July 2nd
On the road again by 1PM.... I had to check out of my hotel at 11AM so I walked (with all of my gear) back to Valley Motor Honda... What a work out.. I had to wear my riding jacket and pants cause my hands were full and my bags are always stuffed to capacity. I was sweating bullets!
I hung out while I waited and was out their by 1PM. I thanked everyone that I had gotten to know down there. I even drove back to the Hi-Lites Salon to say ggod-bye..Thanks everyone!!!
View Day 11 Sheridan, WY to Cody, WY in a larger map
Now time to cross the Bighorn Mountains...
One thing that has been interesting is that almost every town I've been through in Wyoming is sitting at about 4000 ft to 6000 ft above sea-level. For example Buffalo, Wy is roughly 4700 feet above sea level whereas Lowell, MA is only about 110 feet above sea level.
Being this high makes the air thinner and there is less oxygen to breathe... I have found myself getting winded and tired more than being back east.
Entering Bighorn National Forest |
See that reddish colored windy road... Yes thats what I drove up! |
9,430 feet above sea-level |
I stopped a bunch along my trip up and down the Bighorns to take pictures and to visit a sacred Native American ceremonial site called the Medicine Wheel
Medicine Wheel
Wyoming Wildflowers
Some things I've realized.....
- On all of these steep roads (going down) there are Run-away truck ramps, in case the brakes stop working on a big tractor trailer truck.
- When a turn says 15 MPH speed limit they usually aren't kidding! Where as back east a turn says 25 MPH you can physically go much faster (not saying you should though).. Here if I go faster I would be off the road many times.
-When a sign says falling rocks...You actually see rocks on the side of the road that have fallen...
- Many roads don't have guard rails even on the steep and dangerous ones!
- Most people drive trucks or have a truck and many have a metal bumber attached in front of the vehicle to protect the original bumber for when they hit an animal.
-Throughout the mid-west and west you can see all of the stains on the road from where animals have been struck and killed. These stains are everywhere on the roads in Wyoming
-East of all the mountain ranges you typically have minimal vegetation (plants) due to the "Rain Shadow" effect... All of the moisture in the air is released as the air moves up the mountains leaving little moisture/rain for the areas directly east of the mountains... (Just look at maps and notice the brownish colors east of mountain ranges) Much of the vegetation that is present is Sage Brush & other plants that have adapted to this climate and elevation.
Coming Down the Western Side of the Bighorn Mountains
Coming Down the western side of the Bighorns I had the choice of staying on Route 14 or taking Route 14A (which is closed during the winter) 14A hear I come! |
I reaize I said that typically on the eastern side of the mountains you will have a "Rain Shadow" effect but the reason the western side is so barren and lacking vegetation (plant life) is that further to the west is another mountain range which prevents much moisture from getting to this area.
After getting down the Bighorns into the flatter and "browner" terrain that you see in the distance it got much hotter.. The next hundred miles or so were relatively flat & sparsely populated. Many towns had less than 100 people. and any cities I went through had just barely more people than the elevation they were at. For the most part the elevation of this "flat" land was always over 4000 feet above sea-level
Because I got a late start leaving Sheridan and spent so much time in the Bighorn Mountains I was forced to ride in the dark again.... I hate driving in the dark.. I am always looking for animals and since I am concentrated so hard on it you start to see stuff that you think is animals and it turns out not to be... Nerve racking!!! Needless to say I made it safely to Cody, WY
Cody, WY is famous for being home to Buffalo Bill Cody and is the gateway to the western entrance to Yellowstone National Park
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