Cheryl and I scooped handfuls of reddish goop away from the tires, mindless but necessary work to get ourselves out of a sticky situation. A thought struck me hard: “Freedom.” We were toiling to free the motorcycle, but it was the Africa Twin itself, a simple dual-sport machine, that evoked the feeling.
A few weeks prior, we’d discussed where to go for a winter ride. We had ignored Canada and most of the Continental U.S. because of the cold but wanted to explore some of Northern California, Oregon, and Washington in the winter. The allure of “NorCal” in particular called to us both. We prepared the usual list of things we’d like to see, then plotted routes to get there with the sole purpose of making sure we took that wrong turn. The adventure was, and remains, the unknown, and over-planning takes a bit of the fun out of it for us.
Our trip began with a ferry ride to Washington, then backroads to Astoria, Oregon. Along the way, Cheryl said, “Hey, let’s see where this road goes.” A moment later we were on a curvy one only a few feet from a straight drop into the water. Just offshore there was a shipwreck, a picture-perfect moment in which to pause and reflect.
The next day we were heading south in gale-force winds, the ride putting our gear, and our resolve, to a serious test. Traveling down the scenic Pacific Coast Highway was now an exercise in fortitude, the wind, cold and rain—a trifecta of conditions directly affecting our safety. In military parlance, we achieved a pucker factor of at least seven, with nasty wind gusts literally taking us from the centerline to the guardrail of every bridge we crossed.
This story is from the July - August 2020 edition of Adventure Motorcycle (ADVMoto).
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This story is from the July - August 2020 edition of Adventure Motorcycle (ADVMoto).
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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