this godforsaken road.</p><p>On this exact same day, two bikers in the other Bend--North Bend, WA--were <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2018/05/21/something-was-wrong-with-this-cougar-animal-that-killed-biker-injured-another-was-emaciated/?utm_term=.5f6de1c58f3d">mauled and killed</a> by a mountain lion. I am so grateful and aware of how easily it could have been me. Manypeople brought this news item to my attention over the following weeks, which I thought was a weird thing tosay to someone like me.</p><p>I eventually emerged from the woods, relieved and exhausted but still remote from civilization. I continuedto push my bike until I was greeted by two locals who were walking their dog. They were sympathetic andsurprised that I had come from the way I did. They walked me toward the highway.</p><p>I was shaken, but not so shook that I didn't notice the scenery we walked through. This was the mostbeautiful place I have ever been. Full stop. We walked a road cutting through a marsh full of lush greenery,as if a sea around us. This sea was interrupted by islands of trees exploding from the surface, too many treesto fit on each little island, pushing each other out of the way, bounded and surrounded by the sea oflow lying plants extending in every direction. I was too awed to even try to capture this scenery in aphotograph. It looked exactly like a Studio Ghibli creation...  Too beautiful and mystic to be real. Thisimpression was compounded by the endorphins rushing through my bloodstream.</p><p>While we were walking through this incredible landscape, the sounds of another come from behind us. ?!?!?This place is so remote, these are the first people I've seen in hours, and here is another, but it's not justanyone--another bike tourer!! He had followed the same road I had, but with much beefier tires than mine andhe had a great time. The odds seemed impossible. His name is Jonas. He was also from Seattle, but taking amuch more leisurely pace than mine, having left Seattle a month ago.</p><p>The folks with the dog offered us their barn as a place to shelter for the night. So we stayed there. Jonasshowed me how to forage for oyster mushrooms which we cooked up for dinner. Jonas is also a musician, so wejammed together, him on a mandolin he was carrying and me on the flute I was carrying. We camped the nighttogether. It was great fun.</p><p>My mom said this story seemed too fake to be real, but to be sure, every word of it is true.</p><p>From my journal:</p><blockquote>My heart is racing & I'm starting to panic. "This is how it ends," I am sure.</blockquote>
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