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- <p>Made it to Idaho!! Easily the most disappointing and pathetic state border sign I've seen.</p>
- <p>I started the morning tired and uninspired. I packed my things and went for breakfast at the local diner.
- They had a house special: Angie's Omelette. The description: olives, pepperoni and cheese. Okay... that is
- weird. I thought it might be one of those so-weird-it's-good things, like bacon maple bars or tahini jelly
- sandwiches, but no. It was just weird. Like pizza for breakfast except it isn't pizza. But it also wasn't
- bad. But I also probably wouldn't eat it again. But I also kinda liked it. This omelette inspired a variety of
- conflicting emotions.</p>
- <p>I'm not feeling energized this morning, but nevertheless I hit the road. First thing is a ridiculous climb
- full of switchbacks and steep inclines. I have my pocket radio lashed to my handlebars for entertainment. And
- out here in the boonies, there are few radio stations to choose from. Reception is not great. But I
- <em>am</em> able to find an NPR station. So I'm trying to listen to NPR, but every few seconds, my already
- tenuous connection to Oregon Public Radio is interrupted by another station on the same band. And so as I
- agonize up this hill, pedaling with all I have in me, my one connection to people and sanity keeps switching
- back and forth between NPR (hot) and a Christian rock radio station (not).</p>
- <blockquote><em>*...we're here today with poet and playwright...and heeeee knowwwws and heeeee lovvvvves...who
- addresses issues of gender and race in her new...light touches my soul and I
- knowwwww...controversy when...in his handddddds and I kno...you I would like to say
- that...everydayyy I rememberrrr....*</em></blockquote>
- <p>Looking back I recognize how objectively funny this scenario is and chuckle over how deeply unfunny it was
- to me at the time</p>
- <br/>
- <p>I had a lovely mid-day. Beautiful riding. Excited to get to the Idaho border. Getting to Idaho was an 8
- mile stretch along the Snake River. I was getting hungry but I thought I would eat in Idaho. And so I kept
- going along, and kept going, and kept going. Telling myself I'd eat in Idaho. And then actually getting over
- the dam was a slog, a stupidly steep hill. And I thought--I'll eat in Idaho. This was a mistake.</p>
- <p>"Bonk" was a word that I had heard among bikers but not understood. Today, I learned.</p>
- <dl>
- <dt><a href="/glossary#bonk">bonk</a> (v.)</dt>
- <dd>to neglect to eat the right amount at the right time and subsequently run entirely out of energy
- (usu.) when going up a hill</dd>
- </dl>
- <p>And I <strong>bonked</strong>.</p>
- <p>There is no easy recovery from a bonk. Most people try to eat as much sugar as quickly as they can. Lunch
- at the top of the dam made the nausea go away, but there was no way I was going to be able to ride my bike any
- further! Especially since a significant mountain pass laid between me and any other point of civilization.</p>
- <p>I was considering my options... I took the next turnoff which just HAPPENED to be a campground (yet another
- godsend) and as I studied my maps, trying to determine how far to the next town (too far), a man approached me
- and asked if I was lost. "No," I said, "just tired." Turns out he was the campmaster, Joe, and he offered me a
- spot, no charge. Great. The spot was a patch of gravel and a picnic table, but sometimes? You count your
- blessings. And really, gravel can be quite comfortable to sleep on actually. I took a shower and enjoyed the
- beautiful scenery around me.</p>
- <p>A little before sunset, I had my things laid out and was milling about. Then a STORM came through, from
- NOWHERE. The wind came from the blue and sent my sleeping bag (still rolled up) flying across the campground.
- I chased it down, looking like one of the three stooges, and tried to grab anything that was loose and secure
- it. Then the rain started. Great, hard, wet rain. I slinked into my <a href="/glossary#bivy">bivy sack</a>, ready to wait out the night and
- the storm. But then 20 minutes later, the rain stopped as suddenly as it had come. So I got out of my sack and
- milled about a bit longer.</p>
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