I had an interesting month of driving mostly in the mid-west with a few
trips back west. I spent a little more than a week as a contract driver for Walmart making local deliveries to Walmart stores centered around north central Illinois - Sterling to be exact. Just across the street from the Walmart center was a horse stable which included this very friendly and confident spotted horse, among others.
I went as far north as Lake Geneva, WI.
Surely you've seen these before.
But have you ever looked closely at the instructions?
Down to Bloomington, IL a couple of times where this grainary has been converted into an indoor climbing gym. What a great idea.
Up and west to Davenport, IA.
And had almost 20 hours of time off-duty in the actual town of Sterling and ended up walking about a half mile through the thigh-deep rock river to see what a couple fisherman were catching.
In the last couple weeks I finally got back west and had a full 34 hours off, my first in six weeks, in Cheyenne which had some crazy weather.
I met this kid at the Cheyenne Frontier Days celebration. He said the bike will do 60mph but you have drag your feet to stop.
After making it back to Kansas City for a very hot night (I really like that city), I headed back west through CO and UT.
Spent a night in Las Vegas and had so much fun riding my little bike up and down the strip, maneuvering between all the stopped traffic to the head of the line and then sprinting off at the green light to the next red. So hot out that my eyes were burning - at ten oclock at night.
Finally the long-awaited photo of my bike (taken by a couple of German students spending a month over here perfecting their English).
I finished July in Fresno CA to a fabulous sunset and a relatively cool night in a truckstop parking lot that doesn't smell like urine!
I never gave eighteen wheelers much thought. But I've suddenly found myself driving a truck and being awakened to this industry that keeps the world economy running.
Chimney Rock and Ute Mountain in Southwest Colorado, Feb 2011
Chimney Rock and Ute Peak in Southwest Colorado, taken Feb 9th 2011.
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Public and Private lands in Wyoming
Hmmm. I found this post sitting in my drafts folder. I would have sworn I'd published this. Oh well.
After spending the last couple weeks back east, I'm heading back to Utah's Cache Valley with twenty one tons of Wisconsin cheese. Strangely, the Cache Valley is known for only one thing - cheese. Why would Wisconsin cheese be shipping to the Cache Valley?
I'm reading the book "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle" by Barbara Kingsolver and she's filled it with lots of very interesting facts about the American food production system. Like this: The US exports 1.1 million tons of potatoes each year, while at the same time importing 1.4 million tons of potatoes. Sounds like someone is getting rich on the distribution end of the deal.
Anyways... I'm spending the night in Rawlins, Wyoming. The last couple of times I've driven into this town from the west, I've admired a mountain just north of town called Cherokee Peak. Tonight was my opportunity to bag it. The Flying-J truckstop I'm parked at is just down the ridge from the peak so I headed uphill and reached the summit in a couple of hours.
Interesting land markings I saw from near the summit. Do you see the straight line in the middle of the photo? I'm sure it's made by an ancient alien race. Human's couldn't possibly make a line that straight. And is that light green circular section closest to us actually two overlapping circles? Is it a symbol for something?
Hiking down, after a fun close approach with a pronghorn antelope, near the bottom I climbed through a barbed wire fence and looked over the edge of a bluff into a verdant little valley with a farm house, some horses, another pronghorn antelope drinking water from a stream, and not thirty feet from the antelope a man yelling up at me "What are you doing up there?". I really need a new eye glass prescription because I couldn't tell if he was facing me or not. So I just yelled down, "HIKING", and continued down, crossed the fence again, and went down a dirt road toward the truckstop. Not five minutes later one of those little two-seat four-wheelers with a roof comes barreling up the dirt road. I thought I was going to get shot.
It turns out it's the guy who was at the bottom of the bluff at least two miles away via dirt roads. The guy then proceeds to explain to me the rules of private property in Wyoming, which are essentially - the burden to know which property is private and which is public rests on me, not on the property owners to post their land. He further explains that most of Wyoming was originally broken up by the US government as one square mile blocks - 640 acres - which were then sold off to private landowners in a mostly checkerboard arrangement. The land he and I were standing on (well, he was sitting in his little vehicle), was public Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land. But the land I passed through to get to that land was his, and another man's, and the land I had to pass through to get back to the truckstop was owned by someone else. In fact, Cherokee Peak is privately owned and I'd been trespassing. Apparently selling off the government land in this checkerboard pattern of private land and BLM land was somebody's way to get rich about a century ago. I'm not surprised.
We end up talking for an hour and I don't get shot, and he gave me the name and phone number of a guy who may be a good contact for the wind energy stuff I'm working on. Finally he gives me a ride back down to the truckstop through a pasture filled with bulls (which he said wouldn't have bothered me if I'd walked through, but I've never dealt with bulls before so I'm not so sure).
Funny how things work out.
After spending the last couple weeks back east, I'm heading back to Utah's Cache Valley with twenty one tons of Wisconsin cheese. Strangely, the Cache Valley is known for only one thing - cheese. Why would Wisconsin cheese be shipping to the Cache Valley?
I'm reading the book "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle" by Barbara Kingsolver and she's filled it with lots of very interesting facts about the American food production system. Like this: The US exports 1.1 million tons of potatoes each year, while at the same time importing 1.4 million tons of potatoes. Sounds like someone is getting rich on the distribution end of the deal.
Anyways... I'm spending the night in Rawlins, Wyoming. The last couple of times I've driven into this town from the west, I've admired a mountain just north of town called Cherokee Peak. Tonight was my opportunity to bag it. The Flying-J truckstop I'm parked at is just down the ridge from the peak so I headed uphill and reached the summit in a couple of hours.
Interesting land markings I saw from near the summit. Do you see the straight line in the middle of the photo? I'm sure it's made by an ancient alien race. Human's couldn't possibly make a line that straight. And is that light green circular section closest to us actually two overlapping circles? Is it a symbol for something?
Hiking down, after a fun close approach with a pronghorn antelope, near the bottom I climbed through a barbed wire fence and looked over the edge of a bluff into a verdant little valley with a farm house, some horses, another pronghorn antelope drinking water from a stream, and not thirty feet from the antelope a man yelling up at me "What are you doing up there?". I really need a new eye glass prescription because I couldn't tell if he was facing me or not. So I just yelled down, "HIKING", and continued down, crossed the fence again, and went down a dirt road toward the truckstop. Not five minutes later one of those little two-seat four-wheelers with a roof comes barreling up the dirt road. I thought I was going to get shot.
It turns out it's the guy who was at the bottom of the bluff at least two miles away via dirt roads. The guy then proceeds to explain to me the rules of private property in Wyoming, which are essentially - the burden to know which property is private and which is public rests on me, not on the property owners to post their land. He further explains that most of Wyoming was originally broken up by the US government as one square mile blocks - 640 acres - which were then sold off to private landowners in a mostly checkerboard arrangement. The land he and I were standing on (well, he was sitting in his little vehicle), was public Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land. But the land I passed through to get to that land was his, and another man's, and the land I had to pass through to get back to the truckstop was owned by someone else. In fact, Cherokee Peak is privately owned and I'd been trespassing. Apparently selling off the government land in this checkerboard pattern of private land and BLM land was somebody's way to get rich about a century ago. I'm not surprised.
We end up talking for an hour and I don't get shot, and he gave me the name and phone number of a guy who may be a good contact for the wind energy stuff I'm working on. Finally he gives me a ride back down to the truckstop through a pasture filled with bulls (which he said wouldn't have bothered me if I'd walked through, but I've never dealt with bulls before so I'm not so sure).
Funny how things work out.
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